summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-27 14:02:02 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-27 14:02:02 -0800
commit1cd140e7f34b181a35e2071670a9fa2c45319107 (patch)
tree34a290fc79d7a02fb738fd2ccabeeeff1ea682f6
parentfab383484103e5a06a96981ed21c7cf2558944af (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/60601-0.txt9874
-rw-r--r--old/60601-h/60601-h.htm12503
-rw-r--r--old/60601-h/images/cover.jpgbin45227 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60601-h/images/ilo1.jpgbin80500 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60601-h/images/ilo2.jpgbin101063 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60601-h/images/ilo3.jpgbin42245 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60601-h/images/ilo4.jpgbin39943 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/60601-0.txt10281
-rw-r--r--old/old/60601-0.zipbin205316 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/60601-h.zipbin521039 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/60601-h/60601-h.htm12926
-rw-r--r--old/old/60601-h/images/cover.jpgbin45227 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/60601-h/images/ilo1.jpgbin80500 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/60601-h/images/ilo2.jpgbin101063 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/60601-h/images/ilo3.jpgbin42245 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/60601-h/images/ilo4.jpgbin39943 -> 0 bytes
19 files changed, 17 insertions, 45584 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e2663ee
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60601 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60601)
diff --git a/old/60601-0.txt b/old/60601-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index ebc85d4..0000000
--- a/old/60601-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9874 +0,0 @@
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 60601 ***
-
- TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
-
-
-Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
-A number of words in this book have both hyphenated and non-hyphenated
-variants. For the words with both variants present the one more used
-has been kept.
-
-Obvious punctuation and other printing errors have been corrected.
-
-The book cover was modified by the Transcriber and has been put in the
-public domain.
-
-The Transcriber would like to point out to what are considered a couple
-of translation inaccuracies from the original Italian language version.
-
-In page 59 the text reads:
-
-"I know of no marsh capable of provoking in human pulses a fever more
-violent that that which at times steals up to us from the shadows of a
-silent canal."
-
-While in the Italian edition (Publisher: Milano Fratelli Treves; year:
-1900), the text reads:
-
-"Io non conosco palude capace di provocare in polsi umani una febbre
-più violenta di quella che sentimmo talvolta venire verso di noi
-all'improvviso dall'ombra di un canale taciturno."
-
-The Transcriber thinks a more adequate translation would be:
-
-"I know of no marsh capable of causing a fever in human pulses more
-violent than the one we sometimes hear coming towards us suddenly from
-the shadow of a taciturn channel."
-
-In page 195 the text reads:
-
-"He had astonished even himself by that sudden apparition, that
-unexpected discovery which illumined the shadows of his mind, because
-exterior reality, and almost tangible."
-
-While in the Italian edition the text reads:
-
-"Si stupiva egli medessimo di quell'apparizione subitanea, di quella
-improvvisa scoperta che, illuminandosi nell buio del suo spirito si
-esternava e quasi diveniva tangibile."
-
-The Transcriber thinks a more adequate translation would be:
-
-"He was surprised himself by that sudden appearance, of that sudden
-discovery that, illuminating itself in the darkness of his spirit, it
-became external and almost became tangible."
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
- THE LITERATURE OF ITALY
-
- consists of sixteen volumes, of which
- this one forms a part. For full particulars
- of the edition see the Official
- Certificate bound in the volume entitled
-
- "A HISTORY OF ITALIAN
- LITERATURE."
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
- Literature of Italy
- 1265 1907.
-
- Edited by Rossiter Johnson and
- Dora Knowlton Ranous
-
- With a General Introduction by William
- Michael Rossetti and Special Introductions
- by James, Cardinal Gibbons,
- Charles Eliot Norton, S. G. W. Benjamin,
- William S, Walsh, Maurice
- Francis Egan, and others
-
- New translations, and former renderings
- compared and revised
-
- Translators: James C. Brogan, Lord Charlemont,
- Geoffrey Chaucer, Hartley Coleridge,
- Florence Kendrick Cooper, Lady Dacre,
- Theodore Dwight, Edward Fairfax, Ugo
- Foscolo, G. A. Greene, Sir Thomas Hoby,
- William Dean Howells, Luigi Monti, Evangeline
- M. O'Connor, Thomas Okey, Dora
- Knowlton Ranous, Thomas Roscoe, William
- Stewart Rose, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William
- Michael Rossetti, John Addington
- Symonds, William S. Walsh, William
- Wordsworth, Sir Thomas Wyatt
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- THE FLAME
- (_IL FUOCO_)
-
- BY
-
-
- GABRIELE D'ANNUNZIO
-
- TRANSLATED BY DORA KNOWLTON RANOUS
-
- .... _fa come natura face in foco_.
-
- --_DANTE_
-
-
- THE NATIONAL ALUMNI
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1907, BY
- THE NATIONAL ALUMNI
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- INTRODUCTION ix
-
-
- BOOK I
-
- THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME.
-
-
- CHAPTER I--The Bells of San Marco 1
-
- CHAPTER II--The Face of Truth 30
-
- CHAPTER III--The Nuptials of Autumn and Venice 40
-
- CHAPTER IV--The Spirit of Melody 67
-
- CHAPTER V--The Epiphany of the Flame 77
-
- CHAPTER VI--The Poet's Dream 95
-
- CHAPTER VII--The Promise 123
-
- CHAPTER VIII--"To Create with Joy!" 134
-
-
- BOOK II
-
- THE EMPIRE OF SILENCE.
-
-
- CHAPTER I--"In Time!" 147
-
- CHAPTER II--After the Storm 156
-
- CHAPTER III--A Fallen Giant 173
-
- CHAPTER IV--The Master's Vision 181
-
- CHAPTER V--Sofia 201
-
- CHAPTER VI--A Brother to Orpheus 209
-
- CHAPTER VII--Only One Condition 221
-
- CHAPTER VIII--Illusions 231
-
- CHAPTER IX--The Labyrinth 239
-
- CHAPTER X--The Power of the Flame 262
-
- CHAPTER XI--Reminiscence 270
-
- CHAPTER XII--Cassandra's Reincarnation 291
-
- CHAPTER XIII--The Story of the Archorgan 304
-
- CHAPTER XIV--The World's Bereavement 319
-
- CHAPTER XV--The Last Farewell 333
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- "O espousals of Paris, fatal to the beloved!"--(Page 298) Frontispiece
-
- He gazed deep into her eyes, and saw that she was as pale
- as if her blood had been sapped to nourish the rich
- fruits of the garden 130
-
- He watched the woman turning and running like a mad
- creature along the dark, delusive paths 259
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-Gabriele D'Annunzio, poet, novelist, and dramatist, was born in 1864,
-on the yacht _Irene_ near Pescara in the Abruzzi, his mother being the
-Duchess Maria Galesse of Rome. His education was begun in the College
-of Prato, in Tuscany, and finished in the University of Rome. His mind
-early showed signs of extraordinary power and brilliant versatility;
-he studied art and produced very creditable work while a mere lad,
-and at the age of sixteen he published his first poem, _Primo Vere_,
-which attracted flattering attention and caused him to be hailed as an
-infant prodigy. In 1880 he went to Rome and became a contributor to
-the _Cronaca Bizantina_, a magazine of art and literature. He remained
-in Rome three years, producing in that time _Terra vergine_ ("Virgin
-Soil"), _Canto novo_ ("New Song"), and _Intermezzo di rime_ ("Intervals
-of Rhyme"), all of which were received with admiration and amazement,
-and with not a little criticism for their unconventional boldness of
-expression.
-
-D'Annunzio left Rome in 1884 and returned to his native hills, where
-he wrote _Il libro delle vergine_ ("The Book of the Virgins") in 1884;
-_San Pantaleone_ (1886), and _Isottèo Guttadauro_. Then, abandoning
-his revolutionary and realistic though splendid and intoxicating
-poetry for prose, the young genius next surprised his public with a
-novel, _Giovanni Episcopo_, followed by _Il Piacere_ ("The Child of
-Pleasure"), in 1889. The former is a strong yet repelling story of
-crude brutalism, told by a victim of relentless fate; the latter is a
-kind of poem in prose, in which there is something above mere facility
-of literary touch; he shows the power of the master poet or painter to
-see the world at a glance, and with a dextrous hand to draw for eyes
-less keen that world in all its changeful aspects.
-
-His next important novel, _Il trionfo della morte_ ("The Triumph of
-Death") was produced in 1896. This brought upon him a storm of mingled
-applause and criticism--admiration for its marvelous beauty of literary
-expression, condemnation of the realistic study of a degenerate whose
-sins lead him to suicide. But, with a proud defiance of criticism, with
-eyes fixed only on his art, he dared after this achievement to write
-the self-revelatory novel that is known as his masterpiece--_Il fuoco_
-("The Flame"). In this great novel, which may fairly be called unique,
-we recognize the personification of a renascence of Latin genius. Under
-the thinnest veil of disguise, the author presents his own figure and
-that of one of the world's greatest tragic actresses, revealing the
-most intimate details of their well known friendship. On this picture
-of the most romantic of love-affairs, in Venice, the most romantic
-of cities, he has lavished his finest strokes of genius, writing of
-feminine nature with rare truth and skill, and an exquisite intuition
-as to the workings of a woman's mind and the throbbings of her heart.
-
-Besides his poems and novels, D'Annunzio has written several plays,
-the best known being _La Gioconda_ ("Joy"), _La Gloria_ ("Glory"), _La
-morta città_ ("The City of the Dead"), and _Francesca da Rimini_. He is
-unquestionably the greatest Italian writer of to-day, and few works of
-Italian fiction appear that do not show something of his influence. A
-European critic of keen discernment says: "Read his works, all ye men
-and women for whom life has no secrets and truth has no terror."
-
- D. K. R.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK I
-
- THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME
-
-
-
-
- TO TIME AND TO HOPE
-
-
- _Without hope, it is impossible to find the unhoped-for._
-
- --_HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS._
-
-
- _He who sings to the god a song of hope shall see his wish
- accomplished._
-
- --_ÆSCHYLUS OF ELEUSIS._
-
-
- _Time is the father of miracles._
-
- --_HARIRI DI BASRA._
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- THE BELLS OF SAN MARCO
-
-
-"Stelio, does not your heart quail a little, for the first time?"
-inquired La Foscarina, with a fleeting smile, as she touched the hand
-of the taciturn friend seated beside her. "I see that you are pale and
-thoughtful. Yet this is a beautiful evening for the triumph of a great
-poet."
-
-With an all-comprehensive glance, she looked around at all the beauty
-of this last twilight of September. In the dark wells of her eyes were
-reflected the circles of light made by the oar as it flashed in the
-water, which was illuminated by the glittering angels that shone from
-afar on the campaniles of San Marco and San Giorgio Maggiore.
-
-"As always," she went on, in her sweetest tones, "as always, everything
-is in your favor. On such an evening as this, what mortal could shut
-out from his mind the dreams that you may choose to evoke by the magic
-of your words? Do you not feel already that the multitude is well
-disposed to receive your revelation?"
-
-Thus, delicately, she flattered her friend; thus she pleased herself by
-exalting him with continual praise.
-
-"It is impossible to imagine a more magnificent and unique festival
-than this, to persuade so disdainful a poet as you to come forth from
-his ivory tower. For you was reserved this rare joy; to communicate
-for the first time with the people in a sovereign place like the Hall
-of the Greater Council, from the platform where once the Doge harangued
-the assembled patricians, with the _Paradiso_ of Tintoretto for a
-background, and overhead the _Gloria_ of Veronese."
-
-Stelio Effrena looked long and searchingly into her eyes.
-
-"Do you wish to intoxicate me?" he said, with a sudden laugh. "Your
-words remind me of the soothing cup offered to a man on his way to the
-scaffold. Ah, well, my friend, it is true: I own that my heart quails a
-little."
-
-The sound of applause rose from the Traghetto di San Gregorio,
-echoed through the Grand Canal, reverberating among the porphyry and
-serpentine discs ornamenting the ancient mansion of the Dario, which
-now leaned over slightly, like a decrepit courtesan loaded with her
-jewels.
-
-The royal barge passed.
-
-"There is the one person among your audience whom etiquette demands
-that you shall crown with some of your flowers of oratory," pursued the
-charming flatterer, alluding to the Queen. "I believe that, in one of
-your earlier books, you own to a taste and respect for ceremonials. One
-of your most extraordinary flights of fancy is that description of a
-day of Charles the Second, King of Spain."
-
-When the royal barge passed the gondola, the man and the woman saluted
-it. The Queen, recognizing the poet, the author of _Persephone_,
-and the distinguished tragic actress, turned to gaze at them with a
-movement of instinctive curiosity. She was blonde and rosy, and her
-face was lighted by her ever-ready smile, as she looked out from the
-cloud of creamy Buranesi laces clinging around her shoulders. Beside
-her sat Andriana Duodo, the patroness of Burano, where, on that
-industrious little island, she cultivated flax, and raised the most
-marvelous old-fashioned flowers.
-
-"Does it not seem to you that the smiles of those two women are so
-similar as to be twin-like?" said La Foscarina, gazing at the silvery
-ripples in the wake of the barge, wherein the double light seemed to
-prolong its self.
-
-"The Countess has a magnificent and ingenuous soul--one of those
-rare Venetian spirits that preserve their warmth, as their ancient
-paintings retain their vivid color," said Stelio, earnestly, as if
-in gratitude. "I have an absolute devotion for her sensitive hands.
-They fairly quiver with pleasure when they touch rare lace or rich
-velvet, lingering over the texture with a grace that seems almost shy
-of betraying such voluptuous joy in mere touch. One day, when I had
-accompanied her to the gallery of the Academia, she stopped before
-the _Massacre des Innocents_ by the first Bonifazio. You recollect,
-of course, the green robe of the prostrate woman that one of Herod's
-soldiers is about to kill--a thing impossible to forget! She paused
-long before it, seeming fairly to radiate from her own person the
-perfect joy that filled her senses; then she said to me, 'Let us leave
-this place now, Effrena! Take me away, but I must leave my eyes on
-that robe--I cannot look at anything more!' Ah, do not smile at her,
-dear friend! She was perfectly simple and sincere in saying that: she
-really did leave her spiritual vision behind her on that bit of canvas
-which Art, with a touch of color, has made the center of an infinitely
-pleasurable mystery. Besides, it was really a blind woman that I
-accompanied there, but I was suddenly seized with reverence for the
-privileged soul for whom the magic of color had power to abolish for
-the moment all memory of commonplace life, and to cut off all other
-worldly communication. What should you call such a state of mind? A
-filling of life's goblet to the brim, it seems to me. It is exactly
-what I should like to do to-night, if I were not discouraged."
-
-A new clamor, louder and more prolonged, rose between the two guardian
-columns of granite, as the royal barge approached the bank of the
-Piazzetta, now black with the waiting throng. During the slight pause
-that followed, the movement of the crowd shifted, like the changing of
-eddies in a current, and all the galleries of the Palace of the Doges
-were filled with a confused buzzing, like the mysterious murmur within
-a sea-shell. Suddenly the buzz rose to a shout, rending the clear air
-and finally dying away in the gathering twilight. The multitude seemed
-to realize the divinity of that poetic hour, amid those incomparable
-surroundings; and perhaps, in its acclaim to youthful royalty and
-beauty, it expressed a vague longing to forget its prosaic existence,
-and to revel in the gift of eternal poetry with which its storied walls
-and waters were endowed.
-
-"Do you know, Perdita," Stelio suddenly exclaimed, "of any other place
-in the world that possesses, like Venice, at certain times, the power
-to stimulate all the forces of human life by the exaltation of all
-desires to a feverish intensity? Do you know of any more irresistible
-temptress?"
-
-She whom he called Perdita did not reply; she bent her head as if from
-desire to concentrate her thoughts; but through all her being she felt
-the indefinable thrill always felt at the sound of the voice of her
-friend when it revealed the vehemence and passionate soul toward which
-this woman was drawn by a mingling of love and terror that had no limit.
-
-"Peace! Oblivion! Do you find them down there, at the end of that
-deserted canal, when you go home exhausted and fevered after inhaling
-the commingled breath of the crowd that you are able to rouse to wild
-enthusiasm by a single gesture? As for myself, when I float on these
-dead waters, I feel my vital powers increase with bewildering rapidity;
-at certain times my brain seems on fire, as if I were in delirium."
-
-"The flame and the power are within yourself, Stelio," said La
-Foscarina almost humbly, without raising her eyes.
-
-He was silent, absorbed. Poetic imagery and impetuous music took form
-within his brain, as if by virtue of some magic fecundation; and his
-spirit reveled in the unexpected delight of that flood of inspiration.
-
-It was still that hour which, in one of his books, he had called
-"Titian's hour," because all things glowed with a rich golden light,
-like the nude figures of that great painter, appearing almost to
-illumine the sky rather than to receive light from it.
-
-"Perdita," said the poet, who, at the sight of so many things
-multiplying their beauties around him, was conscious of a kind of
-intellectual ecstasy, "does it not seem to you that we are following
-the funeral train of the dead Summer? There she lies in her funereal
-barge, robed in golden draperies, like a Doge's wife, like a Loredana,
-a Morosina, or a Soranza of the golden age; and her cortège conducts
-her toward the Isle of Murano, where some lord of the flames will place
-her in a coffin of opaline crystal, so that, submerged in the waters of
-the lagoon, she can, at least, through her transparent eyelids, behold
-the supple movement of the seaweed, and thus fancy herself enwrapped in
-the undulating tresses of her own hair, while waiting for the sun of
-resurrection to dawn."
-
-A spontaneous smile spread over La Foscarina's face, born in her eyes,
-which glowed as if they really had beheld the vision of the beautiful
-dead.
-
-"Do you know, Perdita," resumed Stelio, after a moment's pause, during
-which both gazed at a file of small boats filled with fruit, floating
-upon the water like great baskets, "do you know anything about a
-particularly pretty detail in the chronicles of the Doges? The Doge's
-wife, to meet the expenses of her robes of ceremony, enjoyed a certain
-percentage of the tax on fruit. Does not this seem delightfully
-appropriate? The fruits of these isles clothed her in gold and crowned
-her with pearls! Pomona paying tribute to Arachne! an allegory that
-Paolo Veronese might well have painted on the dome of the Vestiario.
-When I conjure up the figure of the noble lady, tall and erect in her
-high, jeweled buskins, it pleases me to think that something fresh
-and rustic is connected with the rich folds of her heavy brocade:
-the tribute of the fruits. What a savor this seems to add to her
-magnificence! Only fancy, my friend, that these figs and grapes of the
-new-come Autumn are the price of the golden robe that covers the dead
-Summer."
-
-"What delightful fancies, Stelio!" said La Foscarina, whose face
-became young again when she smiled, as a child to whom one shows a
-picture-book. "Who was it that once called you the Image-maker?"
-
-"Ah--images!" said the poet, his fancy warming. "In Venice, just as one
-feels everything to a musical rhythm, so he thinks of everything in
-poetic imagery. They come to us from everywhere, innumerable, diverse,
-more real and living to our minds than the persons we elbow in these
-narrow streets. In studying them, we can lose ourselves in the depths
-of their haunting eyes, and divine, by the curve of their lips, what
-they would say to us. Some art tyrannical as imperious mistresses, and
-hold us long beneath the yoke of their power. Others are enfolded in a
-veil, like timid virgins, or are tightly swaddled, like infants; and
-only he that knows how to rend their veils can lead them to the perfect
-life. This morning, when I awakened, my soul was filled with images;
-it was like a beautiful tree with its branches laden with chrysalides."
-
-He paused, with a laugh.
-
-"If they come forth from their prison to-night," he added, "I am saved;
-if they do not, I am lost!"
-
-"Lost?" said La Foscarina, gazing earnestly at him, with eyes so full
-of confidence that his heart went out to her in gratitude. "No, Stelio,
-you will not lose yourself. You are always sure of yourself; you
-bear your own destiny in your hands. I think your mother never could
-have felt any apprehension on your account, even in the most serious
-circumstances. Is not that true? Pride is the only thing that makes
-your heart falter."
-
-"Ah, sweet friend, how I love you--how I thank you for saying that!"
-said the poet frankly, taking her hand. "You continually foster my
-pride and encourage me to believe that I have already acquired those
-virtues to which I never cease to aspire. Sometimes you seem to have
-the power of conferring I know not what divine quality on the things
-that are born in my soul, and of making them appear adorable in my
-own eyes. Sometimes, too, you fill me with the awe-struck wonder of
-the sculptor who, having in the evening borne to the sacred temple
-the marble gods still warm from his hands--I might say still clinging
-to the fingers that moulded them--the next day beholds them standing
-on their pedestals, surrounded by clouds of incense, and seeming to
-exhale divinity from every pore of the insensate matter from which
-he fashioned them with his perishable hands. And so, each time that
-Fortune grants me the favor of being near you, I realize that you are
-necessary to my life, although, during our long separations, I can
-live without you, and you without me, despite the fact that both of
-us well know what splendors would be born of the perfect union of our
-lives. Thus, knowing the full value of that which you give me, and,
-still more, of that which you could give me, I think of you as lost to
-me; and, by that name which it pleases my fancy to call you, I try to
-express at the same time this consciousness and this regret."
-
-He interrupted himself, because he felt a quiver of the hand he clasped
-in his own.
-
-"When I call you 'Perdita,'" he resumed softly, after a pause, "I fancy
-that you can see my desire approaching you, with a deadly blade deep in
-its palpitating side. Even should it reach you, the chill of death has
-already touched its audacious hand."
-
-The woman experienced an oft-felt suffering as she listened to the
-poetic words that flowed from her friend's lips with a spontaneity that
-proved them sincere. Again she felt an agitation and a terror that she
-knew not how to define. She felt that she was slipping out of her own
-life, and was transported into a kind of fictitious life, intense and
-hallucinating, where even to breathe was difficult. Drawn into that
-atmosphere, as fiery as the glow surrounding a lighted forge, she felt
-that she should be capable of passing through any transfigurations that
-it might please the master of her spirit to work in her to satisfy his
-continual craving for poetry and beauty. She comprehended that, in his
-idealistic mind, her own image resembled that of the dead Summer,
-wrapped in its opalescent cerements. She felt a childish desire to gaze
-into the poet's eyes as in a mirror, to contemplate the likeness of her
-real self.
-
-That which rendered her melancholy most painful, was the recognition of
-a vague resemblance between this agitation and the anxiety that always
-possessed her when she sank her own personality in that of some sublime
-creation of dramatic art. Was not this man drawing her, in fact, into
-a similar region of higher but artificial life; and, that she might
-figure there without remembrance of her everyday self, did he not seek
-to cover her with a splendid disguise? But, while she was unable to
-maintain so great a degree of intensity except by a painful effort, she
-knew that he dwelt within that state of exaltation with perfect ease,
-as if in his natural atmosphere, ceaselessly enjoying a marvelous world
-of fancy, which he could renew or change at his own pleasure.
-
-He had come to realize in himself the intimate union of art and
-of life, thus finding, in the depths of his own soul, a source of
-perpetual harmony. He had become able to maintain within himself,
-without lapse, the mysterious psychological condition that engenders
-works of beauty, and thus, at a single stroke, to crystallize into
-ideal types the fleeting figures of his varied existence. It was to
-celebrate this conquest over his own mental powers that he put the
-following words into the mouth of one of his heroes: "I witnessed
-within myself the continual genesis of a higher life, wherein all
-appearances metamorphosed themselves as if reflected in a magic
-mirror." Endowed with an extraordinary linguistic facility, he could
-instantly translate into words the most complicated workings of his
-mind, with a precision so exact and vivid that sometimes, as soon
-as expressed, they seemed not to be his own, having been rendered
-objective by the isolating power of style. His clear and penetrating
-voice, which, so to speak, seemed to define each word as distinctly
-as if it were a note of music, enhanced still more this peculiar
-quality of his speech, so that those who heard him speak for the
-first time experienced an ambiguous feeling--a mingling of admiration
-and aversion, because he revealed his own personality in a manner so
-strongly marked that it seemed to denote an intention to demonstrate
-the existence of a profound and impassable difference between himself
-and his listeners. But as his sensibility equaled his intelligence, it
-was easy for those that knew him well and liked him to absorb, through
-his crystalline speech, the glow of his vehement and passionate soul.
-These knew how illimitable was his power to feel and to dream, and from
-what fiery source sprang the beautiful images into which he converted
-the substance of his inner life.
-
-She whom he called Perdita knew it well; and, as a pious soul awaits
-from God some supernatural help that shall work out its salvation, so
-she seemed to be waiting for him to put her into the state of grace
-necessary to enable her to elevate and maintain herself in those
-fiery regions toward which a mad desire to be consumed impelled her,
-despairing as she was at the thought of her vanished youth, and the
-fear of finding herself left alone at last in a desert of ashes.
-
-"It is you now, Stelio," she said, with the slight smile she used to
-hide her sadness, "who wish to intoxicate me." She gently drew her hand
-from his. Then, to break the spell, she pointed to a loaded barge that
-was slowly approaching them, and said:
-
-"Look! Look at your pomegranates!"
-
-But her voice shook a little.
-
-Then, in the dreamy twilight, on the water as silvery-green as the
-leaves of the willow, they watched the passing boat overflowing with
-that emblematic fruit which suggests things rich and hidden: caskets
-of red leather, surmounted by the crown of a royal donor; some closed,
-others half-open, revealing their close-packed gems.
-
-In a low tone, the tragic actress repeated the words addressed by Hades
-to Persephone in the sacred drama, at the moment when the daughter of
-Demeter tastes the fatal pomegranate:
-
- _Quando tu coglierai il colchico in fiore su'l molle
- Prato terrestre, presso la madre dal cerulo peplo._
-
-"Ah, Perdita! how well you know how to throw a shadow into your voice!"
-interrupted the poet, feeling the harmony of the twilight that seemed
-to throw a mystic vagueness over the syllables of his lines. "How well
-you know how to become nocturnal, even before the evening is upon us!
-Do you recall the scene where Persephone is on the point of throwing
-herself into Erebus, to the wailing of the chorus of the Oceanides?
-Her face is like yours when a shadow passes over it. Her crowned head
-leans backward, as she stands rigidly erect in her saffron-colored
-peplum; and the very spirit of the night seems flowing into her
-bloodless flesh, deepening under her chin, in the hollows of her eyes
-and around her nostrils, giving her face the look of a tragic mask.
-It is your mask, Perdita! While I was composing my _Mystery_, the
-remembrance of you aided me in evoking her divine person. That little
-saffron-velvet ribbon you so often wear around your neck gave me the
-note for Persephone's peplum. And one evening at your house, when I
-was about to take leave of you at the threshold of a room where the
-lamps were not yet lighted--an agitated evening of last autumn, you
-remember?--you succeeded, with a single movement, in bringing to full
-light in my being the creature that had lain long there undeveloped;
-and then, without dreaming that you had brought about that sudden
-birth, you shut yourself again within the solitary obscurity of your
-own Erebus. Ah, I was certain that I could hear you sob, yet a torrent
-of uncontrollable joy ran through my veins. I never have spoken to you
-of this before, have I? I ought to have consecrated my work to you, as
-to an ideal Lucina."
-
-She shrank under the eyes of the master of her spirit; she suffered
-because of that mask which he admired on her face, and because of that
-strange joy that she was aware was continually up-springing within him,
-like a perpetually playing fountain. She felt oppressed by her own
-personality; troubled because of her too-expressive face, the muscles
-of which possessed a strange power of mimicry; pained to think of
-that involuntary art which governed the significance of her gestures,
-and of that expressive shadow which sometimes on the stage, during a
-moment of anxious silence, she knew how to throw over her face like a
-veil of grief--that shadow which now threatened to remain among the
-lines traced by time on the face that was no longer young. She suffered
-cruelly by the hand she adored--that hand so delicate and noble which,
-even with a gift or a caress, had power to hurt her.
-
-"Do you not believe, Perdita," Stelio continued after another pause,
-"in the occult beneficence of signs? I do not mean astral science or
-horoscopic signs. I mean that, like those that believe themselves
-under the influence of one planet or another, we can create an ideal
-correspondence between our own soul and some terrestrial object, in
-such a way that this object, becoming impregnated, little by little,
-with the essence of ourselves, and being magnified by our illusion,
-finally becomes for us the representative sign of our unknown destiny,
-and takes on an aspect of mystery when it appears to us in certain
-crises of our life. This is the secret whereby we may restore to our
-withering hearts something of their pristine freshness. I know by
-experience the beneficial effect we may derive from intense communion
-with some earthly object. From time to time it is necessary for our
-natures to become like a hamadryad, in order to feel within us the
-circulation of new energy drawn from the source of life. Of course
-you understand that I am thinking of your words just now, when the
-boat passed. You expressed the same idea when you said 'Look at
-your pomegranates!' For you, and for everyone that loves me, the
-pomegranate never can be anything but _mine_. For you and for them,
-the idea of my personality is indissolubly linked to that fruit which
-I have chosen for an emblem, and which I have charged with significant
-ideals, more numerous than its seeds. Had I lived in the times when
-men excavated the Grecian marbles and found under the soil the still
-damp roots of ancient fables, no painter could have represented me on
-his canvas without putting in my hand the Punic apple. To sever from
-my person that symbol would have seemed to the ingenuous artist like
-the amputation of a living member, for, to his pagan imagination, the
-fruit would have seemed to grow to my hand as to its natural branch.
-In short, he would not have conceived me in any different way than he
-thought of Hyacinthus or Narcissus or Ciparissus, all three of whom
-would appear to him as youths symbolized by a plant. But, even in our
-day, a few lively and warm imaginations exist that comprehend all the
-meaning and enjoy all the savor of my invention.
-
-"You, yourself, Perdita, do you not delight in cultivating in your
-garden a pomegranate, the beautiful 'Effrenian' tree, that you may
-every summer watch me blossom and bring forth fruit? In one of your
-letters, flying to me like a winged messenger, you described to me
-the graceful ceremony of decorating the tree with garlands the day
-you received the first copy of _Persephone_. So, for you, and for
-those that love me, I have in reality renewed an ancient myth when,
-in fancy, I have assimilated myself with a form of eternal Nature.
-And when I am dead (and may Nature grant that I am able to manifest
-my whole self in my work before I die!), my disciples will honor me
-under a symbol of that tree; and in the sharp outline of the leaf, in
-the flame of the flower, and in the hidden treasure of the ripe fruit,
-they will recognize certain qualities of my art. By that leaf, by that
-flower and fruit, as if by a posthumous teaching of the master, their
-minds will be formed to a similar sharpness, flame-like intensity, and
-treasured richness.
-
-"You will see now, Perdita, what is the real beneficence of symbols.
-By affinity, I am led to develop myself in accord with the magnificent
-genius of the plant which it pleases me to fancy as the symbol of my
-aspirations toward a full, rich life. This arboreous image of myself
-suffices to assure me that my powers should follow nature in order
-to attain naturally the end for which they were created. 'Nature
-has disposed me thus' is the epigraph of Leonardo da Vinci, which I
-placed on the title-page of my first book; and the pomegranate, as it
-continually blossoms and bears its fruit, repeats to me that simple
-phrase over and over again. We obey only the laws written in our own
-substance, and by reason of this we shall remain intact in the midst of
-dissolution, in the unity and plenitude that make our joy. No discord
-exists between my art and my life."
-
-He spoke with perfect freedom, as if the mind of the listening woman
-were a chalice into which he poured his thoughts till it was full to
-the brim. An intellectual felicity filled him, blended with a vague
-consciousness of the mysterious action whereby his mind was preparing
-itself for the effort it was soon to make. From time to time, as if
-by a lightning flash, his mental vision beheld, as he bent toward his
-beloved friend and listened to the beat of the oar in the silence of
-the great estuary, the crowd, with its thousand faces, gathering in the
-vast hall; and he felt a rapid throbbing of his heart.
-
-"It is a very singular thing, Perdita," said he, gazing at the pale
-distance of the waters, "to observe how readily chance aids our
-imagination in ascribing an element of mystery to the conjunction of
-certain appearances with the aim we have fancied. I do not understand
-the reason why the poets of to-day are so indignant at the vulgarity
-of the present, and complain that they were born either too late
-or too early. I am convinced that to-day, as always, every man of
-intelligence has power to create for himself his own beautiful fable
-of life. We should study the confused whirl of life with the same
-lively imagination that Leonardo encouraged in his disciples when
-he advised them to study the stains on the wall, the ashes on the
-hearth, the clouds, even mud, and similar objects, in order to find
-there 'wonderful inventions' and 'infinite things.' In the same way,
-he declared, one can find in the sound of bells every name and every
-word that can be imagined. That great master knew well that chance--as
-the sponge of Apelles had already shown--is always the friend of the
-ingenious artist. For example, I never cease to be astonished at the
-ease and grace with which chance favors the harmonious development of
-my inventions. Do you not believe that the dark god Hades forced his
-bride to eat the seven seeds of the pomegranate in order to furnish me
-with the subject of a masterpiece?"
-
-He interrupted himself with one of the bursts of boyish laughter that
-revealed so clearly the persistence of natural joyousness in the depths
-of his heart.
-
-"See, Perdita," he continued, still laughing, "whether I am not
-right. Early in October last year I was invited to Burano by Donna
-Andriana Duodo. We passed the morning in her flax-fields, and in the
-afternoon we went to visit Torcello. At that time I was beginning to
-saturate myself with the mythical story of Persephone, and already my
-poem had begun to take shape in my brain, and it seemed to me that I
-was floating on the waters of the Styx, and that I should arrive at
-the abode of the Manes. Never had I experienced a purer and sweeter
-understanding of death, and this feeling seemed to render me so
-ethereal that I fancied I could tread the field of asphodel without
-leaving there the least trace of my footsteps. The air was damp, warm,
-the sky was gray; the canals wound between the banks covered with
-half-faded verdure. (You know Torcello only by sunlight, perhaps.) But
-all this time some one was talking, arguing, and declaiming in Charon's
-boat. The sound of praise roused me from my reverie. Francesco di Lizo
-was speaking of me, regretting that such an artist, so magnificently
-sensual--I quote his own words--should be obliged to live apart from
-the obtuse and hostile throng, and to celebrate the feast of sound,
-color, and form in the solitary palace of his dream. He abandoned
-himself to a lyric impulse, recalling the joyous and splendid life
-of the Venetian painters, the popular favor that swept them, like a
-whirlwind, up to the heights of the glory, beauty, strength and joy
-which they multiplied around them in producing countless images on
-walls and domes.
-
-"Then Donna Andriana said: 'Well, I promise solemnly that Stelio
-Effrena shall have his triumphal feast in Venice.' The Dogaressa had
-spoken! At that moment I beheld, on the low, mossy bank, a pomegranate
-laden with fruit, which, like the hallucination of a vision, broke
-the infinite squalor of that place. Donna Orsetta Contarini, who was
-sitting beside me, uttered a cry of delight, and held out her hands, as
-impatient as her lips. Nothing pleases me so much as a frank, strong
-expression of desire. 'I adore pomegranates!' she cried, and she seemed
-fairly to be tasting its fine, sharp flavor. She was as childish as
-her name is archaic. Her cry moved me; but Andrea Contarini appeared
-severely to disapprove of his wife's vivacity. He seemed to me like a
-Hades that has little faith in the mnemonic virtue of the seven seeds
-as applied to legitimate marriage. But the boatmen, too, were stirred
-with sympathy, and rowed toward the shore, approaching it so close that
-I was able to jump out first, and I began at once to despoil the tree,
-my brother. It was another case, albeit from the lips of a pagan of the
-words of the Last Supper: 'Take, eat, this is my body, which is given
-for you. Do this in remembrance of me.' How does this seem to you,
-Perdita? Do not think that I am inventing this story. I assure you it
-is true."
-
-La Foscarina allowed herself to be fascinated by the free and elegant
-fancy whereby he exercised the quickness of his wit and his facility
-of expression. In his words was something intoxicating, variable, and
-vigorous, which suggested to her mind the double and diverse image of
-water and of fire.
-
-"Now," he continued, "Donna Andriana has kept her promise. Guided by
-that hereditary taste for magnificence which she shows so plainly,
-she has prepared a truly ducal feast in the Palace of the Doges,
-in imitation of those that were held there toward the end of the
-sixteenth century. She conceived the idea of rescuing from oblivion
-the _Ariadne_ of Benedetto Marcello, and of making her sigh in the
-same place where Tintoretto painted the daughter of Minos receiving
-the crown of stars from Aphrodite. Don't you recognize in the beauty
-of this idea the woman who wished to leave her dear eyes behind her
-on that ineffable green robe? Remember, too, that this _musicale_ in
-the Hall of the Greater Council has a historic precedent. In fifteen
-hundred seventy-three, in this same Hall, was performed a mythological
-composition by Cornelio Frangipani, with music by Claudio Merulo, in
-honor of his most Christian Majesty Henry Third. Own, Perdita, that my
-erudition astonishes you. Ah, if you only knew all that I have learned
-on that subject! I will read you my lecture on it, some day when you
-deserve a severe punishment!"
-
-"What! Are you not to read it to-night at the festival?" inquired La
-Foscarina in surprise, fearing that, with his well known heedlessness
-of engagements, Effrena had resolved to disappoint the expectant public.
-
-He understood her anxiety, and chose to amuse himself with it.
-
-"This evening," he replied, with tranquil assurance, "I shall take
-a sherbet in your garden, and delight my eyes with the sight of the
-pomegranate, with its jewels gleaming in the starlight."
-
-"Ah, Stelio! What do you mean?" she cried, half rising.
-
-In her words and movement was so keen a regret, and at the same time
-so strange an evocation of the expectant gathering, that his mind was
-troubled. The image of the formidable monster with innumerable human
-faces amid the gold and somber purple of the vast hall reappeared
-before his mental vision; in fancy he felt its fixed regard and hot
-breath. He realized also the peril he had resolved to face in trusting
-only to the inspiration of the moment, and felt a horror of a possible
-sudden mental obscurity, an unexpected confusion of his thought.
-
-"Reassure yourself," he said. "I was only jesting. I will go _ad
-bestias_, and I will go unarmed. Did you not see the sign reappear just
-now? Do you believe, after the miracle of Torcello, that it reappeared
-in vain? It has come to warn me again that the only attitude that
-suits me is the one to which Nature disposes me. Now, you well know, my
-friend, that I do not know how to speak of anything but myself. And so,
-from the throne of the Doges, I must speak to my listeners only of my
-own soul, under the veil of some seductive allegory, with the charm of
-flowing musical cadences. I purpose to do this extemporaneously, if the
-fiery spirit of Tintoretto will only inspire me, from the heights of
-his Paradise, with sufficient ardor and audacity. The risk tempts me.
-But into what a strange error I was about to fall, Perdita! When the
-Dogaressa announced the feast to me, and begged me to do the honors,
-I undertook to compose a dignified discourse, a really ceremonious
-effort in prose, ample and solemn as one of those great robes of state
-behind glass in the Correr Museum; not without making in the exordium a
-profound genuflexion to the Queen; nor omitting to weave an impressive
-garland for the head of the most serene Andriana Duodo! And for
-several days it has given me a curious pleasure to dwell in spiritual
-communion with a Venetian patrician of the sixteenth century, a master
-of letters like Cardinal Bembo, a member of the Academy Uracini or
-Adorni, a frequent visitor to the gardens of Murano and the hills of
-Asolo. Certain it is that I felt a marked resemblance between the turn
-of my periods and the massive gold frames that surround the paintings
-on the ceiling of the Hall of Council. But, alas! yesterday morning,
-when I arrived here, and, in passing along the Grand Canal, when I
-wished to steep my weariness in the damp, transparent shade where the
-marble still exhales the spirit of the night, I had a sudden impression
-that my papers were worth much less than the dead seaweed tossed by
-the tide, and they seemed as strange to me as the _Trionfi_ of Celio
-Magno and the _Favole Marittime_ of Anton Maria Consalvi, quoted and
-commented on in them by me. What should I do, then?"
-
-He threw around him an all-sweeping glance, as if exploring the waters
-and the sky in search of an invisible presence, or a newly arrived
-phantom. A yellowish light spread toward the solitary shores, which
-stood out in sharp lines like the dark veins in agate. Behind him,
-toward the Salute, the sky was scattered with light rosy and violet
-ribbon-like clouds, giving it the appearance of a glaucous sea, peopled
-with Medusas. From the gardens near the water descended the odor of
-foliage saturated with light and heat--an odor so heavy one might
-almost see it float on the waves like aromatic oil.
-
-"Do you feel the Autumn, Perdita?" Stelio asked his dreamy friend, in a
-penetrating voice.
-
-Again she had a vision of the dead Summer, enclosed within opalescent
-glass and sunk among the masses of seaweed.
-
-"Yes, I feel it--within myself!" she replied, with a melancholy smile.
-
-"Did you not see it last night, when it descended upon the city? Where
-were you last night, at sunset?"
-
-"In a garden of the Giudecca."
-
-"I was here, on the Riva. When human eyes have contemplated such a
-spectacle of joy and beauty, does it not seem to you that the eyelids
-should close and seal themselves forever? I should like to speak
-to-night, Perdita, of these hidden, secret matters. I should like to
-celebrate within myself the nuptials of Venice and Autumn, in almost
-the same tonality that Tintoretto used when he painted the nuptials of
-Ariadne and Bacchus for the hall of the Anticollegio--azure, purple and
-gold. Last night an old germ of poetry suddenly blossomed in my soul.
-I recalled a fragment of a forgotten poem that I wrote when I began
-to write in _nona rima_, one September in my early youth, when I had
-come by sea to Venice for the first time. The title of the poem was
-simply 'The Allegory of Autumn,' and the god was no longer represented
-as crowned with vine-leaves, but with jewels, like one of Paolo
-Veronese's princes, his being aglow with passion, about to approach
-the Anadyomenean City, with her arms of marble and her thousand green
-girdles. But the idea had not at that time reached the right degree
-of intensity to be admitted to the realm of Art, and instinctively I
-gave up the effort to manifest it in its entirety. But, in an active
-mind, as in a fertile soil, no seed is lost; and now this idea returns
-to me at an opportune moment and urgently demands expression. What a
-just and mysterious fatality governs the mental world! It was necessary
-that I should respect that first germ in order to feel its multiplied
-virtues develop in me to-day. That Vinci, who looked deep into all
-things profound, certainly meant something of this kind in his fable of
-the grain of millet that says to the ant: 'If you will be kind enough
-to let me satisfy my desire to be born again, I will render myself to
-you again a hundredfold.' Admire the touch of grace in those fingers
-capable of breaking iron! Ah, he is always the incomparable master! How
-can I forget him for a time, that I may give myself to the Venetians?"
-
-The playful irony with which he had been speaking was suddenly
-extinguished in his last words, and again he seemed plunged in his own
-thoughts.
-
-"It is already late; the hour approaches; we must return," he said
-presently, rousing himself as if from a troubled dream, for he had seen
-reappear that formidable monster with the thousand human faces filling
-the depth and width of the great hall. "I must go back to the hotel in
-time to dress."
-
-Then, with a return of his boyish vanity, he thought of the eyes of the
-unknown women who would see him that evening for the first time.
-
-"To the Hotel Danieli," La Foscarina said to the boatman.
-
-While the dentellated iron of the prow swung around on the water, with
-a slow, animal-like movement, each felt a sadness different but equally
-painful at leaving behind them the infinite silence of the estuary,
-already overcome by darkness and death, and being compelled to return
-toward the magnificent and tempting city, whose canals, like the veins
-of a full-blooded woman, began to burn with the fever of night.
-
-They were quiet for some time, absorbed by their interior agitation,
-which shook each heart to it depths. And all things around them exalted
-the power of life in the man who wished to attract to himself the
-universe in order not to die, and in the woman, who would have thrown
-her oppressed soul to the flames in order to die pure.
-
-Both started at the unexpected sound of the salute at the lowering of
-the flag on board a man-of-war anchored before the gardens. At the
-summit of the black mass they saw the tricolored flag slide down the
-staff and fold itself up, like a heroic dream that suddenly vanishes.
-For a moment the silence seemed deeper, and the gondola glided into
-darker shadows, grazing the side of the armed colossus.
-
-"Do you know that Donatella Arvale who is to sing in _Ariadne_?" said
-Stelio suddenly.
-
-"She is the daughter of the great sculptor, Lorenzo Arvale," La
-Foscarina replied, after an instant of hesitation. "I have no dearer
-friend than she--and in fact she is my guest at present. You will meet
-her at my house this evening, after the festival."
-
-"Donna Andriana spoke to me of her last night as a prodigy. She said
-that the idea of resurrecting _Ariadne_ had come to her on hearing
-Donatella Arvale sing divinely the air: _Come mai puoi--Vedermi
-piangere?_ We shall have some divine music at your house, Perdita. Oh,
-how I long to hear it! Below there, in my solitude, for months and
-months, I hear only the music of the sea, which is too terrible, and my
-own music, which is too tumultuous."
-
-The bells of San Marco gave the signal for the Angelus, and their
-powerful notes spread in great waves of sound over the water,
-vibrating among the masts of the vessels, and creeping out upon the
-infinite reach of the lagoon. From San Giorgio Maggiore, San Giorgio
-dei Greci, San Giorgio degli Schiavoni, San Giovanni in Bragora,
-and San Moisé, from the Salute, the Redentore, and beyond, over the
-entire domain of the Evangelista, to the distant towers of the Madonna
-dell' Orto, San Giobbe and Sant' Andrea, tongues of bronze responded,
-mingling in one great chorus, seeming to extend over the silent stones
-and waters a single immense and invisible dome of metal, the vibration
-of which might almost reach the first sparkling stars. Those sacred
-voices seemed to lend to the City of Silence an ideal and infinite
-grandeur.
-
-"Can you still pray?" said Stelio in a softened voice, looking at the
-woman who, with eyes downcast, and hands clasped on her knees, seemed
-absorbed in a silent orison.
-
-She did not reply; she only pressed her lips together more closely.
-
-The minds of both were confused by the strange, the new image, and the
-new name, that had risen between them. Perturbation and passion seized
-them again, drew them near each other with such force that they dared
-not look into each other's eyes, for fear of what might be read there.
-
-"Shall I see you again this evening, after the festival?" said La
-Foscarina, with a slight unsteadiness in her voice. "Are you free?"
-
-She was eager now to hold him, to make him her prisoner, as if she
-feared he would escape her, as if she had hoped to find this night
-some magic philter that would bind him to her forever. And, though
-she comprehended now that the gift of all she had to give had become
-necessary, she realized only too clearly, nevertheless, even through
-the intoxication that bewildered her, the poverty of the gift so long
-withheld. And a mournful modesty, a mingling of terror and pride,
-contracted her slender frame.
-
-"I am free--and I am yours!" the young man answered in a half whisper,
-without raising his eyes to hers. "You know that nothing is worth to me
-what you can give."
-
-His heart, too, was stirred to its depths, with the two aims before his
-ambition toward which, this night, all his energy bent, like a powerful
-bow: the city and the woman, both tempting and mysterious, weary with
-having lived too much, and oppressed with too many loves; both were too
-much magnified by his imagination, and both were destined to disappoint
-his hopes.
-
-In the moment that followed, a violent wave of mingled regret and
-desire swept over him. The pride and intoxication of his hard,
-persistent labor; his boundless ambition, which had been curbed within
-a sphere too narrow for it; his intolerance of mediocrity, his demand
-for the privileges of princes; his superb and empurpled dreams; his
-insatiable need of preëminence, glory, pleasure--surged in his soul
-with a confusing tumult, dazzling and suffocating him. And the craving
-of his sadness inclined him to win the final love of this solitary,
-nomadic woman, the very folds of whose garments seemed to suggest
-the frenzy of the far-off multitudes, whom she had so often thrilled
-and shaken with her art, by a cry of passion, a sob of grief, or a
-death-like silence. An irresistible impulse drew him toward this woman,
-in whom he fancied he saw the traces of all emotions and experiences,
-toward that being, no longer young, who had known so many caresses, yet
-was unknown by him.
-
-"Is it a promise?" he murmured, bowing his head lower to conceal his
-agitation. "Ah! at last!"
-
-She made no reply, but fixed on him a gaze of almost mad intensity,
-which he did not see.
-
-They relapsed into silence again, while the reverberation of the bells
-passing overhead was so penetrating that they felt it in the roots of
-the hair, as from a quiver of their own flesh.
-
-"Good-by," said La Foscarina, as they were landing. "When we leave the
-hall, let us meet in the courtyard, near the second well, the nearest
-to the Molo."
-
-"Good-by," he answered. "Take some place where I may see you, among the
-crowd, when I speak my first word."
-
-A confused clamor arose from San Marco, above the sound of the bells,
-spread over the Piazzetta, and died away toward the Fortuna.
-
-"May all light be on your brow, Stelio!" said La Foscarina, holding out
-her burning hands to him passionately.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- THE FACE OF TRUTH
-
-
-When he entered the court by the south door, Stelio Effrena, seeing the
-black and white throng that swarmed up the Giants' Stairway, in the
-ruddy light of the torches fixed in the iron candelabra, felt a sudden
-sensation of repugnance, and paused at the entrance. He noted the
-contrast between this paltry crowd and the noble architecture which,
-magnified by the unusual nocturnal illumination, expressed, by their
-varied harmoniousness, the strength and the beauty of a day that was
-past.
-
-"Oh, how miserable!" he exclaimed, turning to the friends that
-accompanied him. "In the Hall of the Greater Council, from the throne
-of the Doges, how is it possible to find metaphors that will move a
-thousand starched shirt-bosoms? Let us go back; let us inhale the odor
-of the real crowd, the true crowd. The Queen has not yet left the royal
-palace. We have time enough."
-
-"Until the moment that I see you on the platform, I shall not feel sure
-that you will really speak," said Francesco de Lizo, laughing.
-
-"I believe that Stelio would prefer the balcony to the platform," said
-Piero Martello, wishing to flatter the master's taste for sedition,
-and his factious spirit, which he himself affected, in imitation.
-"He would like to harangue, between the two red columns, the mutinous
-people who threatened to set fire to the new _Procuratie_ and the old
-_Libreria_."
-
-"Yes, certainly," said Stelio, "if the harangue had power to prevent
-or to precipitate an irreparable act. I hold that we use the written
-word to create a pure form of beauty, which, even in an uncut book,
-is enclosed and shut in, as in a tabernacle that may be entered only
-by election, with the same premeditated will used in the breaking of
-a seal. But the spoken word, it seems to me, when it is addressed
-directly to a multitude, should have only action for its aim. On
-this condition alone can a proud spirit, without lessening itself in
-dignity, communicate with the masses by means of voice and gesture.
-Otherwise, his effort becomes merely histrionic. And so I repent
-bitterly of having accepted this function of an ornamental orator, who
-must not speak unless he speaks agreeably. Consider, I ask you, how
-humiliating for me is the honor that they think to do me, and consider
-also the uselessness of my speech. All these people, strangers here,
-have left their mediocre occupations, or their favorite amusements,
-to come and listen to me with the same vain and stupid curiosity that
-would lead them to listen to some new virtuoso. For the women that will
-listen to me, the art with which I have tied my cravat will be much
-more appreciated than the art with which I shall round my periods. And,
-after all, the only effect of my speech will be a clapping of hands,
-deadened by gloves, or a brief, discreet murmur, to which I shall
-reply with a gracious inclination of the head. Does it seem to you that
-I am about to attain the summit of my ambition?"
-
-"You are wrong," said Francesco de Lizo. "You should congratulate
-yourself for this happy occasion, which will allow you, for several
-hours, to impress the rhythm of art on the life of a forgetful city,
-and to make us dream of the splendors that might embellish our
-existence by a renewed union of Art with Life. If the man that built
-the Teatro di Festa were there, he would praise you for that harmony
-which he predicted. But the most wonderful thing about this affair is
-the fact that, notwithstanding your absence, and your ignorance of the
-project, the festival seems to have been prepared under the direct
-inspiration of your genius. This is the best proof that it is possible
-to restore and diffuse taste, even in the midst of the barbaric
-present. Your influence to-day is more powerful than you think. The
-lady who has desired to honor you--she that you call the Dogeressa--at
-every new idea that came to her, asked herself: 'Would it please
-Effrena?' If you only knew how many young and eager spirits put to
-themselves to-day the same question, when they consider the aspects of
-their inner life!"
-
-"And for whom should you speak, if not for them?" said Daniele Glauro,
-the fervent and sterile ascetic of Beauty, with that melodious voice
-which seemed to reflect the frank and inextinguishable ardor of the
-soul beloved by the master as one of the most faithful. "If, when you
-stand upon the platform, you will look about you, you will easily
-recognize the expression in their eyes. There are many of them, and
-some have come a long distance; they await your words with an eagerness
-that you perhaps do not understand. They are those who have imbibed
-the spirit of your poetry, who have breathed the fiery ether of your
-dream, and felt the grip of your chimera; those to whom you have
-announced the transfiguration of the world by the miracle of a new
-art. The number that you have attracted as an apostle of hope and of
-joy is very great. They have heard that you are to speak in Venice,
-in the Ducal Palace--one of the most splendid and glorious places on
-earth. They will be able to see you and listen to you for the first
-time, surrounded by the magnificence that seems to them an appropriate
-frame to your personality. The old Palace of the Doges, which has so
-long been wrapped in nocturnal darkness, is suddenly illuminated and
-aroused this night for you, and, to their minds, it is you alone that
-have had the power to rekindle these long-extinguished torches. Do you
-understand now the eagerness of their expectation? Does it not seem to
-you that to them only you ought to speak? The condition you impose on
-the man that harangues a multitude may be fulfilled. You can awaken an
-emotion in their breasts that shall turn them forever toward the Ideal.
-For how many of them, Stelio, you might make this Venetian night an
-experience never to be forgotten!"
-
-Stelio laid his hand on the prematurely bent shoulders of the mystic
-doctor, and, smiling, repeated Petrarch's words: "_Non ego loquar
-omnibus, sed tibi, sed mihi, et his_."
-
-He saw within himself the radiant eyes of his unknown disciples, and
-heard within his soul, in clear tones, the sound of his own exordium.
-
-"Nevertheless," he replied gayly, addressing Piero Martello, "it would
-be amusing to conjure up a tempest on this sea."
-
-They were standing under the arch, near a column, in contact with the
-noisy, unanimous crowd, which gathered in the Piazzetta, stretched out
-toward the Zecca, was swallowed up near the _Procuratie_, barred the
-Torre dell'Orologio, occupied every space like a wave without form, and
-communicated its living warmth to the marble columns and the walls,
-against which it surged in its violent movement. From time to time, a
-louder cry arose from the distance, at the farther end of the Piazza,
-swelling higher and stronger until it burst out near them like a clap
-of thunder, then diminishing until it died away in a murmur.
-
-"I should like to-night to find myself for the first time with a woman
-I loved, on a floating couch, over there, beyond the gardens, toward
-the Lido," said the romantic poet, Paris Eglano, a blond, beardless
-youth, whose handsome mouth, with its full red lips, contrasted with
-the almost angelic delicacy of his other features. "Within an hour,
-Venice will present to some Nero-like lover, hidden in a gondola, the
-spectacle of a city set on fire by its own delirium."
-
-Stelio smiled, noting to what extent his intimates had become imbued
-with his own spiritual essence, and how deep the seal of his own style
-had stamped itself on their minds. Suddenly the image of La Foscarina
-flashed across his mental vision: La Foscarina, poisoned by too much
-art, remembering too many amatory experiences, with the stamp of
-maturity and of corruption on her eloquent mouth, the aridity of the
-vein fever that burned in those hands that pressed out the juices of
-deceitful fruits, and the marks of a hundred masks on that face which
-had simulated the fury of all mortal passions. Thus she appeared to his
-ardent thought of her, and his heart throbbed faster as he pictured her
-emerging soon from the multitude, as from some element that enslaved
-her, and thought that from her glance he should draw the necessary
-inspiration.
-
-"Come, let us go," said he resolutely to his friends. "It is the hour."
-
-The cannon announced that the Queen had left the royal palace. A
-prolonged quiver ran through the living human mass, like that which
-precedes a storm at sea. From the bank of San Giorgio Maggiore, a
-rocket rushed up with a long hiss, rising in the air like a fiery
-stem and bursting into a mass of pink splendor at the top; then it
-curved, grew fainter, and dissolved in trembling sparks, extinguished
-finally with a slight crackling in the water. And the joyous clamor
-that greeted the beautiful Queen, repeating her name--the name of the
-starry, white flower and of the pearl--evoked in Stelio's imagination
-the pomp of the ancient Promissione, the triumphal procession of the
-Arts escorting the new Dogaressa to the palace; the wave of joy on
-which Morosina Grimani mounted to her throne, shimmering with gold,
-while all the Arts bowed before her, laden with gifts as if they bore
-horns of plenty.
-
-"Certainly," said Francesco de Lizo, "if the Queen loves your books,
-she will wear all her pearls this evening. You will have before you a
-veritable labyrinth of jewels--all the hereditary gems of the Venetian
-patricians."
-
-"Look toward the foot of the stairway, Stelio," said Daniele Glauro. "A
-group of devotees is waiting for you to pass that way."
-
-Stelio stopped at the well indicated by La Foscarina. He leaned over
-the bronze edge, his knees touching the little carved caryatides, and
-saw in the dark water the reflection of the stars. For the moment his
-soul isolated itself, shut out the surrounding sounds, and withdrew
-into the shadowy disc, from which rose a slight dampness betokening
-the presence of water. His excited desire felt a need to attain even
-greater intoxication than this night promised him, and he felt that in
-the farthest depths of his being lay a secret soul, which, like this
-dark, watery mirror, remained immovable, strange, and intangible.
-
-"What do you see there?" inquired Piero Martello, also leaning over the
-rim, worn in places by the ropes of centuries.
-
-"The face of Truth!" the master answered.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the apartments contiguous to the Hall of the Greater Council, once
-occupied by the Doge, but now by the pagan statues that were seized
-as booty in ancient wars, Stelio awaited the summons from the master
-of the ceremonies to mount to the platform. He was quite calm, and
-smiled on the friends that spoke to him, but their words reached his
-ear between pauses, like interrupted sounds borne from afar by the
-wind. From time to time, with an abrupt, involuntary movement, he drew
-near to one of the statues, and ran his hand nervously over it, as if
-seeking some weak spot, that he might break it; or he bent curiously
-over some rare medal, as if to read on it some indecipherable sign.
-But his eyes saw nothing of all this; they were turned within, where
-the multiplied power of his will evoked the silent forms that his
-voice would presently transform into the perfection of verbal music.
-His whole being contracted itself in an effort to raise to the highest
-degree of intensity the representation of the extraordinary feelings
-that possessed him. Since he could speak only of himself, and of his
-own universe, at least he would unite in one ideal figure the sovereign
-qualities of his art, and show to his disciples by his genius for
-imagery what an invincible force hastened him through this life. Once
-more he intended to show them that, in order to obtain the victory
-over men and circumstances, there is no other way than to persevere in
-exalting oneself and to magnify one's own dream of beauty or of power.
-
-He bent over a medallion by Pisanello, feeling at his temples the
-ardent, rapid pulsation of his thought.
-
-"See, Stelio," said Daniele Glauro to him, with that pious reverence
-which veiled his voice whenever he spoke of his religion, "see how the
-mysterious affinities of Art work upon you, and how an infallible
-instinct leads you, amid so many forms, and at the very moment when
-your thought is about to reveal itself, toward the example of the most
-perfect expression, the highest model of style. At the very instant
-of coining your own idea, you are led to study one of Pisanello's
-medallions; you are attracted by the impression of one of the greatest
-stylists that ever have lived in the world, the most frankly Hellenic
-soul of the whole Renaissance. And suddenly your forehead is illumined
-by a ray of light."
-
-The pure bronze bore the effigy of a young man with beautiful, waving
-hair, an imperial profile and Apollo-like neck, and the head was so
-perfect a type of elegance and vigor that the imagination could not
-picture him in life except as free from all decadence and eternally
-unchangeable, as the artist had presented him in this circle of
-bronze.--_Dux equitum præstans Malatesta Novellus Cesenæ dominus.
-Opus Pisani pictoris._--And beside it was another medallion by the
-same artist, bearing the effigy of a virgin, with narrow chest, a
-swan-like throat, and hair drawn back in the shape of a heavy bag; the
-forehead, high and receding, seemed already to promise the aureole of
-the blessed, and she was like a vase of purity sealed forever, hard,
-precise, and limpid as a diamond, an adamantine pyx where the spirit,
-consecrated like the Host, rested as a sacrifice.--_Cicilia Virgo,
-filia Johannis Francesco primi Marchionis Mantuae._
-
-"Here comes La Foscarina, with Donatella Arvale," announced Francesco
-de Lizo, who had been watching the crowd that climbed the Censors'
-Stairway and pressed into the vast hall.
-
-Again Stelio Effrena felt a wave of agitation sweep over him. The
-murmur of the throng seemed to come from afar and mingle in his ears
-with the throbbing of his arteries, and in this murmur he fancied he
-heard once more the last words of Perdita.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- THE NUPTIALS OF AUTUMN AND VENICE
-
-
-The murmur swelled louder, diminished, then ceased, as Stelio, with
-firm, light movement, ascended the marble steps of the platform. As he
-turned toward the audience, his dazzled eyes rested upon the formidable
-monster with a thousand human faces, amid the gold and somber purple of
-the immense hall.
-
-A sudden thrill of pride gave him complete self-control. He bowed
-to the Queen and to Donna Andriano Duodo, who smiled upon him with
-the same twin smiles he had seen from the gliding gondola on the
-Grand Canal. He threw a keen glance toward the scintillating first
-rows, seeking La Foscarina, then looked toward the farther end of
-the hall, where only a dark zone, dotted with white spots, could be
-distinguished. The silent, attentive multitude seemed to him like an
-enormous, many-eyed chimera, its breast covered with glittering scales,
-extending its black bulk under the arches of the rich, heavy ceiling
-that hung over it like a suspended treasure.
-
-Dazzling was that chimeric breast, where sparkled necklaces that
-must once have flashed their fires under the same ceiling on the
-night of a coronation banquet. The tiara and the necklaces of the
-Queen--the rows of pearls, like grains of light, somehow suggesting
-the miraculous image of a smile just about to appear--the dark emeralds
-of Andriano Duodo, taken long ago from the handle of a scimitar;
-the rubies of Giustiniana Memo, set in the semblance of carnations
-by the inimitable craftsmanship of Vettor Camelio; the sapphires of
-Lucrezia Priuli, taken from the shoes in which the Most Serene Zilia
-had walked to her throne on the day of her triumph; the beryls of
-Orsetta Contarini, delicately set in dull gold by the art of Silvestro
-Grifo; the turquoises of Zenobia Corner, bathed in a strange pallor
-by the mysterious malady that, in a single night, changed them as
-they lay on the warm breast of the Princess de Lusignan, among the
-delights of Asolo--all the rich jewels that had illumined the nights
-of the Anadyomenean city glowed with renewed fire on the breast of the
-chimera, from which rose a moist odor of feminine breaths and many
-perfumes. The rest of that strangely marked and shapeless body extended
-to the rear of the hall, in a sort of long tail, passing between the
-two gigantic spheres, which recalled to the memory of the "Image-maker"
-the two bronze spheres that the monster with the bandaged eyes presses
-with his paws in Giambellino's allegory. And this vast animal life,
-devoid of all thought for the time before him who alone at that moment
-must think, endowed with the inert fascination of enigmatic idols,
-covered with its own silence as with a shield capable of receiving and
-resisting any shock, awaited the first thrill of his dominating word.
-
-Stelio Effrena measured this silence, upon which his first syllable
-must fall. While his voice was rising to his lips, an effort of
-will summoning it and fortifying it against instinctive hesitation,
-he perceived La Foscarina standing near the railing that encircled
-the celestial sphere. The pale face of the tragic actress rose from
-her bare neck, and the purity of her white shoulders was just above
-the orbit of the zodiacal figures. Stelio admired the art of this
-apparition. With his own eyes fixed upon those distant, adoring ones,
-he began to speak slowly, as if the rhythm of the oars still lingered
-in his ears.
-
-"One afternoon, not long ago, while I was returning from the gardens
-along the warm bank of the Schiavoni, where the souls of poets
-sometimes believe they see I know not what magic golden bridge spanning
-a sea of light and silence toward a dream of infinite beauty, I
-thought--or rather, I witnessed with my thoughts, as at some intimate
-spectacle--of the nuptial alliance, under those skies, of Autumn and
-Venice.
-
-"Everywhere was disseminated a spirit of life, arising from passionate
-expectation and restrained ardor, which made me marvel at its
-vehemence, but which seemed not altogether new to me; I had already
-seen it in some shadowy zones, under the almost death-like immobility
-of Summer; and sometimes I had felt it vibrating, like a mysterious
-pulse, in the strange feverish odor of the water. Thus, I thought, it
-is true, then, that this pure city of Art aspires to a supreme state
-of beauty which for her returns annually, as the flowers return to the
-forest. She tends to reveal herself in full harmony, as if always
-she bore within her bosom, powerful and conscious, the same desire of
-perfection from which she sprang and was formed throughout the ages,
-like some divine creature. Under the motionless fire of Summer, she
-seemed to palpitate no more, to breathe no more, but to lie dead in her
-green waters. My feeling did not deceive me, however, when I fancied I
-saw her secretly inspired by a spirit of life sufficient to renew the
-most sublime of the ancient miracles.
-
-"That is what I thought, and what I saw. But how can I convey to
-you that listen to me any idea of that vision of joy and beauty? No
-sunrise, no sunset, could equal the glory of that hour of light on the
-water and the marble. The unexpected apparition of the beloved woman
-in a forest in springtime could not be as intoxicating as this sudden
-revelation by daylight of the heroic and voluptuous city, which carries
-in its marble embrace the richest dream of a Latin soul."
-
-The voice of the orator, clear, penetrating, almost icy at the
-beginning, was suddenly warmed by the invisible sparks kindled within
-him by the effort of improvisation, yet governed by the extreme nicety
-of his ear. While his words flowed without hesitation, and the rhythmic
-line of his periods set forth their beauty with the clearness of a
-figure drawn at one stroke by a bold hand, his auditors were conscious
-of the excessive tension of his mind, and it captivated them as one of
-those terrifying feats at the circus, where all the herculean energies
-of the athlete show the test by his quivering tendons and swelling
-arteries. They felt the reality, the living warmth of the thought
-thus expressed, and their pleasure was the greater because unexpected,
-for most of his auditors had anticipated from this indefatigable
-searcher after perfection the studied reading of a laboriously composed
-discourse. His devotees observed with emotion this audacious test, as
-if they saw before them, unveiled, the secret labor that had brought
-forth the forms that had given them so much joy. And this first wave of
-emotion, spreading by contagion, indefinitely multiplied and becoming
-unanimous, returned to him who caused it, and seemed almost to overcome
-him.
-
-This was the expected danger. Under the pressure of a wave so strong,
-the speaker faltered. For a few seconds a thick cloud darkened his
-brain; the light of his mind was extinguished, as a torch before an
-irresistible wind; his eyes grew dim, as if he were about to faint. But
-he felt how mortifying would be the shame of defeat if he yielded to
-this seizure; and in that darkness, by a sort of effort of brute force,
-or like the striking of steel on flint, his will rose in triumph over
-the instinctive weakness. With glance and gesture, he directed the eyes
-of the assemblage to the great masterpiece in the ceiling of that hall,
-spreading there in a kind of sun-like radiance.
-
-"I am certain," he exclaimed, "that Venice appeared thus to Paolo
-Veronese, when he sought within himself for an image of the Queen
-triumphant."
-
-He explained the reason why the great master, after throwing upon his
-canvas a profusion of gold, jewels, silks, purple, ermine, and all
-imaginable richness, at last could represent the glorious face only in
-the nimbus of a shadow.
-
-"We ought to exalt Veronese for that shadowy veil alone! Representing
-by a human face the Queen of Cities, he yet knew how to express its
-essential spirit, whose symbol was an inextinguishable flame seen
-through a watery veil. And one I know well, who, having plunged his
-soul in this sublime element, has withdrawn it enriched with a new
-power, and consequently has lived a fuller and more ardent spiritual
-life."
-
-This one he knew well--was it not himself? In the assertion of his own
-personality he found again all his courage, and felt that henceforth
-he was master of his thoughts and words, freed from danger, capable of
-drawing within the charmed circle of his dream the enormous, many-eyed
-chimera, with the glittering breast--the ephemeral and versatile
-monster from whose side emerged its offspring, the Tragic Muse, her
-head rising above the constellations.
-
-Obedient to his movement, the innumerable faces turned toward the
-Apotheosis, their awakened eyes contemplating with wonder this marvel,
-as if they beheld it for the first time, or under a new aspect. The
-naked back of the woman with the golden helmet shone under the cloud
-with an effect of muscular life so perfect that it looked as attractive
-as palpable flesh. And, from this nudity, more realistic than all the
-rest, victorious over Time, which had darkened around it heroic images
-of sieges and battles, seemed to emanate a powerful enchantment, the
-sweetness of which was augmented by the breath of the autumn night
-coming through the open windows; while, from above, the princesses of a
-former day, leaning over the balustrades between two columns, inclined
-their illumined faces and opulent breasts toward their worldly sisters
-below.
-
-Under the new spell of enchantment, the poet threw off his winged
-words, harmonious as lyric strophes. He described the Queen City
-palpitating with ardor within her thousand green girdles, extending her
-marble arms toward the wild Autumn, whose humid breath reached her,
-balmy with the delicious death of the fields and islands, making her
-sigh like a bride awaiting her hour of joy. By the magic of his words,
-Venice seemed to be possessed of marvelous hands, with which she wove
-for herself the inimitable tissue of allegory that covered her.
-
-"And since, in all the world, poetry alone is truth, he that knows how
-to contemplate it, and to draw it into his own soul by the virtue of
-his thought, will be very near to mastering the secret of victory over
-life."
-
-In pronouncing these last words, Stelio sought the eyes of Daniele
-Glauro, and saw that they sparkled with happiness beneath that large,
-meditative brow, which seemed swollen by the weight of an unborn world.
-The mystic doctor was there, near the platform, with several of those
-unknown disciples that he had described to the master as eager and
-anxious, full of faith and expectation, impatient to break the chain
-of their daily servitude, and to know the free intoxication of joy
-and sadness. Stelio noted that they were grouped, like a nucleus of
-compressed force, against the great red bookcases, wherein lay buried
-innumerable volumes of useless and forgotten lore. He marked their
-eager and attentive faces, their long hair, their lips, half parted
-with child-like absorption, or closed tightly in a kind of violent
-sensitiveness, their bright eyes, to which the breath of his words
-carried lights and shadows, as a changeful breeze stirs a parterre of
-delicate flowers. He felt that in his own hand he held all their souls
-blended into one spirit, which he could at will agitate, crush, tear,
-or burn, as if it were a filmy scarf.
-
-While his mind expanded and relaxed, in its continued effort, he still
-retained a strange power of exterior investigation, a faculty of
-material observation which became the clearer and more penetrating with
-the warmth and quickening of his eloquence.
-
-Suddenly he saw with his mental vision the picture he wished to
-present, and his verbal expression of it was after the manner of the
-master painters that had reigned in that place, with the luxuriance of
-Veronese, and the fire of Tintoretto.
-
-"All the vitalities and all the transfigurations of the ancient stones,
-where Time has accumulated so many mysteries, and where glory has set
-her emblems; all the alternations of marvelously easy creations and
-destructions were reflected in the water; the effulgence of a jubilant
-light glittered between the crosses of cupolas inflated by prayer, and
-the slender saline crystals hanging under the arch of the bridges. Like
-a sentinel on a rampart uttering his shrill cry to him that listens
-for the signal, so the golden angel from the summit of the highest
-tower at last flashed out the announcement.
-
-"And He appeared! The Bridegroom appeared, seated in his fiery chariot,
-which he turned toward the Queen of Cities, and in his youthful,
-superhuman countenance was a strange fascination springing from an
-animal-like cruelty and delicacy contrasting with the deep eyes, full
-of all knowledge. His blood rioted through his veins, from the tips of
-his fingers to his nimble feet; mysterious, occult things veiled his
-being, concealing joy as the grape in bloom conceals the vine; and all
-the tawny gold and purple that surrounded him were like the vestment of
-his senses.
-
-"With what passion, throbbing under her thousand emerald girdles, and
-the richness of her jewels, the Queen of Cities gave herself to the
-magnificent god!"
-
-Swept up in this rushing flight of words, the soul of the multitude
-seemed to reach the sentiment of Beauty, as if it were a summit never
-before attained. The pulse of the people and the voice of the poet
-seemed to give back to those ancient walls their former life, and to
-reawaken in that cold museum its original spirit: a flood of powerful
-ideas, concrete, and organized in the most durable substance to attest
-the nobility of a great race.
-
-The splendor of divine youth descended upon the women, as it might
-have descended in a sumptuous alcove, for each felt within herself the
-breathlessness of expectation and the joy of yielding, like that of the
-Queen of Cities. They smiled with vague languor as if wearied by the
-strain upon their emotions; their cool, polished shoulders rose from
-their corollas of jewels.
-
-Stelio looked down upon the sparkling breast of the great, many-eyed
-chimera, on which rose and fell many fluttering feather fans, like tiny
-wings; and over his spirit passed an intoxicating glow that disquieted
-him. The vibration of his nerves, acting upon those of his auditors
-and thus reacting upon himself, unsettled him so much as almost to
-unbalance him. For an instant he felt that he was oscillating above the
-crowd, like a concave and sonorous body, the resonances of which were
-engendered by an indistinct yet infallible will.
-
-He was surprised at the unknown power that dwelt within him, abolishing
-his own personal limits and conferring the fulness of a chorus on his
-single voice.
-
-This, then, was the mysterious truce which the revelation of Beauty
-could grant to the daily existence of wearied man; this was the
-mysterious will that could possess the poet at the moment when he
-replied to the souls of his followers who questioned him as to the
-value of life and tried to raise themselves, if only once, to the
-height of the eternal Ideal. He was only the messenger through whom
-Beauty offered to those men, assembled in this place consecrated by
-centuries of human glory, the divine gift of oblivion. He was only the
-translator into rhythmic speech of the visible language whereby, in
-this same place, the noble craftsmen of a former day had expressed the
-prayers and aspirations of the race. And for one hour, at least, those
-men would contemplate the world with different eyes; they would think
-and dream with different souls.
-
-In fancy, he passed beyond the walls that enclosed the palpitating
-throng in a kind of heroic cycle, a circle of red triremes, fortified
-towers, and triumphal theories. The place now seemed too narrow for
-the exaltation of his new feeling; and once more he was drawn toward
-the real people, the immense, unanimous crowd he had seen outside the
-palace, who had sent upward in the starry night a clamor that, like
-blood or wine, intoxicated them as they uttered it.
-
-And not alone to this multitude did his thoughts turn; his fancy beheld
-an infinity of multitudes, massed together in theaters, dominated by an
-idea of truth and of beauty, pale and intent before the great arch of
-the stage, which should open before them some marvelous transfiguration
-of life, or frenzied by the sudden splendor radiating from an immortal
-phrase. And the dream of a higher Art, as it surged up again in his
-thought showed him mankind once more reverencing poets, as those who
-alone can interrupt at intervals its daily anguish, quench its thirst,
-and dispense oblivion. He even judged too slight the test he was now
-undergoing; he felt himself capable of creating gigantic fictions. The
-still formless work that he nourished in his soul shook him with a
-thrill of life as he looked again at the tragedienne, standing above
-the sphere of constellations--the Muse with the transcendent voice, who
-seemed to carry the frenzy of far-off throngs, now silenced, in the
-classic folds of her robes.
-
-Almost overcome by the incredible intensity of emotion that had
-possessed him during the brief pause, he began to speak again in
-a lower tone. He spoke of the growth of art between the youth of
-Giorgione and the old age of Tintoretto, and described it as golden,
-purple, rich and expressive as the pomp of the earth irradiated by the
-glow of sunset.
-
-"When I consider the impetuous creators of such marvelous beauty, my
-mind recalls an image from a fragment of Pindar's: 'When the centaurs
-became acquainted with the virtues of wine, sweet as honey and a
-conqueror of men, they banished milk from their tables and hastened to
-quaff their wine from silver horns.' No one in the world better knew
-than they how to taste the wine of life. They drew from it a kind of
-lucid intoxication that multiplied their powers and communicated to
-their eloquence a fertilizing energy. And in their greatest creations,
-the violent throbbing of their pulses seems to have persisted
-throughout the ages, like the veritable rhythm of Venetian art.
-
-"Ah, how pure and poetic is the slumber of the Virgin Ursula on her
-immaculate bed! The most religious silence reigns in that chamber,
-where the pious lips of the sleeper seem to form themselves into the
-act of uttering prayer. Through the doors and the windows steals the
-timid light of dawn, illumining the syllables inscribed on her pillow:
-INFANTIA is the simple word that spreads around that virginal head,
-like the fresh aurora of the morning: INFANTIA. She sleeps, the maiden
-already betrothed to the pagan prince and destined to martyrdom. So
-chaste, so ingenuous, so fervent, is she not the image of Art such as
-the precursors saw it, with the sincerity of their child-like eyes?
-INFANTIA! The word evokes around that couch all those forgotten ones:
-Lorenzo Veneziano, Simone da Cusighe, Catarino, Jacobello, Maestro
-Paolo, Giambono, Semitecolo, Antonio, Andrea, Quirizio da Murano, and
-all the laborious family by whom color--which later was the rival of
-fire--was prepared in the burning island of furnaces. But would not
-they themselves have uttered a cry of admiration if they had seen the
-drops of blood that sprang from the maiden's heart when it was pierced
-by the arrow of the beautiful pagan archer? A current so red from a
-virgin nourished on white milk! This victory was a sort of festival: to
-it the archers brought their finest bows, their richest garments, their
-most elegant air. The golden-haired barbarian, aiming his arrows at the
-martyr, with a movement so proud and graceful, does he not resemble an
-adolescent and wingless Eros? That gracious slayer of innocence (or
-perhaps his brother), after laying aside his bow, will abandon himself
-to the enchantment of music to dream a dream of infinite pleasure.
-
-"It was indeed Giorgione that poured into him a new soul, and kindled
-it with an implacable longing. The music that charms him is not the
-melody that last night the lutes diffused among the curving arches,
-over radiant thrones, or diminishing in the silence of distances in the
-visions of the third Bellini. Under the touch of religious hands, it
-still rises from the harpsichord; but the world it awakens is full of
-a joy and a sadness wherein sin hides its head.
-
-"He that has looked at the _Concerto_ with the eyes of wisdom has
-comprehended an extraordinary and irrevocable moment of the Venetian
-soul. By means of a harmony of color--whose power of expression is
-as boundless as the mystery of sounds--the artist reveals the first
-agitation of an eager spirit to whom life has suddenly appeared under
-the aspect of a rich inheritance.
-
-"The monk, seated at his harpsichord, and his older companion, do not
-resemble those monks that Vettor Carpaccio represented as flying before
-the wild beast tamed by Jerome, in San Giorgio degli Schiavoni. Their
-essence is nobler and stronger; they breathe an atmosphere higher and
-richer, propitious to the birth of a great joy, a great sadness, or
-a superb dream. What notes do those beautiful, sensitive hands draw
-from the keys on which they linger? Magic notes, no doubt, since they
-have power to work in the musician a transfiguration so great. He is
-half-way through his mortal existence, already far from his youth and
-near his decline, yet only now life reveals itself to him, rich with
-all good things, like a forest full of ripe, red fruit, the velvety
-freshness of which his always busy hands never before have known. As
-his senses still slumber, he has not yet fallen under the domination
-of a single seductive image, but he suffers a sort of confused anguish
-wherein regret overcomes desire, while in the web of harmonies that he
-seeks, the vision of his past--but only as it might have been and was
-not--weaves itself like the tissue of a chimera.
-
-"His companion divines this inner agitation, for he is already at the
-threshold of old age; calm, sweet, and serious, he touches the shoulder
-of the passionate player with a pacifying movement. But there, emerging
-from the warm shadows like the embodiment of youthful ardor itself,
-is the young man with hat beplumed and flowing locks, the glowing
-flower of adolescence which Giorgione created under the influence of
-a reflection from that Hellenic myth whence arose the ideal form of
-Hermaphrodite. He is there, present, yet a stranger, separated from the
-others, like a being that cares only for his own welfare. The music
-exalts his inexpressible dream, and seems to multiply indefinitely his
-capacity to enjoy. He knows himself master of that life which escapes
-the other two, and the harmonies sought by the musician seem to him
-only the prelude to his own feast. His glance is sidewise and intent,
-turned toward a certain point, as if he would attract to himself
-something that charms him; his closed lips are ready with a kiss as yet
-ungiven; his brow is so spacious that the thickest garland would not
-encumber it; but if I think of his hands, I fancy them crushing the
-laurel leaves to perfume his fingers."
-
-The hands of the Inspirer illustrated the gesture of the covetous
-youth, as if they were really pressing out the essence of the aromatic
-leaf; and his voice lent to the image an illusion so strong that the
-young men felt that here at last was one who could express their
-cherished and secret thoughts and dreams, and give voice to their
-unspeakable, continuous, and ceaseless longings. They occupied the free
-space at the back of the seated audience, making a living border for
-that compact mass; and, as the edges of a flag that waves in the breeze
-have a stronger flutter, these youthful hearts beat faster than those
-of older men at the warm breath of the poet's words.
-
-Stelio recognized them, distinguishing them by their singularity of
-attitude, the intensity of emotion revealed by their compressed lips
-and the glow of ardor in their cheeks. On the face of one, turned
-toward the open balcony, he read the enchantment of the autumn night,
-and the delicious breeze coming from the lagoon. The glance of another
-indicated, by a ray of love, some woman, seated near by, looking as if
-she were lost in tender recollections, her face white, her red lips
-slightly parted, like the entrance to a hive moist with honey.
-
-His eyes continually returned to the promised woman, who looked as she
-stood there like the living support of a starry sphere. He was grateful
-to her for her choice of this manner of appearing to him when, for the
-first time, he gave himself to the people. He no longer regarded her
-as merely the passing fancy of a single night, a woman ripened by long
-experience, but the marvelous instrument of a new art, the interpreter
-of the greatest poetry, she that should incarnate in her changeful
-personality his future fictions of beauty, she whose unforgettable
-voice should carry to mankind the long-expected word. He now felt
-attached to her, not by a promise of love, but by a promise of glory;
-and the formless work that he still cherished in his breast again
-leaped within him.
-
-"You that listen to me," he continued, "do you not see some analogy
-between these three symbols of Giorgione's and the three generations,
-all living at the same time, that illumined the dawn of a new century?
-Venice, the City Triumphant, reveals herself to their eyes like a
-great, a superabundant banquet, where all the riches accumulated
-throughout centuries of war and commerce are to be set out without
-stint. What richer fountain of pleasure could there be to initiate life
-in insatiable desire? It is a time of agitation, almost of distraction,
-which, because of its fulness, is worth an hour of heroic violence.
-Alluring voices and laughter seem to float from the hills of Asolo
-where, surrounded by all delights, reigns the daughter of San Marco,
-Domina Aceli, who found in a myrtle grove of Cyprus the cincture of
-Aphrodite. Now approaches the youth with the white plumes; he comes to
-the banquet, followed by his uncurbed escort, and all desires kindle
-and burn like torches quickened by the wind. And this was the beginning
-of that divine Autumn of Art toward which men will always turn with
-deep emotion as long as the human soul strives to transcend the
-narrowness of its common existence in order to live a life more fervent
-or to die a nobler death.
-
-"I see Giorgione imminent on the marvelous sphere, but I do not
-recognize his mortal person; I seek him in the mystery of the fiery
-cloud that envelops him. He appears to us more myth-like than human.
-The destiny of no poet on earth is comparable to his. All concerning
-his life is unknown; some even go so far as to deny his existence.
-His name is inscribed on no work, and many refuse to attribute any
-work to him with absolute certainty. But the whole of Venetian art was
-illumined by his revelation; it was from him that the great Titian
-received the secret of infusing glowing blood into the veins of the
-beings he created. In fact, that which Giorgione represents in Art is
-the Epiphany of the Flame. He deserves to be called 'the Flame-Bearer,'
-like Prometheus.
-
-"When I consider the rapidity with which this sacred gift has passed
-from one artist to another, glowing with increasing splendor from color
-to color, I think of one of those _lampadeforie_, or festivals, in
-which the Greeks tried to perpetuate the memory of the Titan son of
-Japetus. On the day of the festival, a group of young Athenian horsemen
-would set off at a gallop, riding from Ceramicus to Colonos, their
-chief waving a torch that had been lighted at the altar of a temple. If
-the torch was extinguished by the swiftness of the course, the bearer
-handed it to a companion, who re-lighted it as he rode; and this one
-gave it to a third; the third to a fourth, and so on, always galloping,
-until the last bearer laid it, still alight, on the altar of the Titan.
-This image, with all it suggests of fiery vehemence, represents to my
-fancy the feast of the master-colorists of Venice. Each of them, even
-to the least illustrious, held in his hand the sacred gift, if only for
-an instant. Some of them, like that first Bonifacio, whom we should
-glorify, gathered with incombustible fingers the inmost flower of the
-flame."
-
-His fingers made a movement in the air as if to pluck the ideal flower.
-His eyes turned again toward the celestial sphere, as if he wished to
-offer the fiery gift to her who guarded the divine zodiacal beasts. "To
-you, Perdita!" But the woman was smiling at some one at a distance.
-
-Following the thread of her smile, Stelio's eyes were led to an unknown
-woman, who suddenly seemed to stand out illumined against a shadowy
-background.
-
-Was not that the creature of music whose name had resounded against the
-iron sides of the ship that evening, in the silence and the shadow?
-
-She seemed to Stelio to be almost an interior image, suddenly
-engendered in that part of his soul where the brief sensation he had
-felt while passing through the shadow of the vessel had remained like
-an isolated and indistinct point. For a second she was beautiful--as
-beautiful as were his yet unexpressed thoughts.
-
-"The city to which such creators have given a soul so powerful," he
-continued, floating himself on the rising wave, "is considered to-day,
-by the greater number, only as a vast inert reliquary, or as a refuge
-of peace and oblivion.
-
-"In truth, I know of no other place in the world--unless it be
-Rome--where a bold and ambitious spirit can better foster the active
-virtue of his intellect, and all the energies of his being toward
-the supreme heights, than on these quiet waters. I know of no marsh
-capable of provoking in human pulses a fever more violent that that
-which at times steals up to us from the shadows of a silent canal. Nor
-do those men who, at noontide in the midsummer heat, lie among the ripe
-grain, feel in their veins a more fiery wave of blood than that which
-suffuses our eyes when we lean too intently over these waters, to see
-whether, perchance, we may descry in their depths some old sword or
-ancient diadem.
-
-"Do not all gracious spirits come hither, as to a place of sweet
-refuge--those that hide some secret pain, those that have accomplished
-some final renunciation, those that have become weak through some
-morbid affection, and those that seek silence only to hear the soft
-step of advancing Death? Perhaps in their fading eyes Venice appears
-like a clement city of death, embraced by the waters of oblivion. But
-their presence is no more important than the wandering weeds that float
-at the foot of the steps of the marble palaces. They only increase the
-odor of sickly things, that strange, feverish odor on which at times,
-toward evening, after a laborious day, we nourish the fulness of our
-own feelings.
-
-"But the ambiguous city does not always indulge the illusions of those
-that look to her as a giver of peace. I know one who, in the midst of
-sweet repose on her breast, started up as terror-struck as if when
-lying beside his loved one, with her hand resting on his weary eyelids,
-he had heard serpents hissing in her hair!
-
-"Ah, if I only knew how to tell you of that prodigious life which
-palpitates beneath her great necklaces and her thousand green girdles!
-Not a day passes that she does not absorb more and more of our souls:
-sometimes she gives them back to us fresh and intact, restored to their
-original newness, whereon to-morrow's events will be imprinted with
-indelible clearness; again, she gives them back to us infinitely subtle
-and voracious, like a flame that destroys all that it touches, so that,
-at evening, among the cinders and the ashes, we may light upon some
-wonderful sublimate. Each day she urges us to the act that is the very
-genesis of our species: the unceasing effort to surpass ourselves. She
-shows us the possibility of transforming pain into the most efficacious
-stimulating energy; she teaches us that pleasure is the most certain
-means of knowledge given to us by Nature, and that the man who has
-suffered much is less wise than he that has enjoyed much."
-
-At these audacious words, a slight murmur of disapproval passed over
-the auditorium; the Queen shook her head ever so little, in token of
-denial; several ladies, in a rapid exchange of glances, seemed to
-signify to one another a sentiment of graceful horror. But these signs
-were overbalanced by the acclamation of youthful approval that rose
-from all sides toward him that taught with a boldness so frank the art
-of rising to the superior forms of life by the virtue of joy.
-
-Stelio smiled as he recognized his own, and so numerous; he smiled
-to recognize the efficacy of his teaching, which already, in more
-than one spirit, had dissipated the clouds of inert sadness, shown it
-the cowardice of weak tears, and infused it with a lasting disdain
-for feeble complaint and soft compassion. He rejoiced at having
-been able to proclaim once more the principle of his doctrine,
-emanating naturally from the soul of the art he glorified. And those
-that had retired to a hermit's cell, there to adore a sad phantom
-that lived only in the dim mirror of their own eyes; those that had
-created themselves kings of palaces without windows, where, from time
-immemorial, they had awaited a Visitation; those that had sought to
-unearth among ruins the image of Beauty, but who had found only a
-worn sphinx, which had tormented them with its endless enigmas; those
-that stood every evening at their thresholds to greet the mysterious
-Stranger bearing gifts under his mantle, and who, with pale cheeks,
-laid their ears against the ground to catch the first sound of the
-Stranger's approach; those whose souls were sterilized by resigned
-mourning or devoured by desperate pride; those that were hardened
-by useless obstinacy, or deprived of sleep by hope continually
-disappointed--all these spirits he wished now to summon that they might
-recognize their ailment under the splendor of that ancient yet ever-new
-soul.
-
-"In truth," said he, in a tone full of exultation, "if the whole
-population, abandoning their homes, should emigrate, attracted to-day
-toward other shores as formerly their heroic youth were tempted by the
-arch of the Bosphorus, in the time of the Doge Pietro Ziani, and the
-voice of prayer should no more strike against the sonorous gold of the
-concave mosaics, nor the sound of the oar perpetuate with its rhythmic
-stroke the meditation of the silent stones, Venice would still remain
-a City of Life. The ideal creatures protected by its silence live
-in the whole past and for the whole future. In them we shall always
-discover new concordances with the edifice of the universe, unforeseen
-meetings with the idea born only yesterday, clear announcements of that
-which is with us only a presentiment as yet, open answers to that which
-as yet we have not dared to ask.
-
-"These ideal creatures are simple, but they are full of innumerable
-meanings; they are ingenuous, yet are clothed in strange attire. Should
-we contemplate them for an indefinite time, they never would cease to
-pour dissimilar truths into our minds. Should we visit them every day,
-every day they would appear to us under a new aspect, as do the sea,
-the rivers, the fields, the woods, the rocks. At times the things they
-say to us do not really reach our intellects, but reveal themselves to
-us in a sort of confused happiness, which causes our own substance to
-dilate and quiver to its inmost depths. Some bright day they will point
-out to us the path to the distant forest, wherein Beauty has awaited us
-from time immemorial, buried in her mystic hair.
-
-"Whence came to them their immeasurable power?
-
-"From the pure unconsciousness of the artificers that created them.
-
-"Those profound men ignored the immensity of the things they wished
-to express. Penetrating with a million roots into the soil of life,
-not like single trees, but like vast forests, they absorbed infinite
-elements, which they transfused and condensed into ideal species,
-whose essences nevertheless remained unknown to them, as the flavor
-of the apple is unknown to the branch that bears it. They were the
-mysterious means chosen by Nature in her effort to represent in an
-integral form those types in which she has not yet succeeded. Because
-of this, continuing the work of the Divine Mother, their minds, as
-Leonardo says, have become transformed into 'a likeness of the Divine
-Mind.' And because creative force rushed to their fingers incessantly,
-like sap to the buds of trees, they created with joy."
-
-All the desire of the determined artist, panting and struggling to
-obtain this Olympian gift, all his envy of those gigantic creators
-of Beauty, all his insatiable thirst for happiness and glory, were
-revealed in the tone in which he pronounced these last words. Once more
-the soul of the multitude was under the magic of the poet's spell,
-strained and vibrating like a single cord composed of a thousand
-strands, the resonance of which could be incalculably prolonged. That
-resonance awakened within the multitude the sense of a truth that had
-lain dormant, but which the poet's words now revealed for the first
-time.
-
-In the sonority of the deep silence, the solitary voice reached its
-climax.
-
-"To create with joy! It is the attribute of Divinity! It is impossible
-to imagine at the summit of the spirit an act more triumphal. Even the
-words that signify it possess something of the splendor of sunrise.
-
-"And these artists created by a medium that is in itself a joyous
-mystery: by color, which is the ornament of the world; by color, which
-seems the effort of matter to become light.
-
-"And the newly awakened musical sense they had for color was such that
-their creations transcend the narrow limits of figured symbols, and
-assume the high revealing power of an infinite harmony.
-
-"Never have the words of Vinci, on whom Truth flashed one day with her
-thousand secrets, appeared so true as when we stand before the great
-symphonic canvases of the masters: 'Music cannot be called anything but
-the sister of Painting.' They are not alone silent poetry, but also
-silent music. The most subtle seekers of rare symbols, and those most
-desirous to impress the sign of an internal universe on the purity of
-a meditative brow, seem to us almost sterile compared with these great
-unconscious musicians.
-
-"When we behold Bonifacio, in the parable of Dives, intoning with a
-note of fire the most powerful harmony of color in which the essence
-of a proud and voluptuous nature ever has revealed itself, we do not
-ask questions about the blond youth, listening to the music and seated
-between the two magnificent courtesans, whose faces glow like lamps
-of purest amber; but, passing beneath the material symbol, we abandon
-ourselves to the power of evocation of those chords, wherein our
-spirits seem to-day to find a presentiment of I know not what evening,
-heavy with beautiful destiny and autumnal gold, in a harbor as quiet
-as a basin of perfumed oil where a galley palpitating with oriflammes
-shall enter with a strange silence, like a butterfly of twilight
-darting into the chalice of some great flower.
-
-"Shall we not, with our mortal eyes, really see it, some glorious
-evening, approaching the Palace of the Doges? Does it not appear to us
-from a prophetic horizon in the Allegory of Autumn which Tintoretto
-offers us, like a superior, concrete image of our dream of yesterday?
-
-"Seated on the shore, like a deity, Venice receives the ring from the
-young, vine-wreathed god who descends into the water, while Beauty
-floats in the air with a starry diadem to crown the marvelous alliance!
-
-"Behold yon distant ship! It seems to bring a message from the gods.
-Behold the symbolic Woman! Her body is capable of bearing the germs of
-a world!"
-
-A whirlwind of applause broke out, dominated by the clamor of the young
-men, who hailed him who had kindled before their anxious eyes a hope
-so glowing, who had professed a faith so strong in the occult genius
-of the race, in the lofty virtue of the ideals handed down by their
-fathers, in the sovereign dignity of their spirit, the indestructible
-power of beauty, in all the great things held as naught by modern
-barbarity. The disciples extended their arms toward the master with
-an effusion of gratitude, an impulse of love, for he had illumined
-their souls as with a torch. In each lived again Giorgione's creation:
-the youth with the beautiful white plumes, who advanced toward the
-rich mass of spoils; and each fancied as multiplied to infinity his
-own power to enjoy all things. Their cry expressed so plainly their
-perturbation of spirit, that the master felt an inward tremor and the
-inrush of a wave of sadness as he thought of the ashes of this sudden
-fire, and of the cruel wakening of the morrow. Against what sharp
-obstacles must be broken this terrible desire to live, this violent
-will of each to shape the wings of Victory to his own destiny, and to
-bend all the energies of his nature toward the sublime end!
-
-But that night favored youthful delirium. All the dreams of domination,
-of pleasure and of glory, that Venice has first cradled, then stifled,
-in her marble arms, seemed to rise anew from the foundations of the
-palace, to enter from the open balconies, palpitating like a people
-revivified under the arch of that rich and heavy ceiling, which was
-like a suspended treasure. The strength which, on the ceiling and the
-walls, seemed to swell the muscles of the gods, the kings, and the
-heroes, the beauty which, in the nudity of the goddesses, the queens,
-and the courtesans, ran like visible music--all that human strength and
-beauty, transfigured by centuries of art, harmonized itself in a single
-figure, which these intoxicated ones fancied they beheld, real and
-breathing, erected before them by the new poet.
-
-They vented their intoxicated enthusiasm in that great cry which they
-sent up to him who had offered to their thirsty lips a cup of his own
-wine. Henceforth, all would be able to see the inextinguishable flame
-through its watery veil. Some one among them already imagined himself
-crumpling laurel leaves to perfume his hands; and another resolved to
-seek at the bottom of a silent canal for the old sword and the ancient
-diadem.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- THE SPIRIT OF MELODY
-
-
-Alone with the statues in one of the rooms of the neighboring museum,
-Stelio Effrena rested for a moment, shrinking from any other contact,
-feeling the need of gathering his strength and quieting his nerves,
-to free himself from the unusual vibration through which it seemed to
-him all the essence of his spirit had been dissipated and scattered
-over the composite soul of the throng. Of his recent words, no trace
-remained in his memory, and of recent images he perceived no vestige.
-The only phrase that lingered in his mind was that "inmost flower of
-the flame," which he had conjured up in speaking of the glory of the
-first Bonifacio, and which he had plucked with his own incombustible
-fingers to offer to his promised love. He remembered how, at the
-precise instant of this spontaneous offering, the woman had turned
-away her head, and how, instead of a glance from her dreamy eyes, he
-had encountered the indicating smile. Then the intoxicating cloud that
-had been just on the point of melting away, seemed to condense itself
-anew in his brain, in the vague form of the creature of music; and
-he fancied that she held in her hand the flower of flame, as, in a
-dominating attitude, she emerged above his inward agitation as from
-the trembling waves of a summer sea.
-
-As if to celebrate that image, from the Hall of the Greater Council
-came the first notes of the symphony of Benedetto Marcello, the
-fugue-like movement of which revealed at once its grand style. A
-sonorous idea, clear and strong as a living person, developed itself in
-the powerful measure; and in that melody Stelio recognized the virtue
-of the same principle around which, as around a thyrsus, he had twined
-the garlands of his poesy.
-
-Then the name that had already resounded against the sides of the
-vessel, in the silence and the shadow, that name which, in the great
-wave of sound from the evening bells, had been lost like a sibylline
-leaf, seemed to his fancy to propose its syllables to the orchestra
-as a new theme to be interpreted by the musicians' bows. The violins,
-viols, and violoncellos sang it in turn; the sudden blasts of the
-heroic trumpets exalted it; and at last a whole quartette, in one
-great, thrilling chord, flung it toward that heaven of joy where
-later would sparkle the starry crown offered to Ariadne by the golden
-Aphrodite.
-
-In the pause that followed, Stelio experienced a singular agitation,
-almost like a religious ecstasy, before that annunciation. He realized
-what it was worth to him, in that inestimable lyric moment, to find
-himself alone amid this group of white and motionless statues. A shred
-of the same mystery which, under the quarter of the ship, had seemed
-to float lightly across his senses like a misty veil, again waved
-before his eyes in that deserted hall, which was so near to the human
-throng. It was like the silence of the sea-shell, lying on the shore
-beside the stormy ocean. He again felt a conviction, such as he had
-already experienced in certain extraordinary hours of his journey, of
-the presence of his fate, which was about to give to his spirit a new
-impulse, perhaps to quicken within him a marvelous act of will. And,
-as he remembered the thousands of obscure destinies hanging over the
-heads of that crowd, which had been so stirred by his images of an
-ideal life, he congratulated himself on being able to adore alone the
-propitious demon that came to visit him secretly, to offer to him a
-veiled gift, in the name of an unknown mistress.
-
-He thrilled at the burst of human voices that saluted with triumphal
-acclamation the unvanquished god.
-
- _Viva il forte, viva il grande!_
-
-The vast hall resounded like a great timbrel, and the reverberation
-penetrated through the Censors' Stairway, the Golden Stairway, the
-corridors and the vestibules to the furthermost parts of the palace,
-like a thunder of joy echoing in the serene night.
-
- _Viva il forte, viva il grande!
- Vincitor dell' Indie dome!_
-
-It seemed indeed that the chorus was saluting the apparition of the
-magnificent god invoked by the poet on the City Beautiful. It seemed
-that in those vocal notes the folds of his purple draperies quivered
-like flames in a crystal tube. The living image hung suspended over
-the assemblage, which nourished it with its own dream.
-
- _Viva il forte, viva il grande!_
-
-In the impetuous fugue movement, the bass, the contraltos, the sopranos
-repeated the frenzied acclamation to the Immortal of the thousand names
-and the thousand crowns, "born on an ineffable bed, like to a young man
-in his first youth."
-
-The old Dionysian intoxication seemed born again, diffusing itself
-through that divine chorus. The fulness and freshness of life in the
-smile of Zeus, who freed men's souls from sadness, expressed itself
-in a luminous outburst of joy. The torches of the Bacchantes blazed
-and crackled in the sound. As in an Orphic hymn, the brightness of
-conflagration illumined that youthful brow, surmounted by azure hair.
-"When the splendor of fire invaded the whole earth, he alone checked
-the whirlwinds of flame." As in the Homeric hymn, there palpitated
-the sterile bosom of the sea, expressing in regular cadences the
-measured stroke of the oars that propelled the stout vessel toward
-unknown lands. The Flower-bearer, the Fructifier, the visible Remedy
-for mortal man, the sacred Flower, The Friend of Pleasure, Dionysius,
-the liberator, suddenly appeared before mankind on the wings of song,
-crowning for them that nocturnal hour with happiness, placing before
-them once more the cup overflowing with all the good things of life.
-
-The song increased in power; all the voices blended in the rush
-of melody. The hymn celebrated the tamer of tigers, of panthers,
-lions and lynxes. A cry seemed to rise from Mænads with heads turned
-backward, flying locks and floating robes, who struck their cymbals and
-shook their castanets: _Evoé!_
-
-But now suddenly surged above these heroic measures a broad, pastoral
-rhythm, invoking the Theban Bacchus, of the pure brow and gentle
-thoughts:
-
- _Quel che all'olmo la vite in stretto nodo
- Pronuba accoppia, e i pampini feconda_ ...
-
-Only two voices, in a succession of sixths, now sang the flowery
-nuptials, the leafy marriage, the flexible bonds. Before the eyes of
-the multitude again passed that image already created by the poet
-of the barque laden with clusters, like a vat filled with grapes to
-be made into wine. And again the song seemed to recall the miracle
-witnessed by the prudent pilot Medeia: "And behold! a sweet and
-fragrant wine ran over the swift, black boat.... And behold! a vine
-climbed to the top of the sail, and from it hung innumerable clusters
-of grapes. And a dark ivy twined about the mast, and it was covered
-with flowers, and beautiful fruits amid their foliage grew thereon, and
-garlands were wound about the rowlocks."
-
-The spirit of the fugue then passed into the orchestra, and mounted in
-exquisitely light roulades, while the voices struck on the orchestral
-web with simultaneous percussion. And, like a thyrsus waving over the
-Bacchic troop, a single voice floated out in the nuptial melody, with
-the laughing joy and grace of the pastoral marriage:
-
- _Viva dell'olmo,
- E della vite
- L'almo fecondo
- Sostenitor!_
-
-The voices seemed to evoke the image of erect and graceful Tiades,
-gently waving their thyrsi in the mists of divine intoxication, dressed
-in long saffron-hued robes, their faces lighted up, ardent as those
-women of Veronese, who leaned over their aerial balconies to listen to
-the song.
-
-But the heroic acclamation once more sprang up with final vehemence.
-The face of the conquering god reappeared amid torches frantically
-waved aloft. Then, in unison, in a supreme burst of joy, voices and
-orchestra thundered together at the many-eyed chimera under the
-suspended treasure of that dome circled by red triremes, armed towers,
-and triumphal bands:
-
- _Viva dell'Indie,
- Viva de' mari,
- Viva de' mostri
- Il domator._
-
-Stelio Effrena had gone as far as the threshold; through the throng
-that made way before him he penetrated into the hall and halted
-near the platform occupied by the orchestra and the singers. His
-restless eyes sought La Foscarina near the celestial sphere, but
-did not find her. The head of the Tragic Muse no longer rose above
-the constellations. Where was she? To what place has she withdrawn?
-Could she see him, although he could not see her? A confused anxiety
-agitated him, and the remembrance of the early evening on the water
-returned to him indistinctly, accompanied by the words of her recent
-promise. Glancing up at the open balconies, he thought that perhaps she
-had stepped outside to breathe the fresh night air, and that, perhaps,
-leaning against the balustrade she felt passing over her cool throat
-the wave of music, which would seem as sweet to her as the delight of a
-kiss from beloved lips.
-
-But his impatience to hear the divine voice dominated all other
-impatience, abolished all other desire. He observed that again a
-profound silence reigned throughout the hall, as at the instant when he
-had opened his lips to speak his first word. And, as at that instant,
-the versatile and ephemeral monster, with a thousand human faces,
-seemed to extend itself and yawn to receive a new soul.
-
-Some one near Stelio whispered the name of Donatella Arvale. He turned
-his eyes toward the platform, past the row of violoncellos, which
-formed a brown hedge. The singer remained invisible, hidden in the
-delicate, quivering forest of bows, whence would arise the mournful
-harmony that must accompany the Lament of Ariadne.
-
-Amid a sympathetic silence rose a prelude of violins. Then the
-viols and violoncellos added a sigh more profound to that imploring
-plaint. Was not this--after the Phrygian flute and the castanets,
-after the instruments of orgies, which trouble the reason and provoke
-delirium--was not this the august Doric lyre, grave and sweet, the
-harmonious support of song? Thus was the Drama born from the boisterous
-Dithyramb. The great metamorphosis of the Dionysian rite, the frenzy
-of the sacred festival before the creative inspiration of the tragic
-poet, were figured in that musical alternance. The fiery breath of the
-Thracian god gave life to a sublime form of Art. The crown and the
-tripod, the prize of the poet's victory, had displaced the lascivious
-goat and the Attic basket of figs. Æschylus, keeper of a vineyard, had
-been visited by the god, who had infused into him his spirit of flame.
-On the bank of the Acropolis, near the sanctuary of Dionysius, a marble
-theater had risen, capable of containing the chosen people.
-
-Thus suddenly opened in the mind of the Master the pathways of
-centuries, extending through the distance of primitive mysteries.
-That form of Art, toward which now tended the effort of his genius,
-attracted by the obscure aspirations of human multitudes, appeared to
-him in the sanctity of its origins. The divine sadness of Ariadne,
-up-springing like a melodious cry from the furious Thiaros, made leap
-once more within him the work he nourished in his soul, unformed
-yet alive. With a glance, again he sought the Muse of the revealing
-voice against the sphere of constellations, but he did not see her,
-and turned once more to the forest of instruments, whence rose the
-imploring plaint.
-
-Then, amid the slender bows, that rose and fell upon the strings
-with alternating movement, appeared the singer, erect as a stem;
-and, like a stem, she seemed to balance herself an instant on the
-softened harmony. The youthfulness of her agile and robust body shone
-resplendent through the texture of her robes, as a flame is seen
-through the thinness of polished ivory. Rising and falling around
-her white form, the bows seemed to draw their melody from the secret
-music that dwelt within her. When her lips opened in an enchanting
-curve, Stelio recognized the strength and purity of the voice before
-the singer had uttered one modulation, as if she were a crystal statue
-wherein he could behold the unspringing of a jet of living water.
-
- _Come mai puoi
- Vedermi piangere?_
-
-The melody of a by-gone love and long-dead sorrow flowed from those
-lips with an expression so pure and strong that suddenly, within the
-soul of the multitude, it was changed into a mysterious happiness.
-Was that strain indeed the divine plaint of the daughter of Minos, as
-she held out her arms in vain to the fair Stranger on the deserted
-shore of Naxos? The fable vanished; the illusion of the moment was
-abolished. The eternal love and eternal sorrow of gods and of men were
-exhaled in that perfect voice. The futile regret for each lost joy,
-the recollection of each fugitive blessing, the supreme prayer flying
-toward every sail on the sea, toward every sun hiding itself among
-the mountains, the implacable desire and the promise of death--all
-these things passed into the great, solitary song, transformed by
-the power of Art into sublime essences which the soul could receive
-without suffering. The words were dissolved in tone, losing their
-significance, changed into notes of love and sadness, indefinitely
-illuminating. Like a circle that is closed, and yet dilates continually
-in accordance with the rhythm of universal life, the melody encircled
-the composite soul which dilated with it in immeasurable joy. Through
-the open balconies, in the perfect calm of the autumn night, the
-enchantment spread over the peaceful waters and mounted to the watchful
-stars, higher than the motionless masts of the ships, higher than the
-sacred towers, inhabited by the now silent bronze bells. During the
-interludes the singer drooped her youthful head and stood motionless
-as a white statue among the forest of instruments, where the long bows
-rose and fell in alternate movement, perhaps unconscious of that world
-which in a few brief moments her song had transfigured.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME
-
-
-Descending to the courtyard hastily, in order to escape importunate
-curiosity, Stelio took refuge in a shadowy corner, to watch, among the
-crowd coming down the Giants' Stairway, for the appearance of the two
-women, the actress and the singer, who were to meet him near the well.
-
-Every instant his expectation became more anxious, while around him
-rose the tumultuous cry that extended to the outer walls of the
-palace and lost itself among the clouds, now lighted with a glare as
-of a conflagration. An almost terrible joy seemed to spread over the
-Anadyomenean City, as if a vehement breath had suddenly dilated all
-breasts, filling the veins of all men with a superabundance of life.
-The repetition of the Bacchic Chorus celebrating the crown of stars,
-placed by Aphrodite on the forgetful head of Ariadne, had drawn a cry
-from the throng on the Molo beneath the open balconies. When, at the
-final elevation, the word _Viva!_ rang out from the chorus of Mænads,
-Satyrs, and Egipans, the chorus of the populace had responded to it
-like a formidable echo from the harbor of San Marco. And in this moment
-of Dionysian delirium it seemed as if the people remembered the forests
-of old that were burned on sacred nights, and had given a signal for
-the conflagration that must light up the beauty of Venice in final,
-dazzling splendor.
-
-The dream of Paris Eglano--the spectacle of marvelous flames offered
-to love on a floating couch--flashed before Stelio's vision. The
-persistent image of Donatella Arvale lingered in his thought: a supple,
-youthful figure, strong and shapely, rising erect amid the sonorous
-forest of bows, which seemed to draw their notes from the hidden music
-within herself. And, seized with a strange distress, through which
-passed something like the shadow of horror, he saw the image of the
-other woman: poisoned by art, worn with experience, with the taste of
-maturity and worldly corruptness on those eloquent lips, a feverish
-dryness in those hands, which had pressed the juice from deceitful
-fruits, and with the marks of a thousand masks on the face that had
-simulated the fury of all mortal passions. To-night, at last, after a
-long period of waiting and of hope, he was to receive the gift of that
-heart, no longer young, which had been claimed by others before him,
-but which he never yet had called his own. How his heart had throbbed
-in the early evening as he sat beside that silent woman, floating
-toward the City Beautiful over the waters that seemed to bear them on
-with the terrifying smoothness of mysterious machinery. Ah, why did
-she come now to meet him in company with the other temptress? Why did
-she place beside her despair and worldly wisdom the pure splendor of
-innocent youth?
-
-He started suddenly as he perceived in the throng at the top of the
-marble staircase, by the light of the smoking torches, the form of La
-Foscarina pressed so closely against that of Donatella Arvale that the
-robes of both blended into one mass of whiteness. He followed them with
-his eyes until they reached the lowest stair, anxious as if at each
-step they had approached the edge of an abyss. The unknown during these
-hours had already led in the heart of the poet a life so intense that
-on seeing her approach him he experienced the emotion that would have
-seized him before a breathing incarnation of one of the ideal creatures
-born of his art.
-
-She descended slowly on the human wave. Behind her, the Palace of the
-Doges, filled with streams of lights and confused sounds, made one
-think of those fairy-tale awakenings which suddenly, in the depths of
-the forest, transfigure inaccessible castles where for centuries the
-hair on royal heads had grown longer and longer during a protracted
-sleep. The two guardian Giants shone red in the blaze of the torches;
-the cuspid of the Golden Gate sparkled with tiny lights. And still
-the clamor rose and swelled above the groups of marbles, loud as the
-moaning of the stormy sea against the walls of Malamocco.
-
-In this tumult, Effrena saw advancing toward him the two temptresses,
-escaping from the crowd as if from the clasp of a monster. And his
-fancy pictured extraordinary assimilations, which should be realized
-with the ease of dreams and the solemnity of liturgic ceremonies. He
-said to himself that Perdita was leading this magnificent prey to
-him, that he might discover some rarely beautiful secret, that some
-great work of love might be accomplished, in which she desired to be
-his fellow artisan. He told himself that this very night she would
-say to him most marvelous words. Across his spirit passed once again
-the indefinable melancholy he had felt when he leaned over the bronze
-rim to contemplate the reflection of the stars in that dark mirror;
-he waited in expectation of some event that should stir that secret
-soul in the furthermost depths of his being, where it lay motionless,
-strange, intangible. By the whirling of his thoughts, he comprehended
-that he was again plunged into that delirium which the glamor of the
-lagoon had given him at twilight. Then, emerging from the shadowy
-corner, he went forward to meet the two women with an intoxicating
-presentiment.
-
-"Oh, Effrena!" said La Foscarina, as she reached the well, "I had given
-up all hope of finding you here. We are very late, are we not? But we
-were caught in the crowd and could not escape."
-
-Then, turning toward her companion with a smile, she said:
-
-"Donatella, this is the Master of the Flame."
-
-Without speaking, but with a slight smile, Donatella Arvale responded
-to the low bow of the young man.
-
-"We must find our gondola," said La Foscarina. "It is waiting for us at
-the Ponte della Paglia. Will you come with us, Effrena? We must profit
-by the opportunity. The crowd is rushing toward the Piazzetta. The
-Queen will leave by the Porta della Carta."
-
-A long, unanimous cry saluted the appearance of the fair Queen in her
-pearls, as she stood at the head of the stairs, where long ago, in the
-presence of the populace, the Doge received the ducal ensign. Again the
-name of the white starry flower and the pearl arose from the crowd and
-was echoed among the marbles. Flashes of joy sparkled against the dark
-sky, a thousand fiery doves flew from the pinnacles of San Marco, like
-messengers of Fire.
-
-"The Epiphany of the Flame!" cried La Foscarina, as she reached the
-Molo and gazed upon the marvelous spectacle.
-
-Donatella Arvale and Stelio Effrena stood side by side, astonished;
-then they looked into each other's eyes, bewildered. And their faces,
-illumined by the reflections, shone as if they were leaning over a
-furnace or a glowing crater.
-
-All the innumerable appearances of the volatile and multi-colored Fire
-spread over the firmament, crept over the waters, curled around the
-masts of the ships, enwreathed the cupolas and the towers, adorned
-the friezes, draped the statuary, bejeweled the capitals, enriched
-every line and transfigured every aspect of the sacred and profane
-architectures around that profound and mysterious watery mirror,
-which multiplied these marvels. The astonished eye could no longer
-distinguish between the contour and the quality of the elements, but
-it was charmed by a moving vision wherein all forms lived a lucid,
-fluid life, suspended in vibrating ether, so that the slender prows
-curving over the waves and the myriad of golden doves against the dark
-sky seemed to rival one another in the glory of swift motion, and
-together to reach the summit of immaterial beauty. That which in the
-twilight had seemed a silvery palace of Neptune, built in imitation
-of a rare shell, at this hour had become a new temple, erected by the
-nimble genii of the Fire. It seemed like one of those labyrinthian
-constructions of our dreams, prodigiously enlarged, that rise on
-andirons, at the hundred gates of which stand the two-faced augurs who
-make ambiguous gestures to the watching maiden; or like one of those
-fairy-like red palaces, at the thousand windows of which appear the
-faces of salamander princesses, who smile amorously upon the dreaming
-poet.
-
-Rosy as a setting moon, the sphere of the Fortuna, borne on the
-shoulders of the Atlantides, radiated on the triple loggia, its rays
-engendering a cycle of satellites. From the Riva, from San Giorgio,
-from the Giudecca, with a continual crackling, clusters of fiery stems
-rose toward the clouds, and there blossomed into sparkling roses,
-lilies, and palms, a flowery paradise, forming an aerial garden that
-continually faded and bloomed again with yet stranger and richer
-blossoms. It was like a rapid succession of springs and autumns in the
-empyrean. An immense sparkling shower of leaves and petals fell from
-the celestial dissolutions, enveloping all things in its golden shimmer.
-
-From a distance, through gaps in the glittering rain, a flotilla gay
-with flags could be seen approaching over the waters of the lagoon: a
-fairy-like fleet such as might float through the dream of a sybarite
-sleeping his last sleep on a bed steeped in deadly perfumes. Like
-those, perhaps, their ropes were made from the twisted hair of slaves
-captured in conquered cities, and still redolent of fragrant oils; like
-those, perhaps, their hulls were laden with myrrh, spikenard, benzoin,
-cinnamon, aromatic herbs; with sandal-wood, cedar, terebinth, and all
-oderiferous woods in rich profusion. The indescribable colors of the
-flags suggested perfumes and spices. Of blue-green peacock shades,
-saffron, violet, and indistinct hues, those flaming flags seemed to
-spring from some burning interior and to have been colored by some
-unknown process.
-
-"The Epiphany of the Flame!" repeated La Foscarina. "What an unforeseen
-commentary on your poem, Effrena! The City of Life responds by a
-miracle to your act of adoration. She burns, through her watery veil.
-Are you not satisfied? Look! Millions of golden pomegranates are
-hanging everywhere!"
-
-The actress was smiling, her face illumined by the magic fire. She was
-suddenly possessed by that singular gayety of hers which Stelio knew
-well, and which, because of its effect of incongruity with her usual
-pose, suggested to him the image of a dark, closed house where violent
-hands had suddenly opened on rusty hinges all the doors and windows.
-
-"We must praise Ariadne," he replied, "for having uttered, in all this
-harmony, the most sublime note."
-
-Stelio said those flattering words only to induce the fair singer to
-speak, only through a desire to know the _timbre_ of that voice when
-it descended from the heights of song. But his praise was lost in the
-reiterated clamor of the crowd, which overflowed on the Molo, making a
-longer stay impossible. From the bank, Stelio assisted the two friends
-into their gondola; then he sat down on a stool at their knees, and the
-long, dentellated prow sparkled, like all else, in the magic fire.
-
-"To the Rio Marin, by the Grand Canal," La Foscarina ordered the
-gondolier. "Do you know, Effrena, we are to have at supper some of your
-best friends: Francesco de Lizo, Daniele Glauro, Prince Hoditz, Antimo
-della Bella, Fabio Molza, Baldassare Stampa"--
-
-"Then it will be a banquet?"
-
-"But not, alas! like that of Cana."
-
-"And will not Lady Myrta, with her Veronese greyhounds, be there?"
-
-"Rest assured that we shall have Lady Myrta. Did you not see her in the
-hall? She sat in the first row, lost in admiration of you."
-
-Because they had looked into each other's eyes as they spoke, a sudden
-emotion seized them. The remembrance of that full twilight hour on the
-water that rippled beneath their oar filled their hearts with a wave of
-troubled blood; and each was surprised by a swift return of the same
-agitation felt when leaving the silent estuary already in the power
-of shadow and death. Their lips refused to utter vain, light words;
-their souls refused to make the effort to incline themselves through
-prudence toward the passing trivialities of the superficial life, which
-now seemed worthless to both; and their spirits became absorbed in
-the contemplation of the strange fancies that rose from their inmost
-thoughts in a garb of indescribable richness, like the heaped-up
-treasures the streams of light seemed to reveal in the depths of the
-nocturnal waters.
-
-And, because of that very silence, they felt the presence of the singer
-weigh heavily upon them, as in the moment when her name had first
-been spoken between them; and little by little the oppression became
-intolerable. Although Stelio was seated close to her, she appeared no
-less distant than when she rose above the forest of instruments; she
-was as absent and unconscious as she had been when her voice soared
-high in song. She had not yet spoken.
-
-Simply to hear her speak, and almost timidly, Stelio said:
-
-"Shall you remain some time longer in Venice?"
-
-He had pondered on the first words he should say to her, but was
-dissatisfied with whatever rose to his lips, for all phrases seemed too
-vivid, insidious, full of ambiguous significance, capable of infinite
-changes and transformations, like the unknown seed from which may
-spring a thousand roots. And it seemed to him that Perdita could not
-hear one of those phrases without feeling that a shadow darkened her
-love.
-
-After he had spoken those simple, conventional words, he reflected that
-even that question might suggest an infinity of hope and eagerness.
-
-"I must leave Venice to-morrow," Donatella replied. "I ought not to be
-here even now."
-
-Her voice, so clear and powerful in the heights of song, was low and
-sober, as if suffused with a slight opacity, suggesting the image
-of the most precious metal wrapped in the most delicate velvet. Her
-brief reply indicated that there was a place of suffering to which she
-must return, where she must undergo some familiar torture. Like iron
-tempered with tears, a strong though sorrowful will shone through the
-veil of her youthful beauty.
-
-"To-morrow!" Stelio exclaimed, not seeking to hide his sincere regret.
-"Have you heard, Signora?"
-
-"I know," the actress replied, gently taking Donatella's hand. "I am
-filled with regret to see her go. But she cannot remain away longer
-from her father. Perhaps you do not yet know"--
-
-"What?" asked Stelio quickly. "Is he ill? Is it true, then, that
-Lorenzo Arvale is ill?"
-
-"No, he is only fatigued," said La Foscarina, touching her forehead
-with a gesture perhaps involuntary but which revealed to Stelio the
-horrible menace hanging over the genius of the artist who had seemed as
-fertile and indefatigable as one of the old masters--a Della Robbia or
-a Verrocchio.
-
-"He is only fatigued," repeated La Foscarina. "He needs repose and
-quiet. And his daughter's singing is very soothing to him. Do you not
-believe, also, Effrena, in the healing power of music?"
-
-"Certainly," Stelio replied, "Ariadne possesses a divine gift whereby
-her power transcends all limits."
-
-The name of Ariadne came spontaneously to his lips to indicate the
-singer as she appeared to his fancy, for it seemed to him impossible
-to pronounce the young girl's real name preceded by the ordinary
-appellation imposed by social usage. In his eyes she was perfect
-and singular, free from the little ties of custom, living her own
-sequestered life, like a work of art on which style had set its
-inviolable seal. He thought of her as isolated like those figures that
-stand out with clear contour, far from common life, lost in mystic
-reverie; and already, before that impenetrable character, he felt a
-sort of passionate impatience, somewhat similar to that of a curious
-man before something hermetically sealed that tempts him.
-
-"Ariadne had for the soothing of her griefs the gift of forgetfulness,"
-said Donatella, "and that I do not possess."
-
-A bitterness perhaps involuntary infused these words, in which Stelio
-fancied he detected the indication of an aspiration toward a life
-less oppressed by useless suffering. He guessed at her revolt against
-a certain form of domestic slavery, the horror of her self-imposed
-sacrifice, her vehement desire to rise toward joy, and her inborn
-aptitude for being drawn like a beautiful bow by a strong hand that
-would know how to use it for some high conquest. He divined that she
-had no longer any hope of her father's recovery, and that she was
-saddened at the thought that henceforth she could only be the guardian
-of a darkened hearth, of ashes without a spark. The image of the great
-artist rose in his mind, not as he was, since Stelio never had known
-him personally, but such as he had fancied the sculptor after studying
-his ideas of beauty expressed in imperishable bronze and marble. His
-mind fixed itself on that image with a sensation of terror more
-icy than that which the most appalling aspects of death could have
-inspired. And all his strength, all his pride and his ardor seemed to
-resound within him like weapons shaken by a menacing hand, sending a
-quiver through every fiber of his heart.
-
-Presently La Foscarina lifted the funereal black curtain, which
-suddenly, amid the splendors of the festival, had seemed to change the
-gondola into a coffin.
-
-"Look!" she said, pointing out to Stelio the balcony of Desdemona's
-palace: "See the beautiful Nineta receiving the homage of the Serenade,
-as she sits between her pet monkey and her little dog."
-
-"Ah, the beautiful Nineta!" said Stelio, rousing himself from his
-wild thoughts, and saluting the smiling occupant of the balcony, a
-little woman who was listening to the music, her face illumined from
-two silver candelabra, from the branches of which hung wreaths of the
-last roses of the year. "I have not yet seen her this time. She is
-the gentlest and most graceful animal I know. How fortunate was our
-dear Howitz to discover her behind the lid of an old harpsichord when
-he was rummaging in that curiosity shop at San Samuele! Two pieces
-of good fortune in one day: the lovely Nineta and a harpsichord lid
-painted by Pordenone. Since that day, the harmony of his life has
-been complete. How I should like to have you penetrate to his nest!
-You would find there a perfect example of that which I spoke of this
-evening, at twilight. There is a man who, by obeying his native taste
-for simplicity, has arranged for himself with minute art his own little
-love-story, in which he lives as happily as did his Moravian ancestor
-in the Arcady of Rosswald. Ah! I know a thousand exquisite things about
-him!"
-
-A large gondola, decorated with many-colored lanterns, and laden with
-singers and musicians, had stopped beneath the balcony of Desdemona's
-house. The old song of brief youth and fleeting beauty rose sweetly
-toward the little woman who listened with her child-like smile, sitting
-between the monkey and the lapdog, making a group like one of Pietro
-Longhi's prints.
-
- _Do beni vu gharè
- Beleza e zoventù;
- Co i va no i torna più,
- Nina mia cara...._
-
-"Does it not seem to you, Effrena, that these surroundings express the
-true soul of Venice, and that the other picture, which you presented
-to the multitude, is only your own fancy?" said La Foscarina, nodding
-her head slightly in time with the rhythm of the sweet song that spread
-through the Grand Canal and was reechoed from afar by singers in other
-gondolas.
-
-"No," Stelio replied, "this does not at all represent the true soul of
-Venice. In each one of us, fluttering like a butterfly over the surface
-of our deeper nature, is a lighter soul, an _animula_, a little playful
-sprite that often dominates us for the moment, and leads us toward
-simple and mediocre pleasures, toward puerile pastimes and frivolous
-music. This _animula vagula_ exists even in the gravest and most
-violent natures, like the clown attached to the person of Othello; and
-sometimes it misleads our better judgment. That which you hear now, in
-the songs and the melodies of the guitars, is the _animula_, or lighter
-spirit, of Venice; but her real soul is discovered only in silence,
-and most terribly, be assured, in full summer, at noonday, like the
-soul of the great god Pan. Out in the harbor of San Marco, I thought
-that you felt its mystic vibration during those moments of the great
-conflagration. You are forgetting Giorgione for Rosalba!"
-
-Around the large gondola beneath the balcony had gathered other
-gondolas bearing languid women who leaned out to listen to the music in
-attitudes of graceful _abandon_, as if in fancy they felt themselves
-sinking into invisible arms. And around this romantic group the
-reflections of the lanterns in the water quivered like a flowering of
-rare and luminous water-lilies.
-
- _Se lassarè passar
- La bela e fresca età,
- Un zorno i ve dirà
- Vechia maura,
- E bramarè, ma invan,
- Quel che ghavevi in man
- Co avè lassà scampar
- La congiontura._
-
-It was, in truth, the song of the last roses that entwined the
-candelabra. It called up in Perdita's mind the funeral cortège of the
-dead Summer, the opalescent veil in which Stelio had wrapped the sweet
-body in its golden robe. Through the glass, sealed by the Master of
-Fire, she could see her own image at the bottom of the lagoon, lying on
-a field of seaweed. A sudden chill stole over her; once more she felt
-horror and disgust of her own body, no longer young. And, remembering
-her recent promise, thinking that perhaps this very night the beloved
-one would claim its fulfilment, she shuddered with a sort of sorrowful
-modesty, a mingling of fear and pride. Her experience and despairing
-eyes ran over the young girl beside her, studying her, penetrating her,
-realizing her occult but certain power, her intact freshness, pure
-health, and that indefinable virtue of love that emanates like an aroma
-from chaste maidens when they have arrived at the perfection of their
-bloom. She felt that some secret current of affinity existed between
-this fair creature and the poet; she could almost divine the words he
-addressed to her in the silence of his heart. A bitter pang seized her,
-so intolerable that, with an involuntary movement, her fingers clutched
-convulsively the black rope of the arm-rest beside her, so that the
-little metal griffin that held it creaked audibly.
-
-This movement did not escape Stelio's anxious vigilance. He understood
-her agitation, and for a moment he experienced the same pang, but it
-was mingled with impatience and almost with anger, for her anguish,
-like a cry of destruction, interrupted the fiction of transcendent life
-that he had been constructing within himself in order to conciliate the
-contrast, to conquer this new force that offered itself to him like a
-bow to be drawn, yet at the same time not to lose the savor of that
-ripe maturity which life had impregnated with all its essences, and the
-benefit of that devotion and that passionate faith which sharpened his
-intelligence and fed his pride.
-
-"Ah, Perdita!" he said to himself, "From the ferment of your human
-loves, why has not a love more than human sprung. Ah, why have I
-finally vanquished you by my pleading, although I know it is too late?
-and why do you allow me to read in your eyes the certainty of your
-yielding, amid a flood of doubts which, nevertheless, never again
-will have power to reëstablish the abolished interdiction. Each of us
-knows full well that that interdiction conferred the highest dignity
-upon our long communion, yet we have not known how to preserve its
-rule, and at the last hour we yield blindly to an imperious internal
-call. Yet, a short time ago, when your noble head dominated the belt
-of constellations, I no longer saw in you an earthly love, but the
-illuminating, revelatory Muse of my poetry; and all my heart went out
-to you in gratitude, not for the promise of a fleeting happiness, but
-for the promise of glory. Do you not understand--you, who understand
-everything? By a marvelous inspiration, such as always comes to you,
-have you not turned my inclination, by the ray of your smile, toward
-a resplendent youthfulness which you have chosen and reserved for me?
-When you descended the stairway together, and approached me, had you
-not the appearance of one that bears a gift or an unexpected message?
-Not wholly unexpected, perhaps, Perdita! For I have anticipated from
-your infinite wisdom some extraordinary action toward me."
-
-"How happy the beautiful Nineta is, with her monkey and her little
-dog!" sighed the actress, looking back at the light songsters and the
-smiling woman on the balcony.
-
- _La zoventù xe un fior
- Che apena nato el mor,
- E un zorno gnanca mi
- No sarò quela._
-
-Donatella Arvale and Stelio also looked back, while the light barque,
-without sinking, bore over the water and past the music the three faces
-of a heavy destiny.
-
- _E vegna quel che vol,
- Lassè che voga!_
-
-Suddenly, in front of the red palace of the Foscari, at the curve of
-the canal, they saw the state vessel of the Doge of Venice so brightly
-illumined that it looked like a burning tower. New streaks of fire
-flashed against the sky. Other flaming doves flew up from the deck,
-rose above the terraces, sank among the statues, hissed as they fell
-into the water, multiplied themselves in thousands of sparks, and
-floated along in smoke. Along the parapets, from the decks, the poop,
-the prow, in a simultaneous explosion, a thousand fountains of fire
-opened, dilated, blended, illuminating with an intense, fiery radiance
-each side of the canal as far as San Vitale and the Rialto. Then the
-vessel of the Doge glided out of sight, transformed into a purple
-thunder-cloud.
-
-"Go through San Polo!" called La Foscarina to the gondolier, bending
-her head as under a storm, and shutting out the roar with her palms
-over her ears.
-
-Again Donatella Arvale and Stelio Effreno looked at each other with
-dazzled eyes. Again their faces, lighted by the glare, glowed as if
-they were leaning over a furnace or a burning crater.
-
-The gondola turned into the canal of San Polo, gliding along through
-the darkness. A cold shadow seemed suddenly to fall over the spirits of
-the three silent occupants. Under the arch of the bridge, the hollow
-echo of the dipping oar struck upon their souls, and the hilarity of
-the festival sounded infinitely far-away. All the houses were dark;
-the campanile rose silent and solitary toward the stars; the Campiello
-del Remer and the Campiello del Pistor were deserted, and the grass
-breathed there in untrodden peace; the trees, bending over the low
-walls of the little gardens, seemed to feel their leaves dying on the
-branches pointing to the serene sky.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- THE POET'S DREAM
-
-
-"So, for a few hours at least, the rhythm of Art and the pulse of Life
-have again throbbed in unison in Venice," said Daniele Glauro, raising
-from the table an exquisite chalice, to which only the Sacred Host was
-wanting. "Allow me to express, for myself and also for the many that
-are absent, the gratitude and fervor that blend in one single image of
-beauty the three persons to whom we owe this miracle: the mistress of
-the feast, the daughter of Lorenzo Arvale, and the poet of Persephone."
-
-"And why the mistress of the feast, Glauro?" asked La Foscarina,
-smiling in graceful surprise. "I, like you, have not given joy, but
-have received it. Donatella and the Master of the Flame: they alone
-merit the crown; and to them alone the glory must be given."
-
-"But, a short time ago, in the Hall of the Greater Council," said the
-mystic doctor, "your silent presence beside the celestial sphere was
-not less eloquent than the words of Stelio, nor less musical than the
-song of Ariadne. Once again you have divinely carved your own statue in
-silence, and it will live in our memories blended with the music and
-the words."
-
-Stelio shuddered as he recalled to mind the ephemeral flexible monster
-from the side of which had emerged the Tragic Muse above the sphere of
-constellations.
-
-"That is true, very true," said Francesco de Lizo. "I, too, had the
-same thought. As we looked at you, we all realized that you were the
-soul of that ideal world which each of us forms for himself, according
-to his own aspirations and thoughts when listening to the mystic word,
-the song, the symphony."
-
-"And each of us," said Fabio Molza, "felt that in your presence,
-dominating the throng, before the poet, dwelt a great and rare
-significance."
-
-"One might almost have said that you alone were about to assist at the
-mysterious birth of a new idea," said Antimo della Bella. "Everything
-around us seemed awakening itself to produce it--that idea which must
-soon be revealed to us, as a reward for the profound faith with which
-we have awaited it."
-
-The Animator, with another trembling of the heart, felt the work that
-he cherished within him leap once more, formless yet, but already
-living; and his whole soul, as if impelled by a lyric breath, suddenly
-felt drawn toward the fertile and enlightening power that emanated
-from the Dionysian woman to whom these fervent spirits addressed their
-praise.
-
-Suddenly she had become very beautiful: a nocturnal creature, fashioned
-by dreams and passion on a golden anvil, living embodiment of immortal
-fate and eternal enigmas. She might remain motionless and silent, but
-her famous accents and her memorable gestures seemed to live around
-her, vibrating indefinitely, as melodies seem to hover over the cords
-accustomed to sound them, as rhymes seem to breathe from the poet's
-closed book, wherein love and sorrow seek comfort and intoxication.
-The heroic fidelity of Antigone, the oracular fury of Cassandra, the
-devouring fever of Phædre, the cruelty of Medea, the sacrifice of
-Iphigenia, Myrrha before her father, Polyxenes and Alceste before the
-face of death, Cleopatra, fitful as the wind and the fires of the
-world, Lady Macbeth, the dreamy murderess with the little hands; and
-those great, fair lilies empearled with dew and tears--Imogen, Juliet,
-Miranda, Rosalind, Jessica, and Perdita--the tenderest, most terrible,
-and most magnificent souls dwelt within her, inhabited her body, shone
-from her eyes, breathed through her lips, which knew both honey and
-poison, the jeweled chalice and the cup of wormwood. Thus, through
-unlimited space, and endless, the outlines of human life and substance
-appeared to perpetuate themselves; and from the simple movement of a
-muscle, a sign, a start, a quiver of the eyelids, a slight change of
-color, an almost imperceptible inclination of the head, a fugitive play
-of light and shade, a lightning-like virtue of expression radiating
-from that frail and slender body, infinite worlds of imperishable
-beauty were continually generated.
-
-The genii of the places consecrated by poetry hovered around her,
-and encircled her with changing visions: the dusty plain of Thebes,
-the arid Argolide, the parched myrtles of Trezene, the sacred olives
-of Colonus, the triumphant Cydnus, the pale country of Dunsinane,
-Prospero's cavern, the Forest of Arden, land dampened with blood,
-toiled upon with pain, transfigured by a dream or illumined by an
-inextinguishable smile, seemed to appear, to recede, then to vanish
-behind her head. And a vision of countries still more remote--regions
-of mists, northern lands, and, far across the ocean, the immense
-continent where she had appeared like an unknown force amid astonished
-multitudes, bearer of the mystic word and the flame of genius--vanished
-behind her head: the throngs, the mountains, rivers and gulfs, the
-impure cities, the ancient, enfeebled, savage race, the strong people
-aspiring to dominate the world, the new nation that wrests from Nature
-her most secret energies to make them serve an all-powerful work in
-erecting edifices of iron and of crystal; the bastard colonies that
-ferment and grow corrupt on virgin soil; all the barbarous crowds
-she had visited as the messenger of Latin genius; all the ignorant
-masses to whom she had spoken the sublime language of Dante; all the
-human herds from which had mounted toward her, on a wave of confused
-anxieties and desires, the aspiration to Beauty.
-
-She stood there, a creature of perishable flesh, subject to the sad
-laws of time, but an illimitable mass of reality and poetry weighed
-upon her, surged around her, palpitated with the rhythm of her breath.
-And not upon the stage alone had she uttered her cries and suppressed
-her sobs: this had entered into her daily life. She had loved, fought
-and suffered violently, in her soul and in her body. What loves? What
-combats? What pangs? From what abysses of melancholy had she drawn the
-exaltations of her tragic force? At what springs of bitterness had
-she watered her free genius? She had certainly witnessed the crudest
-misery, the darkest ruin; she had known heroic effort, pity, horror,
-and the threshold of death. All her thirst had burned in the delirium
-of Phædre, and in the submissiveness of Imogen had trembled all her
-tenderness. Thus Life and Art, the irrevocable Past and the eternal
-Present, had made her profound, many-souled, and mysterious, had
-magnified her ambiguous destiny beyond human limits, and rendered her
-equal to great temples and natural forests.
-
-Nevertheless, she stood there, a living, breathing woman, under the
-gaze of the poets, each of whom saw her, and yet in her many others.
-
-"Ah! I will embrace you as in some mad revelry; I will clasp you,
-shake you; from your ripe experience, I will draw all the divine and
-abnormal secrets that weigh upon you--the things you have already done,
-and those on which you still meditate in the mysterious depths of your
-soul," sang the lyric demon in the ear of the poet, who recognized
-in the mystery of this woman the surviving power of primitive myth,
-the renewed initiation of the god that had concentrated in one single
-ferment all the energies of Nature, and, by a variety of rhythms, had
-raised, in an enthusiastic worship of himself, the senses and the
-spirit of man to the highest summits of joy and of pain.
-
-"I have done well, I have done wisely, to wait!" said Stelio to
-himself. "The passing of years, the tumult of dreams, the agitation of
-struggle and the swiftness of triumph, the experience of many loves,
-the enchantment of poets, the acclamations of the people; the marvels
-of earth, the patience and the fury, the steps in the mud, the blind
-flight, all evil, all good, that which I know and do not know, that
-which you know, as well as that which you are ignorant of--all this had
-to be to prepare the fulness of this night, which belongs to me!"
-
-He felt himself suffocate and turn pale. A wild impulse seized him by
-the throat, and would not relax its hold. His heart swelled with the
-same keen emotion that had possessed both in the twilight, as they
-floated over the water.
-
-And, as the exaggerated radiance of the city and the event had suddenly
-disappeared, the glory of this woman of the night reappeared to
-his mind still more closely blended with the city of the wonderful
-necklaces and the thousand emerald girdles. In the city and in the
-woman, the poet now saw a power of expression that he never had seen
-before: each glowed in the Autumn night; the same feverish fire that
-coursed through the canals ran also in her veins.
-
-The stars sparkled, the trees waved their branches behind Perdita's
-head, back of which were the shadows of a garden. Through the open
-balconies the sweet air of heaven entered the room; shook the flames of
-the candelabra and the chalices of flowers; swept through the doorways,
-making the draperies wave to and fro, animating that old house of the
-Capello, wherein the last great daughter of San Marco whom the people
-had covered with gold and glory had gathered relics of republican
-magnificence. Galleon lamps, Turkish targets, bronze helmets, leathern
-quivers, and velvet scabbards ornamented the apartments inhabited by
-the last descendant of that marvelous Cesare Darbes who maintained the
-Art of Comedy against the Goldonian reform, and changed the agony of
-the Most Serene Republic into a burst of laughter.
-
-"I only ask that I may be the humble servitor of that idea," was La
-Foscarina's reply to Antimo della Bella's words. Her voice trembled a
-little, her eyes had met Stelio's gaze.
-
-"You alone could make it triumphant," said Francesco de Lizo. "The soul
-of the people is yours forever."
-
-"The drama can only be a rite or a message," declared Glauro
-sententiously. "Acting should again become as solemn as a religious
-ceremony, since it embraces the two constituent elements of all
-worship: the living person, in whom, on the stage as before an altar,
-the word of the revealer is made incarnate, before a multitude as
-silent as if in a temple"--
-
-"Bayreuth!" interrupted Prince Hoditz.
-
-"No; the Janiculum!" exclaimed Stelio, suddenly breaking his silence of
-blissful dizziness. "A Roman hill. We do not need the wood and brick of
-Upper Franconia; we will have a marble theater on a Roman hill."
-
-The sudden opposition of his words seemed to spring from a light,
-good-natured disdain.
-
-"Do you not admire the work of Richard Wagner?" Donatella Arvale
-inquired, with a slight frown that for a moment made her Hermes-like
-face look almost hard.
-
-Stelio looked deep into her eyes; he felt that there was something
-obscurely hostile in the young girl's manner, and also that he himself
-experienced against her an indistinct suggestion of enmity. At this
-moment he again saw her living her own isolated life, fixed in some
-deep, secret thought, strange and inviolable.
-
-"The work of Richard Wagner," he replied, "is founded in the German
-spirit, and its essence is purely northern. His reform is not without
-analogy with that attempted by Luther; his drama is the supreme flower
-of the genius of a race, the extraordinarily powerful summary of
-the aspirations that have stirred the souls of the symphonists and
-national poets, from Bach to Beethoven, from Wieland to Goethe. If
-you could imagine his work on the Mediterranean shores, amid our pale
-olive-trees, our slender laurels, under the glorious light of the Latin
-sky, you would see it grow pale and dissolve. Since, according to his
-own words, it is given to the artist to behold a world as yet unformed
-resplendent in its future perfection, and to enjoy it prophetically
-through desire and through hope, I announce to you the coming of a new,
-or rather a renewed, art which, by the strong, sincere simplicity of
-its lines, by its vigorous grace, by its ardor of inspiration, by the
-pure power of its harmonies, will continue and crown the immense ideal
-edifice of our elect race. I glory in being Latin, and--will you pardon
-me, most exquisite Lady Myrta, and you, my delicate Hoditz?--in every
-man of different blood I see a barbarian."
-
-"But Wagner, too," said, Baldassare Stampa, who, having just returned
-from Bayreuth, was still full of ecstasy, "when he first unwound the
-thread of his theories, departed from the Greeks."
-
-"It was an uneven and a tangled thread," the poet replied. "Nothing
-is further from the Orestiades than the tetralogy of the Ring. The
-Florentines of the Casa Bardi have penetrated much deeper into the true
-meaning of Greek tragedy. All honor to the Camerata of the Conte di
-Vernio!"
-
-"I have always thought that the Camerata was only an idle reunion of
-scholars and rhetoricians," said Baldassare Stampa.
-
-"Did you hear that, Daniele?" exclaimed Stelio, addressing the mystic
-doctor. "When was there in the world a more fervid intelligence? They
-sought the spirit of life in Grecian antiquity; they tried to develop
-harmoniously all human energies, to manifest man in his integrity
-by every method of art. Giulio Caccini taught that that, which
-contributed to the excellence of the musician is not only the study
-of particular things, but of everything in general; the tawny hair of
-Jacopo Peri and of Zazzerino flamed in their song like that of Apollo.
-In the discourse that serves as a preface to the _Rappresentazione
-di Anima et di Corpo_, Emilio del Cavaliere presents the same ideas
-on the organization of the new theater that have since been realized
-at Bayreuth, comprising the rules of perfect silence, an invisible
-orchestra, and appropriate darkness. Marco da Gagliano, in celebrating
-a festal performance, eulogizes all the arts that contributed to it 'in
-such a way that through the intellect all the noblest sentiments are
-flattered at the same time by the most delightful art that the human
-mind has discovered.' That is sufficient, I think."
-
-"Bermino," resumed Francesco de Lizo, "presented an opera in Rome, for
-which he himself built the theater, painted the decorations, carved the
-ornamental statues, invented the machinery, wrote the words, composed
-the music, arranged the dances, rehearsed the actors, and in which he,
-too, danced, sang, and acted."
-
-"Enough! Enough!" cried Prince Hoditz, laughing. "The barbarian is
-vanquished."
-
-"No, that is not yet enough," said Antimo della Bella; "it remains
-to us to glorify the greatest of all these innovators; him that was
-consecrated a Venetian by his passion and death, him whose tomb is in
-the Church of the Frari, and is worthy of a pilgrimage--the divine
-Claudio Monteverde."
-
-"There was a heroic soul, of pure Italian essence," warmly acceded
-Daniele Glauro.
-
-"He accomplished his work in the tempest, loving, suffering,
-struggling, alone with his faith, his passion, and his genius," said La
-Foscarina slowly, as if absorbed in a vision of that sad and courageous
-life that had nourished the creations of its art with its warmest
-blood. "Tell us about him, Effrena."
-
-Stelio thrilled as if she had suddenly touched him. Again her
-expressive mouth called up an ideal figure, which rose as if from a
-sepulcher before the eyes of the poets, with the color and the breath
-of life. The ancient viola-player, bereaved, ardent, and sorrowful,
-like the Orpheus of his own fable, seemed to appear before them.
-
-It was a fiery apparition, more fervid and dazzling than that which had
-glowed in the harbor of San Marco; a flaming force of life, expelled
-from the deepest recesses of Nature toward the expectant multitude;
-a vehement zone of light, flashing out from an interior sky to
-illumine the most secret depths of human will and desire; an unheard
-word emerging from original silence to say that which is eternal and
-eternally ineffable in the heart of the world.
-
-"Who could speak of him, even if he himself should speak to us?" said
-the Inspirer, agitated, unable to conceal the wave of emotion surging
-in his soul like the troubled waters of a stormy sea.
-
-He looked at the singer, and beheld her as she had appeared during
-the pauses, when she stood amid the forest of instruments, white and
-inanimate as a statue.
-
-But the spirit of Beauty they had called up was to manifest itself
-through her.
-
-"Ariadne!" Stelio murmured, as if to awaken her from a dream.
-
-She arose without speaking, reached the door, and entered the adjoining
-room. The light sweep of her skirts and her soft footfall were audible;
-then they heard the sound of the piano being opened. All were silent
-and expectant. A musical silence filled the vacant place in the
-supper-room. A sudden gust of wind shook the flames of the candles
-and swayed the flowers. Then all became motionless in the anxiety of
-anticipation.
-
- _Lasciatemi morire!_
-
-Suddenly their souls were ravished by a power comparable to the
-strength of the eagle which, in Dante's dream, bore the poet to the
-region of flame. They burned together in eternal truth; they heard the
-melody of the world pass through their luminous ecstasy:
-
- _Lasciatemi morire!_
-
-Was it Ariadne, still Ariadne, weeping in some new grief, still rising
-to higher martyrdom?
-
- _E che volete
- Che mi conforte
- In cosa dure sorte,
- In cosi gran martire?
- Lasciatemi morire!_
-
-The voice ceased; the singer did not reappear. The aria of Claudio
-Monteverde composed itself in the auditors' memories like an immutable
-lineament.
-
-"Is there any Greek marble that has a perfection of style more sure
-and simple?" said Daniele Glauro softly, as if he feared to break the
-musical silence.
-
-"But what sorrow on earth ever has wept like that?" stammered Lady
-Myrta, her eyes full of tears, that ran down her poor, pale cheeks,
-which she wiped with her trembling hands, misshaped by gout.
-
-The austere intellect of the ascetic and the sweet, sensitive soul shut
-within the old, infirm body bore witness to the same power. In the same
-way, nearly three centuries before, at Mantua, in the famous theater,
-six thousand spectators had been unable to repress their sobs; and the
-poets had believed in the living presence of Apollo on the new stage.
-
-"See, Baldassare," said Stelio, "here is an artist of our own race
-who by the simplest means succeeded in attaining the highest degree
-of that beauty which the German but rarely approached in his confused
-aspirations toward the land of Sophocles."
-
-"Do you know the lament of the ailing king?" asked the young man with
-the sunny locks, which he wore long as a heritage from the Venetian
-Sappho, the "high Gaspara," unfortunate friend of Collalto.
-
-"All the agony of Amfortas is contained in a _mottetto_ that I know:
-_Peccantem me quotidie_, but with what lyric impetus, what powerful
-simplicity! All the forces of tragedy are there, sublimated, so to
-speak, like the instincts of a multitude in a heroic heart. The
-language of Palestrina, much more ancient, appears to me still purer
-and more virile.
-
-"But the contrast between Kundry and Parsifal, in the second act, the
-Herzeleide _motif_, the impetuous figure, that figure of pain drawn
-from the word of the sacred feast, the _motif_ of Kundry's aspiration,
-the prophetic theme of the promise, the kiss on the lips of the 'pure
-fool,' all that rending and intoxicating contrast of desire and
-horror.... 'The wound, the wound! Now it burns, now it bleeds within
-me!' And above the despairing frenzy of the temptress, the melody of
-submission: 'Let me weep on thy breast! Let me unite myself with thee
-for one hour; then, even if God repel me, through thee I shall be
-redeemed and saved.' And Parsifal's response, in which the _motif_
-of the 'pure fool,' now transfigured into the promised Hero, returns
-with lofty solemnity: 'Hell would be our fate for all eternity if for
-one single hour I should permit thee to clasp me in thy arms.' Then
-the wild ecstasy of Kundry: 'Since my kiss has made thee a prophet,
-embrace me wholly, and my love will render thee divine! One hour, one
-single hour with thee, and I shall be saved!' And the last effort of
-her demoniac will, the last gesture of enticement, the entreaty and the
-furious words: 'Only thy love can save me! Oh, let me love thee! Mine
-for a single hour! Thine for a single hour!'"
-
-Perdita and Stelio, entranced, gazed into each other's eyes; for an
-instant their spirits rushed together and mingled, in all the joy of an
-actual embrace.
-
-La Marangona, the largest bell of San Marco, sounded midnight, and,
-as at the eventide, the two enamored ones felt the reverberation of
-the bronze bell in the roots of their hair, almost like a quiver of
-their own flesh. Once more they felt, hovering over them, the whirlwind
-of sound, in the midst of which, in the twilight, they had suddenly
-become aware of the rising apparition of consoling Beauty, evoked
-by unanimous prayer. All the beauty of the waters, the timidity of
-concealed longing, the anxiety, the promise, the parting, the festival,
-the formidable, many-headed monster, the great, starry sphere, the
-clamor, the music, the song, and the wonders of the miraculous Flame,
-the return through the echoing canal, the song of brief youth, the
-mental struggle and silent agitation in the gondola, the sudden shadow
-over their three destinies, the banquet illumined by beautiful thought,
-the presentiments, hopes, pride, all the strongest pulsations of life
-were renewed between those two, quickened, became a thousand, and again
-one. They felt that in that one moment they had lived beyond all human
-limits, and that before them was opening a vast unknown, which they
-might absorb as the ocean absorbs, for, though they had lived so much,
-they felt their hearts were empty; though they had drunk so deep, they
-were still athirst. An overmastering illusion seized upon these rich
-natures, and each seemed to grow immeasurably more desirable in the
-other's eyes. The young girl had disappeared. The expression of the
-despairing, nomadic actress seemed to repeat: "Embrace me wholly, and
-my love will render thee divine! One hour, one single hour with thee,
-and I shall be saved! Mine for a single hour! Thine for a single hour!"
-
-The eloquent commentary of the enthusiast still dwelt upon the sacred
-tragedy. Kundry, the mad temptress, the slave of desire, the Rose of
-Hell, the original perdition, the accursed, now reappeared in the
-spring dawn; she reappeared humble and pale in her messenger's attire,
-her head bent, her eyes cast down; and her harsh, broken voice spoke
-only the single phrase: "Let me serve! Let me serve!"
-
-The melodies of solitude, of submission, of purification prepared
-around her humility the enchantment of Good Friday. And behold
-Parsifal, in black armor and closed helmet, his spear lowered, lost
-in an infinite dream: "I have come by perilous paths, but perhaps
-this day I shall be saved, since I hear the murmur of the sacred
-forest." ... Hope, pain, remorse, memory, the promise, faith panting
-for the soul's health, and the sacred, mysterious melodies wove the
-ideal mantle that should cover the Simple One, the Pure, the promised
-Hero sent to heal the incurable wound. "Wilt thou take me to Amfortas
-to-day?" He languished and fainted in the old man's arms. "Let me
-serve! Let me serve!" The melody of submission rose again from the
-orchestra, drowning the original impetuous _motif_. "Let me serve!" The
-faithful woman brings water, kneels humbly and eagerly, and washes the
-feet of her beloved. The faithful one drew from her bosom a vase of
-balm, anointed the beloved feet, and wiped them with her flowing hair.
-"Let me serve!" The Pure One bent over the sinner, sprinkling water on
-her wild head: "Thus I accomplish my first office; receive this baptism
-and believe in the Redeemer!" Kundry burst into tears, and knelt with
-her brow in the dust, freed from impurity, freed from the curse. And
-then, from the profound final harmonies of the prayer to the Redeemer,
-rose and spread with superhuman sweetness the melody of the flowery
-fields: "How beautiful to-day is the meadow! Once I was entwined with
-marvelous flowers; but never before were the grass and wild blossoms so
-fragrant!" In ecstasy, Parsifal contemplated the fields and forests,
-dewy and smiling in the light of morn.
-
-"Ah! who could forget that sublime moment?" cried the fair-haired
-enthusiast, whose thin face seemed to reflect the light of that joy.
-"All, in the darkness of the theater, remained motionless, like one
-solid, compact mass. One would have said that, in order to listen to
-that marvelous music, the blood had ceased to flow in our veins. From
-the Mystic Gulf, the symphony rose like a shaft of light, the notes
-transformed into rays of sunshine, born with the same joy as the blade
-of grass that pierces the earth, the opening flower, the budding
-branch, the insect unfolding its wings. And all the innocence of
-new-born things entered into us, and our souls lived over again I know
-not what dream of our far-away childhood.... INFANTIA, the device of
-Carpaccio! Ah, Stelio! how well you brought it back to our riper age!
-How well you knew how to inspire us with regret for all that we have
-lost, and with hope of recovering it by means of an art that shall be
-indissolubly reunited to life!"
-
-Stelio Effrena was silent, oppressed by the thought of the gigantic
-work accomplished by the barbaric creator, which the enthusiasm of
-Baldassare Stampa had evoked as a contrast to the fervid poet of
-_Orpheus_ and of _Ariadne_. A kind of instinctive rancor, an obscure
-hostility that did not spring from the intellect, sustained him against
-the tenacious German who had succeeded, by his own unaided effort,
-in inflaming the world. To achieve his victory over men and things,
-he, too, had exalted his own image and magnified his own dreams of
-dominating beauty. He, too, had approached the multitude as if it were
-his chosen prey; he, too, had imposed upon himself, as if it were a
-discipline, an unceasing effort to surpass himself. And now he had the
-temple of his creed on the Bavarian hill.
-
-"Art alone can lead men back to unity," said Daniele Glauro. "Let us
-honor the nobler master that has proclaimed this dogma for all time.
-His Festival Theater, though built of bricks and wood, though narrow
-and imperfect, has none the less a sublime significance, for within it
-Art appears as a religion in a living form; the drama there becomes a
-rite."
-
-"Yes, let us honor Richard Wagner," said Antimo della Bella, "but, if
-this hour is to be memorable by an announcement and a promise from
-him who this night has shown the mysterious ship to the people, let
-us invoke once more the heroic soul that has spoken to us through
-the voice of Donatella Arvale. In laying the corner-stone of his
-Festival Theater, the poet of _Siegfried_ consecrated it to the hopes
-and victories of Germany. The Apollo Theater, which is now rising
-rapidly on the Janiculum, where eagles once descended, bearing their
-prophecies, must be the monumental revelation of the idea toward which
-our race is led by its genius. Let us reaffirm the privilege with which
-nature has ennobled our Latin blood."
-
-Still Stelio remained silent, deeply stirred by turbulent forces that
-worked within his soul with a sort of blind fury, like the subterranean
-energies that swell, rend, and transform volcanic regions for the
-creation of new mountains and new chasms. All the elements of his inner
-life, assailed by this violence, seemed to dissolve and multiply at
-the same time. Images of grandeur and of terror passed through this
-tumult, accompanied by strange harmonies. Swift concentrations and
-dispersions of thought succeeded one another, like electric flashes
-in a tempest. At certain moments, it seemed to him that he could hear
-songs and wild clamors through a doorway that was opened and closed
-incessantly; sounds as if a tempestuous wind bore to his ears the
-alternate cries of a massacre and an apotheosis.
-
-Suddenly, with the intensity of a feverish vision, he saw the scorched
-and fatal spot of earth whereon he wished to create the souls of his
-great tragedy; he felt all its parching thirst within himself. He saw
-the mythical fountain which alone could quench the burning aridity; and
-in the bubbling of its springs the purity of the maiden that must die
-there. He saw on Perdita's face the mask of the heroine, quiescent in
-the beauty of an extraordinarily calm sorrow. Then the ancient dryness
-of the plain of Argos converted itself into flames; the fountain of
-Perseia flowed with the swiftness of a stream. The fire and the water,
-the two primitive elements, rushed over all things, effaced all other
-traces, spread and wandered, struggled, triumphed, acquired a word,
-a language wherewith to unveil their inner essence and to reveal the
-innumerable myths born of their eternity. The symphony expressed the
-drama of the two elementary Souls on the stage of the Universe, the
-pathetic struggle of two great living and moving Beings, two cosmic
-Wills, such as the shepherd Arya fancied it when he contemplated the
-spectacle from the high plateau with his pure eyes. And, of a sudden,
-from the very center of the musical mystery, from the depths of
-the symphonic Ocean, arose the Ode, brought by the human voice, and
-attaining the loftiest heights.
-
-The miracle of Beethoven renewed itself. The winged Ode, the Hymn,
-sprang from the midst of the orchestra to proclaim, in phrases absolute
-and imperious, the joy and the sorrow of Man. It was not the Chorus,
-as in the Ninth Symphony, but the Voice, alone and dominating, the
-interpreter, the messenger to the multitude. "Her voice! her voice!
-She has disappeared. Her song seemed to move the heart of the world,
-and she was beyond the veil," said the Animator, who in mental vision
-saw again the crystal statue within which he had watched the mounting
-wave of melody. "I will seek thee, I shall find thee again; I will
-possess myself of thy secret. Thou shalt sing my hymns, towering at
-the summit of my music!" Freed now from all earthly desire, he thought
-of that maiden form as the receptacle of a divine gift. He heard the
-disembodied voice surge from the depths of the orchestra to reveal the
-part of eternal truth that exists in ephemeral fact. The Ode crowned
-the episode with light. Then, as if to lead back to the play of
-imagery his ravished spirit from "beyond the veil," a dancing figure
-stood out against the rhythm of the dying Ode. Between the lines of a
-parallelogram drawn beneath the arch of the stage, as within the limits
-of a strophe, the mute dancer, with her body seemingly free for a
-moment from the sad laws of gravity, imitated the fire, the whirlwind,
-the revolutions of the stars. "La Tanagra, flower of Syracuse, made
-of wings, as a flower is made of petals!" Thus he invoked the image
-of the already famous Sicilian who had re-discovered the ancient
-orchestic art as it had been in the days when Phrynichus boasted that
-he had within himself as many figures of the dance as there were
-waves on the ocean on a stormy winter night. The actress, the singer,
-the dancer--the three Dionysian women--appeared to him like perfect
-and almost divine instruments of his creations. With an incredible
-rapidity, in word, song, gesture and symphony, his work should
-crystallize itself and live an all-powerful life before the conquered
-multitude.
-
-He was still silent, lost in an ideal world, waiting to measure the
-effort necessary to manifest it. The voices surrounding him seemed to
-come from a long distance.
-
-"Wagner declares that the only creator of a work of art is the people,"
-said Baldassare Stampa, "and that the sole function of the artist is to
-gather and express the creation of the unconscious multitude."
-
-The extraordinary emotion that had stirred Stelio when, from the throne
-of the Doges, he had spoken to the throng seized on him once more. In
-that communion between his soul and the soul of the people an almost
-divine mystery had existed; something greater and more exalted was
-added to the habitual feeling he had for his own person; he had felt
-that an unknown power converged within him, abolishing the limits of
-his earthly being and conferring upon his solitary voice the full
-harmony of a chorus.
-
-There was, then, in the multitude a secret beauty, in which only the
-poet and the hero could kindle a spark. Whenever that beauty revealed
-itself by the sudden outburst from a theater, a public square, or
-an entrenchment, a torrent of joy must swell the heart of him who
-had known how to inspire it by his verse, his harangue, or a signal
-from his sword. Thus, the word of the poet, when communicated to the
-people, was an act comparable to the deed of a hero--an act that
-brought to birth in the great composite soul of the multitude a sudden
-comprehension of beauty, as a master sculptor, from the mere touch of
-his plastic thumb upon a mass of clay, creates a divine statue. Then
-the silence that had spread like a sacred veil over the completed poem
-would cease. The material part of life would no longer be typified by
-immaterial symbols: life itself would be manifested in its perfection
-by the poet; the word would become flesh, rhythm would quicken in
-breathing, palpitating form, the idea would be embodied with all the
-fulness of its force and freedom.
-
-"But," said Fabio Molza, "Richard Wagner believes that the real heart
-of the people is composed only of those that experience grief in
-common--you understand, grief in common."
-
-"Toward Joy--still toward eternal Joy," Stelio reflected. "The real
-heart of the people is composed of those that feel vaguely the
-necessity of raising themselves, by means of Fiction, Poetry, the
-Ideal, out of the daily prison in which they serve and suffer."
-
-In his waking dream he beheld the disappearance of the small theaters
-of the city, where, amid suffocating air heavy with impurities, before
-a crowd of rakes and courtesans, the actors make public prostitution
-of their talents. And then, on the steps of the new theater, his mental
-vision beheld the true people, the great, unanimous multitude, whose
-human odor he had inhaled, whose clamor he had listened to in the great
-marble shell, under the stars. By the mysterious power of rhythm, his
-art, imperfectly understood though it was, had stirred the rude and
-ignorant ones with a profound emotion, penetrating as that felt by a
-prisoner about to be released from his chains. Little by little, the
-sensation of joy at their deliverance had crept over the most abject;
-the deep-lined brows cleared; lips accustomed to brutal vociferation
-had parted in amazement; and, above all, the hands--the rough hands
-enslaved by instruments of toil--had stretched out in one unanimous
-gesture of adoration toward the heroine who in their presence had
-wafted toward the stars the spirit of immortal sorrow.
-
-"In the life of a people like ours," said Daniele Glauro, "a great
-manifestation of art has much more weight than a treaty of alliance
-or a tributary law. That which never dies is more prized than that
-which is ephemeral. The astuteness and audacity of a Malatesta are
-crystallized for all time in a medal of Pisanello's. Of Machiavelli's
-politics nothing survives but the power of his prose."
-
-"That is true, most true!" thought Stelio; "the fortunes of Italy are
-inseparable from the fate of the Beauty of which she is the Mother."
-This sovereign truth now appeared to him the rising sun of that divine,
-ideal land through which wandered the great Dante. "Italy! Italy!"
-Throughout his being, like a call to arms, seemed to thrill that name,
-that name which intoxicates the world. From its ruins, bathed in so
-much heroic blood, should not the new art, robust in root and branch,
-arise and flourish? Should it not become a determining and constructive
-force in the third Rome, reawakening all the latent power possessed by
-the hereditary substance of the nation, indicating to her statesmen
-the primitive truths that are the necessary bases of new institutions?
-Faithful to the oldest instincts of his race, Richard Wagner had
-foreseen, and had fostered by his own efforts, the aspiration of the
-German States to the heroic grandeur of the Empire. He had evoked the
-noble figure of Henry the Fowler, standing erect beneath the ancient
-oak: "Let warriors arise from every German land!" And at Sadowa and
-at Sedan these warriors had won. With the same impulse, the same
-tenacity, people and artist had achieved their glorious aim. The same
-degree of victory had crowned the work of the sword and the work of
-melody. Like the hero, the poet had accomplished an act of deliverance.
-Like the will of the Iron Chancelor, like the blood of his soldiers,
-the Master's musical numbers had contributed toward the exalting and
-perpetuating of the soul of his race.
-
-"He has been here only a few days, at the Palazzo Vendramin-Calergi,"
-said Prince Hoditz.
-
-And suddenly the image of the barbaric creator seemed to Stelio to
-approach him; the lines of his face became visible, the blue eyes
-gleamed under the wide brow, the lips closed tight above the powerful
-chin, armed with sensuousness, pride, and disdain. The slight body,
-bent with the weight of age and glory, straightened itself, appeared
-almost as gigantic as his work, took on the aspect of a god. The blood
-coursed like a swift mountain torrent, its breath sighed like a forest
-breeze. Suddenly the youth of Siegfried filled the figure and permeated
-it, radiant as the dawn shining through a cloud. "To follow the impulse
-of my heart, to obey my instinct, to listen to the voice of Nature
-within myself--that is my supreme law!" The heroic, resounding words,
-springing from the depths, expressed the young and healthy will that
-had triumphed over all obstacles and all evil, always in accord with
-the law of the Universe. And the flames, called forth from the rock by
-the wand of Wotan, arose in the magic circle: "On the flaming sea a way
-has opened! To plunge into that fire, oh, ineffable joy! To find my
-bride within that flaming circle!" All the phantoms of the myth seemed
-to blaze anew and then vanish.
-
-Then the winged helmet of Brunehilde gleamed in the sunlight: "Glory
-to the sun! Glory to the light! Glory to the radiant day! My sleep
-was long. Who has awakened me?" The phantoms fled in tumult, and
-dispersed. Then arose from the dark shadows the maiden of the song,
-Donatella Arvale, as she had appeared to him amid the purple and gold
-of the immense hall in a commanding attitude and holding a fiery
-flower in her hand: "Dost thou not see me, then? Do not my burning
-gaze and ardent blood make thee tremble. Dost thou not feel this wild
-ardor?" Though she was absent, she seemed to resume her power over his
-dream. Infinite music seemed to rise from the silent, empty place in
-the supper-room. Her Hermes-like face seemed to retain an inviolable
-secret: "Do not touch me; do not trouble my repose, and I will reflect
-forever thy luminous image. Love only thyself and renounce all thought
-of me!" And again, as on the feverish water, a passionate impatience
-tortured the Animator, and again he fancied the absent one like a
-beautiful bow to be drawn by a strong hand that would know how to use
-it as an instrument to achieve some great conquest: "Awake, virgin,
-awake! Live and laugh! Be mine!"
-
-Stelio's spirit was drawn violently into the orbit of the magic world
-created by the German god; its visions and harmonies overwhelmed him;
-the figures of the Northern myth towered above those of his own art
-and passion, obscuring them. His own desire and his own hope spoke the
-language of the barbarian: "I must love thee, blindly, and laughing:
-and, laughing, we must unite and lose ourselves, each in the other. O
-radiant Love! O smiling Death!" The joyousness of the warrior-virgin
-on the flame-circled summit reached the loftiest height; her cry of
-love and liberty mounted to the heart of the sun. Ah, what heights and
-what depths had he not touched, that formidable Master of human souls!
-What effort could ever equal his? What eagle could ever hope to soar
-higher? His gigantic work was there, finished, amidst men. Throughout
-the world swelled the last mighty chorus of the Grail, the canticle of
-thanksgiving: "Glory to the Miracle! Redemption to the Redeemer!"
-
-"He is tired," said Prince Hoditz, "very tired and feeble. That is
-the reason why we did not see him at the Doge's Palace. His heart is
-affected." ...
-
-Once more the giant became a man: the slight body, bent with age and
-glory, consumed by passion, slowly dying. And Stelio heard again in
-his heart Perdita's words, which had called up the image of another
-stricken artist--the father of Donatella Arvale. "The name of the bow
-is BIOS ("life"), and its work is death!"
-
-The young man saw his pathway blazed before him by victory--the long
-art, the short life. "Forward, still forward! Higher, ever higher!"
-Every hour, every second, he must strive, struggle, fortify himself
-against destruction, diminution, oppression, contagion. Every hour,
-every second, his eye must be fixed on his aim, concentrating and
-directing all his energies, without truce, without relaxation. He felt
-that victory was as necessary to his soul as air to his lungs. At the
-contact with the German barbarian, a furious thirst for conflict awoke
-in his Latin blood. "To you now belongs the will to do!" Wagner had
-declared, on the day of the opening of the new theater: "In the work
-of art of the future, the source of invention will never run dry." Art
-was infinite, like the beauty of the world. There are no limits to
-courage or to power. Man must seek and find, further and still further.
-"Forward, still forward!"
-
-Then a single wave, vast and shapeless, embodying all the aspirations
-and all the agitations of that delirium, whirling itself into a
-maelstrom, seemed to take on the qualities of plastic matter, obeying
-the same inexhaustible energy that forms all animals and all things
-under the sun. An extraordinary image, beautiful and pure, was born
-of this travail, lived and glowed with unbearable intensity. The poet
-saw it, absorbed it with a pure gaze, felt that it took root in the
-very depths of his being. "Ah, to express it, to manifest it to the
-world, to fix it in perfection for all eternity!" Sublime moment that
-never would return! All visions vanished. Around him flowed the current
-of daily life; fleeting words sounded; expectation palpitated, desire
-still lived.
-
-He looked at the woman. The stars sparkled; the trees waved, and the
-dark garden spread out behind Perdita, and her eyes still said: "Let me
-serve! Let me serve!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- THE PROMISE
-
-
-Descending the terrace to the garden, the guests had dispersed among
-the shady paths and under the vine-covered trellises. The night breeze
-was damp and warm, touching the long lashes on delicate eyelids like
-lips brushing them in a caress. The invisible stars of the jasmine
-perfumed the darkness; the rich fragrance of fruit, too, was even
-stronger than in the island gardens. A vivid power of fertility
-emanated from this narrow trace of cultivated earth, which appeared
-like a place of exile, surrounded by a girdle of water, and, like an
-exiled soul, all the more intense.
-
-"Do you wish me to remain here? Shall I return after the others have
-gone? Say quickly! It is late!"
-
-"No, no, Stelio, I beg of you! It is late--it is too late! You yourself
-say it is."
-
-La Fosacarina's voice was full of mortal terror. Her white arms and
-shoulders trembled in the shadows. She wished at once to refuse and to
-yield; she wished to die, yet she wished to feel his strong embrace.
-She trembled more and more; her teeth chattered slightly, for a glacial
-stream seemed to submerge her, chilling her from head to foot. The
-strange emotion caused a fancy that her very limbs were ready to break,
-and she was conscious that the stiffness of her set features had even
-changed the sound of her voice. And still she longed at once to die
-and to be loved; still, over her terror, her chill, her body no longer
-young, hung the terrible sentence the beloved had pronounced, which she
-herself had repeated: "It is late--it is too late!"
-
-"Your promise, your promise, Perdita! I will not be put off!"
-
-The tide, swelling like a full, fair throat, the estuary, lost in
-darkness and death, the City, when illumined by the twilight fire, the
-water flowing in the invisible clepsydra, the bronze bells with their
-vibrations reaching to the sky, the eager wish, the contracted lips,
-lowered eyelids, feverish hands, all recurred with the memory of the
-silent promise. With wild ardor he longed to clasp that being, whose
-knowledge of all things was immeasurably deep and rich.
-
-"No, I will not be put off!"
-
-His ardor had come to him from far-distant ages, from the most ancient
-origins, the primitive simplicity of sudden unions, the antique mystery
-of sacred furies. Like the horde that was possessed by the enchantment
-of the gods, and descended the mountain side, tearing up trees, rushing
-on with blind fury, momentarily increasing, its numbers swelled by
-other madmen, spreading madness in its way, and finally becoming one
-vast bestial yet human multitude, impelled by a monstrous will, so the
-crudest of instincts urged him on, confusing all his ideas in a dizzy
-whirl. And what most attracted him in that wandering and despairing
-woman, whose knowledge was deep and rich, was the consciousness that
-she was a being oppressed by the eternal servitude of her nature,
-destined to succumb to the sudden convulsions of her sex; a being who
-soothed the fever of stage life in sensuous repose, the fiery actress,
-who passed from the frenzied plaudits of the multitude to the embrace
-of a lover; the Dionysian creature who chose to crown her mysterious
-rites as they were crowned in the ancient orgies.
-
-His amorous madness was now immeasurable, and was a mingling of
-cruelty, jealousy, poetry and pride. He regretted that he never had
-sought her after some dramatic triumph, warm from the breath of the
-people, breathless and disheveled, showing the traces of the tragic
-soul that had wept and cried in her, with the tears of that alien
-spirit still damp on her agitated face. As by a flash of light, he had
-a sudden vision of her reclining, at rest, yet full of the power that
-had drawn forth a howl from the monster, panting like a Mænad after the
-dance, athirst and weary.
-
-"Ah, do not be cruel!" entreated the woman, who felt in the voice of
-the beloved, and read in his eyes, the madness that possessed him. From
-the burning gaze of the young man she shrank with pathetic modesty. His
-insistence hurt the sensitive delicacy of her spirit. She recognized
-in it all that there was of mere selfish impulse; she well knew that
-he thought of her as something poisonous and corrupt, with memories of
-many loves, a wandering, implacable temptress. She divined the sudden
-grudgingness, jealousy and feverish resentment that had blazed up in
-the long-beloved friend, to whom she had consecrated all of herself
-that was most precious and most sincere, preserving the perfection of
-that sentiment by her steadfast refusal to break down all barriers.
-Now, all was lost; all was suddenly devastated, like a fair domain
-at the mercy of rebellious and vindictive slaves. Then, almost as if
-she were passing through the last agonies of death, her whole bitter
-and stormy past rose before her: that life of struggle and pain,
-bewilderment, effort, passion, and triumph. She felt all its heavy
-burden weighing on her, and recalled the ineffable joy, the feeling
-of mingled terror and freedom, with which, in her far-distant youth,
-she had given her first, fresh love to the man who had deceived her.
-And through her mind passed the image of herself, that maiden who had
-disappeared, who perhaps was still dreaming in some solitary place,
-or weeping, or promising herself future happiness. "Too late--it is
-too late!" The irrevocable word rang continually in her ears like the
-reverberation of the bronze bells.
-
-"Do not be cruel, Stelio!" she repeated, white and delicate as the
-swansdown that encircled her shoulders. She seemed suddenly to have
-shorn herself of her power, to have become slight and weak, to have
-assumed a secret, tender personality, easy to kill, to destroy, to
-immolate as a bloodless sacrifice.
-
-"No, Perdita, I will not be cruel," he stammered, suddenly discomposed
-by her face and voice, his heart stirred with human pity, arising from
-the same depths that had harbored his wilder instincts. "Pardon me!
-Forgive!"
-
-He would have liked to take her in his arms that moment, to nurse her,
-console her, let her weep on his breast, and to dry her tears. He felt
-that he no longer recognized her, that some unknown creature stood
-before him, infinitely humble and sad, deprived of all strength. His
-pity and remorse were like the emotion we feel if we unwillingly hurt
-or offend an invalid or a child--some lonely and inoffensive little
-being.
-
-"Pardon me!"
-
-He would have liked to kneel, to kiss her feet in the grass, to murmur
-little fond phrases in her ear. He bent toward her and touched her
-hand. She started violently, opened wide her large eyes upon him; then
-lowered her eyelids and stood motionless. Shadows seemed to gather
-under her arched brows, throwing into relief the curve of her cheeks.
-Again the glacial wave submerged her.
-
-Voices arose from the guests dispersed about the garden, then a long
-silence followed.
-
-Presently a crunching of gravel, as if trodden by a heavy foot, was
-heard, followed by another long silence. Soon a confused clamor was
-heard coming from the canals; the jasmine's fragrance was heavier than
-before, as a heart in suspense quickens in movement. The night seemed
-fraught with miracles, and eternal forces worked harmoniously between
-the earth and the stars.
-
-"Pardon me! If my love oppresses you, I will continue to stifle it; I
-will even renounce it forever, and obey you. Perdita! Perdita! I will
-forget all that your eyes said to me a little while ago, in the midst
-of the idle talk. What embrace, what caress could more wholly unite our
-souls? All the passion of the night threw us together. I received your
-soul like a wave. And now it seems that never again can I separate my
-heart from yours, nor can you separate yours from mine. Together we
-must go forward to meet I know not what mysterious dawn...."
-
-He spoke in a low tone, with absolute abandon, having become for the
-moment a vibrating substance that responded to every change in the
-nocturnal spirit that bewitched him. That which he saw before him was
-no longer a corporeal form, an impenetrable prison of flesh; it was a
-soul unveiled by a succession of appearances not less expressive than
-melody itself, an infinite sensibility, delicate and powerful, which,
-in that slight frame, created in turn the fragility of the flower, the
-vigor of marble, the flash of the flame, all shadows and all light.
-
-"Stelio!"
-
-She hardly breathed that name aloud; yet in the sigh that died on her
-soft lips was as thrilling a note of wonder and exultation as would
-have been revealed in the most piercing cry. In the accent of the
-man she had recognized love: love, real love! She, who had so often
-listened to beautiful and perfect words pronounced by that clear voice,
-and who had suffered under them as from a torture or a heartless jest,
-now saw her own life and all the world suddenly transformed at this
-new accent. Her very soul seemed changed; that which had encumbered
-it fell away into dim, far-off obscurity, while to the surface rose
-something free and immaculate, that dilated and curved over her like
-the sky; and, as the wave of light mounts from the horizon to the
-zenith with mute harmony, the illusion of happiness mounted to her
-lips. A smile softly spread over her lips, which quivered like leaves
-in the breeze, showing a glimpse as pearly as the jasmine's starry
-flowers.
-
-"All is abolished--all is vanished. I never have lived, I never have
-loved, I never have suffered. I am renewed. I never have known any love
-but this. My heart is pure. I should wish to die in the joy of your
-love. Years and experience have passed over me without reaching that
-part of my soul which I have kept for you, that secret heaven which has
-suddenly opened to the unforeseen, has triumphed over all my sadness,
-and has remained alone to cherish the strength and the sweetness of
-your name. Your love will save me; the fulness of my love will render
-you divine!"
-
-Words of wildest transport sprang from her liberated heart, though
-her lips dared not speak them. But she smiled--smiled her infinite,
-mysterious, silent smile!
-
-"Is it not true? Speak--answer me, Perdita! Do you not feel too our
-need of each other--all the stronger from our long renunciation, from
-the patience with which we have awaited this hour? Ah, it seems to me
-that all my presentiments and all my hopes would count as nothing, if
-it were fated that this hour should not come to pass. Say that without
-me you could not have waited, after life's darkness, for the glorious
-dawn, as I could not wait without you!"
-
-"Yes, yes!"
-
-In that stifled syllable, she was lost irrevocably. The smile faded,
-the lines of the mouth became heavy, causing it to appear in sharply
-drawn relief against the pallor of her face; the lips seemed athirst,
-strong to attract, to cling, insatiable. And her whole body, which just
-before had seemed to shrink in sensitiveness and apprehension, now drew
-itself up again, as if formed anew, recovering all its physical power,
-and inundated by an impetuous wave of emotion.
-
-"Let us have no more uncertainty. It is late."
-
-He could not disguise his impatience of the social restraints that must
-be observed on account of the other guests.
-
-"Yes!" La Foscarina repeated, but in a new accent, her eyes dwelling
-upon his, commanding, imperious, as if she felt certain now of
-possessing a philter that should bind him to her forever.
-
-Stelio felt his heart-throbs quicken still more at the thought of the
-love this mysterious being must be able to give. He gazed deep into her
-eyes, and saw that she was as pale as if all her blood had been sapped
-by the earth to nourish the rich fruits of the garden; and it seemed to
-him that the present was part of a dream-life, wherein he and she lived
-alone in all the world.
-
- [Illustration: _HE GAZED DEEP INTO HER EYES AND SAW THAT SHE WAS AS
-PALE AS IF HER BLOOD HAD BEEN SAPPED TO NOURISH THE RICH FRUITS OF THE
- GARDEN_]
-
- _From an Original Drawing by Arthur H. Ewer_
-
-
-La Foscarina was standing under a shrub laden with fruit. The sudden
-beauty that had illumined her in the supper-room, made up of a thousand
-ideal forces, reappeared in her face with still greater intensity,
-kindled now from the flame that never dies, the fervor that never
-languishes. The magnificent fruits hung over her head, bearing the
-crown of a royal donor. The myth of the pomegranate was revivified in
-the mystery of midnight, as it had been at the passing of the boat in
-the mystic twilight. Who was this woman? Was she Persephone herself,
-Queen of Shades? Had she dwelt in that unknown region where all human
-agitations seem as trifling as idle winds on a dusty, interminable
-road? Had she contemplated the springs of the world, sunk deep in the
-earth? Had she counted the roots of the flowers, immobile as the veins
-in a petrified body? Was she weary or intoxicated with human tears,
-laughter, and sensuousness, and with having touched, one after another,
-all things mortal, to make them bloom only to see them perish? Who was
-she? Had she struck upon cities like a scourge, silenced forever with
-her kiss all lips that sang, stopped the pulsation of tyrannous hearts?
-Who was she--who? What secret past made her so pale, so passionate,
-so perilous? Had she already divulged all her secrets and given all
-her gifts, or could she still, by new arts, enchant her new lover, for
-whom life, love, and victory were one and the same thing? All this,
-and more, was suggested to him by the little veins in her temples, the
-curve of her cheeks, the lithe strength of her body.
-
-"All evil, all good, that which I know and do not know, that which you
-know, as well as that which you are ignorant of--all this had to be, to
-prepare the fulness of this night." Life and the dream had become one.
-Thought and sense were as wines poured into the same cup. Even their
-garments, their faces, their hopes, their glances, were like the plants
-of the garden, like the air, the stars, the silence.
-
-Sublime moment, never to return! Before he realized it, his hands
-involuntarily reached out to draw her to himself. The woman's head
-fell backward, as if she were about to faint; between her half-closed
-eyelids and her parted lips her eyes and her teeth gleamed as things
-gleam for the last time. Then swiftly she raised her head again and
-recovered herself; her lips sought the lips that sought hers.
-
-After a moment they saw each other again in a lucid way. The voices of
-the guests in the garden were wafted to their ears, and an indistinct
-clamor from the far-off canal rose from time to time.
-
-"Well?" demanded the young man feverishly, after that burning kiss of
-body and soul.
-
-The lady bent to lift a fallen pomegranate from the grass. The fruit
-was ripe; it had burst open in its fall and now poured out its blood
-from the wound it had received. With the vision of the fruit-laden
-boat, the pale islet, and the field of asphodels, to the impassioned
-woman's mind returned the words of the Inspirer: "This is my body....
-Take, eat!"
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Yes!"
-
-With a mechanical movement she crushed the fruit in her hand, as if she
-wished to expel all its juice, which trickled in a stream over her
-wrist. She trembled, as the glacial wave rushed over her anew.
-
-"Go away when the others go, but then--return! I will wait for you at
-the gate of the Gradenigo garden."
-
-She trembled still, partly from terror, a prey to an invincible power.
-As by a flash of light, again he saw her reclining, at rest, panting
-like a Mænad after the dance. They gazed at each other, but could not
-bear the fierce light of each other's eyes. They parted.
-
-She went in the direction of the voices of the poets who had exalted
-her ideal power.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- "TO CREATE WITH JOY!"
-
-
-Lost! Lost! Now she was lost! She still lived--vanquished, humiliated,
-as if some one had trampled pitilessly upon her; she still lived, and
-dawn was breaking, the days were beginning again, the fresh tide was
-flowing once more into the City Beautiful, and Donatella was still
-sleeping upon her pure pillow. Into an infinite distance had faded the
-hour, in reality so short a time before, when she had waited at the
-gate for her beloved, recognized his step in the funereal silence of
-the deserted path, and felt her knees weaken as if from a blow, while
-a strange reverberation rang in her ears. How far-away now seemed that
-hour! yet the little incidents of her vigil returned to her mind with
-intensity: the cold iron rail against which she had leaned her head,
-the sharp, acrid odor that rose from the grass as from a retting-vat,
-the moist tongue of Lady Myrta's greyhounds that came noiselessly and
-licked her hands.
-
-"Good-by! Good-by!"
-
-She was lost! He had left her as he would have left some light love,
-almost with the manner of a stranger, almost impatient even, drawn by
-the freshness of the dawn, by the freedom of the morning.
-
-"Good-by!"
-
-From her window she perceived Stelio on the bank of the canal; he was
-inhaling deep breaths of the fresh morning air; then in the perfect
-calm that reigned over all things, she heard his clear, confident voice
-calling the gondolier:
-
-"Zorzi!"
-
-The man was asleep in the bottom of his gondola, and his human slumber
-resembled that of the curved boat that obeyed his movements. Stelio
-touched him lightly with his foot, and instantly he sprang up, jumped
-to his place and seized the oar. Man and boat awoke at the same time,
-as if they had but one body, ready to glide over the water.
-
-"Your servant, Signor!" said Zorzi with a smile, glancing up at the
-brightening sky. "Sit down, Signor, and I will row."
-
-Opposite the palace, the door of a large workshop was thrown open. It
-was a stonecutter's shop, where steps were fashioned from the stone of
-Val-di-Sole.
-
-"To ascend!" thought Stelio, and his superstitious soul rejoiced at
-the good omen. On the sign, the name of the quarry seemed radiant with
-promise--the Valley of the Sun. He had already seen, a short time
-before, the image of a stairway, on a coat-of-arms in the Gradenigo
-garden--a symbol of his own ascension. "Higher, always higher!" Joy
-came bubbling up from the depths of his being. The morning awakened all
-manly energies.
-
-"And Perdita? And Ariadne?" He saw them again, as they descended the
-marble stairway, in the light of the smoking torches. "And La Tanagra?"
-The Syracusan appeared to his vision, with her long, goat-like eyes,
-reposing gracefully upon her mother earth, motionless as a bas-relief
-on the marble in which it is carved. "The Dionysian Trinity!" He
-fancied them as exempt from all passion, immune from all evil, like
-creations of art. The surface of his soul seemed covered with swift and
-splendid images, like sails scattered over a swelling sea. His heart
-beat calmly, and with the approaching sunrise he felt a renewal of his
-life-forces, as if he were born anew with the morning.
-
-"We do not need this light any longer," murmured the gondolier slyly,
-extinguishing the lantern of the gondola.
-
-"To the Grand Canal, by San Giovanni Decollato!" cried Stelio, seating
-himself.
-
-As the dentellated prow swung into the Canal of San Giacomo dall'Orio,
-he turned to look once more at the palace, of a leaden hue in the early
-dawn. One lighted window grew dark at that moment, like an eye suddenly
-blinded. "Good-by! Good-by!" The woman no longer young was up there
-alone, sad with the sadness of death; the Song-Maiden was preparing to
-return to the place of her long sacrifice. He knew not how to pity,
-he could only promise. From the abundance of his strength, he drew an
-illusion that he might change those two destinies for his own joy.
-
-"Stop before the Palazzo Vendramin-Calergi!" he ordered the gondolier.
-
-The canal, ancient stream of silence and of poetry, was deserted. The
-pale green sky was reflected in it with its last fading stars. At
-first glance, the palace had an aerial appearance, like an artificial
-cloud hung over the water. The shadows in which it was still wrapped
-suggested the quality of velvet, the beauty of something soft and
-magnificent. And, just as in studying a deep-piled velvet, the pattern
-gradually becomes discernible, the architectural lines revealed
-themselves in the three Corinthian columns that rose with rhythmic
-grace and strength to the point where the emblems of nobility, the
-eagles, the horses, and the amphora, were mingled with the roses of
-Loredan. NON NOBIS, DOMINE, NON NOBIS.
-
-Within that palace throbbed the great ailing heart. Stelio saw again
-the image of the barbaric creator: the blue eyes gleaming under the
-broad brow, the lips compressed above the powerful chin, armed with
-sensuousness, pride, and disdain. Was he sleeping? Could he sleep,
-or was he lying sleepless with his glory? The young man recalled
-strange things that were told of Wagner. Was it true that he could
-not sleep unless his head rested on his wife's bosom, and that,
-despite advancing years, he clung to her as a lover to his mistress?
-He remembered a story told him by Lady Myrta, who, while she was in
-Palermo, had visited the Villa d'Angri, where the very closets in the
-room occupied by the master had remained impregnated with an essence
-of rose so strong that it made her ill. He fancied that slight, tired
-body, wrapped in sumptuous draperies, ornamented with jewels, perfumed
-like a corpse ready for the pyre. Was it not Venice that had given
-him, as long ago it had given Albert Dürer, a taste for luxury and
-magnificence? Yes, and it was in the silence of her canals that he
-had heard the passing of the most ardent breath of all his music--the
-deadly passion of Tristan and Isolde.
-
-And now, within that palace throbbed the great ailing heart, and there
-its formidable impetuosity was flagging. The patrician palace, with
-its eagles, its horses, amphora, and roses, was as tightly closed and
-silent as a great tomb. Above its marble towers the sunrise turned the
-pale green sky to rosy pink.
-
-"Hail to the Victorious One!" Stelio stood up and cast his flowers at
-the threshold of the palace door.
-
-"On! On!" he cried.
-
-Urged by this sudden impatience, the gondolier bent to his oar, and
-the light craft threaded its way along the stream. A brown sail
-passed silently. The sea, the rippling waves, the laughing cry of the
-sea-gulls, the sweeping breeze arose before his desire.
-
-"Row, Zorzi, row! To the Veneta Marina, by the Canal dall'Olio!" the
-young man cried.
-
-The canal seemed too narrow for the expanse of his soul. Victory was
-now as necessary to his spirit as air to his lungs. After the delirium
-of the night, he wished to prove the perfection of his physical nature
-by the light of day and in the sharp breeze of the sea. He did not wish
-to sleep. He felt a circle of freshness around his eyes, as if he had
-bathed them with dew. He had no desire for repose, and the thought of
-his bed in the hotel filled him with disgust. "The deck of a ship, the
-odor of pitch and of salt, the flutter of a red sail.... Row, Zorzi!"
-
-The gondolier redoubled his efforts. The Fondaco dei Turchi disappeared
-from their view, a vision of marvelously yellow old ivory, like the
-only remaining portico of some ruined mosque. They passed the Palazzo
-of the Cornaro and the Palazzo of the Pesaro, those two giants
-blackened by time as by smoke from a fire; they passed the Ca' d'Oro, a
-divine marvel of air and stone; and suddenly the Rialto bridge showed
-its ample back, laden with shops, already bustling with life, sending
-forth the odor of vegetables and fish, like a great horn of plenty
-pouring out upon the shores the fruits of earth and sea to feed the
-Queen of Cities.
-
-"I am hungry, Zorzi, I am very hungry!" said Stelio, laughing.
-
-"A good sign when a wakeful night makes one hungry; it makes only the
-old feel sleepy," said Zorzi.
-
-"Row to shore!"
-
-He bought at a stall some grapes of the Vignole and some figs from
-Malamocco, laid on a plate of vine-leaves.
-
-"Row, Zorzi!"
-
-The gondola turned, then sped under the Fondaco dei Tedeschi, making
-its way toward the Rio de Palazzo. The bells were now ringing joyously
-in the full daylight, drowning the noises of the market-place with
-their brazen tongues.
-
-"To the Ponte della Paglia!"
-
-A thought, spontaneous as an instinct, led him back to the glorious
-spot where it seemed some trace must remain of his lyric inspiration
-and of the great Dionysian chorus: _Viva il forte!_ The gondola
-grazed the side of the Palace of the Doge, massive as a monolith cut
-by chisels not less apt in finding melodies than the bows of the
-musicians. With all his new-born soul he embraced the mass; he heard
-once more the sound of his own voice and the bursts of applause. He
-said again to himself: "To create with joy! That is an attribute of
-Divinity! Impossible to imagine, in the highest flight of the spirit,
-a more triumphal act. Even the phrase itself has something of the
-splendor of the dawn."
-
-Again and again he repeated to the air, the waters, the stones, to the
-ancient city, to the young dawn: "To create with joy! To create with
-joy!"
-
-When the prow passed under the bridge and entered the mirror of light,
-a freer breath gave him fresh realization, with his hope and his
-courage, of the beauty and strength of the life of the past.
-
-"Find me a boat, Zorzi--a boat that will go out to sea."
-
-He longed for still wider space in which to breathe; he longed to feel
-a strong wind, salt air and dashing spray; to see the sails swell, and
-the bowsprit pointed toward a boundless horizon.
-
-"To the Veneta Marina! Find me a fishing-boat, a _bragozzo_ from
-Chioggia."
-
-He perceived a large red and black sail, just hoisted, and now flapping
-in the breeze, superb as an ancient banner of the Republic, with the
-device of the Lion and the Book.
-
-"That one there--that will do. Let us catch it, Zorzi."
-
-In his impatience he waved his hand, to sign to the boat to stop.
-
-"Call out to them to wait for me, Zorzi!"
-
-The gondolier, heated and dripping, cried out to the man at the sail.
-The gondola flew like a canoe in a regatta.
-
-"Bravo, Zorzi!"
-
-But Stelio was panting, too, as if he were in pursuit of fortune, some
-happy aim, or the certainty of a kingdom.
-
-"We have won the flag!" laughed the gondolier, rubbing his burning
-palms. "What foolishness!"
-
-The movement, the tone, the good-humor, the astonished faces of the
-fishermen leaning over the rail, the reflection of the red sail in the
-water, the cordial odor of fresh bread from a neighboring bake-shop,
-the smell of boiling pitch from a dock-yard, the voices of workmen
-entering the arsenal, the strong emanations from the quays, impregnated
-with the odor of the old rotten vessels of the Serene Republic, the
-resounding blows of the hammer on the vessels of the new Italy--all
-these rude and healthful things aroused a wonderful joyousness in the
-heart of the young man, who laughed aloud for very gladness.
-
-"What do you wish?" demanded the older of the fishermen, bending toward
-the ringing laughter his bearded bronzed face. "What can I do for you,
-Signor?"
-
-The mast creaked as if it were alive, swaying from top to bottom.
-
-"You can come on board, if you like," he said. "Is that all you want?"
-
-He brought a ladder and attached it to the stern. It was a simple
-affair of ropes and pegs, but to Stelio it seemed, like all else in the
-rough craft, to have a life of its own. As he stepped upon it he felt
-almost ashamed of his light, glossy shoes. The heavy, calloused hand of
-the sailor, covered with blue tattoo-marks, helped him to climb up and
-pulled him on board with a jerk.
-
-"The grapes and the figs, Zorzi!"
-
-From the gondola, Zorzi handed him the vine-leaf plate.
-
-"May it make new blood for you, Signor!"
-
-"And the bread?"
-
-"We have some warm bread," said one of the sailors, "just out of the
-oven."
-
-Hunger would certainly give that bread a delicious flavor, finding
-therein all the nourishment of the grain.
-
-"Your servant, Signor, and a fair wind to you!" said the gondolier,
-taking leave.
-
-"Starboard!"
-
-The lateen sail, with the Lion and the Book, swelled crimson. The craft
-turned toward the open sea, directing its course toward San Servolo.
-The shore seemed to assume a sharp curve, as if to repel it.
-
-"To the right!"
-
-The boat veered with great force. A miracle met it: the first rays of
-the sun pierced the fluttering sail and illumined the angels on the
-campaniles of San Marco and San Giorgio Maggiore, setting on fire the
-globe of the Fortuna and crowning the five miters of the Basilica with
-a diadem of light. Venice Anadyomene reigned over the waters, and from
-her beauty all her veils were ravished.
-
-"Glory to the Miracle!" An almost superhuman feeling of power and of
-freedom swelled the young man's heart as the wind had swollen the sail
-transfigured for him. In its crimson splendor, he saw himself as in the
-splendor of his own blood. It seemed to him that all the mystery of
-this beauty demanded of him a triumphal act. He felt confident that he
-was able to accomplish it. "To create with joy!"
-
-And the world was his!
-
-
-
-
- BOOK II
-
- THE EMPIRE OF SILENCE
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- "IN TIME!"
-
-
-"In time!" In a room of the Academy, La Foscarina had stopped before
-_La Vecchia_, by Francesco Torbido--that wrinkled, toothless, flaccid,
-yellow old woman, who could no longer either smile or weep, that human
-ruin worse than decay, that species of earthly Parca, who, instead of
-spindle, thread, or scissors, held in her hand a card bearing that
-significant warning.
-
-"In time!" she said again, when she and her companion were once more in
-the open air. She said it to break the pensive silence, during which
-she had felt her heart sink, like a stone cast into dark waters. She
-spoke again suddenly:
-
-"Stelio, do you know that closed house in the Calle Gambara?"
-
-"No--which house?"
-
-"The house of the Countess of Glanegg."
-
-"No, I don't know it."
-
-"Do you not know the story of the beautiful Austrian?"
-
-"No, Fosca. Tell it to me."
-
-"Will you go with me as far as the Calle Gambara; it is only a short
-distance?"
-
-"Yes, I will go."
-
-They walked along, side by side, toward the closed mansion. Stelio
-fell back a step, that he might observe the actress, that he might
-behold her grace as she walked in that warm, dead air. With his ardent
-gaze he seemed to embrace her whole person: the line of her shoulders
-sloping with noble grace, the free and pliant waist on the strong
-hips, the knees that moved lightly among the folds of her robe, and
-that pale, passionate face, those eloquent lips, that brow, lofty
-and beautiful as that of a man, the fringe of dark lashes over the
-elongated eyes, that sometimes were clouded over, as if tears rose to
-them and remained unshed--the whole passionate face full of lights and
-shadows, love and sadness, feverish force and quivering life.
-
-"I love you! I love you! You alone please me! Everything about you
-pleases me!" he said to her suddenly, whispering the words close to
-her cheek. He was now walking so close as almost to press against her,
-as he accommodated his step to hers, his arm passed under her arm. He
-could not bear to know that she was seized with startled anguish at
-those terrible warning words.
-
-She trembled, stopped; her eyelids drooped, her cheeks turned pale.
-
-"My friend!" she said, in a tone so faint that the two words seemed
-modulated less by her lips than by the rare smile of her spirit.
-
-Her sudden sadness melted away, changed into a wave of tenderness that
-poured in a lavish flood over her friend. Her unbounded gratitude
-inspired her with an eager desire to find some great gift for him.
-
-"Tell me, Stelio, what can I do for thee?"
-
-She imagined some marvelous test, some unheard-of proof of love. "Let
-me serve! Let me serve!" cried her heart. She yearned to own the whole
-earth, that she might offer it to him.
-
-"What dost thou wish? Tell me--what can I do for thee?"
-
-"Love me--only love me!"
-
-"Poor friend, my love is sad."
-
-"It is perfect; it crowns my life."
-
-"But you are young."
-
-"I love you!"
-
-"You should possess one with strength equal to your own."
-
-"But it is you, and only you, that each day increases my strength and
-exalts my hope. My blood runs quicker when I am near you in your mystic
-silence. At those times things are born in my brain that in time you
-will marvel to see. You are necessary to me."
-
-"Do not say that!"
-
-"Each day you confirm me in the assurance that all promises made to me
-will be kept."
-
-"Yes, you will have your own beautiful destiny. For you I have no fear;
-you are sure of yourself. No peril can surprise you, no obstacle can
-impede your progress. Oh, to be able to love without fear! One always
-fears when one loves. It is not for you that I fear. You seem to me
-invincible. I thank you for that also."
-
-She showed him her faith, deep as her passion, lucid and unlimited. For
-a long time, even in the heat of her own struggles and the vicissitudes
-of her wandering life, she had kept her eyes fixed on this young,
-victorious existence, as on an ideal form born of the purification of
-her own desire. More than once, in the sadness of vain loves and the
-nobility of the prohibition imposed between them, she had thought: "Ah,
-if, some day, from all my courage, hardened in many storms, from all
-the strong, clear things that grief and revolt have revealed in the
-depths of my soul, from the best of myself, I could fashion for thee
-the wings that shall bear thee upward in thy last supreme flight!" More
-than once, her melancholy had been dissipated in a heroic presentiment.
-And then she had subjected her soul to restraint, had raised it to the
-highest plane of moral beauty that she could, had guided it in paths of
-purity, solely to merit that for which she hoped and feared at once--to
-be worthy of offering her servitude to him who was so impatient to
-conquer the world.
-
-And now a sudden violent shock of Fate had thrown her before him in
-the guise of a mere weak woman, overcome by earthly passion. She had
-united herself to him by the closest tie; she had watched him at dawn,
-sleeping; she had had sudden awakenings, alarmed by cruel fear, and had
-found it impossible to close her tired eyes again, lest he should gaze
-on her while she slept, and see in her face the lines of care and years.
-
-"Nothing is worth the inspiration you give me," said Stelio, pressing
-her arm close and seeking her soft wrist under her glove, urged by a
-longing to feel the pulsation of that devoted life. "Nothing is worth
-the assurance that nevermore until death shall I be alone."
-
-"Ah, you too feel that, do you--that it is forever?" she cried in a
-transport of joy at seeing the triumph of her love. "Yes, forever,
-Stelio--whatever happens, wherever your destiny may lead you, in
-whatever way you wish me to serve you, either near you or afar...."
-
-In the misty air rose a confused and monotonous sound, which La
-Foscarina recognized as the chorus of sparrows gathered among the dying
-trees in the garden of the Countess of Glanegg. The words died on her
-lips; she made an instinctive movement as if to turn back and to draw
-her companion with her.
-
-"Where are we going?" Stelio asked, surprised at her sudden movement,
-and at the unforeseen interruption, that came like a burst of magic
-music.
-
-She stopped, smiling her faint smile that showed her heart was aching.
-("IN TIME!")
-
-"I wished to escape," she replied, "but I cannot."
-
-She looked like a pale flame, as she stood there.
-
-"I had forgotten, Stelio, that I was to take you to the closed house."
-
-Like one lost in a desert, she stood there, helpless, under the gray
-sky.
-
-"It seemed to me that we were to go somewhere else. But we are already
-here. 'In time'!"
-
-She appeared to him now as she had in that memorable night, when she
-had said "Do not be cruel, Stelio!" Clothed in her sweet, tender
-soul she stood there, so easy to kill, to destroy, to immolate in a
-bloodless sacrifice.
-
-"Come away--let us go," he said, trying to lead her with him. "Let us
-go somewhere else."
-
-"I cannot."
-
-"Let us go home--let us go to your house; we will light a fire, the
-first fire of October. Let me pass this evening with you, Foscarina. It
-will rain soon. It would be so sweet to sit in your room and talk, or
-be silent, hand-in-hand. Come! Let us go."
-
-He would have liked to take her in his arms, to nurse her, soothe
-her, charm away her sadness. The sweetness of his own words augmented
-his tenderness. Of all her lovable person, he loved most fondly the
-delicate little lines that radiated from the corners of her eyes to
-her temples, the little purple veins that made her eyelids look like
-violets, the curve of her cheeks, the pointed chin, and all that seemed
-touched by the finger of Autumn, every shadow that overspread that
-passionate face.
-
-"Foscarina! Foscarina!"
-
-Whenever he called her by her real name, his heart beat faster, as if
-something more deeply human had entered into his love, as if suddenly
-her whole past had seized once more the figure he was pleased to
-isolate in his dream, and as if innumerable threads formed a bond
-uniting it more closely than ever to implacable life.
-
-"Come! Let us go!"
-
-She smiled pensively.
-
-"But why? The house is very near. Let us pass it by the Calle Gambara.
-Do you not wish to know the story of the Countess of Glanegg? Look! One
-would think it a convent."
-
-The street was deserted as the path leading to a hermitage; it was
-gray, damp, strewn with dead leaves. The east wind had brought a light,
-warm mist that softened all sounds.
-
-"Behind those walls, a desolate soul survives the beauty of its body,"
-said La Foscarina softly. "Look! The windows are closed, the blinds
-are nailed, the doors are sealed. Only one door is still open for the
-servants, and through it they carry the dead woman her nourishment,
-though she is walled up as if in an Egyptian tomb. The servants feed a
-body that no longer has the spirit of life."
-
-The naked trees, which rose to the top of the cloister-like enclosure,
-looked almost smoky in the mist; the sparrows, more numerous than the
-leaves, twittered incessantly.
-
-"Guess the Countess's name, Stelio. It is beautiful and rare--as
-beautiful as if you had originated it."
-
-"I do not know."
-
-"Radiana! The prisoner is called Radiana."
-
-"But whose prisoner is she?"
-
-"The prisoner of Time, Stelio. Time stands on guard at her door, with
-his scythe and hour-glass, as she is shown in old prints."
-
-"Are you trying to describe an allegory?"
-
-A boy passed, whistling. When he saw the two strangers looking at
-the closed windows, he stopped to gaze too, his large eyes full of
-curiosity and astonishment. They were silent. Presently the little boy
-grew tired of staring; nothing interesting could be seen; the windows
-were not opened; everything was motionless, so he ran away. They heard
-the flight of his little bare feet on the wet stones and rotting leaves.
-
-"Well," said Stelio, "and what did Radiana do? You have not yet told
-me who is this woman, nor the reason why she is a recluse. Tell me her
-story. I have already been thinking of Soranza Soranzo."
-
-"The Countess Glanegg is one of the greatest ladies of the aristocratic
-Viennese world, and perhaps the most beautiful I ever have seen.
-Franz Lenbach has painted her in the armor of the Valkyries, with the
-four-winged helmet. Have you ever visited his red studio in the Palazzo
-Borghese?"
-
-"No, never."
-
-"Go there some day, and ask him to show you that portrait. You will
-see it unchanged, as I see it now through all those walls. She has
-wished to remain like that in the memory of those that saw her in the
-splendor of her beauty. One day, when the sun shone too bright, she saw
-that the time had come for that beauty to fade, and she resolved to
-take leave of the world in such a way that men should not be witnesses
-of the decay and destruction of her famous beauty. Perhaps it was her
-sympathy with things that disintegrate and fall in ruins that has kept
-her in Venice. She gave a magnificent farewell banquet, where she
-appeared, still sovereignly beautiful; then she withdrew forever from
-the world to this house that you see, in this walled garden, where,
-alone with her servants, she awaits the end. She has become a legendary
-figure. They say that there are no mirrors in her house, and that she
-has forgotten her own face. She has forbidden even her most devoted
-friends and her nearest relatives to visit her. How does she live? What
-are her thoughts? By what means does she wile away the time of waiting?
-Is her soul in a state of grace?"
-
-Every pause in that veiled voice questioning the mystery was filled
-with deepest melancholy.
-
-"Does she pray? Does she contemplate? Does she weep? Or, perhaps, has
-she become inert, and suffers no more than a withered apple in the back
-of some old closet."
-
-"What if she should suddenly show herself at that window?" said Stelio,
-feeling something like a real sensation, as he fancied he heard a
-creaking hinge.
-
-Both looked closely at the nailed blinds.
-
-"Perhaps she is sitting behind them, looking at us," he added, in a
-half whisper.
-
-This thought made them both shudder.
-
-They were leaning against a wall facing the house, and did not wish to
-move a step. The encircling inertia affected them, the smoke-like mist
-enveloped them more and more thickly; the chatter of the birds lulled
-their senses as a drug given to feverish patients. The siren whistles
-pierced the air from afar. The brown leaves dropped from the trees. How
-long it took for a floating leaf to reach the earth! All around them
-was mist, heaviness, slow consumption, ashes.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- AFTER THE STORM
-
-
-"I must die, my dear--I must die!" said La Foscarina, in a
-heart-rending voice, after a long silence, raising her face from the
-cushions where she had buried it, after a stormy scene of passion, in
-which the ardent words of her beloved had given her as much pain as
-pleasure.
-
-She looked at Stelio, who had thrown himself, half reclining, on a
-divan near the balcony, and now lay silent, his eyes half-closed, his
-disordered hair touched with a ray of gold from the setting sun. She
-realized that she was possessed by an incurable madness, spreading
-throughout her declining body. Lost! Lost! She was irrevocably lost!
-
-"Die?" said her beloved, in a dreamy voice, without moving or opening
-his eyes, as if he were wrapped in a melancholy trance.
-
-"Yes--die--before you hate me!"
-
-Stelio opened his eyes quickly, raised himself erect and held up one
-hand, as if to prevent her from saying more.
-
-"Ah, why do you torment yourself in this way?" he said.
-
-He saw that she was ivory pale; her hair fell in wandering wavy locks
-over her cheeks; she seemed consumed by some corrosive poison; her
-face was full of terror and misery.
-
-"What are you doing with me? What are we both doing?" she exclaimed in
-anguish.
-
-"I love you!"
-
-"Not as I wish, not as I have dreamed; I do not wish to be loved thus."
-
-"But you set my heart on fire, and then madness seizes me."
-
-"It is like the madness of hatred."
-
-"No, no; do not say that!"
-
-"Your fierceness makes me feel that you hate me--that you even wish to
-kill me."
-
-"But you make me blind, I tell you, and then I know not what I say or
-do."
-
-"What is it that maddens you so? What do you see in me?"
-
-"Ah, I know not--I cannot tell!"
-
-"But I know very well what it is!"
-
-"Why do you torment yourself, I say? I love you! This is the love...."
-
-"That condemns me! I must die of it! Call me once more by the name you
-gave me long ago."
-
-"You are mine! You belong to me, and I will not lose you."
-
-"Yes, you will lose me."
-
-"But why? I do not understand. What wild fancy is this of yours? Does
-my love offend you? Do you not love me in the same way?"
-
-His irritation and misunderstanding only aggravated her suffering. She
-covered her face with her hands. Her heart throbbed with hammer-like
-beating in her rigid breast, seeming to echo in her brain.
-
-Presently she raised her head and looked at him with painful effort.
-
-"I have a heart, Stelio," she said, with trembling lips, as if she were
-struggling with a sort of fierce timidity in order to force herself
-to speak those words. "I suffer from a heart, too keenly alive--oh,
-Stelio, alive and eager and anguished as you never will know...."
-
-She smiled the sweet, faint smile with which she sought to disguise her
-suffering; hesitated a moment, then reached toward a bunch of violets,
-which she took and pressed close to her lips. Her eyelids drooped,
-her classic brow, between her dark hair and the flowers, showed its
-ivory-like beauty.
-
-"You wound my heart sometimes, Stelio," she said softly, her lips still
-caressing the violets. "Sometimes you are cruel to it."
-
-It seemed as if those fragrant, humble blossoms helped her to confess
-her sadness, to veil still more the timid reproach she had made to her
-beloved. She was silent; Stelio bowed his head. The logs on the hearth
-crackled; the autumn rain fell monotonously in the fading garden.
-
-"I long for kindness, with a thirst that you never will understand. For
-that deep, true kindness, dear friend, which does not speak but which
-comprehends, which knows how to give all in a single look or a single
-movement; which is strong, sure, always armed against the evil impulse
-that tempts us. Do you know the sort of kindness I mean?"
-
-Her voice, alternately strong and wavering, was so warm with inner
-light, was so full of revelation of a soul, that it passed through the
-young man's blood more like a spiritual essence than a sound.
-
-"In you, yes, Foscarina, I know it."
-
-He took in his own hands the slender hands that lay filled with
-violets on her lap; he bowed his head low over them and kissed them
-submissively. Then he knelt at her feet, in the same submission. The
-delicate perfume seemed to arouse his tenderness. During the long pause
-the fire and the rain continued their murmured speech.
-
-Suddenly she asked in a clear voice:
-
-"Do you think that I believe myself sure of you?"
-
-"Have you not watched over my slumbers?" he replied, but in an altered
-tone, for he was suddenly seized by a new emotion: with her query he
-had seen rise before him her naked soul; and he felt that that soul had
-penetrated his own, and recognized his secret yearning for the belief
-and confidence of others in himself.
-
-"Yes, but what does that prove?" was her reply. "Youth sleeps quietly
-on any pillow. You are young"--
-
-"I love you and I have faith in you! I give myself entirely to you. You
-are my life's companion, and your hand is strong."
-
-He saw the well known sadness in the lines of that loved face, and his
-voice trembled with tenderness.
-
-"Kindness!" said she, caressing with light touch the hair on his
-temples. "You know how to be kind--you even feel a need to comfort at
-times. But a fault has been committed, and it calls for expiation.
-Once it seemed to me that for you I could do the humblest as well as
-the highest things; but now I feel that I can do only one thing--to go
-away, disappear, and leave you free with your destiny."
-
-He interrupted her by springing to his feet and taking the loved face
-between his hands.
-
-"I can do this, which love alone could not do," she said softly,
-turning pale, and looking at him with an expression he never had seen
-before.
-
-Stelio felt that he held her soul in his hands--a living spring,
-infinitely beautiful and precious.
-
-"Foscarina, Foscarina! my soul, my life! Yes, you can give me more than
-love--I know it well, and nothing is worth to me that which you give
-me; no other offer could console me for not having you beside me on my
-way. Believe me, believe! I have said this to you so often--don't you
-remember?--even before you became all my own, when the compact still
-held between us"--
-
-Still holding her face between his palms, he leaned over and kissed her
-passionately on her lips.
-
-This time she shivered; the glacial flood she felt at times seemed
-passing over her.
-
-"No! no!" she pleaded, turning away from the young man. Dreamily she
-bent to gather up the scattered violets.
-
-"The compact!" she said, after an interval of silence. "Why have we
-violated it?"
-
-Stelio's eyes were fixed on the changeful splendor of the fire on the
-hearth, but in his open hands lingered the strange sensation, the trace
-of a miracle--that human face over which, through its sad pallor, had
-passed a wave of sublime beauty.
-
-"Why?" the woman repeated sadly. "Ah, confess--confess that you, too,
-before we were seized with the blind madness of that night, felt that
-the higher life was about to be devastated and lost; that we must not
-yield if we wished to save the good that remained in us--that powerful,
-intoxicating thing which seemed to be the only treasure left in my
-life. Confess, Stelio! speak the truth! I can almost name the exact
-moment when the better voice spoke to you in warning. Was it not on the
-water, on the way home, when we had with us--Donatella?"
-
-Before pronouncing that name she had hesitated a second, then she felt
-an almost physical bitterness--a bitterness that descended from her
-lips to the depths of her soul, as if the syllables held poison for
-her. She awaited his reply with suffering. "I do not know how to think
-about the past, Fosca," the young man replied; "moreover, I do not
-wish to think about it. I have lost no good attribute that belonged to
-me. It pleases me that your soul springs to your ripe lips, heavy with
-sweetness, and that your fair cheek pales when I embrace you."
-
-"Hush, hush!" she begged. "Do not speak like that! Do not prevent me
-from saying what it is that troubles me! Why do you not help me?"
-
-She shrank back among the cushions, and looked fixedly at the fire, to
-avoid meeting the eyes of her beloved.
-
-"More than once I have seen a look in your eyes that has filled me with
-horror," she said at last, with a touch of hoarseness in her effort to
-speak.
-
-Stelio started, but dared not contradict her.
-
-"Yes, with horror," she repeated, in a clearer tone, implacable against
-herself, having already triumphed over her fear and regained her
-courage.
-
-Both were now face to face with the truth.
-
-She continued without faltering.
-
-"The first time I saw it was out there in the garden--that night--you
-know! I understood then what it was you saw in me; all the mire over
-which I have walked, all the infamy that clung to my feet, all the
-impurity for which I have so much disgust! Ah, you could not have
-acknowledged the visions that kindled your thoughts that night! Your
-eyes were cruel and your mouth was convulsed. When you felt that you
-wounded my sensitiveness, you took pity on me. But then--but since
-then"--
-
-Her face was covered with blushes; her voice had grown impetuous, and
-her eyes were brilliant.
-
-"To have nourished for years, with all the best that was in me, a
-sentiment of devotion and unbounded admiration, near you or from afar,
-in joy and in sadness; to have accepted in the purest spirit all the
-consolation offered by you to mankind through your poetry, and to have
-awaited eagerly other gifts, even higher and more consoling; to have
-believed in the great force of your genius since its dawn, and never
-to have relaxed my watch over your ascent, and to have accompanied
-it with a wish that has been my morning and evening prayer all these
-years; to have continued, with silent fervor, the effort to give some
-beauty and harmony to my own spirit, that it might be more worthy to
-approach yours; so many times, on the stage, before an ardent audience,
-to have pronounced with a thrill some immortal phrase, thinking of
-those which perhaps one day you would communicate to mankind through
-my lips; to have worked without respite, to have tried always to rise
-to a higher and simpler form in my art, to have aspired unceasingly to
-perfection, fearing that nothing less would please you, that otherwise
-I should seem inferior to your dream; to have loved my fleeting glory
-only because some day it might serve yours; to have hastened, with the
-fervent confidence of faith, the latest of your revelations, that I
-might offer myself to you as the instrument of your victory before my
-own decay; against all and everything, to have defended this secret
-ideal in my soul, against all and against myself as much as against
-others; to have made of you my melancholy, my steadfast hope, my heroic
-test, the symbol of all things good, strong, and free--ah, Stelio!
-Stelio!"--
-
-She paused an instant, overcome by that memory as by a new shame.
-
-"And then to have reached that dawn--to have seen you leaving my house
-in that way on that horrible morning--Do you remember?"
-
-"I was happy--happy!" cried the young man, in a stifled voice, pale and
-agitated.
-
-"No, no! Do you remember? You left me as you would have left some light
-love, some passing fancy, after a few hours of idle pastime."
-
-"You deceive yourself!"
-
-"Confess! Come, speak the truth. Only through truth can we now hope to
-save ourselves."
-
-"I was happy, I tell you; my whole heart expanded with joy; I dreamed,
-I hoped, I felt as if I were born anew."
-
-"Yes, yes!--happy to breathe freely, to feel your youth in the breeze
-and the fresh air. What did you see in her who in her renunciation had
-so many times suffered keenly--yes, you know it well!--rather than
-break the vow that she had taken and borne with her in her wanderings
-over the earth? Tell me! what did you see in me, if you did not believe
-me a corrupt creature, the heroine of chance amours, the vagabond
-actress who in her own life, as on the stage, may belong to any man and
-every man?"
-
-"Foscarina! Foscarina!"
-
-Stelio leaned over her and closed her lips with a trembling hand.
-
-"No, no, do not say that! You are mad! Hush! hush!"
-
-"It is horrible!" murmured the woman, sinking back on the cushions,
-unnerved by her agitation, submerged in the bitter wave that had
-flooded her heart.
-
-But her eyes remained wide open, fixed as two crystal orbs, hard as
-if they had no lashes, fastened on Stelio. They prevented him from
-speaking, from denying or softening the truth they had discovered. In a
-moment or two he found that gaze intolerable, and gently pressed the
-lids down with the tips of his fingers, as one closes the eyes of the
-dead. She noted the movement, which was full of infinite melancholy;
-she felt that only tender love and pity were in that touch. Her
-bitterness passed away, her eyes grew moist. She extended her arms,
-clasped them around his neck, and raised herself a little. She seemed
-to be shutting her soul within herself, and became once more gentle and
-weak, full of silent pleading.
-
-"And so I must go," she sighed at last. "Is there no help for it? Is
-there no pardon?"
-
-"I love you!" her lover repeated.
-
-She disengaged one arm, and held her open hand toward the fire, as
-if to conjure fate. Then once more she clasped her lover in a close
-embrace.
-
-"Yes, still a little while! Let me remain with you a little longer.
-Then I will go away; I will go somewhere, far-away, and die on a stone
-under a tree. But let me stay with you a little longer."
-
-"I love you!"
-
-The blind and indomitable forces of life were whirling over them in
-that embrace. And because they realized this with terror their clasp
-grew closer; and from that embrace sprang an impulse, both good and
-evil, that stirred them to the soul. In the silent room, the voices
-of the elements spoke their obscure language, which was like an
-uncomprehended reply to their mute questioning. The fire, near them,
-and the rain, from without, discoursed, replied, narrated. Little by
-little, these voices reached the spirit of the Animator, enticed it,
-charmed it, drew it into the world of innumerable myths, born of their
-eternity. His keener spiritual senses heard the deep resonance of the
-two melodies expressing the intimate essence of the two elementary
-wills--the two marvelous melodies that he had found, to weave them
-into the symphonic web of the new tragedy. Of a sudden, all sadness
-and anxiety left him as in a happy truce, an interval of enchantment.
-And the woman's clasp relaxed, as if in obedience to some command of
-liberation.
-
-"There is no help for it!" she repeated to herself, seeming to repeat
-a formula of condemnation heard by her in the same mysterious way that
-Stelio had heard the wonderful melodies.
-
-She leaned forward, resting her chin in her hand and her elbow on her
-knee; and in this attitude she gazed a long time into the fire, with a
-slight frown on her brow.
-
-As Stelio looked at her, his soul was troubled. He yearned to find some
-way of breaking the iron band that oppressed her, of dissipating that
-mist of sadness, of leading his beloved back to joy.
-
-The fire in its sudden burst of flame illumined her face and hair; her
-forehead was as beautiful as a noble manly brow; something natural and
-untamed was suggested in the rippling waves and changeful hue of her
-thick hair.
-
-"What are you looking at so intently?" she said at last, feeling his
-fixed gaze. "Have you found a gray hair?"
-
-He knelt before his love again, flexible and tender.
-
-"I see only your beauty. In you I always find something that delights
-me. I was looking then at the strange wave of your hair here--a wave
-not made by the comb, but by the storm!"
-
-He slipped his fingers through the thick tresses. She closed her eyes,
-feeling again the spell of his terrible power over her.
-
-"I see only your beauty. When you close your eyes thus, I feel that you
-are mine to the depth of your heart--lost in me, as the soul is one
-with the body: a single life, mine and thine."
-
-She listened in the half light, and his voice seemed to come from a
-long distance, and to be speaking not to her but to another woman;
-she felt as if she were overhearing a lover's protestations to his
-mistress, and suddenly fancied herself mad with jealousy, possessed
-by a desire to kill, filled with a spirit of revenge; but that body
-must remain motionless, her hands hanging at her sides, nerveless and
-powerless.
-
-"You are my delight and my inspiration. You have a stimulating power
-of which you are unconscious. Your simplest act suffices to reveal to
-me some truth of which I was ignorant. And love is like the intellect:
-it shines in the measure of the truth it discovers. Why, why do you
-grieve yourself? Nothing is destroyed, nothing is lost. It was intended
-that we should be united, so that together we might rise to joy and
-triumph. It was necessary that I should be free and happy in your
-true and perfect love in order to create the work of beauty that so
-many men expect of me. I need your faith; I need to pass through joy
-and to create. Your presence alone suffices to inspire my mind with
-incalculable fruitfulness. Just now, when your arms held me close, I
-heard a sudden torrent of music, a flood of melody, passing through the
-silence."
-
-To whom was he speaking? Whom did he ask for joy? Was not his imperious
-demand for music a yearning toward her that sang, transfiguring the
-universe with her song? Of whom, if not of fresh youth and maidenhood,
-could he ask joy and creation? While she had held him in her embrace,
-it was the other woman who had sung and spoken within him! And now,
-now--to whom was he speaking, if not to that other woman? She alone
-could give him what was necessary for his art and his life. The
-maiden was a new force, a closed beauty, an unused weapon, keen and
-magnificent for the intoxication of war. Malediction! Malediction!
-
-Mingled sorrow and anger stirred her heart, in that vibrating darkness
-which she dared not leave. She suffered the torments of a nightmare; as
-if she were rolling toward a precipice with the indestructible burden
-of her vanished years--years of misery and of triumph--her fading
-face with its thousand masks, her despairing soul, and the thousand
-other souls that had inhabited her mortal body. This grand passion of
-her life, which was to have saved her, seemed now to be pushing her
-relentlessly toward ruin and death. In order to reach her, and through
-her to attain to his highest joy, the passion of her beloved was
-compelled to make its way through what he believed to be a multitude
-of unknown loves; it would contaminate, corrupt and embitter itself,
-perhaps even change by slow degrees to disgust. Always that shadowy
-multitude must keep alive in him that instinct of brutal ferocity which
-lurked in his strong nature. Ah, what had she done? She herself had
-armed a furious devastator, and had put him between her friend and
-herself. No escape was possible. She herself, on that night of the
-flame, had led before him the fresh and beautiful prey, of whom he had
-taken possession by one of those looks that are a choice and a promise.
-To whom was he speaking now, if not to that other woman. Of whom did he
-ask joy?
-
-"Do not be sad! do not be sad!"
-
-But now she heard his words only confusedly, more faint than before, as
-if her soul had sunk into a chasm; but she felt his impatient hands as
-they touched her caressingly. And, in that red darkness, wherein, as it
-seemed to her, all madnesses and folly were born, she felt a surging
-revolt in her veins.
-
-"Do you wish me to take you to her? Do you wish me to call her to you?"
-cried the unhappy woman, suddenly opening her eyes with an expression
-that astonished Stelio; she seized his wrists and shook him with a
-grasp so tight that he felt her nails in his flesh. "Go! go! She awaits
-you! Why do you remain here? Go, run! She awaits you!"
-
-She sprang up, raising him at the same time, and tried to push him
-toward the door. She was no longer recognizable, transfigured by fury
-into a dangerous, threatening creature. The strength of her hands was
-incredible, like the energy of evil intent in her whole being.
-
-"Who awaits me? What did you say? What is the matter with you? Come
-back to your senses, Foscarina!"
-
-He stammered his appeal, he trembled, fancying he saw madness in that
-distorted face. But she was like one distraught and heard him not.
-
-"Foscarina!" He called her with all his soul, white with terror, as if
-to stop with his cry her escaping reason.
-
-She gave a great start, opened her hands, and gazed around as if just
-roused from a long sleep, of which she remembered nothing.
-
-"Come, sit down."
-
-He led her back to the cushions, and gently made her settle herself
-among them. She allowed herself to be soothed by his solicitous
-tenderness. Presently she moaned:
-
-"Who has beaten me?"
-
-She felt of her bruised arms, and touched her face lightly, trembling
-as if she were cold.
-
-"Come; lie down! Put your head here."
-
-He made her lie on the couch; disposed her head comfortably, put a
-light cushion over her feet, softly and carefully, leaning over her as
-over a dear invalid, giving up to her all his heart still throbbing
-with fear.
-
-"Yes, yes," she repeated, in a voice no louder than a sigh, at each
-movement he made, as if she would prolong the sweetness of these cares.
-
-"Are you cold?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Shall I cover you with something?" Stelio inquired.
-
-"Yes."
-
-He sought for some wrap, and found on a table a piece of antique
-velvet, which he spread over her. She smiled faintly.
-
-"Are you comfortable like that?"
-
-She made an affirmative sign by simply closing her eyelids.
-
-Stelio gathered up the violets, now warm and languid, and laid them on
-the pillow near her head.
-
-"So?"
-
-Her eyelids drooped even more slightly than before. He kissed her
-forehead, amid the perfume of the violets; then he turned to stir the
-fire, putting on more wood and raising a fine blaze.
-
-"Do you feel the heat? Are you getting warm?" he asked softly.
-
-He approached and bent over the poor soul. She slept; the contraction
-of her face had relaxed, and the lines of her mouth were composed in
-the equal rhythm of sleep; a calm like that of death spread over her
-pale face. "Sleep! Sleep!" He was so moved by love and pity that he
-would have liked to transfuse into that slumber an infinite virtue of
-consolation and forgetfulness.
-
-He remained standing on the rug, watching her, counting her
-respirations. Those lips had said: "I can do one thing that love alone
-cannot do." Those lips had said: "Do you wish me to take you to her? Do
-you wish me to call her to you?" He neither judged nor resolved, but
-let his thoughts scatter. Once again he felt the blind, indomitable
-forces of life whirling over his head, over that sleeping form, and
-also his terrible desire to cling to life. "The bow is named BIOS, and
-its work is death."
-
-In the silence, the fire and the rain continued to talk. The voice
-of the elements, the woman sleeping in her sadness, the imminence of
-fate, the immensity of the future, remembrance and presentiment, all
-these things created in his mind a state of musical mystery wherein
-the yet unwritten work surged anew and illumined his thought. He
-listened to his melodies developing themselves indefinitely, and heard
-a personage in the drama say: "This alone quenches our thirst, and all
-the thirst in us turns eagerly toward this freshness. If it did not
-exist, none could live here; we should all die of thirst." He saw a
-country furrowed by the dry, white bed of an ancient river, dotted with
-bonfires which lighted up the extraordinarily calm, pure evening. He
-saw a funereal gleam of gold, a tomb filled with corpses all covered
-with gold, and the crowned corpse of Cassandra among the sepulchral
-urns. A voice said: "How soft her ashes are! They run between the
-fingers like the sands of the sea." Another voice said: "She speaks of
-a shadow that passes over things, and of a damp sponge that effaces
-all traces." Then night fell; stars sparkled, the myrtles breathed
-perfume, and a voice said: "Ah! Behold the statue of Niobe! Before
-dying, Antigone sees a stone statue whence gushes an eternal fountain
-of tears." The error of the age had passed away; the remoteness of
-centuries was abolished.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- A FALLEN GIANT
-
-
-One afternoon in November, Stelio returned on the steamer from the
-Lido, accompanied by Daniele Glauro. They had left behind them the
-thunder of the greenish waves of the Adriatic, the trees of San Niccolò
-despoiled by a predaceous wind, whirlwinds of dead leaves, heroic
-phantoms of departures and arrivals, the memory of the archers playing
-to win the scarlet ensign, and the mad rides of Lord Byron, devoured by
-the desire to surpass his own destiny.
-
-"I too, to-day, would have given a kingdom for a horse," said Effrena,
-in self-ridicule, irritated by the mediocrity of life. "Not a cross-bow
-nor a horse in San Niccolò, not even the courage of an oarsman! _Perge
-andacter!_ So here we are, on this ignoble gray carcass that smokes and
-seethes like a kettle. Look at Venice, dancing down there!"
-
-The anger of the waves was extending to the lagoon. The waters were
-agitated by a violent wind, and the agitation seemed to reach to the
-foundations of the city, and the palaces, cupolas, and campaniles
-appeared to heave like vessels on the water. Clusters of floating
-seaweed showed their white roots; and flocks of sea-gulls circled in
-the wind, their strange, wild laughter echoing above the crested waves.
-
-"Wagner!" Daniele Glauro said suddenly, in a low tone, touched with
-emotion, as he pointed at an old man leaning against the railing of a
-prow. "There he is, with Franz Liszt and Donna Cosima. Do you see him?"
-
-Stelio's heart beat quicker; for him too all other surrounding figures
-disappeared; his bitter sense of ennui and inertia disappeared; and
-he felt remaining only the suggestion of superhuman power evoked by
-that name, and realized that the only reality hovering over all those
-indistinct phantoms was the ideal world conjured up by that name around
-the little old man leaning over the troubled waters.
-
-Victorious genius, fidelity of love, unchangeable friendship, the
-supreme apparitions of heroic nature, were reassembled in silent union
-beneath the tempestuous sky. The same dazzling whiteness crowned
-the three heads, whose hair had become blanched through sadness. A
-troubled sorrow was revealed in their faces and attitudes, as if the
-same undefined presentiment oppressed their blended spirits. The
-white face of the woman had a beautiful, strong mouth, with clear-cut
-lines, revealing a tenacious soul; and her light, steel-like eyes were
-fixed continually on him who had chosen her for the companion of his
-noble warfare, watching over him who, having vanquished all hostile
-forces, would be powerless to vanquish Death, whose menace perpetually
-pursued him. That feminine vigil, full of fear, opposed itself to the
-invisible gaze of the other Woman, and threw around the old man a
-vague, funereal shadow.
-
-"He seems to be suffering," said Daniele Glauro. "Do you not see? He
-seems almost on the point of swooning. Shall we go to them?"
-
-Effrena looked with inexpressible emotion at those white locks blown
-about by the sharp wind on the aged neck under the broad brim of the
-felt hat, and at the almost livid ear, with its swollen lobe. That
-body, which had withstood the keenest warfare by the proud instinct of
-its own domination, now looked as limp as some rag which the wind could
-bear away and destroy.
-
-"Ah, Daniele! what can we do for him?" said Stelio, yielding to an
-almost religious impulse to manifest in some way his reverence and pity
-for that great oppressed heart.
-
-"What can we do?" repeated Glauro, to whom that ardent desire to
-offer something of himself to the hero now suffering the human fate
-had immediately communicated itself. Their souls were blended in that
-impulse of fervor and gratitude, that sudden exaltation of their innate
-nobility; but they could give nothing more than that. Nothing could
-check the secret ravages of the fatal malady; and both were filled with
-profound sorrow as they saw the snowy hair tossed about on the old
-man's neck by the wind coming from afar, and bringing to the quivering
-lagoon the murmur and the foam of the open sea.
-
-"Ah, glorious sea, thou shalt hear me still! Never shall I find on the
-earth the health I seek. To thee, therefore, will I remain faithful,
-O waves of the boundless sea!" The impetuous harmonies of _The Flying
-Dutchman_ returned to Effrena's memory, with the despairing call that
-pierces through them from time to time; he fancied that in the rushing
-wind he could hear again the wild chant of the crew on the ship with
-the blood-red sails: _"Iohohé! Iohohé!_ come ashore, black Captain!
-Seven years have passed!" Again his imagination conjured up the figure
-of Richard Wagner in youth; he saw once more the lonely one wandering
-in the living horror of Paris, poor yet undaunted, devoured by the
-fever of genius, his eyes fixed on his star, and his mind resolved to
-force the world to recognize it. In the myth of the shadowy captain,
-the exiled one had seen the image of his own breathless race, his
-furious struggle, his supreme hope. "But some day the pale hero may be
-delivered, should he meet on earth a woman that will be faithful to him
-until death."
-
-The woman was there, beside the hero, an ever vigilant guardian. She
-too, like Senta, knew the sovereign law of fidelity; and death was soon
-to dissolve the sacred vow.
-
-"Do you think that, steeped as he is in poetic myths, he has dreamed of
-some extraordinary manner of dying, and that he now prays every day to
-Nature to conform his end to his dream?" said Glauro, thinking of the
-mysterious will that induced the eagle to mistake for a rock the brow
-of Æschylus, and led Petrarch to die alone over the pages of a book.
-"What would be an end worthy of him?"
-
-"A new melody of unheard-of power, which in his youth had been to him
-indistinct and impossible to fix, should suddenly rend his soul like a
-terrible sword."
-
-"True!" said Glauro.
-
-The wind-driven clouds were battling in phalanxes through space; the
-towers and cupolas seemed swaying in the background; the shadows
-of city and sky, equally vast and mobile on the troubled waters,
-alternately changed and blended, as if they had been produced by things
-equally near dissolution.
-
-"Look at the Magyar, Daniele; there is a generous soul! He has served
-the hero with boundless faith and devotion; and by this service, more
-than by his art, he has won glory. But see how this very feeling, so
-strong and so sincere, inspires him with almost theatrical affectation,
-because of his continual wish to impose upon his spectators a
-magnificent image of himself, which shall delude them."
-
-The Abbé Liszt straightened his thin and bony frame, which seemed
-encased by a coat of mail, and drawing himself to his full height
-he bared his head to pray, addressing a mute prayer to the God of
-Tempests. The wind stirred his thick white hair, that leonine mane that
-at times seemed to emit electric currents which affected his listeners,
-and many women. His magnetic eyes were raised to heaven, while the
-words of his inaudible prayer moved his thin lips, lending a mystic air
-to that face so deeply furrowed with wrinkles.
-
-"What matters it?" said Glauro. "He possesses the divine faculty of
-fervor and a taste for all-powerful strength and dominating passion.
-Does not his art aspire toward Prometheus, Orpheus, Dante, Tasso? He
-was attracted by Richard Wagner as by some great force of nature;
-perhaps he heard in him the theme he has attempted to express in his
-symphonic poem: 'That which is heard on the Mountain'."
-
-"That may be," said Effrena.
-
-But both started on seeing the old man turn suddenly, with the gesture
-of one groping in darkness, and clutch convulsively at his companion,
-who uttered a cry. They ran toward the group. Everyone on the boat
-crowded around them, struck by that cry of anguish. A look from the
-woman prevented the curious from venturing too close to the apparently
-lifeless body. She herself supported him, laid him on a bench, felt
-his pulse, and bent over to listen to his heart-beats. Her love and
-her grief traced an inviolable circle around the stricken one. The
-bystanders stepped back and waited in silence, anxiously looking on
-that livid face for signs of either life or death.
-
-The face was still and pale, as it lay on the woman's knees. Two
-deep furrows descended along the cheeks toward the half-open mouth,
-deepening near the imperious nose. Puffs of wind ruffled the thin,
-fine hair on the full forehead, and the white collar of beard below
-the square chin where the vigor of the jawbone was visible through the
-wrinkled skin. The temples were covered with perspiration, and one of
-the feet twitched slightly. The smallest detail of that fallen figure
-impressed itself forever on the minds of the two young men.
-
-How long did his suffering endure? The shadows continued to float over
-the dark water, broken at intervals by long shafts of sun-rays that
-appeared to pierce the air and bury themselves like arrows in the dark
-waves. The regular cadence of the engine beat upon the air; and now
-arose the wild laughter of the sea-gulls, and a sort of dull, prolonged
-moan from the tempest-stricken city.
-
-"We must carry him," said Stelio in his friend's ear; he was
-intoxicated by the sadness of the situation and by the solemnity of his
-own visions.
-
-The motionless face gave a slight sign of returning life.
-
-"Yes, let us offer our services," said Glauro, whose face was pale.
-
-They looked at the woman with the snow-white cheeks; then they advanced
-and offered their arms.
-
-How long did that terrible removal last? The distance from the boat to
-the shore was not great, but those few steps seemed a long journey. The
-waves dashed against the posts of the pier; the distant moan came to
-them from the Grand Canal as if from the winding paths of a cavern; the
-bells of San Marco rang for vespers; but this confusion of sounds had
-lost all immediate reality, and seemed infinitely profound and distant,
-like a lament of the ocean itself.
-
-In their arms they bore the Hero's body--the unconscious form of
-him who had inundated the world with the flood of melody from his
-oceanic soul, the mortal being of the Revealer who had translated into
-infinite song the essence of the Universe for man's adoration. With an
-ineffable thrill of terror and joy, such as would stir a man who should
-see a mighty river dashing itself over vast rocks, a volcano bursting
-into flame, a conflagration devouring a forest, a dazzling meteor
-obscuring the light of the stars, Effrena felt beneath the hand that
-he had slipped under the shoulder to sustain the body--and he paused
-an instant to gather his strength, which was failing him, and gazed at
-that white head against his breast--he felt the renewed beating of that
-sacred heart.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- THE MASTER'S VISION
-
-
-"You were strong, Daniele--you who can hardly break a twig! And he was
-heavy, that old barbarian; his body seemed built over a framework of
-bronze: well constructed, firm, able to stand on a deck that might rise
-and fall--the body of a man that nature destined for the sea. Whence
-came your strength, Daniele? I almost feared for you, but you did not
-even stagger. Do you realize that we have borne a hero in our arms?
-This is a day we ought to distinguish and celebrate in some way. His
-eyes opened again and looked into mine; his pulse revived under my
-hand. We were worthy to carry him, Daniele, because of our fervor."
-
-"You are worthy not only to carry him, but of gathering and preserving
-some of the most beautiful promises offered by his art to men who still
-have hope."
-
-"Ah, if only I am not overwhelmed by my own abundance, and if I can
-master the anxiety that suffocates me, Daniele!"
-
-The two friends walked on and on, side by side, in exalted and
-confident mood, as if their friendship had taken on an added nobility.
-
-"It seems as if the Adriatic had overthrown the Murazzi, in this
-tempest," said Daniele, pausing to look at the waves that had mounted
-even to the Piazza. "We must return."
-
-"No, let us cross the ferry. Here is a boat. Look at the reflection of
-San Marco on the water!"
-
-The boatman rowed them to the Torre dell' Orologio. The rising
-tide soon overflowed the Piazza, looking like a lake surrounded by
-porticoes, reflecting the greenish-yellow twilight sky.
-
-"EN VERUS FORTIS QUI FREGIT VINCULA MORTIS," read Stelio on the curve
-of an arch, below a mosaic of the Resurrection. "Did you know that
-Richard Wagner held his first colloquy with Death in Venice, exactly
-twenty years ago, at the time he produced Tristan? Consumed by a
-hopeless passion, he came here to die in silence, and here he composed
-that wild second act, which is a hymn to eternal night. And now fate
-has led him back to the lagoons. Fate, it seems, has decreed that here
-he shall breathe his last, like Claudio Monteverde. Is not Venice full
-of musical desire, immense and indefinable? Every sound transforms
-itself into an expressive voice. Listen!"
-
-The city of stone and water seemed indeed to have become as sonorous as
-a great organ. The hissing and moaning had changed to a sort of choral
-supplication, rising and falling in regular rhythm.
-
-"Do you not hear the theme of a melody in that chorus of moans? Listen!"
-
-They had debarked from the little boat, and had resumed their walk
-through the narrow streets.
-
-"Listen!" Stelio repeated. "I can detect a melodic theme, which swells
-and decreases without power to develop itself. Do you hear it?"
-
-"It is not given to me to hear what you hear," replied the sterile
-ascetic to the genius. "I will await the time when you can repeat to me
-the word that Nature speaks to you."
-
-"Ah!" Stelio resumed, "to be able to restore to melody its natural
-simplicity, its ingenuous perfection, its divine innocence; to draw
-it, living, from its eternal source, from the true mystery of nature,
-the inmost soul of the Universe! Have you ever reflected upon the myth
-connected with the infancy of Cassandra? She had been left one night
-in the temple of Apollo; and in the morning she was found lying on the
-marble floor, wrapped in the coils of a serpent that licked her ears.
-And from that day she understood all the voices of Nature in the air,
-all the melodies of the world. The power of the great seeress was only
-a high musical power; and a part of that Apollonian virtue entered
-the souls of the poets that coöperated in the creation of the tragic
-Chorus. One of those poets boasted of understanding the voices of
-all birds; another was able to hold converse with the winds; another
-comprehended perfectly the language of the sea. More than once I have
-dreamed that I too was lying on the marble floor, folded in the coils
-of that serpent. The magic of that old myth must be renewed, Daniele,
-in order that we may create the new art.
-
-"Have you ever thought what might be the music of that species of
-pastoral ode sung by the Chorus in _Å’dipus Tyrannus_, Å’when Jocasta
-flees, horror-struck, and the son of Laïus still cherishes the illusion
-of a last hope? Do you recall it? Try to imagine the strophes as if
-they were a frame, within which an expressive dance-figure is animated
-by the perfect life of melody. The spirit of Earth would rise before
-you: the consoling apparition of the great common Mother at the
-unhappiness of her stricken, trembling children--a celebration, as it
-were, of all that is divine and eternal above Man, who is dragged to
-madness and death by blind and cruel Destiny. Try now to conceive how
-this song has helped me in the writing of my great tragedy to find the
-means of the highest and at the same time the simplest expression."
-
-"Do you purpose, then, to reëstablish the ancient Chorus on the stage?"
-
-"Oh, no! I shall not revive any ancient form; I intend to create a
-new form, obeying only my instinct and the genius of my own race, as
-did the Greeks when they created that marvelous structure of beauty,
-forever inimitable--the Greek drama. For a very long time, the three
-practicable arts of music, poetry, and dancing have been separated; the
-first two have developed toward a superior form of expression, but the
-third is in its decadence, and I think that now it is impossible to
-combine them in a single rhythmical structure without taking from one
-or another its own dominant character, which has already been acquired.
-If they are to blend in one common effect, each must renounce its own
-particular effect--in other words, become diminished. Among the things
-most susceptible of rhythm, Language is the foundation of every art
-that aspires to perfection. Do you think that language is given its
-full value in the Wagnerian drama? Do you not think that the musical
-conception itself often loses some of its primitive purity by being
-made to depend on matters outside the realm of music? Wagner himself
-certainly realizes this weakness, and shows it when he approaches
-a friend in Bayreuth, covering his eyes with his hand, that he may
-abandon his sense of hearing entirely to the virtue of the pure sound
-of the voice."
-
-"This is all new to me," said Glauro, "yet it rejoices and intoxicates
-me as we rejoice when we hear something that has been long foreseen and
-felt by presentiment. Then, as I understand, you will not superpose
-the three rhythmic arts, but will present them each in its single
-manifestation, yet all linked by a sovereign idea, and raised to the
-supreme degree by their own significant energy?"
-
-"Ah, Daniele! how can I give you any idea of the work that lives within
-me?" Stelio exclaimed. "The words you use in trying to formulate my
-meaning are hard and mechanical."
-
-They stood at the foot of the Rialto steps. The gale swept over them;
-the Grand Canal, dark in the shadow of the palaces, seemed to bend like
-a river hastening to a cataract.
-
-"We cannot remain here," said Glauro, leaning against a door; "the wind
-will blow us down."
-
-"Go on; I will overtake you. Only a moment," cried the master,
-covering his eyes with his hand, and concentrating his soul upon sound
-alone.
-
-Formidable was the voice of the tempest, in the midst of the immobility
-of centuries, turned to stone. Its unaccompanied song, its hopeless,
-wailing lamentation, was raised in memory of the multitudes that
-had become ashes, the scattered pageants, the fallen grandeur, the
-innumerable days of birth and of death--things of an age without name
-or form. All the melancholy of the world rushed in the wind over that
-eager, listening soul.
-
-"Ah! I have seized you!" Stelio cried suddenly, with triumphant joy.
-
-The complete and perfect line of the melody had been revealed to him,
-now belonged to him, and would become immortal in his spirit and in the
-world.
-
-"Daniele! I have found it!"
-
-He raised his eyes, and saw the first stars in the adamantine sky.
-He feared to lose the precious treasure he had found. Near, a column
-he now saw a man with a flickering light at the end of a long pole,
-and heard the slight sound of the lighting of a lantern. Swiftly and
-eagerly he jotted down in his notebook, under the lamplight, the notes
-of the melodic theme, compressing into five lines the message of the
-elements.
-
-"O day of marvels!" said Daniele Glauro, on seeing Stelio on the
-steps, as light and agile as if he had robbed the air of some of its
-elasticity. "May Nature cherish you forever, my brother!"
-
-"Come, come!" said Stelio, taking him by the arm and urging him on with
-boyish gayety. "I must run!"
-
-He drew him through the narrow streets leading to San Giovanni
-Elemosinario.
-
-"What you told me one day, Daniele, is quite true. I mean that the
-voice of things is essentially different from their sound," said
-Stelio. "The sound of the wind may represent the moans of a frightened
-throng, the howling of wild animals, the falling of cataracts, the
-rustle of waving banners, or mockery, threats, and despair. But the
-voice of the wind is the synthesis of all these sounds: that is the
-voice which sings and tells of the terrible travail of time, the
-cruelty of human destiny, the eternal warfare for an illusion eternally
-born anew."
-
-"And have you never thought that the essence of music does not lie in
-the sounds alone?" asked the mystic doctor. "It often dwells in the
-silence that precedes and follows sound. Rhythm makes itself felt in
-these intervals of silence. Rhythm is the very heart of music, but its
-pulsation is inaudible except during the intervals between sounds."
-
-This metaphysical law confirmed Stelio in his belief of the justness of
-his own intuition.
-
-"Imagine," said he, "an interval between two scenic symphonies wherein
-all the _motifs_ concur in expressing the inmost essence of the
-characters that are struggling in the drama as well as in revealing
-the inmost depths of the action, as, for instance, in Beethoven's
-great prelude in _Leonora_, or the prelude to _Coriolanus_. That
-musical silence, pulsating with rhythm, is like the mysterious living
-atmosphere where alone can appear words of pure poetry. Thus the
-personages seem to emerge from the symphonic sea as if from the
-hidden truth that works within them; their spoken words will possess
-an extraordinary resonance in that rhythmic silence, will reach the
-farthest limit of verbal power, because it will be animated by a
-continuous aspiration to song that cannot be appeased except by the
-melody which must rise again from the orchestra, at the close of the
-tragic episode. Do you understand me?"
-
-"Then you place the episode between two symphonies, which prepare it
-and also terminate it, because music is the beginning and the end of
-human utterance."
-
-"Thus I bring nearer to the spectator the personages of the drama.
-Do you recall the figure employed by Schiller in the ode he wrote in
-honor of Goethe's translation of _Mahomet_, to signify that, on the
-stage, only the ideal world seems real. The chariot of Thespis, like
-the barque of Acheron, is so slight that it can carry only shadows or
-the images of human beings. On the stage commonly known, these images
-are so unreal that any contact with them seems as impossible as would
-be contact with mental forms. They are distant and strange, but in
-making them appear in the rhythmic silence, accompanied by music to
-the threshold of the visible world, I shall be able to bring them
-marvelously close, because I shall illumine the most secret depths
-of the will that produces them. I shall reveal, in short, the images
-painted on the veil and that which happens beyond the veil. Do you
-understand?"
-
-They were now entering the Campo di San Cassiano lonely and deserted
-on the banks of the gray stream; their voices and their footsteps
-echoed there as if in an amphitheater of stone, distinct above the
-sound of the Grand Canal, which made a rushing noise like that of
-a river. A purple mist rose from the fever-laden waters, spreading
-like a poisonous breath. Death seemed to have reigned there a long
-time. The shutter of a high window beat in the wind against the wall,
-grinding on its hinges, a sign of abandonment and ruin. But, in the
-mind of the Inspirer, all these appearances produced extraordinary
-transfigurations. He saw again the wild and solitary spot near the
-tomb of Mycenæ. Myrtles flourished between the rugged rocks and the
-cyclopic ruins. Beside a rock lay the rigid, pure body of the Victim.
-In the death-like silence he could hear the murmuring water and the
-intermittent breath of the breeze among the myrtles.
-
-"It was in an august place," said he, "that I had the first vision of
-my new work--at Mycenæ, under the gateway of the Lions, while I was
-re-reading _Orestes_. Land of fire, country of thirst and delirium,
-birthplace of Clytemnestra and of the Hydra, earth forever sterile by
-the horror of the most tragic destiny that ever has overtaken a human
-race. Have you ever thought about that barbarian explorer who, after
-passing the greater part of his existence among his drugs behind a
-counter, undertook to find the tombs of the Atridæ among the ruins
-of Mycenæ, and who one day (the sixth anniversary of the event is of
-recent date) beheld the greatest and strangest vision ever offered to
-mortal eyes? Have you ever pictured to yourself that fat Schliemann at
-the moment when he discovered the most dazzling treasure ever held by
-Death in the dark obscurity of the earth for centuries--for thousands
-of years? Have you ever fancied that this superhuman and terrible
-spectacle might have been revealed to some one else--to a youthful and
-fervent spirit, to a poet, a life-giver, to you, to me, perhaps? Then
-the fever, the frenzy, the madness--Imagine!"
-
-He was on fire and vibrating, suddenly swept away by his own fancy as
-by a whirlwind. His seer's eyes sparkled with the gleam of the buried
-treasure. Creative force flowed to his brain as blood to his heart.
-He was an actor in his own drama, with accent and movement expressing
-transcendent beauty and passion, surpassing the power of the spoken
-word, the limit of the letter. And his brother spirit hung upon his
-speech, trembling before the sudden splendor that proved to him the
-truth of his own divinations.
-
-"Imagine! Imagine that the earth in which you explore is baleful--it
-must still exhale the miasma of monstrous wickedness. The curse upon
-the Atridæ was so terrific that some vestige of it must still have
-remained to be feared in the dust that they once trod upon. You are
-bewitched: the dead you seek and cannot find are reincarnated in you,
-and breathe in your body with the terrible breath with which Æschylus
-infused them, huge and sanguinary as they appear in the _Orestes_,
-pierced perpetually with the darts and flames of their destiny.
-Hereafter, all the ideal life with which you have nourished yourself
-must assume the form and impress of reality. And still you go on in
-this land of thirst, at the foot of the bare mountain, enclosed within
-the fascination of the dead city, always delving in the earth, with
-those terrifying phantoms ever before your eyes in the burning dust. At
-each thrust of the spade you tremble to the very marrow, eager to see
-the face of one of the Atridæ, still perfect, but with the signs still
-visible of the violence he suffered, the inhuman carnage. And behold
-it! the gold, the gold, the bodies, piles of gold, bodies covered with
-gold"--
-
-The Atridæ princes seemed to be lying there on the stones, a miracle
-evoked in the obscurity of the pathway. And the one who had evoked
-these images, as well as his listener, shuddered at the same instant.
-
-"A succession of tombs: fifteen bodies, intact, one lying beside
-another, on a golden bed, with masks of gold on their faces, their
-brows crowned with gold and breasts bound with gold; and covering
-them, on their forms, at their sides, at their feet, everywhere, a
-prodigality of golden things, countless as the leaves falling in a
-fairy forest. Do you see? Do you see?"
-
-"Yes, yes, I see! I see!"
-
-"For a second, that man's soul has traversed hundreds and thousands of
-years, has breathed the terrible legend, has palpitated in the horror
-of the ancient carnage. For a second, his soul has lived that antique
-life of violence. The slain ones were all there: Agamemnon, Eurymedon,
-Cassandra, and the royal escort, and for a moment they lay under
-his eyes, motionless. Then--they vanished into nothingness--do you
-see?--like a vapor exhaled, like scattered foam, like flying dust, like
-I know not what frail and fleeting thing--engulfed in the same fatal
-silence that surrounded their radiant immobility. And there was only
-a handful of dust and a mass of gold!" Daniele Glauro, deeply moved,
-seized his friend's hand; and the Inspirer read in his faithful eyes
-the mute flame of enthusiasm consecrated to the great work.
-
-They stopped near a door in the dark wall. A mysterious sense of
-distance possessed the mind of each, as if their souls were lost in the
-mists of time; and they fancied that behind that door an ancient people
-lived enthralled by a changeless Destiny. The sound of a rocking cradle
-came from the house, and the croon of a soft lullaby to a wailing
-child. The stars glowed in the narrow glimpse of sky; against the walls
-the sea was moaning. And in another spot a hero's heart suffered while
-waiting for death.
-
-"Life!" said Stelio, resuming his walk, and drawing Daniele with him.
-"Here, at this moment, all that trembles, weeps, hopes, breathes, and
-raves in the immensity of life, gathers itself in your mind, condensing
-itself there with a sublimation so rapid that you believe yourself able
-to express it all in a single word. But what word? What word? Do you
-know it? Who will ever know it well enough to speak it?"
-
-Again he was distressed at his inability to embrace all and express all.
-
-"Have you ever seen, at certain times, the whole universe standing
-before you, as distinct as a human head? I have, a thousand times. Ah,
-to cut it off, like him that cut off Medusa's head, at one stroke, and
-hold it up before the multitude so that it never should be forgotten!
-Have you ever thought that a great tragedy might resemble the attitude
-of Perseus? I tell you this: I should like to take the bronze of
-Benvenuto Cellini from the Loggia of Orcagna and place it in the
-_foyer_ of the new theater as an admonition. But who will give to a
-poet the sword of Hermes and the mirror of Athena?
-
-"Perseus!" continued the Inspirer. "In the ravine, below the citadel
-of Mycenæ, is a fountain called Perseia, and it is the only living
-thing in that place where all is parched and dead. Men are attracted
-toward it as to a spring of life in that region where the melancholy
-whiteness of the dried river-beds is visible late in the twilight. All
-human thirst ardently approaches that freshness. And throughout my
-work the music of that stream shall be heard--the water, the melody
-of the water. I have found it! In that, the pure element, shall be
-accomplished the pure Act which is the aim of the new tragedy. On its
-clear, cold waters shall sleep the virgin destined to die 'deprived
-of nuptials,' like Antigone. Do you understand? The pure Act marks
-the defeat of antique Destiny. The new soul suddenly breaks the iron
-band that held it, with a determination born of madness, of a lucid
-delirium that resembles ecstasy, or a deeper, clearer vision of Nature.
-In the orchestra, the final ode is of the salvation and liberation of
-man, obtained through pain and sacrifice. The monstrous Fate is there,
-vanquished, near the tombs of the Atridæ, before the very corpses of
-the victims. Do you understand? He that frees himself by means of the
-pure Act, the brother that kills his sister to save her soul from the
-horror that was about to seize her, has himself in reality seen the
-face of Agamemnon!"
-
-The fascination of the funereal gold had taken fresh hold upon his
-fancy; the evidence of his internal vision gave him a look as of one
-under a spell of hallucination.
-
-"One of the corpses surpasses all the others in height and in majesty:
-his brow is crowned with a golden diadem, and he wears a cuirass,
-shoulder-plates, and a girdle of gold, surrounded with swords, lances,
-daggers, cups, and countless golden discs scattered like petals over
-his body, more venerable than a demigod. The man bends over this body,
-while it is vanishing in the light before his very eyes, and lifts
-the heavy mask. Ah, does he not then see the face of Agamemnon? Is
-not this corpse perhaps the King of kings? The mouth and the eyes
-are open. Do you remember that passage of Homer's? 'As I lay dying,
-I raised my hands to my sword; but the woman with dog-like eyes went
-away, and would not close my eyes and my mouth, at the moment when I
-was about to descend to the abode of Hades.' Do you remember? Well,
-the mouth of this corpse is open, and its eyes are open. He has a high
-brow, ornamented with a single large golden leaf; the nose is long and
-straight, the chin oval"--
-
-The magician paused an instant, his eyes fixed and dilated. He was a
-seer. All about him disappeared, and his fiction remained the only
-reality. Daniele trembled, for he too was able to see through the eyes
-of the other.
-
-"Ah, the white spot on the shoulder, too! He has raised the armor. The
-spot, the spot! the hereditary mark of the race of Pelops 'of the ivory
-shoulder'! Is he not indeed the King of kings?"
-
-The rapid, half-broken utterances of the seer were like a succession of
-flashes whereby he himself was dazzled. He had astonished even himself
-by that sudden apparition, that unexpected discovery which illumined
-the shadows of his mind, because exterior reality, and almost tangible.
-How had he been able to discover that spot on Agamemnon's shoulder?
-From what abyss of his memory had suddenly surged up that detail so
-strange, yet precise and decisive as a mark that affords recognition of
-a body dead since the preceding day?
-
-"You were there!" exclaimed Daniele, intoxicated. "It was you yourself
-that lifted that armor and that mask! If you have really seen what you
-have just described, you are no longer a man!"
-
-"I have seen! I have seen!"
-
-Again he became an actor in his own drama, and it was with a violent
-palpitation that he heard, from the lips of a living person, the words
-of the drama--the very words that were to be spoken in the episode
-itself: "If you have really seen what you have described, you are no
-longer a man." From that instant, the explorer of sepulchers took on
-the aspect of a noble hero fighting against the ancient destiny that
-had risen from the ashes of the Atridæ to contaminate and overthrow him.
-
-"Not with impunity," he continued, "does a man open tombs and gaze
-upon the faces of the dead--and what dead! He lives alone with his
-sister, the sweetest creature that ever has breathed the air of
-earth--alone with her, in the dwelling full of light and silence, as in
-a prayer, a consecration. Now, imagine one that unconsciously drinks
-poison, a philter, I know not what impure thing, which poisons his
-blood and corrupts his thoughts--suddenly, while his soul is at peace.
-Imagine this terrible evil, this vengeance of the dead! He is suddenly
-seized by an unholy passion; he becomes the miserable, trembling prey
-of a monster; he fights a desperate, secret fight, without truce,
-without mercy, day and night, every hour, every moment--all the more
-atrocious the more the innocent pity of the poor creature inclines
-toward his evil. How can this man be freed? From the very beginning
-of the tragedy, as soon as the innocent one begins to speak, it is
-evident that she is destined to die. And all that is said and done in
-the episodes, all that is expressed by the music, and by the songs and
-dances of the interludes, serves to lead her slowly but inexorably
-toward death. She is the equal of Antigone. In her brief, tragic
-hour, she passes accompanied by the light of hope and the shadow of
-presentiment; she passes accompanied by songs and tears, by the noble
-love that offers joy, by the mad love that engenders mourning; and
-she never pauses except to fall asleep on the cold, clear waters of
-the fountain that called to her from the solitudes with its continual
-murmur. Hardly has her brother killed her when he receives from her,
-through death, the gift of his redemption. 'All stain,' he cries,
-'is effaced from my soul! I have become wholly pure! All the sanctity
-of my former love has reëntered my soul like a torrent of light. Were
-she here now, all my thoughts of her would be pure as lilies. Were she
-to rise again, she could walk over my heart as over immaculate snow.
-Now she is perfect; now she can be adored as a divinity. I will lay
-her in the deepest of my sepulchers, and around her I will lay all my
-treasures.' Thus, the act of death, into which he has been drawn by
-his lucid madness, becomes an act of purification and of liberation,
-marking the defeat of ancient Destiny. Emerging from the symphonic
-ocean, the ode shall sing of the victory of man, shall illumine the
-darkness of the catastrophe with an unknown light, and shall elevate to
-the summit of music the first word of the Drama renewed."
-
-"The gesture of Perseus!" exclaimed Daniele, still under the spell of
-exaltation. "At the end of the tragedy you cut off the head of the
-Moira, and show it to the multitude, ever young and ever-new, which
-shall bring the spectacle to a close amid great cries of enthusiasm."
-
-Both saw, as in a dream, the marble theater on the Janiculum, the
-multitude swayed by the idea of truth and of beauty, the illimitable
-starry Roman sky; they saw the frenzied multitude descending the slope
-of the hill, bearing in their rude hearts the confused revelation of
-poetry; they heard the clamor prolonging itself in the darkness of the
-immortal city.
-
-"And now good-by, Daniele," said the master, reminded of his need to
-hasten, as if some one waited for him or called him.
-
-The eyes of the Tragic Muse remained immovable in the depths of his
-dream, sightless, petrified in the divine blindness of statues.
-
-"Where are you going?"
-
-"To the Palazzo Capello."
-
-"Does La Foscarina know the thread of your work?"
-
-"Vaguely."
-
-"And what figure shall you give to her?"
-
-"She shall be blind, having already passed into another world, and gone
-beyond the life of this. She shall see that which others do not see.
-Her feet shall be in the shadows, but her head in the light of eternal
-truth. The contrasts of the tragic hour shall reverberate in the
-darkness of her soul, multiplying themselves there like thunder among
-the deep circles of solitary rocks. Like Tiresias, she shall comprehend
-everything, permitted or forbidden, celestial and terrestrial, and she
-shall know 'how hard it is to know when knowing is useless.' Ah, I
-shall put marvelous words into her mouth, and silences that shall give
-birth to infinite beauties."
-
-"On the stage," said Glauro, "whether she speaks or is silent, her
-power is almost more than human. She reveals to us the existence in
-our own hearts of the most secret evil and the most hidden hopes;
-by her enchantment, our past becomes present; and, by the virtue of
-her aspect, we recognize ourselves in the trials suffered by others
-throughout time, as if the soul she reveals to us were our own."
-
-They stopped on the Ponte Savio. Stelio was silent, under a flood of
-love and melancholy, which had suddenly come upon him.
-
-"I wish I had not to leave you to-night, Stelio," confessed the
-faithful brother, who was also invaded by a peculiar melancholy. "When
-I am with you, I breathe more freely, and live a swifter life."
-
-Stelio was silent. The wind had abated somewhat. The brown church and
-the square tower of naked brick seemed to be praying silently to the
-stars.
-
-"Do you know the green column that stands in San Giacomo dall' Orio?"
-Daniele resumed, intending to hold his friend a little longer, because
-he dreaded to say farewell. "What sublimity! It is like the fossilized
-condensation of an immense green forest. In following its innumerable
-veins, the eye travels in a dream through sylvan mysteries. When I look
-at it I fancy myself visiting Sila and Ercinna."
-
-Stelio knew the column. One day Perdita had leaned long against the
-precious shaft, contemplating the magic frieze of gold that curves
-above the canvas of Bassano, obscuring it.
-
-"To dream--always to dream," he sighed, with a return of that bitter
-impatience which had suggested sneering words to him when he had come
-on the boat from the Lido. "To live on relics! Think of Dandolo, who
-overthrew the column and an empire at the same time, and who preferred
-to remain doge when he might have become emperor. Perhaps he lived more
-than you, who wander in fancy through forests when you examine the
-marble he pillaged. Good-by, Daniele."
-
-"I shall stop at the Palazzo Vendramin for news," said the faithful
-brother.
-
-These words recalled afresh the thought of the great ailing heart, the
-weight of the hero in their arms, the terrible removal.
-
-"He has conquered--he can die," said Stelio.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- SOFIA
-
-
-Stelio entered La Foscarina's house like a spirit. His mental
-exaltation changed the aspect of things. The hall, lighted by a galley
-lamp, appeared immense to him. The detached cabin of a gondola standing
-on the pavement near the door, startled him as if he had suddenly seen
-a coffin.
-
-"Ah, Stelio!" exclaimed the actress, rising with a start and hastening
-toward him impetuously, with all the spring of her eagerness that had
-been repressed by expectation. "At last!"
-
-She stopped before him suddenly, without touching him. The swift
-impulse vibrated in her visibly. She was like a wind when it falls.
-"Who has detained you from me?" was her thought, while her heart was
-filled with doubt; for in one instant she had discerned something about
-the beloved one that rendered him intangible to her--something strange
-and far-away in his eyes.
-
-But he had found her most beautiful at the very moment when she
-sprang from the shadows, animated by a violence like that of the
-tempest sweeping the lagoons. The cry, the gesture, the sudden halt,
-the vibration of her body, the light in her countenance suddenly
-extinguished like a fire fallen to ashes, the intensity of her gaze,
-like the glow of battle, the breath that parted her lips as heat
-breaks open the lips of the earth--all these aspects of her real self
-showed a capability of pathos comparable only to the effervescence of
-natural energies, the power of cosmic force. The artist recognized in
-her the Dionysian creature, the living material, apt for receiving the
-rhythms of art, to be modeled according to poetic forms. And, because
-he saw her character as varying as the waves of the sea, he found
-inert the blind mask he thought to put on her face; the tragic fable
-through which she was to pass in sadness seemed narrow, and too limited
-was the order of sentiment whence she should draw her expressions,
-almost subterranean the soul she must reveal. His mental images were
-seized with a sort of panic, a fleeting terror. What could be that
-single work in the immensity of life? Æschylus composed more than a
-hundred tragedies, Sophocles still more. They had constructed a world
-with gigantic fragments lifted by their titanic arms. Their labor was
-as vast as a cosmogony. The Æschylian figures seemed still warm with
-ethereal life, shining with sidereal light, humid from the fertilizing
-cloud. The spirit of the Earth worked in the creators.
-
-"Hide me, hide me! Do not ask me anything, and let me be silent!"
-he implored, incapable of concealing his perturbation, powerless to
-control the tumult of his disordered thoughts.
-
-The woman's heart beat fast in the ignorance of fear.
-
-"Why? What have you done?"
-
-"I suffer."
-
-"From what?"
-
-"Anxiety, anxiety--from that trouble of mine which you know well."
-
-She clasped him in her arms. He felt that she was trembling in doubt.
-
-"Are you mine--are you still mine?" she asked, in a stifled voice, her
-lips pressed to his shoulder.
-
-"Yes--always yours."
-
-This woman always suffered a horrible fear every time she saw him
-depart from her, every time she saw him return. When he went, was it
-not toward the unknown betrothed? When he returned, was it not to bid
-her a last farewell?
-
-She clasped him in her arms with the fondness of a lover, a sister, a
-mother--with all human love.
-
-"What can I do for you? Tell me!"
-
-A continual need tormented her to offer, to serve, to obey a command
-that urged her toward peril, toward a struggle to seize some good that
-she might bring to him.
-
-"What can I give you?"
-
-He smiled wearily, overcome by sudden languor.
-
-"What do you wish? Ah, I know!"
-
-He smiled again, allowing himself to be caressed by that voice, by
-those adoring hands.
-
-"You wish for everything, do you not? You desire everything?"
-
-Still he smiled sadly, like an ailing child listening to descriptions
-of delightful games.
-
-"Ah, if I only could! But no one in the world can give you anything of
-any value, dearest friend. Your poetry and your music--they alone can
-demand everything. I remember that ode of yours beginning 'I was Pan.'"
-
-He leaned against the faithful heart his head now filled with the light
-of beautiful thoughts.
-
-"'I was Pan.'"
-
-Through his spirit passed the splendor of that lyrical moment, the
-delirium of that ode.
-
-"Have you seen your sea to-day? Did you see the storm?"
-
-He shook his head, without speaking.
-
-"Was it a great storm? One day you told me that you have many mariners
-among your forefathers. Have you been thinking to-day of your home on
-the dunes? Are you homesick for the sand? Do you wish to go back there?
-You have worked a great deal there, and have done great work. It is a
-consecrated house. Your mother was with you while you worked. You could
-hear her stepping softly in the next room. Sometimes she stopped to
-listen, did she not?"
-
-He embraced her silently. That voice penetrated his very soul, and
-refreshed it.
-
-"And your sister was with you, too? You told me her name once, and I
-have not forgotten it. She is called Sofia. I know that she is like
-you. I should like to hear her speak once, or to watch her walking
-along the road. Once you praised her hands. They are beautiful, are
-they not? You told me one day that when she is sad her hands hurt her,
-as if they were the roots of her soul. That is what you said--'the
-roots of her soul.'"
-
-He listened, almost happy. How had she discovered the secret of
-soothing him, the balm for his soul? From what hidden spring did she
-draw the fluid melody of those memories?
-
-"Sofia never will know the good she has done to the poor traveler. I
-know little of Sofia herself, but I know that she resembles you, and I
-have often pictured her to myself. I can see her at this moment. When
-I have been in distant countries, far-away among strangers, feeling
-almost lost, she has appeared to me often, and borne me company. She
-has appeared to me suddenly, when I had neither called nor expected
-her. Once I saw her at Mürren, where I had arrived after a long, weary
-journey, made in order to see a poor friend who was at the point of
-death. Day was breaking; the mountains had that cold, delicate color
-of beryl that is seen only among glaciers. Why did she come? We
-waited, together. The sun touched the summits of the mountains. Then a
-brilliant rainbow crowned them for a moment, then vanished. And Sofia
-vanished with the rainbow, with the miracle."
-
-He listened, almost happy. Were not all the beauty and all the truth
-that he himself would like to express contained in a stone, or in a
-flower of those mountains? The most tragic struggle of human passions
-was not worth the apparition of that mystic light upon the eternal
-snows.
-
-"And another time?" he asked softly, for the pause was long, and he
-feared that she would not continue. She smiled, then looked sad.
-
-"Another time I was at Alexandria in Egypt, in a time of confused
-horror, as if after a shipwreck. The city had an aspect of
-putrefaction, like a city in decay. I remember: a street full of
-muddy water; a white horse, thin as a skeleton, that splashed in the
-water, its mane and tail of an ochre color; the turrets of an Arabian
-cemetery, the far-away gleam of the marsh of Mareotis. What misery!
-What disgust!"
-
-"Oh, dear soul, never, never again shall you be left alone and
-despairing," said Stelio in his heart, now filled with fraternal
-tenderness for the nomad woman who recalled the sadness of her
-continual wanderings.
-
-"And another time?" he said aloud.
-
-"Another time it was in Vienna, in a museum. There was a great, empty
-hall, the rain whipped against the windows; innumerable precious relics
-were there in crystal cases; the signs of death were everywhere, exiled
-things no longer prayed to or adored. Together Sofia and I leaned over
-a case containing a collection of holy arms, with their metal hands
-fixed in an immovable gesture. There were martyr's hands sown with
-agates, amethysts, topaz, garnets, and pale turquoises. Through certain
-openings, splinters of bone were visible. One hand held a golden lily,
-another a miniature city, another clasped a column. One was smaller
-than the others; it had a ring on every finger, and held a vase full of
-ointment: the relics of Mary Magdalene. Exiled things, become profane,
-no longer prayed to or adored. Is Sofia devout? Has she the habit of
-prayer?"
-
-He did not reply. He felt that he should not speak, nor give any
-visible sign of his own life in the enchantment of that distant life.
-
-"Sometimes your sister used to enter your room while you were at work,
-and lay a blade of grass on the page newly begun."
-
-The enchantress trembled; a veiled image seemed to be suddenly
-revealing itself.--Do you know that I began to love her--the girl that
-sings, the girl whom you cannot have forgotten--because I thought of
-your sister? Yes--in order to pour into a pure soul the tenderness my
-soul wished to offer to your sister, from whom so many cruel things
-separated me! Do you know that?--
-
-Those words quivered with life, but they were not spoken; yet the voice
-trembled at their mute presence.
-
-"Then you would grant yourself a few moments of rest. You went to the
-window with her, and both gazed out upon the sea. A plowman drove his
-young oxen over the sand to teach them a straight furrow. When they
-were finally taught, they no longer plowed the sand, but went up on the
-hill. Who has told me these things?"
-
-He himself had told her once, almost in the same words, but now these
-memories came back like unexpected visions.
-
-"Then flocks of sheep passed along the shore; they came from the
-mountains, and were on the way to the plains of the Puglia. All was
-still; a golden silence covered the shore. Later, you went with
-your sister, and followed the tracks left by the sheep along the wet
-sand.... Who has told me all these things?"
-
-Stelio's fevered mind was calmed. A slow peace, like slumber, descended
-upon him.
-
-"Then sudden storms sprang up; the sea sometimes overflowed the dunes
-and the land, leaving foam on juniper and tamarisk trees, on myrtle and
-rosemary. Heaps of seaweed and jetsam would be thrown on the beach. A
-boat had been wrecked somewhere. The sea brought firewood to the poor,
-and mourning to heaven knows whom! The beach would be thronged with
-people, each trying to collect the largest bundle of wood. Then your
-sister would bring other aid--bread, wine, vegetables, linen. Blessings
-would rise louder than the noise of the waves. You looked out of the
-window, and thought that none of your beautiful images was worth the
-odor of warm bread. You left the half-finished page, and hurried to
-help Sofia, speaking to the women, the children and the old men.... Who
-has told me all these things?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- A BROTHER TO ORPHEUS
-
-
-From that first evening, Stelio had preferred to go to the house of
-his beloved through the gate of the Gradenigo garden, making his way
-through trees and shrubs that had become wild again. The actress had
-received permission to open a communication between her own garden
-and that of the long-abandoned palace by means of an opening in the
-dividing wall. But soon afterward, the Lady Myrta had come to live in
-the great silent rooms wherein the last guest had been the son of the
-Empress Josephine, the Viceroy of Italy. The apartments were ornamented
-with old, stringless musical instruments, and the garden was peopled by
-graceful hounds, that lacked any prey.
-
-To Stelio, nothing seemed sweeter or more sad than that walk toward
-the woman that waited for him while counting the hours--so slow, yet
-so swift in their flight. In the afternoon, the path of San Simeone
-Piccolo turned a pale golden hue, like a bank of the finest alabaster.
-The reflected rays of sunlight danced on the iron prows that stood in
-a row by the pier. A few decaying gondola cabins lay in the shadow of
-the pavements, with their curtains and cushions stained and spoiled by
-rain, as if they were catafalques worn out by continual use in funeral
-ceremonies, grown old on the way to the churchyard. The garden gate
-opened at the end of the Campiello della Comare, green and mossy like a
-country cemetery; it spread out between two columns, topped by broken
-statues, on the limbs of which the dry branches of ivy were outlined
-like veins.
-
-"Helion! Sirius! Altair! Donovan! Ali-Nour! Nerissa! Piuchebella!"
-
-Seated on a bench near a rose-covered wall, Lady Myrta was calling
-her dogs. La Foscarina stood near her, in a fawn-colored costume, the
-material of which resembled that superb textile called _rovana_, used
-in ancient times in Venice. The sunlight bathed the women and the roses
-in the same soft warmth.
-
-"You are dressed like Donovan to-day," said Lady Myrta to the actress,
-with a smile. "Did you know that Stelio prefers Donovan to all the
-others?"
-
-A slight blush rose to La Foscarina's cheeks; she looked at the
-fawn-colored greyhound.
-
-"He is the strongest and the most beautiful," she replied.
-
-"I believe that Stelio would like to have him," added the old lady,
-with a sweet, indulgent smile.
-
-"What is there that he would not like to have?"
-
-Lady Myrta noted the tinge of melancholy in the tone of the woman in
-love. She remained silent.
-
-The dogs lay near them, serious and sad, sleepy and dreamy, far from
-plains, steppes, and deserts, stretched out in the clover, where also
-grew the gourds, with their greenish-yellow fruit.
-
-"Does your lover grieve you?" the elder woman would have liked to ask
-of the woman in love, for the silence weighed on her, and she felt her
-own heart revivified by the fire within that sorrowful soul. But she
-dared not. She only sighed. Her heart, ever young, still throbbed at
-the sight of despairing passion and beauty menaced.
-
-"Ah, you are still beautiful, and your lips still attract kisses, and
-the man that loves you can still be intoxicated with your sweet pallor
-and your eyes," she thought, as she looked at the pensive actress,
-toward whom the November roses leaned. "But I am a specter."
-
-She lowered her eyes, gazed upon her own deformed hands lying on her
-lap, and wondered that those hands were hers, they were so dead and
-distorted, lamentable monsters that could no longer touch anyone
-without exciting disgust, that had nothing to caress any more except
-the dogs. She felt the wrinkles in her face, the false teeth against
-her gums, the false hair on her head, all the ruin of her poor body,
-which once was obedient to the graceful will of her delicate spirit;
-and she wondered at her own persistence in struggling against the
-outrages of Time, in deceiving herself, in recomposing every morning
-that ridiculous illusion with essences, oils, unguents, rouge and
-powder. But, in the perpetual springtime of her dreams, was she not
-ever youthful? Was it not yesterday, only yesterday, that she had
-caressed a loved face with her perfect fingers, hunted the fox and the
-deer in the northern counties, danced with her betrothed in the park
-to an air of John Dowland's?--There are no mirrors in the house of the
-Countess Glanegg; there are too many in Lady Myrta's house--was La
-Foscarina's thought.--One has hidden her decline from herself and from
-everyone else; the other sees herself growing older day by day. She
-counts her wrinkles one by one, gathers up her dead hair in her comb,
-feels her teeth rattling against her pale gums, and tries to repair
-the damage by artificial devices. Poor tender soul, who wishes still
-to be smiling and charming! But we must die, disappear, descend into
-the earth!--She observed the little cluster of violets that Lady Myrta
-had pinned to her skirt. In all seasons fresh flowers were fastened
-there, barely visible, hidden among the folds, a sign of her daily
-illusion of springtime, of the ever-new enchantment she wove about
-herself by the aid of memory, music, poetry, and all the arts of dreams
-against old age, infirmity, and solitude.--We should live one supreme,
-flaming hour, then disappear forever in the earth before all charm has
-vanished, before all grace is dead!--
-
-She felt the beauty of her own eyes, the careless strength of her
-hair, blown back by the wind, all the power of rhythm and transport
-that slumbered in her muscles and her bones. She heard again in fancy
-the words of her lover, saw him again in his tender transport of love,
-in the sweetness of languor, the moments of profound oblivion.--Still
-a little while, still a few days longer I shall please him, and
-seem beautiful to him, and put fire in his blood. A little while
-longer!--With her feet in the deep grass, her brow raised to the
-sunlight, amid the fragrance of fading roses, in the fawn-colored robe
-that made her seem like the magnificent beast of prey, she glowed with
-passionate joy of life and hope, a sudden quickening of the blood, as
-if that future which she had renounced by her resolution to die were
-flowing back into the present.--Come! come!--Within herself she called
-to her beloved with a sort of intoxication, sure that he would come,
-because she already felt that he would, and never had she been deceived
-by her presentiment.
-
-"Ah, here is Stelio!" said Lady Myrta at that instant, seeing the young
-man advancing among the laurels.
-
-La Foscarina turned swiftly, with a blush. The greyhounds rose,
-pricking up their slender ears. The meeting glance of those lovers
-had something in it like an electric flash. Again, as always, in the
-presence of that wonderful creature, her lover had the divine sensation
-of suddenly being enfolded in a cloud of flaming ether, in a vibrant
-wave that seemed to isolate him from ordinary atmosphere and almost to
-ravish his senses.
-
-"You were awaited here by all that dwell in this seclusion," said Lady
-Myrta, with a smile that hid the emotion that stirred the youthful
-heart in the infirm and aged body at the sight of love and longing. "In
-coming here, you have responded to a call."
-
-"That is true," said the young man, holding the collar of Donovan,
-which, remembering his caresses, had run to meet him. "The fact is, I
-have come a long distance. Guess from where?"
-
-"From the country of Giorgione!"
-
-"No, from the cloister of Santa Apollonia. Do you know that place?"
-
-"Is that one of your inventions to-day?"
-
-"Invention? It is a cloister of stone, a real cloister, with a well and
-with little columns."
-
-"It may be so, but everything that you have once looked at, Stelio,
-becomes your invention."
-
-"Ah, Lady Myrta, I should like to offer you that gem of a cloister. I
-wish I might move it here, into your garden. Imagine a small, secret
-cloister, opening on a sequence of slender columns, set in pairs like
-nuns when they walk, fasting, in the sun; very delicate, neither white,
-gray nor black, but that most mysterious tint ever given to stone by
-the great master colorist--Time. In the midst of these is a well,
-and on the curb, which is worn by the rope, hangs a pail without a
-bottom. The nuns have disappeared, but I believe that the shades of the
-Danaïdes frequent the place."
-
-He stopped speaking suddenly, seeing himself surrounded by the
-greyhounds, and began to imitate the guttural sounds the kennel-men
-make to gather the dogs. The animals became excited; their wistful eyes
-brightened.
-
-"Ali-Nour! Crissa! Nerissa! Clarissa! Altair! Helion! Hardicanute!
-Veronese! Hierro!"
-
-He knew them all by name, and when he called them they seemed to
-recognize him for their master. There was the Scottish hound, native of
-the highlands, with thick, rough coat; the Irish wolf-hound, ruddy and
-strong, with brown irises showing clearly in their whites; the Tartary
-hound, spotted with black and yellow, a native of vast Asiatic steppes,
-where at night he had guarded a tent against hyenas and leopards;
-the Persian dog, light-colored and small, with ears covered with long
-silky hair, a fluffy tail, of lighter tint on the sides and legs, more
-graceful than the antelopes he had killed; there was also the Spanish
-_galgo_ that had migrated with the Moors, that magnificent animal held
-in leash by a pompous dwarf in the painting by Velásquez, instructed
-to course and to force on the naked plains of the Mancha; the Arabian
-_sloughi_, illustrious depredator of the desert, with black tongue and
-palate, a noble animal, all pride, courage, and elegance, accustomed
-to sleep on rich rugs and to lap pure milk from a pure vase. Assembled
-in a pack, they quivered around him who knew how to reawaken in their
-torpid blood their primitive instincts of pursuit and carnage.
-
-"Which among you was Gog's best friend?" he asked, looking from one to
-another of the pairs of beautiful, eager eyes fixed upon him. "You,
-Hierro? You, Altair?"
-
-His peculiar accent animated the sensitive creatures, which listened
-with suppressed and intermittent growls.
-
-"Well, I must tell you all something that I have kept secret till
-to-day. Gog--do you hear?--who could crush a hare with one snap of his
-jaws--Gog is crippled."
-
-"Oh, indeed!" exclaimed Lady Myrta, concerned. "Is it possible, Stelio?
-And Magog--how is he?"
-
-"Magog is safe and well."
-
-These were the names of a pair of greyhounds that Lady Myrta had given
-to the young man.
-
-"How did it happen?"
-
-"Alas, poor Gog! He had already killed thirty-seven hares. He
-possessed all the virtues of his fine breed: swiftness, resistance,
-incredible rapidity in turning, and the constant desire to kill his
-prey, besides the classical manner of running straight and seizing his
-prey from behind almost at the same instant. Have you ever watched a
-greyhound in coursing, Foscarina?"
-
-"Never."
-
-"Then you never have seen one of the rarest spectacles of daring,
-vehemence, and grace in the world. Look!"
-
-He drew Donovan toward him, knelt beside him, and began feeling the
-animal with his expert hands.
-
-"No machine in nature exists that is more exactly and powerfully
-adapted to its purpose. The muzzle is sharp in order to penetrate the
-air; it is long, so that the jaws can crush the prey at the first snap.
-The skull is wide between the ears in order to contain the greatest
-courage and skill. The jowls are dry and muscular, and the lips so
-short they hardly cover the teeth."
-
-With sure and easy touch, he opened the mouth of the dog, which offered
-no resistance.
-
-"Look at those white teeth! See how long the eyeteeth are, with a
-little curve at the top, the better to hold his prey. No other species
-of dog has a mouth so well constructed for biting."
-
-His hands lingered over the examination, and his admiration for the
-superb specimen was unbounded. He was kneeling in the clover, and
-received in his face the breath of the dog, which quietly permitted
-him to examine it, as if it comprehended and enjoyed the praise of the
-connoisseur.
-
-"See what elegance in his ribs, arranged with the symmetry of a fine
-keel, and in that line curved inward toward the abdomen, which is
-hidden. All point to one aim. The tail, thick at the root and slender
-at the tip--look! almost like that of a rat--serves as a sort of
-rudder, necessary to enable him to turn swiftly when the hare doubles.
-Let us see, Donovan, whether you are perfect also in this respect."
-
-He took the tip of the tail, passed it under the leg, and drew it
-toward the haunch-bone, where it exactly touched the projecting part.
-
-"Yes, perfect! Once I saw an Arab of the tribe of Arbâa measuring his
-_sloughi_ in that way. Ali-Nour, did you tremble when you discovered
-the herd of gazelles? Imagine, Foscarina--the _sloughi_ trembles when
-he discovers his prey, quivers like a willow, and turns his soft,
-pleading eyes toward his master, begging to be released. I do not know
-the reason why this pleases me and stirs me so much. His desire to kill
-is terrible; his whole body is ready to stretch itself like a bow,
-yet he trembles! Not with fear, nor with uncertainty, but with sheer
-desire. Ah, Foscarina! if you could see a _sloughi_ at that moment, you
-would not fail to learn from him his manner of quivering, and you would
-render the manner human by the power of your tragic art, and would
-give mankind a new sensation. Up, Ali-Nour! swift desert arrow! Do you
-remember? But now you tremble only when you are cold."
-
-Blithe and graceful, he had let Donovan go, and had taken between his
-hands the serpentine head of the slayer of gazelles; he gazed into
-those deep eyes, wherein lurked nostalgia for the silent, tropical
-land; for tents unfolded after a march toward some deceiving mirage;
-for fires kindled for the evening meal under stars that seemed to throb
-in the waves of the wind just above the summits of the palm-trees.
-
-La Foscarina had entered into that physical enchantment of love whereby
-the limits of one's being seem to dilate and be fused in the air, so
-that every word and movement of the beloved object brings a feeling
-of happiness sweeter than any caress. Her lover had taken between his
-hands the head of Ali-Nour, but she felt the touch of those hands upon
-her own brow. He was gazing into Ali-Nour's eyes, but she could feel
-that gaze deep in her own soul.
-
-Had he not touched the obscurest mystery of her being? Did he not
-compel her to feel within herself the animal depths whence had sprung
-the unexpected revelation of her tragic genius, moving and maddening
-the multitude as would a splendid spectacle of sea and sky, a gorgeous
-sunrise, a tremendous tempest. When he had spoken of the trembling
-_sloughi_, had he not divined the natural analogies whence she drew the
-power of expression that amazed peoples and poets? It was because she
-had re-discovered the Dionysian sense of Nature as a naturalizer, the
-antique fervor of instinctive and creative energies, the enthusiasm of
-the multiform god emerging from the fermentation of all sap, that she
-appeared so new and so great on the stage. Sometimes she felt within
-herself something like an immanence of the miracle which in the mystic
-past swelled with divine milk the breasts of the Mænads at the approach
-of the hungry young panthers.
-
-Stelio began again to imitate the guttural call of the kennel-keeper.
-The dogs grew more excited; their eyes brightened again; the tense
-muscles swelled under the coats--tawny, black, white, gray, spotted;
-the long haunches were curved like bows ready to hurl into space those
-bodies dry and slender, like a quiver-full of arrows.
-
-"There, Donovan, there!"
-
-Stelio pointed to a reddish-gray object in the grass at the end of
-the garden; it looked somewhat like a crouching hare with flattened
-ears. The imperious voice deceived the hesitating hounds, and it was
-beautiful to see the slender, vigorous bodies quivering in the sunlight.
-
-"There, Donovan!"
-
-The great tawny dog looked him deep in the eyes, gave a formidable
-bound toward the imaginary prey, with all the vehemence of his
-reawakened instinct. He reached the spot in an instant, then stopped,
-disappointed, followed by the whole pack.
-
-"A gourd! a gourd!" cried the deceiver, with shouts of laughter. "Not
-even a rabbit. Poor Donovan! He bit only a gourd! Poor Donovan! what
-humiliation! Take care, Lady Myrta, lest he drown himself in the canal
-for very shame!"
-
-From the contagion of her lover's gayety, La Foscarina laughed too. Her
-fawn-tinted gown and the tan coats of the hounds shone in the sunlight
-against the green clover. Her white teeth, revealed by rippling
-laughter, graced her mouth with a renewal of youth.
-
-"Would you like to own Donovan?" said Lady Myrta, with a touch of
-graceful, malicious significance. "I know your arts!"
-
-Stelio ceased laughing, and blushed like a boy.
-
-A wave of tenderness filled La Foscarina's heart as she saw the boyish
-blush. She fairly sparkled with love; she felt a wild wish to clasp him
-in her arms at that very moment.
-
-Before thanking Lady Myrta, Stelio looked again at the dog, admiring
-him as he was, strong, splendid, perfect, with the mark of style on his
-limbs as if Pisanello had drawn him for the reverse of a medal. Then he
-looked at La Foscarina, who had turned to the group of animals, moving
-over the grass with a swift undulation, like the movement called the
-greyhound step by the ancient Venetians. She advanced, with Donovan,
-holding him by the collar. The chill of evening began to be felt, the
-shadow of the bronze cupola grew longer on the grass; a purple mist, in
-which the last flecks of golden sunlight swam, began to spread over the
-branches that swayed in the breeze.
-
---See, we are yours!--the woman seemed to be saying mutely, while the
-animal, beginning to shiver, pressed close against her.--We are yours
-forever. We are here to serve you!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- ONLY ONE CONDITION
-
-
-Heartrending was the sweetness of that November, smiling like a sick
-person who fancies himself to have reached a state of convalescence and
-feels an unusual sense of relief and well-being, knowing not that his
-hour of agony draws near.
-
-"What is the matter with you to-day, Fosca? What has happened to you?
-Why are you so distant to me? Speak! Tell me!"
-
-Stelio had entered San Marco by chance, and had seen her there, leaning
-against the chapel-door that leads to the baptistry. She was alone,
-motionless, her face devoured by fever and by shadows, with terrified
-eyes fixed on the fearful figures of the mosaics that flamed in a
-yellow fire.
-
-"Leave me here alone, I entreat you--I beg of you! I must be alone! I
-implore you!"
-
-She turned as if to flee, but he detained her.
-
-"But tell me! Speak at least one word that I may understand."
-
-Still she sought to escape, and her movement expressed unspeakable
-anguish.
-
-"I implore you! If you pity me, the only thing you can do for me now is
-to let me go."
-
-"But one word--at least one word, so that I shall understand."
-
-A flash of fury passed over the agitated face.
-
-"No! I wish to be alone!"
-
-Her voice was as hard as her glance. She turned, taking a step or two
-like a person overcome by dizziness seeking some support.
-
-"Foscarina!"
-
-But he dared not detain her longer. He saw the despairing one walk
-through the zone of sunlight that invaded the basilica like a rushing
-torrent entering through a door opened by an unknown hand. Behind her
-the deep golden cavern, with its apostles, martyrs, and sacred beasts,
-glittered as if the thousand torches of the daylight were pouring in on
-it.
-
-"I am lost in the depths of sadness.... This violent impulse to revolt
-against fate, to rush away in search of adventure--to seek.--Who will
-save my hope? Whence will come a ray of light?... To sing, to sing! But
-I would sing a song of life at last.... Can you tell me where the Lord
-of the Flame is at present?"
-
-These words, in a letter from Donatella Arvale, were branded on her
-eyes and on her soul, with all the characteristics of handwriting, as
-much alive as the hand that traced them, as throbbing as that impatient
-pulse. She saw them graved on the stones, outlined on the clouds,
-reflected in the water, indelible and inevitable as the decrees of Fate.
-
---Where shall I go? Where shall I go?--Through all her agitation and
-despair, she had still a sense of the sweetness of things, the warmth
-of the gilded marbles, the perfume of the quiet air, the languor of
-human leisure.
-
-She turned with a start, fearing yet hoping to be followed by her
-lover. She could not see him. She would have fled had she seen him,
-but her heart ached as if he had sent her to death without a word of
-recall.--All is over!--
-
-She entered the Porta della Carta, having crossed the threshold. The
-intoxication of her sorrow led her to the spot where, on a night of
-glory, the three destinies had come together. She went to the well,
-the point of that rendezvous. Around that bronze curb the whole life
-of those few seconds rose again with the distinct outline of reality.
-There she had said, addressing her companion with a smile: "Donatella,
-this is the Lord of the Flame!" Then the immense cry of the multitude
-had drowned her voice, and above their head rose a flight of fiery
-pigeons against the dark sky.
-
-She approached the well, and gazed into it. She leaned over the curb,
-saw her own face in the deep mirror, saw in it terror and perdition,
-saw the motionless Medusa she carried in the depth of her soul. Without
-realizing it, she repeated the action of him she loved. She saw his
-face, too, and Donatella's, as she had seen them illumined for an
-instant that night, close together, lighted by the radiance in the sky.
-
---Love, love each other! I will go away, I shall disappear! Good-by!--
-
-She closed her eyes at the thought of death, and in that darkness
-she saw the kind, strong eyes of her mother, infinite as a horizon of
-peace.--You are at peace, and you await me--you whose life and death
-were of passion.--
-
-She stood erect, then departed by the Molo, stepped into a gondola, and
-ordered it to be rowed to the Giudecca. The buildings and the water
-formed a miracle of gold and opal. The image of dead Summer flashed
-across her memory--dead Summer dressed in gold and shut in a coffin
-of opalescent glass. She imagined herself submerged in the lagoon,
-sleeping on a bed of seaweed; but the memory of the promise made on
-that water, and kept in the delirium of that night, pierced her heart
-like a knife, and threw her into a convulsion.
-
---Never more, then? Never more!--
-
-She reached the Rio della Croce. The gondola stopped before a closed
-door. She landed, took out a small key, opened the door, and entered
-the garden.
-
-This was her refuge, the secret place for her solitude, defended by the
-fidelity of her melancholy as by silent guardians.
-
-"Never more?" She walked under the trellises, approached the water,
-stopped a moment, felt weary, and at last sat down on a stone, held her
-temples between her hands, and made an effort to concentrate her mind,
-to recover her self-possession. "He is still here, near me. I can see
-him again. Perhaps I shall find him standing on the steps of my house.
-He will take me in his arms, kiss my lips and eyes, tell me again
-that he loves me, that everything about me pleases him. He does not
-know--he does not understand. Nothing irreparable has happened. What is
-it, then, that has so upset and disturbed me? I have received a letter
-written by a girl who is far-away, imprisoned in a lonely villa near
-her demented father, who complains of her lot and seeks to change it.
-That is all. There is no more to say. And here is the letter."
-
-Her fingers trembled, and she fancied she could detect Donatella's
-favorite perfume, as if the young girl were sitting beside her.
-
---Is she beautiful? Really beautiful? How does she look?--
-
-The lines of the image were indistinct at first. She tried to seize
-them, but they eluded her. One particular above all others fixed itself
-in her mind--the large, massive hand.--Did he see her hand that night?
-He is very susceptible to the beauty of hands. When he meets a woman,
-he always looks at her hands. And he adores Sofia's hands.--She allowed
-herself to dwell on these childish considerations, then she smiled
-bitterly. And suddenly the image became perfect, lived, glowing with
-youth and power, overwhelmed and dazzled her.--Yes, she is beautiful!
-And hers is the beauty he desires.--
-
-She kept her eyes fixed on the silent splendor of the waters, with
-the letter on her lap; she was nailed there by the inflexible truth.
-And involuntary thoughts of destruction flashed upon her inert
-discouragement; the face of Donatella burned by fire, her body crippled
-by a fall, her voice ruined by an illness! Then she had a horror of
-herself, followed by pity for herself and the other woman.--Has she
-not too the right to live? Let her live, let her love, let her have
-her joy.--She imagined for the young girl some magnificent adventure,
-a happy love, an adorable betrothed, prosperity, luxury, pleasure.--Is
-there only one man on this earth, then, that she can love? Is it
-impossible that to-morrow she might meet some one who would win her
-heart? Is it impossible that her fate should suddenly turn her in
-another direction, take her far from here, lead her through unknown
-paths, separate her from us forever? Is it necessary that she should be
-loved by the man I love? Perhaps they never will meet again.--She tried
-thus to escape her presentiment. But a contrary thought whispered:
-"They have met once; they will seek each other, they will meet again.
-Her soul is not obscure--not one that can be lost in the multitude. She
-possesses a gift that shines like a star, and it will always be easily
-recognizable even from afar--her song. The marvel of her voice will
-serve her as a signal. She will surely avail herself of this power; she
-too will pass among mankind leaving a wake of admiration behind her.
-She will have glory as she has beauty--two attributes that will easily
-attract Stelio. They have met once; they will meet again."
-
-The sorrowing woman bent as if under a yoke. A clear, pearly light
-bathed the lagoon in radiance. The islands of La Follia, San Clemente,
-and San Servilio were enveloped in a light mist. From a distance came
-at intervals a faint cry, as of shipwrecked sailors becalmed, answered
-by the harsh voice of a siren whistle or by the raucous call of the
-sea-gulls. At first the silence seemed terrible, then it grew sweet.
-
-The woman, little by little, recovered her deep goodness of heart,
-felt again her old tenderness for the beautiful creature in whose
-personality she had once deceived her desire to love the good sister,
-Sofia. She thought again of the hours passed in the lonely villa on
-that hill of Settignano, where Lorenzo Arvale created his statues in
-the fulness of his strength and fervor, ignorant of the blow that was
-about to fall. She lived again in those days, saw again those places;
-she sat once more in memory for the famous sculptor who modeled her
-in clay, while Donatella sang some quaint old song; and the spirit of
-melody animated at once the model and the effigy, and her thoughts and
-that pure voice and the mystery of Art composed an appearance of a life
-almost divine in that great studio open on all sides to the light of
-heaven, whence Florence and its river was visible in the springtime
-valley.
-
-In addition to fancying the girl a reflection of Sofia, had she not
-been attracted otherwise to her--the sweet Donatella, who never had
-known a mother's caress since her birth? She saw her again, grave and
-calm beside her father, the comfort for his hard work, guardian of the
-sacred flame, and also of a resolve of her own--a secret resolve, which
-preserved itself as bright and keen as a sword in its sheath.
-
---She is sure of herself; she is mistress of her own power. When at
-last she knows she is free, she will reveal herself as one made to
-rule. Yes, she is made to subjugate men, to excite their curiosity and
-their dreams. Even now, her instinct, bold and prudent as experience
-itself, directs her.--La Foscarina remembered Donatella's attitude
-toward Stelio on that night; her almost disdainful silence, her brief,
-dry words, her manner of leaving the table, her disappearance, leaving
-the image of herself framed within the circle of an unforgettable
-melody. Ah, she knows the art of stirring the soul of a dreamer.
-Certainly he cannot have forgotten her. And just as certainly he
-awaits the hour when it shall be given him to meet her again--not less
-impatiently than she, who asks me where he is.--
-
-Again she lifted the letter and ran her eyes over it, but her memory
-traveled faster than her eyes. The enigmatic query was at the foot
-of the page, like a half-veiled postscript. Looking at the written
-words, she felt again the same sharp pang as when she read them the
-first time, and once more her heart was shaken as if the danger were
-imminent, as if her passion and her hope were already lost beyond
-recall.--What is she about to do? Of what is she thinking? Did she
-expect him to search for her without delay, and, disappointed in that,
-does she now wish to tempt him? What does she intend to do?--She
-struggled against that uncertainty as against an iron door which
-she must force in order to find again behind it the light of her
-life.--Shall I answer her? Suppose I reply in such a way as to make
-her understand the truth, would my love necessarily be a prohibition
-of hers?--But here her soul rose with a mingled feeling of repugnance,
-modesty, and pride.--No, never! Never shall she learn of my wound from
-me--never, not even should she question me!--And she realized all the
-horror of an open rivalry between a woman no longer young and a girl
-strong in her maiden youth. She felt the humiliation and cruelty of
-such an unequal struggle. "But if not Donatella, would it not be some
-one else," again whispered the contrary spirit "Do you believe you can
-bind a man of his nature to your melancholy passion? The only condition
-under which you should have allowed yourself to love him, and to offer
-him a love faithful unto death, was in keeping the compact that you
-have broken."
-
-"True, true!" she murmured, as if answering a distinct voice, in formal
-judgment, pronounced in the silence by invisible Fate.
-
-"The only condition on which he can now accept your love, and recognize
-it, demands that you leave him free, that you give up all claim on him,
-that you renounce all, forever, and ask for nothing--the condition of
-being heroic. Do you understand?"
-
-"True, true!" she repeated aloud, raising her head.
-
-But the poison bit her. She remembered all the sweetness of
-caresses--the lips, the eyes, the strength and ardor of the lover had
-re-animated all her being.
-
-A far-away monotonous sound of song floated in the air--a song of
-women's voices, that seemed to rise from bosoms oppressed, from throats
-as slender as reeds, like the sound evoked from the broken wires of
-old spinets at a touch on the worn keys; a shrill, unequal tone, in
-a lively and vulgar rhythm, which sounded sadder in that light and
-silence than the saddest things of life.
-
-"Who is singing?"
-
-With obscure emotion she arose, approached the shore, and listened.
-
-"The madwomen of San Clemente!"
-
-From the isle of La Follia, from the barred windows of the light,
-lonely hospital, came the lively yet melancholy chorus. It trembled,
-hesitated in the immensity of space, grew fainter and almost died away,
-then rose again and swelled to a piercing shriek, diminished once more,
-and finally sank to silence.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- ILLUSIONS
-
-
-Yes, heart-rending was the sweetness of that November, smiling like
-a sick person who has become free from suffering, knowing it is the
-last, and tasting again the sweetness of life, which reveals to him new
-charms when just about to leave him.
-
-"Look at the Euganean hills below us, Foscarina; if the wind should
-come they will rise and float in the air like gauzy veils, and pass
-over our heads. I never have seen them so transparent. Some day I
-should like to go with you to Arquà; the villages there are as pink as
-the shells we find in myriads in the earth. When we arrive there, the
-first drops of a sudden shower will be robbing the peach-blossoms of
-their petals. We will wait under one of the arches of the Palladio to
-avoid getting wet. Then, without inquiring the way of anyone, we will
-look for the fountain of Petrarch. We will carry with us his poems in
-the small edition of Misserini's, that little book you keep beside your
-bed and cannot close any more because it is so full of pressed leaves
-and grasses. Would you like to go to Arquà some spring day?"
-
-She did not reply, but gazed silently at the lips that said these
-graceful things; and, without hope, she simply took a fugitive
-pleasure in their movement and accent. For her there was in his image
-of the Spring the same enchantment as in a stanza of Petrarch's; but
-she could lay a bookmark in the one and find it again, while the poetic
-fancies must be lost with the passing hour.
-
-She wished to say: "I will not drink at that fountain," but kept
-silence, that she might still enjoy the caress.--Oh, yes, intoxicate me
-with illusions! Play your own game; do with me as you will.--
-
-"Here we are at San Giorgio in Alga. We shall reach Fusina in a few
-minutes."
-
-The little walled islet passed before them, with its marble Madonna,
-perpetually admiring her reflection in the water, like a nymph.
-
-"Why are you so sweet, my beloved? I never have seen you like this
-before. I know not where I am with you to-day. I cannot find words to
-tell you with what a sense of melody your presence inspires me. You
-are here beside me, I can hold your hand, yet you are diffused in the
-horizon, you yourself are the horizon, blended with the waters, with
-the islands, with the hills. When I was speaking just now, it seemed
-that each syllable created in you infinitely dilating circles, like
-those round that leaf just fallen from the gold-leaved tree. Is it
-true? Tell me that it is. Oh, look at me!"
-
-He felt himself enveloped in this woman's love as by the air and the
-light; he breathed in that soul as in a distinct element, receiving
-from it an ineffable fulness of life as if a stream of mysterious
-things were flowing from her and from the glory of the daylight at the
-same time, and pouring itself into his heart. The desire to make some
-return for the happiness she gave him lifted him to an almost religious
-height of gratitude, and suggested to him words of thanks and of praise
-which he would have spoken had he been kneeling before her in the
-shadows. But the splendor of sky and sea around them was so great that
-he could only be as silent as she. And for both this was a moment of
-marvelous communion in the light; it was a journey brief yet immense,
-in which both traversed the dizzy distances they had within themselves.
-
-The boat reached the shore of Fusina. They roused themselves, and gazed
-at each other with dazzled eyes.
-
---Does he love me, then?--
-
-Hope and pain revived in the woman's heart. She did not doubt the
-sincerity of her beloved, nor that his words expressed the ardor of
-his heart. She knew how absolutely he abandoned himself to every wave
-of emotion, how incapable he was of deception or of falsehood. More
-than once she had heard him utter cruel truths with the same feline,
-flexible grace that some men adopt when they wish to appear charming.
-She knew well the direct, limpid gaze which sometimes became hard and
-icy, but which never was otherwise than straight; but she knew also the
-rapidity and marvelous diversity of emotion and thought that rendered
-his spirit unseizable. There was always in him something flexible and
-vigorous that suggested to the actress the double and diverse image
-of flame and of water. And it was this man she wished to fix, to
-captivate, to possess! There was always in him an unlimited ardor of
-life, a sense of _euphoria_, or joy in existence, as if every second
-were the supreme instant, and he were about to tear himself from the
-pleasure and pain of living, as from the tears and embraces of a last
-farewell. And it was for this insatiable avidity that she wished to
-remain the only nourishment!
-
-What was she to him, if not an aspect of that "life of the thousand
-and thousand faces," toward which the poet's desire, according to one
-of his own images, continually shook all its thyrsi? For him she was
-a theme for visions and inventions, like the hills, the woods, the
-storms. He absorbed mystery and beauty from her as from all forms of
-the universe. Even now he had withdrawn his thoughts from her, and was
-occupied with a new quest; his changeful, ingenuous eyes sought for
-some miracle to marvel at and adore.
-
-She looked at him, but he did not turn his face toward her; he was
-studying the damp, foggy region through which they were driving slowly.
-She sat beside him, feeling herself deprived of her strength, no longer
-capable of living in and for herself, of breathing with her own breath,
-of following a thought that was unknown to her beloved, hesitating even
-in her enjoyment of natural objects that he had not pointed out.
-
-Her life seemed to be alternately dissolving and condensing itself. An
-instant of intensity would pass, and then she waited for the next, and
-between them she was conscious of nothing save that time was flying,
-the lamp was flickering, the body was fading, and that all things were
-perishing, dying.
-
-"My dear, my friend," said Stelio, suddenly turning and taking her
-hand, impelled by an emotion that had overcome him, "why did we come to
-these places? They seem very sweet, but they are full of terror."
-
-He looked at her keenly.
-
-"You suffer," he said, with a depth of pity in his tone that made the
-woman turn pale. "Do you too feel this terror?"
-
-She looked around with the anxiety of one pursued, and fancied she saw
-a thousand ominous phantoms rising from the earth.
-
-"Those statues!" said Stelio, in a tone that changed them in her eyes
-into witnesses of her own wasting life.
-
-The country around them was as deserted and silent as if its former
-inhabitants had been gone for centuries, or were sleeping in graves
-new-made the day before.
-
-"Do you wish to return? The boat is still there."
-
-She seemed not to hear.
-
-"Speak, Foscarina!"
-
-"Let us go--let us go on," she replied. "Wherever we may go our fate
-will not change."
-
-Her body swayed to the slow, lulling roll of the wheels, and she
-feared to interrupt it; she shrank from the least effort, the smallest
-fatigue, overcome by heavy inertia. Her face was like the delicate veil
-of ash that covers a live coal, hiding its consumption.
-
-"Dear, dear soul!" said Stelio, leaning toward her and lightly
-touching the pale cheek with his lips. "Lean on me; give yourself
-entirely to me; have confidence in me. Never will I fail you, never
-will you fail me. We shall find it--we shall find the true secret on
-which our love can rest forever, immovable. Do not be reserved with me.
-Do not suffer alone, nor hide your sorrows from me. When your heart
-swells with grief, speak to me. Let me believe that I can comfort you.
-Let us not hide anything from each other. I shall venture to recall to
-you a condition that you yourself made. Speak to me, and I will always
-answer you truthfully. Let me help you--me, who have received from you
-so much of good. Tell me that you do not fear to suffer. I believe your
-soul capable of supporting all the sadness of the world. Do not let me
-lose faith in that force of passion, whereby more than once you have
-seemed to me divine. Tell me you do not fear suffering.... I don't
-know.... I may be mistaken. But I have felt a shadow around you, like
-a desperate wish to withdraw yourself, to leave me, to find some end.
-Why? Why? And, just now, looking at all this terrible desolation that
-smiles at us, a great fear suddenly filled my heart--I thought that
-perhaps even your love might change like all things, and pass away into
-nothingness. 'You will lose me.' Ah, those words were yours, Foscarina!
-They fell from your own lips."
-
-She did not answer. For the first time since she had loved him, his
-words seemed vain, useless sounds, moving powerless through the air.
-For the first time, he seemed to her a weak and anxious creature, bound
-by inexorable laws. She pitied him as well as herself. He asked her to
-be heroic, a compact of grief and of violence. At the moment when he
-attempted to console and comfort her, he predicted a difficult test,
-prepared her for torture. But what was courage worth, of what use was
-any effort? What were all miserable human agitations worth, and why
-think of the future, even of the uncertain morrow?
-
-The Past reigned supreme around them, and they themselves were nothing,
-and everything was nothing.--We are dying; both of us are dying. We
-dream, and then we die.--
-
-"Hush! Hush!" was all she said, softly, as if they were in a cemetery.
-A slight smile touched her lips, and rested there as fixedly as the
-smile on the lips of a portrait.
-
-The wheels rolled on over the white road, along the shores of the
-Brenta. The stream, sung and praised in the sonnets of the gallant
-abbés in the days when gondolas laden with music and pleasure had
-glided down its current, had now the humble aspect of a canal, where
-the iris-necked ducks splashed in flocks. On the damp, low plain the
-fields smoked, the bare trees showed plainly, their leaves rotting on
-the damp earth. A slow, golden mist floated above an immense vegetable
-decay that seemed to encroach even upon the walls, the stones, the
-houses, seeking to destroy them like the leaves. The patrician
-villas--where a pale life, delicately poisoned by cosmetics and
-perfumes, had burned itself out in languid pastimes--were now in ruins,
-silent and abandoned. Some had an aspect like a human ruin, with
-empty spaces that suggested hollow orbits and toothless mouths; others
-were crumbling, and looked as if ready to fall in powder, like a dead
-woman's hair when her tomb is opened; and here, there, everywhere, rose
-the still surviving statues. They seemed innumerable, like a scattered
-people. Some were still white, others were gray or yellow with lichens,
-or green and spotted with moss. They stood in all sorts of attitudes:
-goddesses, heroes, nymphs, seasons, hours, with their bows and arrows,
-their wreaths, cornucopias, and torches, with all the emblems of power,
-riches and pleasure, exiled now from fountains, grottoes, labyrinths,
-arbors, and porticoes: friends of the greenwood and the myrtle,
-protectors of fleeting loves, witnesses of eternal vows, figures of a
-dream far more ancient than the hands that had carved them, and the
-eyes that had contemplated them in the ruined gardens. And, in the
-sweet sunlight of the dying season, their shadows were like the shadows
-of the irrevocable Past--all, all that loves no longer, laughs and
-weeps no more, never will live, never will return. And the unspoken
-word on their marble lips was the same that was expressed in the fixed
-smile on the lips of the world-weary woman--NOTHING!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- THE LABYRINTH
-
-
-But that day they were to pass through other shadows, to know other
-fears.
-
-Henceforth the tragic meaning of life filled both their minds, and
-they tried in vain to banish the physical sadness which from moment to
-moment made their spirits more clear yet more disturbed. They clasped
-each other's hand, as if they were groping in dark, dangerous places.
-They spoke little, but often they gazed into each other's eyes, and
-the look of the one poured into that of the other a wave of confused
-emotion, the mingling of their love and horror. But it did not calm
-their hearts.
-
-"Shall we go farther?"
-
-"Yes, let us go on."
-
-Still they clasped each other's hand closely, as if they were about to
-go through some strange test, and were resolved to experiment as to
-what depths could be reached by the combined force of their melancholy.
-At the Dolo, the wheels made the chestnut-leaves rustle and crackle
-beneath them, and the tall changing trees flamed over their heads like
-crimson draperies on fire. At a distance was the Villa Barbariga,
-silent, deserted, of a reddish hue in its denuded garden, showing
-vestiges of old paintings in the cracks of its façade, like streaks of
-rouge on the wrinkled cheeks of an old woman. And, at every glance, the
-distances of the landscape seemed fainter and bluer, like things slowly
-submerged.
-
-"Here is Strà."
-
-They alighted before the Villa Pisani, and, accompanied by its
-guardian, they visited the deserted apartments. They heard the sound
-of their own footsteps on the marble that reflected them, the echoes
-in the historic arches, the creaking of the doors, the tiresome voice
-of the keeper awakening the memories of the place. The rooms were
-vast, hung with faded draperies and furnished in the style of the
-Empire, with Napoleonic emblems. The walls of one room were covered
-with portraits of the Pisani, procurators of San Marco; of another,
-with marble medallions of all the Doges; of a third, with a series of
-flowers painted in water-colors and mounted in delicate frames, pale as
-the dry flowers that are laid under glass, in memory of love or death.
-
-As La Foscarina entered one room, she said:
-
-"_In time!_ Here, too!"
-
-There, on a bracket, stood a transformation into marble of _La Vecchia_
-by Francesco Torbido, made even more repulsive by the relief, by the
-subtle skill of the sculptor, to bring out with his chisel each tendon,
-wrinkle, and hollow place in the old woman's face. And at the doors of
-this room seemed to appear the ghosts of the crowned women that had
-hidden their unhappiness and their decay in that vast dwelling, at once
-like a palace and a monastery.
-
-"Maria Luisa di Parma, in eighteen hundred and seventeen," continued
-the monotonous voice.
-
-"Ah, the Queen of Spain, wife of Charles the Fourth, and mistress of
-Manuel Godoï," said Stelio. "She attracts me more than all the others.
-She came here when they were in exile. Do you know whether she stayed
-here with the King and the favorite!"
-
-But the guardian knew only that name and the date.
-
-"Why does she attract you?" La Foscarina asked. "I know nothing of her
-history."
-
-"Her end, the last years of her life of exile, after so much struggle
-and passion, are extraordinarily full of poetry."
-
-And he described that violent and tenacious character, the weak,
-credulous King, the handsome adventurer who had enjoyed the smiles of
-the Queen, and had been dragged through the streets by the infuriated
-mob; the agitations of the three lives bound together by Fate, and
-swept before Napoleon's will like leaves in a whirlwind; the tumult at
-Aranjuez, the abdication, the exile.
-
-"And Godoï--the Prince of Peace, as the King called him--faithfully
-followed the sovereigns into exile; he remained faithful to his royal
-mistress, and she to him. They all lived together under the same roof
-thenceforth, and Charles never doubted the virtue of Maria Luisa.
-Even to the day of his death, he lavished all manner of kindness on
-the two lovers. Imagine their life in this place; imagine here such a
-love coming safely through a storm so terrible. All was broken down,
-overthrown, reduced to powder by the destroyer. Bonaparte had passed
-that way, but had not smothered that love, already old, beneath the
-ruins. The faithfulness of those two violent natures moves my heart not
-less than the credulity of the kindly King. Thus they grew old. Imagine
-it! The Queen died first, then the King; and the favorite, who was
-younger than they, lived a wandering life a few years more."
-
-"This is the Emperor's room," said the guardian solemnly, flinging open
-a door.
-
-The great shade seemed omnipresent in the villa of the Doge Alvise. The
-imperial eagle, symbol of his power, dominated all the faded relics.
-But in the yellow room, the shade seemed to occupy the vast bed, to
-rest under the canopy, surrounded by the four bedposts ornamented at
-the top with golden flames. The formidable sigla inscribed within the
-laurel crown shone upon the polished side of the bed. And this species
-of funereal couch seemed to be prolonged in the dim mirror hanging
-between the two figures of Victory that supported the candelabra.
-
-"Did the Emperor sleep in this bed?" inquired the young man of the
-custodian, who pointed out to him on the wall the portrait of the great
-_condottiere_ mantled in ermine, wearing a crown of laurel and holding
-a scepter, as he appeared at the coronation blessed by Pius VII. "Is it
-certain?"
-
-He was surprised at himself at not feeling the emotion experienced by
-ambitious spirits at the sight of the traces of heroes--that strong
-throb he knew so well.
-
-He lifted the edge of the yellow counterpane, and let it fall as
-suddenly as if the pillow under it had been full of vermin.
-
-"Let us go away from this place; let us go!" said La Foscarina, who had
-been looking through the windows at the park, where the golden bars of
-the setting sun alternated with bluish-green zones of shade. "We cannot
-breathe here," she added.
-
-The air, in truth, was like that of a vault.
-
-"Now we pass into the room of Maximilian of Austria," said the droning
-voice, "he took the dressing-room of Amélie de Beauharnais for his
-bedroom."
-
-They crossed this apartment in a flood of crimson light. The sunlight
-struck on a crimson couch, flashed rainbows from a frail chandelier
-with crystal drops that hung from the ceiling and kindled perpendicular
-red lines on the wall. Stelio stopped on the threshold, evoking in his
-fancy as he did so, the pensive figure of the young Archduke, with blue
-eyes, that fair flower of Hapsburg fallen in a barbaric land one summer
-morning!
-
-"Let us go!" begged La Foscarina again, seeing him still delay.
-
-She hastened through the immense salon, painted in fresco by Tiepolo;
-the Corinthian bronze gate closing behind her gave forth a clang as
-resonant as the stroke of a bell, sending prolonged vibrations through
-space. She flew along, terrified, as if the whole palace were about
-to crumble and fall, and the light to fail, and she dreaded lest she
-should find herself alone among the shadows with these phantoms of
-unhappiness and death. As Stelio followed, through the space wherein
-the air was moved by her flight, between those walls enclosing
-relics, behind the famous actress who had simulated the fury of deadly
-passions, the desperate efforts of will and of desire, and the violent
-conflict of splendid destines on the stage of all lands, the warm blood
-in his veins grew chill, as if he were passing through a freezing
-atmosphere; he felt his heart grow cold, his courage flag; his reason
-for being lost its hold on his mind, and the magnificent illusions
-with which he had fed his soul, that it might surpass itself and his
-destiny, wavered and were dispersed.
-
-"Are we still living?" he asked, when they found themselves in the air
-without, in the park, far from the unwholesome odor.
-
-He took La Foscarina's hand, shook her gently, gazed into her eyes and
-tried to smile; then he drew her into the sunlight in the middle of the
-green meadow.
-
-"What heat! Do you feel it? How sweet the grass is!"
-
-He half-closed his eyes, that he might feel the sun's rays on his
-eyelids, and was once more filled with the joy of living. The woman
-imitated him, calmed by the pleasure her beloved showed; and she looked
-from under her half-closed eyelids at his fresh, sensuous mouth. They
-sat thus for some time, hand-in-hand, their feet resting on the warm
-grass. Her thoughts turned back to the Eugenean hills, which he had
-described, to the villages pink as the buried shells, to the first
-drops of rain on the tender leaves, Petrarch's fountain, to all things
-fair and pleasant.
-
-"Life might still be sweet!" she sighed, in a voice wherein was the
-miracle of hope born anew.
-
-The heart of her beloved became like a fruit suddenly ripened by a
-miraculous ray. Joy, delight, and tenderness spread through his whole
-being. Once more he reveled in the joy of the moment, as if it were the
-last of life. Love was exalted above Destiny.
-
-"Do you love me? Tell me?"
-
-She made no answer, but she opened wide her eyes, and the vastness of
-the universe was within the circle of those pupils. Never was boundless
-love more powerfully signified by mortal woman.
-
-"Ah, life with thee is sweet, sweet--yesterday as well as to-morrow!"
-
-He seemed intoxicated with her, with the sunlight, the grass, the
-divine sky, as with something never before seen or possessed. The
-prisoner leaving his stifling cell, the convalescent who beholds the
-sea after looking death in the face, are not more intoxicated.
-
-"Would you like to go now? Shall we leave our melancholy behind us?
-Would you like to go to a country where there is no autumn?"
-
---The autumn is in myself, and I carry it everywhere--she thought; but
-she smiled the slight smile with which she veiled her sadness.--It is
-I--it is I that must go away alone; I will disappear; I will go
-far-away and die, my love, O my love!--
-
-During this moment of respite, she had not succeeded either in
-conquering her sadness or reviving her hope; but her anguish was
-softened, and she had lost all bitterness and rancor.
-
-"Do you wish to go away?"
-
---To go away, always to be going away, to wander throughout the world,
-to go long distances!--thought the nomad woman.--Never to stop, never
-to rest! The anxiety of the journey is not over yet, but already the
-truce has expired. You wish to comfort me, my friend, and, to console
-me, you propose that I should go far-away once more, although I
-returned to my home, as it were, but yesterday.--
-
-Suddenly her eyes looked like two sparkling springs.
-
-"Leave me in my home a little while longer. And remain here, too, if
-that is possible. Later, you will be free, you will be happy. You
-have so long a time before you! You are young. You will win what you
-deserve. They will not lose you, even if they must wait for you."
-
-Her eyes had two crystal masks before them; they glittered in the
-sunshine, and seemed almost fixed in her fevered face.
-
-"Ah, always the same shadow!" Stelio exclaimed, with an impatience he
-could not conceal. "But what are you thinking of? What do you fear? Why
-not tell me what it is that troubles you? Explain yourself. Who is it
-that must wait for me?"
-
-She trembled with terror at that question, which seemed new and
-unexpected, although he only repeated her own last words. She trembled
-to find herself so near danger, as if, in walking across this fair
-meadow, a precipice had suddenly opened under her feet.
-
-And suddenly, in that unfamiliar place, on that beautiful grass, at the
-end of the day, after all those specters, sanguinary or bloodless, rose
-a living image of will and desire, which filled her with far greater
-terror. Suddenly, above all the figures of the Past, arose the figure
-of the Future, and again the aspect of her life was changed; and the
-sweetness of the respite was already lost, and the fair meadow with its
-sweet grass was worth nothing.
-
-"Yes, let us talk, if you wish."
-
-But she was obliged to lift her face a little to keep her tears from
-falling.
-
-"Do not be sad!" pleaded the young man, whose soul was suspended on
-those eyelids, whence the tears would not fall. "You hold my heart
-in your hand. I never will fail you. Then why torment yourself? I am
-wholly yours."
-
-For him, too, the image of Donatella was there, with her rounded
-figure, her body as robust and agile as a wingless Victory, armed with
-the glory of maidenhood, attractive yet hostile, ready to struggle, and
-then to yield. But his soul was suspended from the eyelids of the other
-woman, like the tears that veiled the eyes in which he had seen the
-vastness of the universe, the infinity of love.
-
-"Foscarina!"
-
-At last the warm tears fell, but she did not let them course down
-her cheeks. With one of those movements that sometimes sprang from
-her sadness with the swift grace of a freed wing, she checked them,
-moistened her finger-tips with them, and touched her temples without
-drying them. And, while she still kept her tears upon herself, she
-tried to smile.
-
-"Forgive me, Stelio. I am so weak!"
-
-"Ah, dear fingers--beautiful as Sofia's! Let me kiss them as they are,
-still wet."
-
-Within his caressing arm, he drew her across the field to a zone of
-golden green. Lightly, with his arm supporting hers, he kissed her
-finger-tips, one after another, more delicate than the buds of the
-tuberose. She startled, and he felt her tremble at each touch of his
-lips.
-
-"They are salt!"
-
-"Take care, Stelio! Some one may see us."
-
-"No one is here."
-
-"Perhaps down there, in the hothouses."
-
-"There is not a sound. Hark!"
-
-"What a strange silence! It is ecstasy."
-
-"We might hear the falling of a leaf."
-
-"And the keeper?"
-
-"He has gone to meet some other visitor."
-
-"Does anyone ever come here?"
-
-"The other day Richard Wagner came here with Daniela von Bülow."
-
-"Ah, yes, the niece of the Countess Agoult, of 'Daniel Stern.'"
-
-"And, among all those phantoms, with which did that great stricken
-heart converse?"
-
-"Who can tell?"
-
-"Only with himself, perhaps."
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Look at the glass windows and walls of the conservatories--how they
-sparkle! They appear iridescent. Rain, sunshine and time have painted
-it in that way. Does it not seem to reflect a distant twilight? Perhaps
-you have sometimes stopped on the Pesaro quay, to look at the beautiful
-pentafore window of the Evangelists. If you raised your eyes, you could
-see the windows of the palace marvelously painted by the changes of
-weather."
-
-"You know all the secrets of Venice!"
-
-"Not all yet."
-
-"How warm it is here! See how tall those cedars are. There is a
-swallow's nest hanging on that limb."
-
-"The swallows went away very late this year."
-
-"Will you really take me to the Euganean hills in the spring?"
-
-"Yes, Foscarina, I should like to do so."
-
-"Spring is so far-away!"
-
-"Life can still be sweet."
-
-"We are living in a dream."
-
-"Look at Orpheus with his lyre, all dressed in lichens."
-
-"Ah, what a land of dreams! No one comes here any more. Grass, grass
-everywhere! There is not a single human footstep."
-
-"Deucalion with his stones, Ganymede with his eagle, Diana with her
-stag--all the gods of mythology."
-
-"How many statues! But these, at least, are not in exile. The ancient
-hornbeams still protect them."
-
-"Here strolled Maria Luisa di Parma, between the King and the favorite.
-From time to time she would pause to listen to the click of the
-blades that cut the hornbeams to form arches. She would let fall her
-handkerchief, perfumed with jessamine, and Don Manuel Godoï would pick
-it up with a graceful gesture, hiding the pain he suffered when he
-stooped--a souvenir of the outrages he had endured at the hands of the
-mob in the streets of Aranjuez. How warm the sun was, and how excellent
-the snuff in its enameled box, when the King said with a smile:
-'Certainly, our dear Bonaparte is not so well off at Saint Helena as
-we are here.' But the demon of power, of struggle, and of passion was
-still alive in the Queen's heart. Look at those red roses!"
-
-"They fairly burn. One would think each had a live coal at its heart.
-Yes, they seem actually to burn."
-
-"The sun is growing red. This is the hour for the Chioggia sails on the
-lagoon."
-
-"Gather a rose for me."
-
-"Here is one."
-
-"Oh, but its leaves are falling."
-
-"Well, here is another."
-
-"These leaves are falling too."
-
-"They are all at the point of death. Perhaps this one is not."
-
-"Do not break it off."
-
-"Look! These seem to be redder still. Bonifazio's velvet--do you
-remember it? It has the same strength."
-
-"'The inmost flower of the flame.'"
-
-"What a memory!"
-
-"Listen! They are closing the doors of the conservatories."
-
-"It is time to go," said Stelio, abruptly yet gently.
-
-"The air is beginning to be cooler."
-
-"Do you feel cold?"
-
-"No, not yet."
-
-"Did you leave your cloak in the carriage?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"We will wait at Dolo for the train, and return to Venice by the
-railway."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"We still have time to spare."
-
-"What is this? Look!"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"What a bitter odor! It is a sort of shrubbery of box and hornbeams."
-
-"Ah, it is the labyrinth!"
-
-A rusty iron gate barred the entrance to the labyrinth between two
-columns that bore two Cupids riding on stone dolphins. Nothing was to
-be seen on the other side of the gate, except the beginning of the
-path, and a kind of solidly built and intricate thicket, dark and
-mysterious. In the center of the maze rose a tower, at the summit of
-which stood the statue of a warrior, as if reconnoitering from that
-point.
-
-"Have you ever been in a labyrinth?" Stelio inquired.
-
-"No, never," she replied.
-
-They lingered to examine the entrance to the deceptive playground,
-composed by an ingenious gardener for the amusement of ladies and
-their cavaliers in the days of hoops and flowered waistcoats. But age
-and neglect had rendered it mournful and wild, had deprived it of
-all appearance of grace and regularity, and had changed it into thick
-yellowish-brown woodland, full of inextricable turns through which the
-slanting rays of the setting sun shone so red that some of the shrubs
-looked like smokeless fire.
-
-"It is open," said Stelio, feeling the gate yield as he leaned on it.
-"Do you see?"
-
-He pushed back the rusty iron gate, took a step forward, and crossed
-the threshold.
-
-"Where are you going?" asked his companion, with instinctive fear,
-putting out a hand to detain him.
-
-"Do you not wish to go in?"
-
-She was perplexed. But the labyrinth attracted them with its mystery,
-illumined by deep flames.
-
-"Suppose we should lose ourselves?"
-
-"You can see for yourself that it is very small. We can easily find the
-gate again."
-
-"And suppose we don't find it?"
-
-He laughed at this childish fear.
-
-"We might remain in there through all eternity!" he said.
-
-"No, no! No one is anywhere near. Let us go away."
-
-She tried to draw him back, but he defended himself, stepping backward
-toward the path. Suddenly he disappeared, laughing.
-
-"Stelio! Stelio!"
-
-She could see him no longer, but she heard his ringing laughter in the
-midst of the wild thicket.
-
-"Come back! come back!"
-
-"No, no! Come in and find me."
-
-"Stelio, come back! You will be lost," she called.
-
-"I shall find Ariadne."
-
-At that name, she felt her heart throb suddenly, then contract, then
-palpitate confusedly. Was not that the name he had called Donatella,
-that first night? Had he not called her Ariadne down there, in the
-gondola, while seated at the young girl's feet? She even remembered his
-words: "Ariadne possesses a divine gift, whereby her power transcends
-all limits." She recalled his accent, his attitude, his look.
-
-Tumultuous anguish seized upon her, obscured her reason, prevented
-her from realizing the spontaneity of the happening, and the simple
-careless jest in her friend's speech. The terror that lay hidden in
-the depths of her love rose in rebellion, mastered her, blinded her
-with misery. The trifling little accident assumed an appearance of
-cruelty and derision. She could still hear that laugh ringing from the
-melancholy maze.
-
-"Stelio!"
-
-In her frantic hallucination, she cried out as if she had seen him
-embraced by the other woman, torn from her arms forever.
-
-"Stelio!"
-
-"Come and find me!" he answered laughing, still invisible.
-
-She rushed into the labyrinth to find him, and advanced straight toward
-the voice and the laugh, guided by her impulse. But the path turned;
-a wall of bushes rose before her, impenetrable, and stopped her.
-She followed the winding, deceiving path; but one turning followed
-another, and all looked alike, and the circle seemed to have no end.
-
-"Look for me!" cried the voice from a distance, through the living
-hedges.
-
-"Where are you? Where are you? Can you see me?"
-
-She looked about for some opening in the hedge through which she might
-see. But all she saw was thick, interlacing branches, and the redness
-of the setting sun which lighted them on one side, while shadows
-darkened them on the other. The box-bushes and the hornbeams were so
-closely mingled that they increased momentarily the bewilderment of the
-breathless woman.
-
-"I am losing myself! Come and meet me!"
-
-Again that boyish laugh came from the maze.
-
-"Ariadne, Ariadne! the thread!"
-
-Now the words came from the opposite side, striking her heart as if
-with a blow.
-
-"Ariadne!"
-
-She turned back, ran, turned again, tried to break through the hedge,
-to see through the undergrowth, to break the branches. She saw nothing
-but the maze, always the same in every direction. At last she heard a
-step, so close that she thought it must be just behind her, and she
-started. But she was deceived. Again she explored her green prison; she
-listened, waited; she could hear no sound but her own breathing and the
-beating of her heart. The silence had become absolute. She gazed at
-the clear sky, curving in its immensity over the two green walls that
-held her prisoner. She felt that that immensity and narrowness were
-the only things in the world. And she could not succeed in separating
-in her thoughts the reality of that place from the image of her mental
-torture, the natural aspect of things from that kind of living allegory
-created by her own anguish.
-
-"Stelio, where are you?"
-
-No reply. She listened and waited in vain. The seconds seemed like
-hours.
-
-"Where are you? I am afraid!"
-
-No reply. But where was he, then? Had he found the way out? Had he left
-her there all alone? Would he continue to play this cruel game?
-
-A mad desire to scream, to sob, to throw herself on the ground, to hurt
-herself, to make herself ill, to die, assailed the distracted woman.
-Again she raised her eyes to the silent sky. The tops of the tall
-hornbeams were reddened, like logs when they have ceased to blaze and
-are about to fall in ashes.
-
-"I can see you!" suddenly said a laughing voice, in the deep shadows,
-very near her.
-
-"Where are you?"
-
-He laughed among the leaves, but without revealing himself, like a
-faun in hiding. This game excited him; his body grew warm and supple
-by this exercise of his agility; and the wild mystery, the contact
-with the earth, the odor of autumn, the strangeness of this unexpected
-adventure, the woman's bewilderment, even the presence of the marble
-deities mingled with his physical pleasure an illusion of antique
-poetry and grace.
-
-"Where are you? Oh, do not play any more! Do not laugh in that way!
-Enough!"
-
-He had crept, bareheaded, into the bushes on his hands and knees. He
-felt the dead leaves, the soft moss. And as he breathed among the
-branches, and felt his heart throb with the strange delight of the
-situation, with the communion between his own life and the vegetable
-life around him, the spell of his fancy renewed among those winding
-ways the industry of the first maker of wings, the myth of the monster
-that was born of Pasiphaë and the Bull, the Attic legend of Theseus
-in Crete. All that ancient world became real to him. In that glowing
-autumn evening, he was transfigured, according to the instincts of his
-blood and the recollections of his mind, into one of those ambiguous
-forms, half animal and half divine, one of those glittering genii whose
-throats were swollen with the same gland that hangs from the neck of
-the goat. A joyous voluptuousness suggested strange surprises to him,
-suggested the swiftness of pursuit, of flight, capture, and a fleeting
-embrace in the shadows of the wood. Then he desired some one like
-himself, fresh youthfulness that could share his laughter, two light
-feet to fly before him, two arms to resist him, a prize to capture at
-last. Donatella with her curved figure recurred to his mental vision.
-
-"Enough, Stelio! I cannot run any more. I shall fall."
-
-La Foscarina uttered a scream on feeling her skirt pulled by a hand
-that had reached through the shrubbery. She bent down, and saw in the
-shadows the face of a laughing faun. The laughter struck her ear
-without calming her distress, without breaking the sense of suffering
-that overpowered her. As she looked at his boyish face, she saw at
-the same instant the face of the singer, who seemed to be stooping
-with her, imitating her movement as if she were a shadow. Her mind
-became more confused, and she could not distinguish between illusion
-and reality. The other woman seemed to overthrow her, oppress her,
-suffocate her.
-
-"Leave me! Leave me! It is not I whom you seek!"
-
-Her voice was so changed that Stelio broke off his laughter and his
-sport, withdrew his arm, and rose to his feet. She could not see him;
-the leafy, impenetrable wall was between them again.
-
-"Take me away from this place. I cannot bear any more. My strength is
-gone. I suffer."
-
-He could find no words to comfort her. The simultaneous coincidence
-of his recent thought of Donatella, and her sudden divination of it,
-impressed him deeply.
-
-"Wait a little! I will try to find the way out. I will call some one."
-
-"Are you going away?"
-
-"Don't be afraid! There is no danger."
-
-But while he spoke thus to reassure her, he felt the inaneness of his
-words--the incongruity between that laughable adventure and the obscure
-emotion born of a far different cause. And now he too felt the strange
-ambiguity whereby the trifling event appeared in two confusing aspects:
-a suppressed desire to laugh persisted under his concern for her, so
-that his perturbation was new to him, like wild agitations born of
-extravagant dreams.
-
-"Do not go away!" she implored, a prey to her hallucinations. "Perhaps
-we can meet there at the next turning. Let us try. Take my hands."
-
-Through an opening, he took her hands; he started on touching them;
-they were icy cold.
-
-"Foscarina, what is the matter? Are you really ill? Wait! I will try to
-break through."
-
-He attempted to break down the hedge, and snapped off a few twigs, but
-its thickness resisted him, and he scratched his hands uselessly.
-
-"No, it is impossible."
-
-"Cry out! Call some one."
-
-He cried aloud in the silence.
-
-The top of the hedge had lost its deep color, but a red light now
-spread over the sky above them. A triangle of wild ducks passed in
-sweeping flight.
-
-"Let me go, Foscarina. I shall find the tower easily, and will call
-from there. Some one will be sure to hear me."
-
-"No! No!"
-
-But she heard him move away, followed the sound of his steps, and
-was once more bewildered by the maze, once more alone and lost. She
-stopped, waited, listened, and looked at the sky. She lost all sense of
-time; the seconds seemed hours.
-
-"Stelio! Stelio!"
-
-She was no longer capable of an effort to control her disordered and
-exasperated mind. She felt the approach of a crisis of mad fear,
-as one feels the approach of a whirlwind.
-
- [Illustration: _HE WATCHED THE WOMAN TURNING AND RUNNING LIKE A MAD
- CREATURE ALONG THE DARK, DELUSIVE PATHS_]
-
- _From an Original Drawing by Arthur H. Ewer_
-
-
-"Stelio!"
-
-He heard that cry full of anguish, and hastened his search along the
-winding paths that first seemed to lead him toward the tower and then
-away from it. The laughter had frozen in his heart. His whole soul
-shook to its foundation every time his name reached him, uttered by
-that invisible agony. And the gradual lessening of the light brought up
-an image of blood that is flowing away, of slowly fading life.
-
-"I am here! I am here!"
-
-One of the paths brought him at last to the open space where the tower
-stood. He ran furiously up the winding stairs, felt dizzy when he
-reached the top, closed his eyes while grasping the railing, opened
-them again, and saw a long zone of fire on the horizon, the disk
-of the rayless moon, the gray plain, and the labyrinth below him,
-black and spotted with box-bush and horn-beam, narrow in its endless
-convolutions, looking like a dismantled edifice covered with wild vines.
-
-"Stop! Stop! Do not run like that! Some one has heard me. A man is
-coming. I can see him coming. Wait! Stop!"
-
-He watched the woman turning and running like a mad creature along the
-dark, delusive paths, like something condemned to vain torture, to some
-useless but eternal fatigue, like a sister of the fabulous martyrs.
-
-"Stop!"
-
-It seemed that she did not hear him, or that she could not control
-her fatal agitation, and that he could not rescue her, but must always
-remain there, a witness of that terrible chastisement.
-
-"Here he is!"
-
-One of the keepers had heard their cries, had approached them, and
-now entered by the gateway. Stelio met him at the foot of the tower,
-and together they hastened to find the lost woman. The man knew the
-secret of the labyrinth, and Stelio prevented any chatter and jests by
-surprising him with his generosity.
-
-"Has she lost consciousness--has she fallen?" The darkness and the
-silence were sinister, and he felt alarmed. She did not answer when
-he called her, and he could not hear her footsteps. Night had already
-fallen on the place, and a damp veil was descending from the purple sky.
-
-"Shall I find her in a swoon upon the ground," he thought.
-
-He started at seeing a mysterious figure appear at a turning, with a
-pale face that attracted all the last rays of daylight, white as a
-pearl, with large, fixed eyes, and lips closely compressed.
-
-They turned back toward the Dolo, taking the same route beside the
-Brenta. She never spoke, never opened her lips, never answered, as if
-she could not unclose her teeth. She lay in the bottom of the carriage,
-wrapped in her cloak, and now and then she shook with a deep shudder,
-as one attacked by malarial fever. Her friend tried to take her hands
-in his to warm them, but in vain--they were inert and lifeless. And as
-they drove along, the statues passed and passed beside them.
-
-The river flowed black between its banks, under the purple and silver
-sky; the moon was rising. A black boat came down the stream, towed by
-two gray horses with heavy hoofs, led by a man who whistled cheerfully,
-and the funnel smoked on the deck like a chimney on a hut. The yellow
-light of a lantern flashed, and the odor of supper floated on the air;
-and here and there, as they drove along, the statues passed and passed
-beside them.
-
-It was like a Stygian landscape, like a vision of Hades, a region of
-shadows, mist, and water. Everything grew misty and vanished like
-spirits. The moon enchanted and attracted the plain, as it enchants
-and attracts the water, absorbing the vapors of earth with insatiable,
-silent thirst. Solitary pools shone everywhere; small, silvery canals
-were visible, glittering at uncertain distances. Earth seemed to be
-gradually losing its solidity, and the sky seemed to regard its own
-melancholy reflected in innumerable placid mirrors.
-
-And here and there, along the banks of the stream, like the ghosts of a
-people disappeared, the statues passed and passed!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- THE POWER OF THE FLAME
-
-
-"Do you think often of Donatella, Stelio?" La Foscarina inquired
-suddenly, after a long silence, during which neither had heard anything
-but the sound of their own footsteps along the canal path of the
-Vetrai, illumined by the multi-colored lights from the fragile objects
-that filled the windows of the neighboring shops.
-
-Her voice sounded harsh and strained. Stelio stopped suddenly, as one
-who finds himself confronted by an unexpected difficulty. His spirit
-had been roaming over the red and green isle of Murano, begemmed
-with flowers in her present desolate poverty, which seemed to blot
-out the memory of the joyous time when poets had sung her praises
-as "a sojourn for nymphs and demigods." He had been thinking of the
-famous gardens where Andrea Navagero, Cardinal Bembo, Aretino, Aldo,
-and their learned followers, rivaled one another in the elegance of
-their Platonic dialogues, _lauri sub umbra_. He had been thinking of
-convents, luxurious as boudoirs, inhabited by little nuns dressed
-in white camelot and laces, with curls on their temples, and necks
-uncovered, after the fashion of the ancient honored courtesans, given
-to secret loves, much sought after by wealthy patricians, with such
-euphonious names as Ancilla Soranzo, Cipriana Morosini, Zanetta Balbi,
-Beatrice Falier, Eugenia Muschiera, pious instructors in the ways of
-love. His changeful dreams were accompanied by a plaintive little air,
-a forgotten dance measure, in which the faint soul of Murano tinkled
-and whispered.
-
-At this abrupt question, the air fled from his memory, all imaginings
-were dispersed, the enchantment of the old life vanished. His wandering
-mind was called back, and came with reluctance. He felt beside him the
-throbbing of a living heart, which he must inevitably wound. He looked
-at his friend.
-
-She was walking beside the canal, calm, with no sign of agitation,
-between the green water and the iridescence of the rows of delicate
-vases. Only her slender chin trembled slightly, between her short veil
-and fur collar.
-
-"Yes, sometimes," he replied, after an instant of hesitation, recoiling
-from falsehood, and feeling the necessity to elevate their love above
-ordinary deceptions and pretensions, so that it should remain for him a
-cause of strength, not of weakness, a free agreement, not a heavy chain.
-
-She pursued her way without wavering, but she had lost all
-consciousness of movement in the terrible throbbing of her heart, which
-shook her from head to foot. She saw nothing more: all she was aware of
-was the nearness of the fascinating water.
-
-"Her voice is unforgettable," Stelio went on, after a pause, having
-found his courage. "Its power is amazing. From that first evening,
-I have thought that that singer might be the marvelous instrument
-for my great work. I wish she would consent to sing the lyric parts
-of my tragedy, the odes that arise from the symphonies and resolve
-themselves into figures of the dance at the end, between episodes. La
-Tanagra has consented to dance. I have confidence in your good offices,
-dear friend, to obtain also the consent of Donatella Arvale. Thus the
-Dionysiac trinity would be reëstablished in a perfect manner on the new
-stage, for the joy of mankind."
-
-Even while he spoke he realized that his words had a false ring, that
-his unconscious air contrasted too crudely with the dark shadow on
-the woman's face. In spite of himself, he had exaggerated his frank
-tone in speaking of Donatella merely as an instrument of art, a purely
-ideal force to be drawn into the circle of his magnificent enterprise.
-In spite of himself, disturbed by the anxiety in that soul so near
-his own, he had leaned slightly toward deception. Certainly what he
-had said was the exact truth, but his friend had demanded from him
-another truth. He broke off suddenly, unable to endure the sound of
-his own words. He felt that at that hour, between the actress and
-himself, art had no meaning, no vital value. Another force dominated
-them, more imperious, more disquieting. The world created by intellect
-seemed inert as the ancient stones on which they trod. The only real
-and formidable power was the poison running in their human blood. The
-will of the one said: "It is my will that you shall love and serve me,
-wholly, mine alone, body and soul." The will of the other said: "It is
-my will that you shall love and serve me, but while I live I shall
-renounce nothing that may appeal to my wish and fancy." The struggle
-was bitter and unequal.
-
-As she remained silent, unconsciously hastening her steps, he prepared
-himself to face the other truth.
-
-"I understand, of course, that that was not what you wished to know."
-
-"You are right: it was not that. Well?"
-
-She turned to him with a sort of convulsive violence that reminded him
-of her fury one far-off evening, when she had cried madly: "Go! Run!
-She awaits you!"
-
-At this moment a workman met them, and offered to show them over the
-neighboring glass factory.
-
-"Yes, let us go in there," said La Foscarina, hurriedly following the
-workman. Presently they reached the furnace room, and were enveloped in
-its fiery breath, as they gazed at an incandescent altar, the glow from
-which dazzled their eyes with a painful glare.
-
---To disappear, to be swallowed up, to leave no sign!--cried the
-woman's heart, intoxicated with the thought of destruction.--In
-one second that fire could devour me like a dry stick, a bundle of
-straw.--And she went nearer to the open mouths in which she could see
-the molten flame, more resplendent than a midsummer sun, rolling around
-the earthen pots in which the shapeless mass was melting; the workmen,
-standing around, awaited the right moment to approach with iron tubes
-to shape that mass with the breath from their lips and the instruments
-of their art.
-
---O virtue of Fire!--thought the Inspirer, turned from his anxiety
-by the miraculous beauty of the element that had become to him as
-familiar as a brother, since the day he had found the revealing
-melody.--Ah, that I might give to the life of the creatures that love
-me the perfection of the forms to which I aspire! That I might fuse
-all their weaknesses in some white heat, and make of the product
-obedient matter in which to impress the commandments of my heroic will
-and the images of my pure poetry! Why, my friend, why will you not be
-the divine living statue molded by my spirit, the work of faith and
-sorrow whereby our lives might surpass even our art? Why are we so near
-resembling ordinary lovers, who lament and curse? When I heard from
-your lips those admirable words: 'I can do one thing that love alone
-cannot do,' I believed indeed that you could give me more than love.
-You must be able always to do those things that love can do, besides
-those it cannot do, in order to meet my insatiable nature.--
-
-Meanwhile, work was going on about the furnace. At the end of the
-blow pipes the molten glass swelled, twisted, became silvery as a
-little cloud, shone like the moon, cracked, divided into a thousand
-infinitesimal fragments, glittering and thin as the threads we see at
-daybreak stretching from tree to tree. The glass-blowers were making
-harmonious vases. The apprentices placed a small, pear-shaped mass
-of burning paste on the spot chosen by the master-workmen; and the
-pear lengthened, twisted, transformed itself into a handle, a rim, a
-spout, a foot, or a stem. The glowing heat slowly died out under the
-instruments, and the half-formed cup was again exposed to the heat,
-then drawn from it docile, ductile, sensitive to the lightest touches
-that ornamented and refined it, conforming it to the model handed down
-by their ancestors, or to the free invention of a new creator.
-
-Extraordinarily light and agile were the human gestures that produced
-these elegant creatures of the fire, of breath and iron; they were like
-the movements of a silent dance. The figure of La Tanagra appeared
-to the Inspirer among the perpetual undulations of the flame, like a
-salamander. Donatella's voice seemed to sing to him the powerful melody.
-
---To-day, again, I myself have given you the thought of her for a
-companion--thought La Foscarina--I myself have called her up between
-us, and evoked her shadow when perhaps your thoughts were elsewhere; I
-have suddenly led her to you, as on that night of delirium.--
-
-It was true, it was true! From the instant when the singer's name had
-been spoken on the water by Foscarina, she herself had unconsciously
-exalted the new image in the poet's mind, had nourished it with her
-jealousy and fear, had strengthened and increased it day by day,
-and had at last illumined it with certainty. More than once she had
-said to the young man, who perhaps had forgotten: "She awaits you!"
-More than once she had presented to his imagination that distant,
-mysterious figure of expectancy. As on that Dionysian night, when the
-conflagration of Venice had lighted up the two youthful faces with the
-same reflection, it was now her own passion that illumined them, and
-they glowed only because she herself had made them.--Certainly, he now
-possesses that image, and it possesses him. My anguish only augments
-his ardor. It is a joy to him to love her before my despairing eyes!--
-
-"As soon as the vase is shaped, we put it in the furnace room to be
-tempered," replied one of the men to a query from Stelio. "If it were
-exposed to the air immediately it would crack in a thousand pieces."
-
-They could see the radiant vases, still slaves of the fire, still under
-its empire, gathered in a receptacle joined to the furnace in which
-they had been fused.
-
-"They have been there ten hours," said the workman, pointing to
-his graceful family. "Is this our great Foscarina?" he added in an
-undertone to Stelio. He had recognized her when she had lifted her
-veil, suffocating with the heat.
-
-Revealing ingenuous emotion, the master workman took a step toward her
-and bowed respectfully.
-
-"One evening, my lady, you made me tremble and weep like a child. Will
-you allow me, in memory of that evening, which I never shall forget, to
-offer you a little work from the hands of the poor Seguso?"
-
-"A Seguso, are you?" said the poet, leaning toward the little man, to
-look at him closer; "are you of the great family of glass-blowers, one
-of the genuine race?"
-
-"At your service, master."
-
-"A prince, then."
-
-"Yes, a harlequin playing the prince."
-
-"You know all the secrets of the art, eh?"
-
-The Muranese made a mysterious gesture which seemed to call up all the
-deep ancestral knowledge of which he affirmed himself the last heir.
-
-"Then, mistress, will you deign to accept it?"
-
-La Foscarina had not spoken, fearing to trust her voice, but now all
-her affable grace rose above her sadness and accepted the gift while
-compensating the giver.
-
-The vase held by the little bent man that had created it was like
-a miraculous flower blooming on a twisted shrub. It was a thing of
-beauty, mysterious as natural things are mysterious; it held the life
-of a human breath in its hollow; its transparence equaled that of sky
-and water; its purple rim was like a floating seaweed; no one could
-have told the reason why it was so beautiful; and its value was either
-slight or beyond price, according to the eyes that looked at it.
-
-La Foscarina chose to take it with her, without having it packed, as
-one carries a flower.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- REMINISCENCE
-
-
-They left the factory, and walked along a road that was enclosed
-between the walls of silent gardens. The bronze-like laurels were
-touched with gold at the tops by the setting sun. The air was filled
-with sparkling gold-dust.
-
-"How sweet and terrible was the fate of Gaspara Stampa," said Stelio.
-"Do you know her _Sonnets_? Yes, I saw them one day on your table. She
-was a strange mingling of ice and fire. Sometimes her mortal passion,
-above the Petrarchism of Aretino, lifted a glorious cry. I remember a
-magnificent verse of hers:
-
- _Vivere ardendo e non sentire il male!_"
-
-"Do you remember, Stelio," said La Foscarina, with that peculiar slight
-smile of hers which gave her face the look of one walking in her sleep,
-"do you remember the sonnet that begins:
-
- _Signore, io so che in me non son più viva,
- E veggo omai ch'ancor in voi son morta?_"
-
-"I don't remember, Fosca."
-
-"Do you remember your beautiful fancy about the dead Summer? Summer
-was lying on a funeral barge, dressed in gold like a dogaressa, and
-the procession was bearing her toward the Island of Murano, where a
-master of the flame was to enclose her in a shroud of opalescent glass,
-so that when she should be submerged in the depths of the lagoon, she
-could at least watch the waving seaweed. Do you remember?"
-
-"It was an evening in September."
-
-"The last night of September, the night of the Allegory. There was a
-great light on the water. You were in an exalted mood, and talked and
-talked. What things you said! You had come from solitude, and your
-overcharged soul broke forth. You poured a sparkling wave of poetry
-over your companion. A bark passed, laden with pomegranates. I called
-myself Perdita. Do you remember?"
-
-As she walked she felt the extreme lightness of her step and felt that
-something in her was vanishing, as if her body were on the point of
-being changed to an empty chrysalis.
-
-"My name was still Perdita. Stelio, do you recall another sonnet of
-Gaspara's beginning:
-
- _Io vorrei pur che Amor dicesse come
- Debbo seguirlo...._
-
-And the madrigal beginning:
-
- _Se tu credi piacere al mio signore?_"
-
-"I did not know you were so familiar with the unhappy Anasilla, my
-dear."
-
-"Ah, I will tell you. I was hardly fourteen years old when I played in
-an old romantic tragedy called _Gaspara Stampa_. I played the leading
-part. It was at Dolo, where we passed the other day on our way to
-Strà. We played in a small rustic theater--a kind of tent. It was the
-year before my mother died. I remember it very well. I can remember
-the sound of my own voice, which was weak then, when I forced it in
-the tirades because some one in the wings kept whispering to me to
-speak louder, louder!... Well, Gaspara was despairing; she wept and
-raved for her cruel Count. There were many things about it all that my
-small, profaned soul did not know or understand, and I know not what
-instinct and comprehension of sorrow led me to find the accent and
-the cries that could stir the miserable crowd from which we expected
-to gain our daily bread. Ten hungry persons used me as a breadwinner;
-brutal necessity cut and tore away from me all the dream-flowers
-born of my trembling precocity. Oh, it was a time of weeping and
-suffocation, of terror, of unthinking weariness, of mute horror. Those
-that martyrized me knew not what they were doing, poor creatures, made
-stupid by poverty and work. God pardon them and give them peace! Only
-my mother--she, too, who 'for having loved too well and been too little
-loved, unhappy lived and died'--only my mother had pity on my pain, and
-knew how to take me in her arms, how to calm my horrible trembling, to
-weep when I wept, to console me. My blessed mother!"
-
-Her voice changed. Her mother's eyes once again looked upon her, kind
-and firm and infinite as a peaceful horizon.--Tell me, tell me what I
-must do! Guide me, teach me, you who know!--Her heart felt again the
-clasp of those arms, and from the distance of years the old pain came
-back, but not harshly; it was almost sweet. The memory of her struggles
-and her sufferings seemed to bathe her soul in a warm wave, to sustain
-and comfort it. The test had been hard and the victory difficult,
-obtained at the price of persistent labor, against brutal and hostile
-forces. She had witnessed the deepest misery and ruin, she had known
-heroic efforts, pity, horror, and the face of Death.
-
-"I know what hunger is, Stelio, and what the approach of night seems
-like when a place of rest is uncertain," she said softly.
-
-She stopped between the high walls, and lifted her little veil, looking
-deep into her friend's eyes. He grew pale under that look, so sudden
-was his emotion and surprise at her words. He felt confused, as if in
-the incoherence of a dream, incapable of applying the true significance
-of those words to the woman who was smiling at him, holding the
-delicate glass in her ungloved hand. Yet he had heard what she said,
-and she stood there before him in her rich fur cape, looking at him
-with beautiful soft eyes, misty with unshed tears.
-
-"And I have known other things."
-
-It relieved her heart to speak like this; his humility gave her
-strength, as if she had accomplished some proud and daring deed. She
-never had felt conscious of her power and worldly glory in the presence
-of her beloved, but now the memory of her obscure martyrdom, her
-poverty and hunger, created in her heart a feeling of real superiority
-over him she believed invincible.
-
-"But I have no fear of suffering," she said, remembering the words he
-had spoken once: "Tell me you do not fear to suffer.... I believe your
-soul capable of bearing all the sorrow of the world." And her hand
-stole up to his cheek and caressed it, and he understood that she had
-answered those words spoken long ago.
-
-He was silent, as intoxicated as if she had presented to his lips the
-very essence of her heart pressed out into that crystal cup like the
-blood of the grape. He waited for her to go on.
-
-They reached a crossroads where stood a miserable hut, falling into
-ruin. La Foscarina stopped to look at it. The rude, unhinged windows
-were held open by a stick laid across them. The low sun struck the
-smoked walls within, and revealed the furniture--a table, a bench, a
-cradle.
-
-"Do you remember, Stelio," said La Foscarina, "that inn at Dolo where
-we waited for the train. Vampa's inn, I mean. A great fire burned
-on the hearth, the dishes glittered on the shelves, and slices of
-_polenta_ were toasting on the gridiron. Twenty years ago everything
-was exactly the same--the same fire, the same dishes, the same
-_polenta_. My mother and I used to go in there after the performance,
-and sit on the bench before a table. I had wept, cried, raved, and
-had died of poison or by the sword, on the stage. I still heard in
-my ears the resonance of the verses I had uttered, in a voice that
-was not my own, and a strange will still possessed my soul, and I
-could not shake it off--it was as if another person, struggling with
-my inertness, persisted in performing over again those movements and
-actions. The simulation of an outside life remained in the muscles of
-my face, and some evenings I could not calm them. Already, even then,
-the mask, the sensation of the living mask, was beginning to grow. My
-eyes would remain fixed, and a chill crept at the roots of my hair.
-I had difficulty in recovering full consciousness of myself and my
-surroundings.
-
-"The odors from the kitchen sickened me; the food on our plates seemed
-too coarse, heavy as a stone, impossible to swallow. My disgust at
-everything sprang from something indescribably delicate and precious,
-of which I was conscious under all my weariness--a vague feeling
-of nobility beneath my humiliation. I hardly know how to express
-it. Perhaps it was the obscure presence of that power which later
-developed in me, of that election, of that difference wherewith Nature
-has marked me. Sometimes the consciousness of that difference from
-others became so strong that it almost raised a barrier between my
-mother and myself--God forgive me!--almost separated me from her. A
-great loneliness possessed me; nothing around me had power to touch
-me any more. I was alone with my destiny. My mother, even though she
-was with me, gradually receded into an infinite distance. Ah, she was
-to die soon, and was already preparing to leave me, and perhaps this
-withdrawal was the forerunner. She used to urge me to eat, with the
-words only she knew how to say. I answered: 'Wait! Wait!' I could only
-drink; I had a great craving for cold water. At times, when I was more
-tired and trembling than usual, I smiled a long-continued smile. And
-even that dear woman herself, with her deep heart, could not understand
-whence came my smile!
-
-"Incomparable hours, wherein it seemed that the bodily prison was being
-broken through by the soul that wandered to the extremest limits of
-life! What must your youth have been, Stelio! Who can imagine it? We
-have all felt the weight of sleep that descends upon us after fatigue
-or intoxication, heavy and sudden as a stroke from a hammer, and it
-seems to annihilate us. But the power of dreams sometimes seizes upon
-us in waking hours with the same force; it holds us and we cannot
-resist it, though the whole thread of our existence seems on the point
-of being destroyed. Ah, some of the beautiful things you said that
-night in Venice come back to my mind, when you spoke of her marvelous
-hands weaving her own lights and shadows in a continuous work of
-beauty. You alone know how to describe the indescribable.
-
-"Well, ... on that bench, in front of that rustic table, in Vampa's
-inn at Dolo, where destiny led me again with you, I had the most
-extraordinary visions that dreams ever have called up in my brain.
-I saw that which is unforgettable; I saw the real forms around me
-obliterated by the dream-figures born of my instinct and my thoughts.
-Under my fixed eyes, dazzled and scorched by the smoky petroleum lamps
-of the improvised stage, the world of my expression began to throb
-with life. The first lines of my art were developed in that state of
-anguish, of weariness, fever, disgust, in which my sensibility became,
-so to speak, plastic, after the manner of the incandescent material we
-saw the workmen holding at the end of the tube. In it was a natural
-aspiration to be modeled, to receive breath, to fill a mold. On certain
-evenings, in that wall covered with copper utensils, I could see myself
-reflected as in a mirror, in attitudes of grief or rage; with an
-unrecognizable face; and, in order to escape from this hallucination,
-to break the fixity of my gaze, I opened and shut my eyes rapidly. My
-mother would say, over and over: 'Eat, my daughter, at least eat this.'
-But what were bread, wine, meat, fruits, all those heavy things, in
-comparison with what I had within me? I said to her: 'Wait!' and when
-we rose to go, I used to take only a large piece of bread with me.
-I liked to eat it in the country the next morning, under a tree, or
-sitting on the bank of the Brenta.... Oh, those statues! They did not
-recognize me the other day, Stelio, but I recognized them!
-
-"It was in the month of March, I remember. I went out into the country
-very early with my bread. I walked at random, though I meant to go to
-the statues. I went from one to another, and stopped before every one,
-as if I were paying a visit. Some appeared very beautiful to me, and I
-tried to imitate their poses. But I remained longer with the mutilated
-ones, as if to console them. In the evening, on the stage, I remembered
-some of them while I was acting, and with so deep a feeling of their
-distance and their solitude that I felt as if I could not speak any
-more. The audience would grow impatient at these pauses too prolonged.
-At times, when I had to wait for my companion in the scene to finish
-his tirade, I used to stand in the attitude of one of those statues,
-and remain as motionless as if I had been made of stone. I was already
-beginning to carve my own destiny.
-
-"I loved one of them tenderly; it had lost its arms, which once
-balanced a basket of fruit on its head. But the hands still remained
-attached to the basket, and the sight of them always aroused my pity.
-This statue stood on its pedestal in a flax-field; a little canal of
-stagnant water was near it, in which the reflected sky repeated the
-tender blue of the flowers. And always, since that time, in my most
-glowing moments on the stage, visions of some landscape rise in my
-memory, particularly when by the mere force of silence I succeed in
-producing a thrill in the listening throng."
-
-Her cheeks had flushed a little, and as the sun wrapped her in a
-radiant garment, drawing sparkles from her furs and from the crystal
-cup, her animation seemed like an increase of light.
-
-"What a spring that was! In one of my wandering journeys I saw a
-great river for the first time. It appeared to me suddenly, swollen,
-and flowing rapidly between two wild banks. I felt then how much of
-divinity there is in a great stream running through the earth. It was
-the Adige, flowing down from Verona, from the city of Juliet."
-
-An ambiguous emotion filled her heart while she recalled the poverty
-and poetry of her youth. She was impelled to continue, though she
-did not know how she had arrived at these confidences, when she had
-intended to speak to her friend of another young life, not belonging
-to the past, but to the present. By what surprise of love had she been
-turned from an effort of her will, from her firm decision to face the
-painful truth, from the concentration of her slumbering energy to
-linger in the memory of the past, and to cover with the image of her
-own lost virgin self that other image which was so different?
-
-"We reached Verona one evening in May. I was devoured by anxiety. I
-clasped close to my heart the book in which I had copied the lines
-of Juliet, and continually repeated to myself the words of my first
-entrance: 'How now? Who calls? I am here. What is your will?' My
-imagination was excited by a strange coincidence: on that very day I
-was fourteen years old--the age of Juliet. The Nurse's gossip sounded
-in my ears; and, little by little, my own destiny seemed mingled with
-that of the Veronese. At the corner of every street I thought I could
-see a throng approaching me, accompanying a coffin covered with white
-roses. When I saw the Arche degli Scaligeri behind its iron bars, I
-cried to my mother, 'Here is Juliet's tomb!' And I burst into sobs,
-and had a desperate desire to love and to die. 'O thou too early seen
-unknown, and known too late!'"
-
-Her voice, repeating the immortal words, penetrated the heart of her
-lover like a heart-rending melody. She paused a moment, then repeated:
-
-"Too late!"
-
-They were the ominous words spoken by her lover, which she herself had
-repeated in the garden, when both were on the brink of being swept
-away on the flood of their passion: "It is late; too late!" The woman
-that was no longer young now faced the former image of herself, in her
-maidenhood, throbbing in the form of Juliet before her first dream of
-love. Having reached the limit of experience, had she not at the same
-time preserved the dream intact--but to what purpose? If to-day she
-looked at the image of her far-distant youth, it was only to trample
-upon it in leading her beloved to the other woman, to her who lived and
-waited.
-
-With her smile of inimitable sadness, she said:
-
-"I _was_ Juliet! One Sunday in May, in the immense arena in the
-amphitheater under the open sky, before an audience that had breathed
-in the legend of love and death, I was Juliet herself. No thrill from
-the most responsive audience, no applause, no triumph, ever has had
-from me the fulness and intoxication of that unique hour. Actually,
-when I heard Romeo say: 'O, she doth teach the torches to burn bright,'
-my whole being kindled. With great economy, I had managed to buy a
-large bunch of roses, and these were my only ornament. I mingled the
-roses with my words, my gestures, with every attitude. I dropped one
-at Romeo's feet when we first met; I strewed the petals of another on
-his head, as I stood on the balcony; and I covered his body with them
-as he lay in the tomb. The words came with the strangest ease, almost
-involuntarily, as in delirium, and I could feel the throbbing in my
-veins accompanying them.
-
-"I could see the great amphitheater, half in sunlight, half in
-shadow, and in the lighter part a sparkling from thousands of eyes.
-The day was as calm as this. Not a breath of air disturbed the folds
-of my robes, or the hair that floated on my uncovered neck. I felt
-my strength and animation momentarily increasing. How I spoke of the
-lark and the nightingale! I had heard them both a thousand times in
-the country. I knew all their songs of the woods, the meadows, and
-the sky. Every word, as it left my lips, seemed to have been steeped
-in the warmth of my blood. There was no fiber in me that did not give
-forth harmonious sound. Ah, the grace, the state of grace! Every time
-it is given to me to rise to the highest summit of my art I live again
-in that indescribable _abandon_. Yes, I was Juliet! I cried out in
-terror at the approach of dawn. The breeze stirred my hair. I could
-feel the extraordinary silence on which my lamentation fell. The
-multitude seemed to have sunk into the ground. I spoke of the terror
-of the coming day, but already I felt in reality 'the mask of night
-upon my face.' Romeo had descended. We were already dead; already
-both had entered the vale of shadows. Do you remember? My eyes sought
-the fading light of the sky. The people were noisy in the arena; they
-were impatient for the death scene; they would listen no more to
-the mother, the nurse, or the friar. The quiver of that impatience
-quickened my throbbing heart. The tragedy swept on. I recall the odor
-of the pitch from the funeral torches, and of the roses that covered
-me, and I remember the sound of far-off bells, and of the sky that was
-losing its light, little by little, as Juliet was losing her life, and
-a star, the first star, that swam in my eyes with my tears. When I
-fell dead on Romeo's body, the cry of the multitude in the shadows was
-so violent that I was frightened. Some one lifted me and dragged me
-toward that cry. Some one held the torch close to my tear-stained face,
-which must have been the color of death.... And thus, Stelio, one night
-in May, Juliet came to life again, and appeared before the people of
-Verona."
-
-Again she paused, and closed her eyes as if she were dizzy, but her
-sorrowful lips still smiled at her friend.
-
-"And then? Then came the need to move, to go no matter where, to
-traverse space, to breathe in the wind. My mother followed me in
-silence. We crossed a bridge, walked beside the Adige, and went on and
-on. My mother asked at times where we were going. I wished to find the
-Franciscan convent where Juliet's tomb was hidden, since, to my great
-regret, she was not buried in one of those beautiful tombs behind the
-great iron gates. But I did not wish to say so, and I could not speak.
-My voice seemed to have been lost with the last word of the dying
-Juliet. 'Where are we going?' again asked that indefatigable kindness.
-Ah, then the last word of Juliet came to me in reply. We were again
-near the Adige, beside a bridge. I think I began to run, because soon
-afterward I felt myself seized by my mother's arms, and I stood leaning
-against the parapet, choking with sobs. 'There let me die!' I wished
-to say, but could not. The river carried with it the night and all its
-stars. I felt that the desire to die was not mine alone. Ah, blessed
-mother!"
-
-She became very pale; her whole heart felt once more the embrace of
-those arms, the kiss of those lips, those tender tears, the depth of
-that suffering.
-
-With a mingled feeling of surprise and alarm, Stelio watched the great
-waves of life that passed over her, the extraordinary expressions,
-the alternating lights and shadows; but he dared not speak, dared not
-break in upon the occult workings of that great, unhappy soul. He could
-only feel confusedly in her words the beauty and sadness of things
-unexpressed.
-
-"Speak to me still," he said. "Draw nearer to me, sweet soul! No moment
-since I first loved you has been worth the steps that we have taken
-together to-day."
-
-Again her first sudden question returned to her mind: "Do you think
-often of Donatella?"
-
-A short path led to the Fondamenta degli Angeli, whence the lagoon
-could be seen, smooth and luminous.
-
-"How beautiful that light is!" she said. "It is like that night when my
-name was still Perdita, Stelio."
-
-She now touched a note that she had touched in an interrupted prelude.
-
-"The last night of September," she added. "Do you remember?"
-
-Her heart was filled with exaltation to such a degree that she almost
-feared it would fail her. But she resolved that her voice should utter
-firmly the name that must break the silence between her friend and
-herself.
-
-"Do you remember the ship anchored before the gardens? A salute greeted
-the flag as it slid down the mast. Our gondola touched the ship as we
-passed under its shadow."
-
-A moment's pause. Her pallor was animated by a wonderful vitality.
-
-"Then, in that shadow, you first spoke Donatella's name."
-
-She made a new effort, as a swimmer, submerged by a wave, rises again
-and shakes his head free of the foam.
-
-"She began then to be yours!"
-
-She felt as if she were growing rigid from head to foot. Her eyes
-stared fixedly at the glittering water.
-
-"She must be yours," she said at last, with the sternness of necessity
-in her voice, as if to repel with a second shock the terrible things
-that were ready to surge up from her fiery heart.
-
-Seized by sudden anguish, incapable of interrupting by a word the
-lightning-like apparitions of her tragic soul, Stelio halted, and laid
-his hand on his companion's arm to make her stop also.
-
-"Is it not true?" she asked with a sweetness almost calm, as if her
-tension had suddenly relaxed, and her passion had quietly accepted the
-yoke laid upon it by her will. "Speak! I do not fear to suffer. Let us
-sit down here. I am a little tired."
-
-They sat down on a low wall, facing the water.
-
-"What can I say to you?" said the young man in a stifled voice, after
-a pause, unable to overcome the agitation arising from the certainty
-of his present love and the consciousness of his desires, inexorable
-as fate. "Perhaps what you have imagined is true; perhaps it is only
-a fancy of your own mind. I am certain to-day of only one thing, and
-that is that I love you and recognize in you all that is noble. I know
-one other thing that is noble--that I have a work to do and a life to
-live according to the dictates of Nature. You, too, must remember. On
-that September evening I spoke to you a long time of my life and of the
-genii that are leading it to its final destiny. You know that I can
-renounce nothing."
-
-He trembled as if he held in his hand a sharp weapon, with which, as he
-was compelled to move it, he could not avoid wounding the defenseless
-woman.
-
-"No, nothing; and especially your love, which ceaselessly exalts my
-strength and my hope. But did you not promise me more than love? Can
-you not do for me things that love alone cannot do? Do you not desire
-to be the constant inspiration of my life and my work?"
-
-She listened motionless, with fixed eyes.
-
-"It is true," he continued, after an anxious pause, recovering his
-courage, and feeling that on the sincerity of this moment depended
-the fate of that free alliance whereby he had hoped to be broadened,
-not confined. "It is true; that evening, when I saw you descend the
-stairs in the midst of the throng in company with her who had sung, I
-believed that a secret thought guided you from the moment that you did
-not come alone to meet me."
-
-The woman felt a chill run through the roots of her hair. Her fingers
-trembled round the crystal cup, wherein the colors of sky and water
-were blended.
-
-"I believed that you yourself had chosen her. Your look was that of one
-who knows and foresees. I was struck by it."
-
-By her keen torture, the woman realized how sweet a falsehood would
-have been. She wished that he would either lie or be silent. She
-measured the distance that lay between her and the canal--the water
-that swallows and lulls to sleep.
-
-"There was something about her that was hostile to me. She remained
-to me obscure, incomprehensible. Do you remember the way she
-disappeared? Her image faded, and only the desire of her song remained.
-You yourself, who led her to me, have more than once revived the
-remembrance of her. You have seen her shadow even where she was not."
-
-She saw Death itself. No other wound had gone deeper, had hurt her
-so cruelly.--I alone! I alone have brought it on myself!--And she
-remembered the cry that had brought this misery: "Go! She awaits you!"
-Suddenly the internal tempest seemed to become a mere hallucination.
-She thought herself non-existent, and wondered to see the glass shining
-in her hand; she lost all corporeal sense. All that had happened was
-only a trick of the imagination. Her name was Perdita. The dead Summer
-was lying in the depths of the lagoon. Words were words, that was all.
-
-"Could I love her? Were I to see her again, should I desire to turn her
-destiny toward mine? Perhaps. But of what use would that be? And of
-what use would all the vicissitudes and necessities of life be against
-the faith that links us? Could you and I resemble commonplace lovers
-who pass their days in quarreling, weeping, and cursing?"
-
-The woman gnashed her teeth. She had a wild instinct to defend herself,
-and to hurt him as in a hopeless struggle. A murderous desire flashed
-across her maddened brain.
-
---No, you shall not have her!--And the brutality of her tyrant seemed
-monstrous to her. Under the measured and repeated blows, she felt that
-she was like a man she had once seen on the dusty road of a mining
-town, prostrated by repeated blows on his head from a mallet in his
-enemy's hand. That hideous memory mingled with her mental torture. She
-sprang up, impelled by the savage force that filled her being. The
-glass broke in her convulsed hand, cut her, fell in a sparkling shower
-at her feet.
-
-Stelio startled. The woman's motionless silence had deceived him, but
-now he looked at her and saw her at last; and once more he saw, as on
-that night in her room when the logs had crackled on the hearth, the
-expression of madness on her agitated face. He stammered some words of
-regret, but impatience boiled under his concern.
-
-"Ah," said La Foscarina, mastering her agony with a bitterness that
-convulsed her mouth, "how strong I am! Another time have a care that
-your wounds are not made so slowly, since my resistance is so slight,
-my friend."
-
-She saw that blood was dripping from her fingers; she wrapped them in
-her handkerchief. She looked at the sparkling fragments on the grass.
-
-"The cup is broken! You had praised it too highly. Shall we raise a
-mausoleum for it here?"
-
-She was very bitter, almost mocking, her lips opening slightly to utter
-a mirthless laugh. Stelio stood silent, chagrined, his heart full of
-rancor at beholding the destruction of so beautiful an effort as that
-perfect cup.
-
-"Let us imitate Nero, since we have already imitated Xerxes!"
-
-She felt even more keenly than he the harshness of her sarcasm, the
-insincerity of her voice, the malignity of the laugh that was like a
-muscular spasm. But she was unable to conquer her soul at that moment.
-She felt a bitter, irresistible necessity to scorn, to devastate,
-to trample under foot, invaded by a sort of perfidious demon. Every
-vestige of tenderness and benevolence had vanished, every hope, every
-illusion. The bitter hatred that lurks under the love of ardent natures
-was dominant. On the man's face she could discern the same shadow that
-darkened her own.
-
-"Do I irritate you? Do you wish to return to Venice alone? Would you
-like to leave the dying season behind you? The tide is falling, but
-there is always enough water for one who has no intention of returning.
-Would it suit you to have me try it? Am I not as docile as you could
-wish?"
-
-She said these insensate things in a hissing tone, and became almost
-livid, as if suddenly burned by some corroding poison. And Stelio
-remembered having seen the same mask on her face on a distant day of
-love, madness and sadness. His heart contracted, then softened.
-
-"Ah, if I have hurt you, I ask for pardon," he said, trying to take her
-hand and soothe her by a gentle act. "But did we not begin together to
-approach this matter? Was it not you that"--
-
-She interrupted him, exasperated by his gentleness.
-
-"Hurt me? And what does that matter? Have no pity, no pity! Do not weep
-over the beautiful eyes of the wounded hare!"
-
-The words broke between her teeth. Her contracted lips opened in a
-convulsion of wild laughter that was like heart-rending sobs. Her
-companion shuddered, spoke to her in a low tone, aware of the curious
-eyes of the women who sat at the thresholds of their cabins.
-
-"Calm yourself! Calm yourself! Oh, Foscarina, I beg of you! Do not act
-so, I entreat! We shall soon be at the quay, and then we shall go home.
-I will tell you--You will understand me then. Come, now we are in the
-street. Do you hear me?"
-
-He feared she would fall in her hysterical convulsion, and stood ready
-to support her. But she only walked faster, unable to speak, smothering
-that wild laughter with her bandaged hand.
-
-"What ails you? What do you see?" Stelio inquired anxiously.
-
-Never could he forget the change in those eyes. They were dull,
-staring, sightless, yet they seemed to see something that was not
-there; they were filled with an unknown vision, occupied by some
-monstrous image which without doubt had generated that mad and
-anguished laughter.
-
-"Shall we stop here a little while? Would you like some water?"
-
-They found themselves now on the Fondamenta dei Vetrai. How long was it
-since they had walked beside the stagnant canal? How much of their life
-had vanished in the interval? What profound shadow were they leaving
-behind them?
-
-Having descended into the gondola, and wrapped herself in her cloak,
-La Foscarina tried to control her hysteria, holding her face with both
-hands, but from time to time the terrible laugh would escape; then
-she pressed her hands closer to her mouth, as if she were trying to
-suffocate herself.
-
-The lagoon and the deep twilight obliterated all forms and colors; only
-the rows of posts, like a file of monks on a path of ashes, showed
-against the dark background. When the bells began their clamor, her
-soul remembered, her tears gushed forth; the horror was vanquished.
-
-She took her hands from her face, leaned toward her friend's shoulder,
-and found again her voice in saying:
-
-"Forgive me!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- CASSANDRA'S REINCARNATION
-
-
-She humbled herself with shame. From that day every action of her
-silently begged for pardon and oblivion.
-
-A new grace seemed born within her. She became more cheerful, spoke
-more gently, walked softly about the house dressed in quiet colors,
-veiling her beautiful eyes with the deep shadow of her lashes,
-because she dared not look at her friend. The fear of tiring him, of
-displeasing or boring him, gave her the wings of divination. Her ever
-watchful sensibility listened at the inaccessible door of his dreams.
-
-Her spirit, determined to create a new feeling capable of conquering
-the violence of instinct, revealed in her face with marvelous signs
-the difficulty of her task. Never before had her supreme art found
-expressions so singular. Looking at her one day, Stelio spoke to her of
-the infinite power concentrated in the shadow produced by the helmet on
-the face of _Il Pensieroso_.
-
-"Michelangelo," he said, "has, in a small cavity in the marble,
-concentrated all the effort of human meditation. Just as the stream
-fills a hollowed palm, so the eternal mystery that surrounds us fills
-the small space made by the Titan's chisel in the material from the
-mountains; and there it has remained, growing denser through all the
-centuries. I know only the mobile shadow of your face, Fosca, that
-equals that shadow in intensity, and sometimes even surpasses it."
-
-Eager for poetry and knowledge, she yearned for the Inspirer's
-presence. She became for him the ideal figure of one that listens and
-understands. The strange, unique arrangement of her hair suggested
-fluttering, impatient wings round her pure forehead.
-
-She read aloud to him pages from the sovereign poets. The august form
-of the Book seemed magnified by the attitude she assumed in holding it,
-by her way of turning the pages, by her religious gravity of attention,
-and the harmony of the voice that changed the printed symbols into
-vocal cadences. While reading Dante, she was as severe and noble as the
-sibyls in the dome of the Sistine Chapel, sustaining the weight of the
-sacred volumes with all the heroism of their bodies moved by the breath
-of prophecy.
-
-When the last syllable had been spoken, she saw Stelio rise
-impetuously, feverishly, and roam about the rooms, stirred by the dart
-of the god, panting in the excitement roused by the confused tumult
-of his own creative force. Sometimes he approached her with glowing
-eyes transfigured by a sudden beatitude, kindled by an inner flame,
-as if an immortal truth had just been revealed. With a shudder that
-drove away from her heart the memory of every caress, she saw him lay
-his head upon her knees, overwhelmed by the tremendous struggle he
-carried on within himself, by the shock that accompanied some hidden
-metamorphosis. She suffered, yet she was happy, though she knew not
-whether he too suffered or was happy; her heart was filled with pity,
-fear, and reverence to feel that vigorous form laboring thus in the
-genesis of the idea. She kept silence; she waited, adoring that head
-that lay upon her knees, filled with thoughts unrevealed.
-
-But she comprehended his great emotion better when one day, after she
-had been reading to him, he spoke of the exile of Dante.
-
-"Imagine, Fosca, if you can without bewilderment, the transport and
-ardor of that great soul, when uniting itself with elementary energies
-in order to conceive his words! Imagine Alighieri, his mind already
-filled with his incomparable vision, on the way to exile, an implacable
-pilgrim, driven by his passion and his poverty from country to country,
-from refuge to refuge, across plains, over mountains, beside rivers and
-seas, in all seasons, suffocated by the sweetness of spring, shivering
-under the harshness of winter, always alert, attentive, with wide,
-voracious eyes, anxious with the inner travail whereby his gigantic
-work was formed. Imagine the fulness of that soul in the contrast
-between common necessities and the flaming apparitions that rose
-suddenly before him at a turn in the road, on the bank of a stream,
-from a hollow in the rocks, on the slope of a hill, in the depths of
-the forest, or in a meadow where the larks were singing. By means
-of his senses, life multiform and multiplex poured into his spirit,
-transfiguring into living images the abstract ideas that filled his
-brain. The sound, the appearance, and the essence of the very elements
-themselves entered into his occult labor, developing it with voices,
-lines, color, movement, and with innumerable mysteries. Fire, air,
-earth, and water worked in collaboration at the sacred poem, penetrated
-the sum of its doctrine, warmed it, aërated it, watered it, covered it
-with leaves and flowers. Open this Christian book, and imagine at the
-same time the face of a Greek god. Do you not see, springing from both,
-shadows and light, the flashes or the wind from the heavens?"
-
-She began to feel that her own life was becoming one with the
-all-absorbing work, that her own personal self was entering, drop by
-drop, into the personage of the drama, that her look, her poses, her
-gestures and voice were going to the composing of the figure of the
-heroine "living beyond life." She fancied that she was dissolving into
-her elements in the fire of that other intellect, only to be re-formed
-by the necessity of a heroism that should dominate Fate.
-
-Sometimes it seemed to her that she was losing her human sincerity,
-and that she would always remain in the state of fictitious excitement
-into which she threw herself while studying a tragic rôle she was to
-create. Thus she experienced a new torment. She tried to shut and
-contract her soul under his keen glance, as if to prevent his intellect
-from penetrating her mind and robbing her of her secret life. She grew
-afraid of the seer.--He will read in my soul the silent words that he
-will put in the mouth of his creation, and I shall only speak them on
-the stage, under my mask.--Sometimes she felt a sudden need to break
-the spell, to withdraw from the image that was to be like her, to spoil
-those lines of beauty, which forced her to a determined sacrifice. Was
-there not also in the tragedy a maiden thirsting for love and eager for
-joy, a maiden in whom a great mind recognized the living incarnation
-of his most exquisite dream, the Victory that was to crown his life?
-And was there not also an impassioned woman no longer young, who had
-one foot already in the dark shadow, and who had but a few steps more
-to take in order to disappear? More than once she was tempted to
-contradict her seeming resignation by some violent act. Then, like a
-penitent, she redoubled her fervor to ward off the peril, hardened
-herself to discipline, sharpened her vigilance, repeating with a sort
-of intoxication the act of supreme renunciation that had risen from the
-depths of her sadness at the aspect of the purifying flame.--You must
-have all; I shall be content with seeing you live, seeing your joy. And
-do with me as you will!--
-
-Then Stelio loved her for the unexpected visions she brought him. He
-trembled and turned pale one day when she entered the room with her
-soft step, her face fixed in calm sorrow, as if she were emerging from
-depths of wisdom whence all human agitations seem but a puff of wind on
-a dusty road.
-
-"Ah, at last! I have created you! I have created you!" he cried,
-thinking he saw his heroine herself standing on a threshold of the
-distant chamber filled with treasure taken from the tombs of the
-Atrides. "Stand still a moment! Do not move your eyelids--keep your
-eyes motionless, as if they were petrified! Now you are blind. But
-you can see things that others do not see, and nothing can be hidden
-from you. Here in this place the man you love has declared his love
-to another, who trembles at the revelation. They are still here, they
-have just let go each other's hands, and their love quivers in the air.
-The room is full of funeral treasure, and on two tables are laid out
-the riches that covered the bodies of Agamemnon and Cassandra. There
-are the coffers filled with necklaces, and there are the urns full
-of ashes. The balcony looks out upon the plain of Argos and on the
-distant mountains. It is twilight, and all that terrible gold glitters
-in the creeping shadows. Do you understand? And you are there, on the
-threshold, led by the nurse. You are blind, yet nothing is hidden from
-you. Stop a moment!"
-
-He spoke in the sudden fever of invention. The scene appeared before
-him, then disappeared, submerged in a flood of poetry.
-
-"What shall you do? What shall you say?"
-
-The actress felt a chill at the roots of her hair. Her very soul
-vibrated. She became blind and prophetic. The cloud of Tragedy
-descended and hung over her head.
-
-"What shall you say? You will call them. You will call both of them by
-name in that silence where the great royal spoils repose."
-
-The actress felt the coursing of her blood; her voice was to resound
-through the silence of thousands of years, to revive the ancient
-suffering of men and heroes.
-
-"You will take their hands; you will feel their two lives stretching
-toward each other."
-
-The blindness of the immortal statues was in her eyes. She could see
-herself sculptured in the great silence, and feel the thrill of the
-mute throng, seized with awe at the sublime power of her attitude.
-
-"And then? And then?"
-
-The Inspirer rushed impetuously toward the actress, as if he wished to
-strike her in order to draw sparks from her.
-
-"You must awake Cassandra from her sleep; you must feel her ashes
-revive in your hands; she must be present in your mental vision. Will
-you? Do you understand? Your living soul must touch her ancient soul,
-and blend into one soul and one grief, so that the flight of time
-seems annihilated. Cassandra is in you, and you are in her. Have you
-not loved her, and do you not love Priam's daughter also? Who that
-once shall hear it can ever forget, who can ever forget the deep notes
-of your voice and the convulsion of your lips at the first cry of
-fatalistic fury: 'O Earth! O Apollo!' I see you once more, deaf and
-dumb, on your chariot with the look of a wild beast just captured. But
-among so many terrible cries, some were infinitely sweet and sad. The
-old men compared you to the nightingale. What were the words you used
-when you spoke of your beautiful river? And when the old men questioned
-you about the love of the god--do you remember your answer?"
-
-The Tragic Muse palpitated as if the breath of the god again invaded
-her. She had become ardent, ductile material, subject to all the
-inspirations of the poet.
-
-"Do you remember your answer?"
-
-"O espousals, espousals of Paris, fatal to the beloved! O you, paternal
-waters of the Scamandros! Once, on your shores, my youth was nourished
-by you!"
-
-"Ah, divine woman, your melody does not make one regret the syllables
-of Æschylus! I remember. The soul of the multitude, seized by the
-lamentation 'of discordant sounds,' relaxed and was soothed by that
-melodious sigh, and each of us received the vision of years long past
-and our innocent happiness. You can say: 'I was Cassandra.' In speaking
-of her, you will remember a former life. Her mask of gold will be in
-your hands."
-
-He seized both her hands; both were intent on the flashes generated by
-their blended forces; the same electric spark ran through their nerves.
-
-"You are there, near the spoil of the slave-princess, and you feel the
-mask. What shall you say?"
-
-In the pause that followed, both seemed to be waiting for a flash.
-The actress's eyes again became fixed and blind, her face became like
-marble. The Inspirer let go her hands, and they made the gesture
-of feeling the sepulchral golden mask. In a voice that created the
-tangible form, she said:
-
-"How large her mouth is!"
-
-"You see her, then?"
-
-"Yes, I too can see her. The mouth is large; the terrible effort of
-prophecy dilated it; she cried aloud, cursed, and lamented without
-ceasing. Can you imagine her mouth in silence?"
-
-Still in the same attitude, as if in ecstasy, she said slowly:
-
-"What profundity in her wonderful silence!"
-
-She seemed to be repeating words suggested to her by mysterious genii,
-and, while the poet listened to her, he fancied that he himself had
-been about to speak them. A profound tremor shook him, as if he were
-witnessing a miracle.
-
-"And her eyes?" he demanded, agitated. "Of what color were her eyes?"
-
-She made no reply.
-
-The marble lines of her face changed slightly, as if under a wave of
-suffering. A furrow appeared between her eyes.
-
-"Her eyes," continued the revealer, "were as sweet and sad as two
-violets."
-
-She paused again, panting, as one who suffers in a dream. Her lips were
-dry, her temples moist.
-
-"Thus they were before they closed forever!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sometimes Stelio came to his friend's house breathless and excited, as
-if pursued by an Erinni. La Foscarina never questioned him, but her
-personality soothed that restless spirit.
-
-"Sometimes I am afraid of the vastness of my conceptions," he said.
-"I am afraid of being suffocated by them. You believe me to be a
-little mad, do you not? Do you remember that stormy evening when I
-returned from the Lido? How sweet you were that evening! A short time
-before that, standing on the Bridge of the Rialto, I found a Motive.
-I had translated the words of the Elements into notes. Do you know
-what a Motive is? It is a small spring, from which may be born many
-other springs, a tiny seed that may give birth to a crown of forests;
-a little spark that may kindle an endless chain of conflagration--a
-nucleus that produces infinite force. A few days ago I began to develop
-the Motive of that stormy evening, which I shall call the Pipes of
-Æolus. Listen to it."
-
-He went to the piano, and struck a few notes with one hand.
-
-"It contains no more than that, but you cannot imagine the generating
-force of those few notes. A tempest, a whirlwind of music has been
-born of them, but I have not yet been able to master it. I am almost
-vanquished, suffocated, constrained to fly."
-
-He laughed a little; but his soul was swaying like the sea.
-
-"The Pipes of Prince Æolus, opened by the companions of Ulysses. Do you
-remember it? The imprisoned winds arise and push back their vessel, and
-the men tremble with terror."
-
-His spirit could not rest long, and nothing could divert him from his
-mental work. He kissed his friend's hand, paced to and fro, stopping
-before the piano that Donatella had played when she sang Claudio's
-melody. He wandered to the window, and gazed upon the leafless garden.
-His aspiration reached out toward the musical creature, toward her that
-must chant his hymns at the summit of his tragic symphonies.
-
-In a low, clear voice the woman said:
-
-"If Donatella were here with us!"
-
-He turned, approached her, and gazed at her fixedly, silently. She
-smiled her slight, mask-like smile at seeing him so near her, yet so
-far removed. She felt that he loved no one at that moment--not herself,
-not Donatella, but that he regarded both simply as instruments of
-his art, forces to employ, bows to bend. He was on fire with poetry,
-and she, with her poor wounded heart, her secret torture, her mute
-plea--she was there, intent on nothing but her sacrifice, ready to pass
-beyond love and life, as the heroine of the future drama. Meanwhile,
-each day must make its mark on her face, discolor her lips, fade her
-hair; each day, in the service of old age, would hasten the work of
-destruction in her miserable flesh. And then?
-
-She recognized that it was love, after all, unquenchable passion, that
-created all the illusions and all the hopes which seemed to aid her in
-accomplishing "what love alone cannot do."
-
-She realized that the torturing restraint of those days had not
-succeeded in creating in her even a symptom of the new feeling whereby
-love was to be made sublime. Her secret task, therefore, meant simply
-continual dissimulation. Was it worth while to live for this?
-
-If once the young man's madness and ardor had caused her to suffer, she
-now suffered far more in seeing that that ardor had grown calm, and
-that a sort of reserve had taken its place--a reserve that sometimes
-repelled the gentlest caress. She felt shame at her regret, knowing
-that he was possessed by his great idea, and was concentrating all his
-energies upon it. But a dark rancor often mastered her in the evening,
-after he had departed, and blind suspicions nightly tortured her
-sleepless soul.
-
---To go away!--The necessity to do this came suddenly, urgently. She
-had said to her beloved once, on a memorable day: "There is only one
-thing I can do--go away, and leave you free with your fate. This thing
-I can do, which love alone could not do." Henceforth, delay was no
-longer possible; she must break off with all hesitation, and emerge
-finally from that kind of fatal suspension of movement, in which she
-had lived so long in agitation.
-
-Since that October dawn, their outward life had been unchanged.
-Nevertheless, she felt that it was impossible for her to continue to
-live in that way any longer. She felt a consciousness of something
-fully accomplished, as in the tree that has yielded all its fruit, as
-in the river that has reached the sea.
-
-Her courage revived; her soul grew stronger, her energies awoke once
-more, and the virile qualities of the leader again came to life. In
-a few days she had arranged her professional route, reassembled her
-dramatic company, and fixed the date of departure.--You must go and
-work over there among the barbarians across the ocean. You must wander
-still from town to town, from hotel to hotel, from theater to theater,
-and every night you will draw howls from the crowd that pays you. You
-will gain much money; you will return laden with gold and with wisdom,
-unless it happens that you are crushed by a wheel some misty day on a
-crowded street. Who knows? From whom have you received the order to
-depart? From some one within yourself--deep, deep within you--who sees
-that which you cannot see, like the blind woman in the tragedy. Who
-knows whether over there, on one of those wide, peaceful rivers, your
-soul will not find its harmony and your lips will not learn that smile
-they have attempted so many times in vain! Perhaps you will discover a
-few white hairs and that smile in your mirror at the same time!--
-
-And she went on preparing for her journey.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- THE STORY OF THE ARCHORGAN
-
-
-From time to time a breath of Spring passed across the February sky.
-
-"Do you feel the Spring?" said Stelio to his friend, inhaling deep
-breaths of the new air.
-
-La Foscarina fell behind him a step or two, because her resolute heart
-was weakening; she lifted her face to the sky, now flecked with white
-clouds like floating plumes. The raucous shriek of a siren whistle
-prolonged itself in the estuary, becoming fainter by degrees until
-the sound was as soft as the note of a flute. It seemed to the woman
-that something rose from the depths of her heart and escaped with that
-prolonged note, as a poignant grief gradually changes into a tender
-memory.
-
-"Yes, Spring has already arrived at the Tre Porti."
-
-Once more they floated aimlessly along the lagoon, that water as
-familiar to their thoughts as is the web to the weaver.
-
-"Did you say at the Tre Porti?" the young man cried, enthusiastically,
-as if his soul were reawakened. "It is there, near the lower bank, at
-the setting of the moon, that the sailors take the Wind prisoner, and
-bring it, chained, to Dardi Seguso. Some day I will tell you the story
-of the Archorgan."
-
-His air of mystery in describing the action of the sailors made La
-Foscarina smile.
-
-"What story?" she asked, enticed by his significant tone. "And what
-does Seguso do here? Has the story anything to do with the master
-glassblower?"
-
-"Yes, but a master of a former day, who knew Latin and Greek, music and
-architecture, who was admitted to the Academy of the Pellegrini, whose
-gardens are at Murano; he was often invited to sup with Titian in his
-house in the Contrada dei Biri; was a friend of Bernardo Cappello, of
-Jacopo Zane, and other ancient Petrarchists. At Caterino Zeno's house
-he saw the famous organ built for Matthias Corvinus, King of Hungary,
-and his magnificent idea came to him in the course of a discussion
-with that Agostino Amadi who succeeded in adding to his collection of
-instruments a true Grecian lyre, a great Lesbian heptachord, rich with
-gold and ivory. Ah, imagine it, that relic of the school of Mitylene,
-brought to Venice by a galley which, in passing through the waters of
-Santa Maura, caught and dragged the body of Sappho as far as Malamocco,
-like an armful of dead grass! But that, too, is another tale."
-
-Again the nomad woman recovered her youthful spirits enough to smile,
-pleased as a child to whom one shows a picture-book. How many marvelous
-stories, how many delightful fancies had not the Visionary conjured
-up for her on those waters, during the long hours of the afternoon?
-How many enchantments had he not known how to weave for her, to the
-rhythm of the oar, in words that made all things seem reality? How
-many times, seated beside her beloved in the light boat, had she not
-enjoyed that sort of waking dream in which all cares were banished,
-carried away on waves of poetry?
-
-"Tell it to me," she begged.
-
-She wished to add:--This story will be the last.--But she restrained
-herself, because up to this time she had not spoken to him of her fixed
-resolution.
-
-He laughed.
-
-"You are as eager for stories as Sofia."
-
-At that name, as when she heard the name of Spring, she felt her
-resolution weaken; the cruelty of her fate pierced her heart, and her
-whole being turned with yearning toward her escaping happiness.
-
-"Look!" he said, pointing to the mirror-like lagoon, rippled here and
-there by a light breeze. "Do not those infinite lines of silence aspire
-to become music?"
-
-Silvery-white in the calm afternoon, the estuary seemed to bear the
-islets on its breast as lightly as the softest clouds hung from the sky.
-
-"Well, the master glassblower heard at Zeno's house praises of the
-famous organ of the King of Hungary, and cried: '_Corpo di Bacco!_
-You shall see what an organ I will build, with my stick, _liquida
-musa canente!_ I will make the god of organs! _Dant sonitum glaucæ
-per stagna loquacia cannæ._ The waters of the lagoon shall give it
-its tone, and in it the stones, the buoys, and the fish also shall
-sing. _Multisonum silentium._ You shall see, by the body of Diana!'
-All his hearers laughed, save Giulia da Ponte--because she had black
-teeth! And the Sansovino gave a dissertation on hydraulic organs.
-But the boaster, before taking his leave, invited the company to
-hear his new music on the day of the Sensa, and promised that the
-Doge on his Bucentaur should halt in the middle of the lagoon to
-listen. That evening the news that Dardi Seguso had lost his senses
-spread to Venice, and the Council, which had a tender regard for its
-famous workmen, sent a messenger to Murano to learn the truth about
-the report. The messenger found the artisan with his sweetheart,
-Perdilanza, who was very loving to him because she was anxious,
-and feared that Dardi was insane. The master, after looking at the
-messenger with fiery eyes, burst into a hearty laugh, which reassured
-her as to his state of mind; then, quite calm again, Seguso ordered
-the messenger to report to the Council that, on the day of the Sensa,
-Venice, San Marco, the Grand Canal, and the Palace of the Doges
-should possess yet another miracle. On the following day, he made a
-formal request for the possession of one of the five little islets
-that circled Murano like the satellites of a planet, but have now
-disappeared, or have dwindled to mere sandbanks. After exploring the
-waters around Temòdia, Trencòre, Galbaia, Mortesina, and La Folèga, he
-chose Temòdia as one chooses a bride, and Perdilanza entered the shadow
-of affliction. Look, Fosca; perhaps even now we are passing over the
-memory of Temòdia. The organ-pipes are sunk deep in the mud, but they
-never will decay. There are seven thousand of them. We are passing over
-the ruins of a forest of melodious glass. How delicate the seaweed is
-here!"
-
-"Tell me the reason why Perdilanza entered the shadow of affliction,"
-said La Foscarina, as both leaned over and looked deep into the
-beautiful clear waters.
-
-"Because her name had been driven from the lips and the heart of her
-lover by the name of Temòdia, which he constantly uttered with vehement
-ardor, and because the island was the only place to which she might
-not follow him. There he had constructed his new work-rooms, and there
-he stayed the greater part of the day, and almost all night, assisted
-by his workmen, whom he had bound to silence by a solemn oath before
-the altar. The Council, in ordering that the master should be provided
-with everything necessary for his tremendous task, had decreed that he
-should lose his head should his work prove inferior to his proud boast.
-Then Dardi tied a scarlet thread around his bare neck."
-
-La Foscarina felt as if she were in a dream. Stelio seemed to have been
-speaking of himself in those strange figures of speech, as on that last
-night of September when he had explained the myth of the pomegranate,
-and the name of the imaginary woman began with the first two syllables
-of the name he had given her in those days! Was any personal
-significance veiled behind this story? Why had he, deliberately, in
-the vicinity of the place where she had been seized with that terrible
-laughter, called up, by that fanciful tale, the memory of the broken
-vase? In trying to understand, she made for herself an instrument
-of torture, with the dream-fancies of Stelio's brain. She did not
-remember that as yet he was ignorant of her approaching departure.
-Instinctively she said within herself:--I am going far-away; do not
-wound me.--
-
-She wished to hear the remainder of the story, however, for she longed
-to understand him fully.
-
-"Well, what happened then to the man with the scarlet thread?" she
-inquired.
-
-"More than once he felt his head was insecure on his shoulders," Stelio
-replied laughingly. "He had to blow pipes as large as the trunk of a
-tree, and he had to do it with his own mouth, unaided by bellows. He
-blew and blew with all his might, without ceasing. Fancy it! The lungs
-of a Cyclops would hardly be strong enough for that. Ah, some day I
-shall describe the fever of that existence hanging between the ax and
-the production of a miracle, in colloquy with the elements. He had
-Fire, Water, and Earth, but lacked Air--the movement of the Air. But
-every day the Council of Ten sent to him a red-haired man to wish him
-good morning--you know, that red-haired man, with a cap over his eyes,
-who embraces the column in the _Adoration of the Magi_ of the second
-Bonifazio. After colossal labors, Seguso had a brilliant idea. He found
-a magician, who was said to have power over the Wind in favor of long
-navigations. He said to the wizard: 'I need a little wind, not too
-light nor too strong, but steady and gentle, which I could manage as I
-wish: only a little breeze with which to blow some glass that I have in
-my head. _Lenius aspirans aura secunda venit._ Do you understand, old
-man?'"
-
-The story-teller burst into a ringing laugh, for he could fancy the
-scene with all its details in a house on the Calle della Testa, at San
-Zanepolo, where the Schiavone lived with his daughter.
-
-La Foscarina tried to join in his gayety; but his boyish laughter
-pained her as it had once before when she was lost in the labyrinth.
-
-"It is a long story," Stelio went on. "Some day I shall use it, but
-I am keeping it for a time when I have more leisure. Now fancy! The
-magician works the spell. Every night Dardi sent his sailors to the Tre
-Porti to spread a snare for the little Wind. At last, one night, or
-rather just before dawn, when the moon was about to set, they caught it
-asleep on a sandy bank in the midst of a flock of tired swallows it had
-borne thither.
-
-"There it lay, on its back, breathing as lightly as a child in the
-salty aroma of the waters, almost covered by innumerable little
-forked tails. The rising tide rocked it in its slumber, and the
-black-and-white travelers fluttered about it, weary with their long
-flight."
-
-"What a charming fancy!" exclaimed La Foscarina at this fresh picture.
-"Where have you seen that?"
-
-"Here begins the real charm of the story," he answered. "They seize the
-sleeping Wind, bind it with osier withes, carry it aboard their boat,
-and set sail for Temòdia. The bark is invaded by the flock of swallows,
-which will not abandon the leader of their flight."
-
-Stelio paused, because the details of the fantasy crowded his
-imagination to such a degree that he knew not which to choose to
-relate.
-
-"And then?" urged his companion, with interest.
-
-"I can tell no more now, Fosca. I know too many things.... Well,
-imagine that Dardi falls in love with his prisoner. It is called
-Ornitio, because it leads flights of migrating birds. A continual
-twittering of swallows surrounds Temòdia; nests hang from the posts and
-the scaffolding that surround the great structure; wings are singed
-in the flames of the furnace, when Ornitio blows through the tube to
-create a light and luminous column with that ball of burning paste. But
-before he had tamed it and taught it what to do, he had much trouble
-with it. The Master of the Flame began by speaking Latin to it, and
-reciting lines of Virgil to it, believing it would understand. But the
-azure-haired Ornitio spoke Greek, naturally, with a slightly sibilant
-accent. It knew Sappho's odes by heart, and while it breathed through
-the unequal tubes, it remembered the pipes of Pan."
-
-"And what did it eat?"
-
-"Pollen and salt."
-
-"Who gave it the food?"
-
-"No one. It was sufficient to inhale the pollen and salt scattered on
-the breeze."
-
-"And did it never try to escape?"
-
-"Always. But Seguso took infinite precautions, like the lover he was."
-
-"And did Ornitio return his love?"
-
-"Yes, it began to love him after a time, particularly because of the
-scarlet thread that the master wore continually around his bare neck."
-
-"And Perdilanza?"
-
-"She was left alone, and languished in her grief. I will tell you more
-of her some day. Some day I shall go to the seashore of Palestrina, and
-I will write this fable for you in the golden sand."
-
-"But how does the story end?"
-
-"The miracle is accomplished. The Archorgan is raised at Temòdia with
-its seven thousand glass pipes, resembling one of those frozen forests
-which Ornitio--who was a little inclined to boast of the wonders it had
-met in its travels--declared it had seen in the land of the Iporborrei.
-At last comes the day of the Sensa. The _Serenissimo_, between the
-Patriarch and the Archbishop of Spalatro, goes out of the harbor of San
-Marco on the _Bucentaur_. So great is the pomp that Ornitio believes
-it must be the triumphal return of the son of Chronos. The fountains
-are set playing all around Temòdia; and animated by the eternal silence
-of the lagoon, the gigantic organ peals forth, under the magic fingers
-of the new musicians, a wave of harmony so vast that it reaches as
-far as the mainland and even to the Adriatic. The _Bucentaur_ stops,
-because its forty oars have suddenly fallen at its sides, abandoned
-by the astonished crew. But suddenly the wave of harmony breaks into
-discordant sounds, and at last it dies away in a faint murmur. Dardi
-feels the instrument becoming dumb under his fingers, as if his own
-soul had failed. What has happened? The master hears only great shouts
-of jeers and scorn that come to him through the silent pipes--the sound
-of firing and the uproar of the populace. A group embarks from the
-_Bucentaur_, bringing the red-haired man, who bears a block and an ax.
-The blow is aimed exactly at the scarlet thread; the head falls, and is
-thrown into the water, where it floats like the head of Orpheus."
-
-"But what had happened?"
-
-"Perdilanza had thrown herself into the cataract! The water dragged her
-into the machinery of the organ. Her body, with its famous hair, lay
-across the great delicate instrument, and silenced its musical heart."
-
-"But Ornitio?"
-
-"Ornitio rescued the head from the water and flew away with it toward
-the sea. The swallows heard of its flight and followed it, and very
-soon a cloud of black wings and white surrounds the fugitive. All the
-nests in Venice remain empty after this sudden flight."
-
-"And Dardi's head?"
-
-"Where it is, no one knows," concluded the story-teller, laughing.
-
-The woman bent her head in thoughtful silence.
-
-"Perhaps there is a hidden meaning in your tale," she said, after a
-pause. "Perhaps I have understood."
-
-"Alas, yes! if there were any resemblance between my audacity and that
-of the master workman. Perhaps I too should wear a scarlet thread
-around my neck, as a sort of warning."
-
-"You will have your great destiny. I have no fear for you."
-
-He ceased to laugh.
-
-"Yes, my friend, I must conquer. And you shall help me. Every morning
-I too receive my menacing visitor--the expectation of those that love
-me and those that hate me. Expectation should wear the dress of the
-executioner, for nothing on earth is so pitiless."
-
-"But it is the measure of your power."
-
-He felt the vulture's beak in his breast. Instinctively he straightened
-himself up, seized with an impatience of even their slow idling on the
-water. Why did he live in such idleness? Every hour and every minute he
-ought to be trying, struggling, fortifying himself against destruction,
-diminution, violation, contagion. Every hour and every minute his eyes
-should be fixed on his aim, and all his energies should be concentrated
-upon it.
-
-"Do you know this saying of the great Herodotus: 'The name of the bow
-is Bios, and its work is death'? This saying is one that excites our
-spirits even before communicating to it its exact meaning. I heard
-it continually within myself, that evening last autumn, when I was
-sitting at your table--the night of the Epiphany of the Flame. That
-night I had an hour of true Dionysian life, an hour of secret though
-terrible delight, as if I held in my breast the burning mountain where
-the Tiades howl and shriek. Sometimes I could really hear songs and
-clamor, and the cries of distant battle. It astonished me that I could
-remain motionless, and the sense of my bodily immobility increased my
-mental frenzy. I could see only your face, which suddenly appeared
-extraordinarily beautiful, revealing all the strength of your soul;
-and behind it I could see other countries and other peoples. If I
-could only tell you how I saw you! In the tumult, at the passage of
-marvelous images, accompanied by floods of music, I called to you as
-in the thick of battle; I made appeals which perhaps you heard--not
-for love alone, but for glory; not for one thirst, but for two, and
-I know not which was the more ardent. And the face of my great work
-appeared to me then the same as your face. I saw it, I tell you! And
-with incredible rapidity my work took form in words, song, movement,
-and symphony, and was so real that if I succeed in infusing a part of
-it into that which I wish to express, I shall surely inflame the world.
-
-"To express oneself! That is the necessity. The greatest vision has
-no value if it is not manifested and condensed in vital forms. And
-I have everything to create. I am not pouring my substance into
-hereditary molds. My work is entirely my own invention. I must not,
-and I will not, obey anything but my instinct and the genius of my
-race. Nevertheless, like Dardi, who saw the famous organ at the house
-of Caterino Zeno, I too have another work before my mind--a work
-accomplished by a formidable creator, a gigantic work in the eyes of
-man."
-
-The image of the barbaric creator reappeared to him: the blue eyes
-gleamed under the vast forehead, and he saw once more the white
-hair tossed by the wind about that aged neck. He remembered his own
-indescribable thrill of joy and fear when he had so unexpectedly felt
-beneath his hand the throbbing of that sacred heart.
-
-"I should say not before but around my spirit. Sometimes it is like
-a stormy sea trying to draw me down and swallow me. My Temòdia is a
-granite rock in the open sea, and I am like an artisan trying to erect
-upon it a pure Doric temple. Compelled to defend the order of his
-columns from the violence of the waves, his spirit is always strained
-in order never to cease to hear, in the midst of the clamor, the secret
-rhythm which alone must regulate the intervals between lines and
-spaces. And in this sense too my tragedy is a battle."
-
-He took one of his friend's hands.
-
-"Do you hear the song?" he asked.
-
-"Where is it?" she said, raising her face to the sky. "Is it in heaven
-or on the earth?"
-
-An infinite melody seemed to be flowing through the peaceful, silvery
-atmosphere.
-
-She felt Stelio's hand quiver.
-
-"When Alessandro enters the illuminated chamber where the virgin has
-been reading the lament of Antigone," he said, "he tells how he has
-come on horseback across the plain of Argos, where the song of the
-larks fills the sky. He says that one lark fell at his horse's feet,
-like a stone, and lay there silent, overcome by its own frenzy of joy
-in its song. He picked it up. 'Here it is.' Then you hold your hand
-toward him, you take the bird, and murmur: 'Ah, it is still warm!' And
-while you speak the virgin trembles. You can feel her quivering."
-
-The actress felt the mystic chill steal over her once more, as if the
-soul of the blind woman reëntered her own soul.
-
-"At the end of the Prelude, the impetuosity of the chromatic
-progressions expresses this growing joy, this fever of delight....
-Listen, listen!... Ah, what a miracle! This morning, Fosca, this
-morning I was at work upon my melody, and now it is developing itself
-in the air! Are we not in a state of grace?"
-
-A spirit of life seemed indeed running throughout the solitude; a
-vehement inspiration filled the silence with emotion. La Foscarina gave
-up her whole soul to it, as a leaf yields itself to the whirlwind,
-ravished to the very summit of love and faith.
-
-But a feverish impatience to act, to work, to accomplish seized the
-young man. His capacity for work seemed multiplied. He thought of the
-plenitude of the hours to come; he saw his work in concrete form--the
-pages, the scores, the variety of needs, the richness of material
-adaptable to rhythm.
-
-"In a week, Fosca, if grace assists me, my Prelude will be finished,
-and I should like to try it immediately with an orchestra. Perhaps I
-shall go to Rome to do this. Antimo della Bella is even more impatient
-than I; I receive a letter from him almost every day. I believe that
-my presence in Rome is necessary for a few days in order to prevent
-certain errors that may arise in the building of the theater. Antimo
-writes about the possibility of tearing down the old stone stairs
-leading from the Corsini Garden to the Janiculum. The street that will
-lead to the theater, after one passes the Arch of Septimius, will
-continue beside the Palazzo Corsini, cross the garden, and extend
-to the foot of the hill. The hill is green and mossy, covered with
-cypress, laurel, and flags. The Paulina fountain rises at the left.
-A flight of stone steps leads to a terrace from which open two paths
-bordered by Apollo-like laurels, and worthy of leading the people
-toward Poetry. Can anyone imagine a nobler entrance? Centuries have
-wrapped it in mystery; no sound is heard but the song of birds, the
-tinkling of fountains, the whisper of the forest. And I believe
-that poets and innocents can even hear there the fluttering of the
-Hamadryads and the breath of Pan!"
-
-The ugly shores, crumbling stones, decaying roots, traces of ruined
-buildings, the odor of dissolution, the funereal cypresses, the black
-crosses, in vain recalled to him the words the statues beside the
-Brenta had spoken with their marble lips. Only the great song of
-victory and liberty, stronger than all other signs, now touched the
-heart of him who was to create with joy. "On! on! Higher! ever higher!"
-
-And the heart of Perdita, purified from all cowardice, ready for any
-test, betrothed itself once more to Life! As in that distant hour of
-the delirious night, she repeated: "Let me serve! Let me serve!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- THE WORLD'S BEREAVEMENT
-
-
-The gondola entered a canal enclosed between two green shores, which
-reached the line of vision so precisely that the numerous reeds were
-perceptible, the newer ones discernible by their paler tint.
-
-From the fulness of her soul, and the abundance of her nature, La
-Foscarina sought everywhere for living things to love; her glance
-became child-like once more, and all things were reflected in it as in
-the peaceful water, and some seemed to reappear from the distant past,
-like apparitions.
-
-When the gondola touched the shore, she was surprised at having arrived.
-
-"Do you wish to land, or do you prefer to go back?" asked Stelio,
-coming out of his reverie.
-
-For a moment she hesitated, because her hand lay in his, and to move
-would have meant a lessening of sweetness.
-
-"Yes," at last she said, with a smile. "Let us walk on this grass a
-little while."
-
-They landed on the Island of San Francesco. A few slender young cypress
-shrubs greeted them timidly. Not a human face was to be seen. The
-invisible myriad filled the desert with their canticle of praise. The
-mists rose in clouds near the sunset hour.
-
-"How many times we have walked together on the grass, have we not,
-Stelio?"
-
-"But now comes the steep rock," he replied.
-
-"Let the rock come, no matter how steep and rough it may be," said La
-Foscarina.
-
-Stelio was surprised at the unusual gayety in his companion's voice. He
-looked at her, and saw a sort of intoxicated joy deep in her beautiful
-eyes.
-
-"Why do we feel so joyous and free on this lonely island?"
-
-"And do you know the reason why?"
-
-"To others, this is a melancholy pilgrimage. Most persons, when they
-come to this place, leave it with the taste of death on their lips."
-
-"But we are in a state of grace," said La Foscarina.
-
-"The more we hope, the more we live," was the reply.
-
-"And the more we love, the more we hope."
-
-The rhythm of the aerial song continued, drawing from them their ideal
-essences.
-
-"How beautiful you are!" said Stelio.
-
-A sudden flush flowed over that impassioned face. She was silent, but
-her breath came quick, and she half-closed her eyes.
-
-"A warm current of air is passing," she said in a half whisper. "Did
-you not feel on the water an occasional breath of warmer air?"
-
-She drew deep breaths.
-
-"There is an odor like that of new-mown hay. Don't you detect it?"
-
-"That is the odor that comes from the banks of seaweed that are
-beginning to be uncovered."
-
-"See how beautiful the country is!"
-
-"That is Le Vignole. Down there is the Lido. And over there is the
-Island of Sant' Erasmo."
-
-The sun had now thrown aside its veil and was showering gold upon the
-estuary. The damp banks emerging from the fog suggested the opening of
-flowers. The shadows of the slender cypresses began to grow longer and
-of a deeper blue.
-
-"I am certain," said La Foscarina, "that almond trees are in blossom
-somewhere near. Let us go on the dyke."
-
-She shook her head, tossing back her hair with one of those instinctive
-movements that seemed to break a bond or to free her of some fetter.
-
-"Wait!"
-
-And quickly withdrawing from her hat two large pins that held it in
-place, she uncovered her head. She turned back to the landing and
-tossed the sparkling hat into the gondola; then she rejoined her
-friend, running her fingers lightly through the waves of her hair,
-through which the air passed, while the sun shone on it warmly. She
-seemed to feel relieved, as if she breathed more freely.
-
-"Did the wings hurt?" Stelio asked with a laugh.
-
-And he regarded the ripples, roughened not by the comb but by the wind.
-
-"Yes, the least weight annoys me. If I should not appear eccentric,
-I should always go without a hat. But when I see the trees I cannot
-resist my impulses. My hair remembers that it was born wild and free,
-and it wishes to breathe in its natural way--in the desert, at least."
-
-Frank and gay in her manner, she glided over the grass with her
-graceful, swaying movement. And Stelio recalled the day when, in the
-Gradenigo garden, she had appeared to his eyes like the beautiful tawny
-greyhound.
-
-"Oh, here comes a Capuchin!"
-
-The friar-guardian approached them, and greeted them with affability.
-He offered to conduct Stelio within the walls of the monastery, but
-said that the rules forbade the admission of his companion.
-
-"Shall I go in?" said Stelio, with a look at La Foscarina, who was
-smiling.
-
-"Yes, go."
-
-"But you will be all alone."
-
-"Never mind; I will stay here alone."
-
-"I will bring you a bit from the sacred pine."
-
-He followed the friar under the portico with a raftered roof, whence
-hung the empty swallows' nests. Before he crossed the threshold, he
-turned once more to wave his hand at his friend. Then the door closed
-after him.
-
- O BEATA SOLITUDO!
- O SOLA BEATITUDO!
-
-Then, as a change in the stops of an organ changes its whole tone, the
-woman's thoughts were suddenly transfigured. The horror of absence,
-to her the worst of all evils, bore down upon her loving soul. Her
-beloved was no longer there; she no longer heard his voice, felt his
-breath, touched his firm and gentle hand. She no longer saw him live;
-she could no longer realize that the air, the lights and shadows, all
-the life of the world, harmonized itself with his life!--Suppose that
-door never should open again--that he never should return to me!--No,
-that could not be. He would surely cross that threshold again in a few
-minutes, and once more she would receive him into her eyes and into her
-very soul. But alas! in a few days, would he not thus disappear again,
-as he had disappeared now? And first the field, then the mountain,
-then other fields and mountains and rivers, then the strait and the
-ocean, the infinite space that neither tears nor cries can cross, would
-they not come between her and that brow, those eyes, those lips? The
-image of the far-off brutal city black with coal and bristling with
-arms, filled the peaceful island; the crash of hammers, the grinding
-of wheels, the puffing of engines, the immense groaning of iron,
-drowned the melody of the springtime. And with each of these simple
-things--with the grass, the sands, the brooks, the seaweed, that soft
-feather floating downward, perhaps from the breast of a songbird--was
-contrasted the vision of streets overflowing with the human torrent,
-houses with thousands of deformed eyes, full of fevers that are enemies
-to sleep, theaters filled with the restlessness or the stupor of men
-who yield one hour to relaxation from the ferocious battle for lucre.
-And still, as in a vision, she saw again her own face and her name
-on walls contaminated by the leprosy of posters, on boards carried
-by stupid bearers, on gigantic bridges of factories, on the doors of
-public vehicles, here, there, and everywhere.
-
-"Look! Look at this! A branch of flowering almond! There is an almond
-tree in bloom in the monastery garden, in the second cloister, near the
-sacred pine! And you could detect the odor!"
-
-Stelio ran toward her, joyous as a child, followed by the Capuchin, who
-bore a bouquet of fragrant thyme.
-
-"Look! Take it. See what a wonderful thing it is!"
-
-She took the branch, trembling, and her eyes were bright with tears.
-
-"And you knew it was blooming!" said Stelio.
-
-He perceived the glittering silvery drops in her eyes, which made them
-look like the petals of a flower. And at that instant, of all her
-adored person, he loved most blindly the delicate lines that went from
-the corners of her eyes to her temples, the tiny veins that made her
-eyelids look like violets, the sweet curve of her cheek, the tapering
-chin, and all that never would bloom again, all the shadows of that
-impassioned face.
-
-"Ah, Father," said she, with a bright glance, repressing her sadness,
-"will not Christ's Poor Man weep again in heaven for this broken
-branch?"
-
-The friar smiled with playful indulgence.
-
-"When this good gentleman saw our tree," he replied, "he gave me no
-time to speak, but had the branch in his hand in a moment, and I could
-only say Amen. But the almond tree is rich."
-
-He was placid and affable, with a crown of hair still nearly black,
-with a refined, olive-skinned face, and great tawny eyes, as clear as a
-topaz.
-
-"Here is some savory thyme," he added, offering the herbs to La
-Foscarina.
-
-They could hear a choir of youthful voices singing a Response.
-
-"Those are our novices; we have fifteen with us."
-
-He accompanied the visitors to the meadow behind the convent. Standing
-on a bank, at the foot of a blasted cypress, the good monk pointed to
-the fertile isles, praised their abundance, mentioned their varieties
-of fruit, lauded the more delightful according to the seasons, and
-directed their attention toward the boats sailing toward the Rialto
-with their new harvest.
-
-"Praise to Thee, O Lord, for our Mother Earth!" said the woman with the
-flowering branch.
-
-The Franciscan was susceptible to the beauty of that feminine voice,
-and was silent.
-
-Lofty cypresses encircled the pious field; four of them showed the
-marks of lightning strokes. Their tops were motionless, and were the
-only sharp outlines in the level of the meadows, and waters that
-blended with the horizon. Not the slightest breeze now stirred the
-infinite mirror. A profound enchantment like an ecstasy filled the
-lovely place with rapture. The melody of the winged creatures still
-continued to float from invisible regions, but it, too, seemed to begin
-to flag and soften in this silent sanctuary.
-
-"At this hour, on the hills of Umbria," said he that had despoiled the
-flowering almond of the cloister, "every olive-tree has at its base,
-like a covering that is shed, a heap of its cut branches; and the tree
-seems more beautiful because the heap of branches hides its rugged
-roots. Saint Francis passes in the air, and with his finger he heals
-the pain of the wounds made by the pruning-knife."
-
-The Capuchin made the sign of the cross, and took his leave.
-
-"Praise be to Jesus Christ!"
-
-The visitors watched him as he moved away under the deep shadows cast
-by the cypresses.
-
-"He has found peace," said La Foscarina. "Does it not seem so to you,
-Stelio? There is great peace in his face and his voice. Look at his
-gait, too."
-
-Alternately a ray of light and a bar of shadow fell across his tonsure
-and his tunic.
-
-"He gave me a piece of the sacred pine," said Stelio. "I will send it
-to Sofia, who is devoted to the seraphic saint. Here it is. It has no
-resinous odor now. Smell it!"
-
-For Sofia's sake she kissed the relic. The lips of the good sister
-would touch the spot where she had pressed her own.
-
-"Yes--send it."
-
-Silently they strolled along, their heads bent, in the footsteps of the
-man of peace, approaching the landing between the rows of cypress trees.
-
-"Do you not sometimes wish to see her again?" asked La Foscarina, with
-a touch of shyness.
-
-"Yes, very much," was Stelio's soft-spoken answer.
-
-"And your mother?"
-
-"Yes, my heart yearns for her--for that mother who looks for me each
-day."
-
-"And would you not like to go back there?"
-
-"Yes, I shall return, perhaps."
-
-"When?"
-
-"I do not know yet. But I do wish to see once more my mother and Sofia.
-I long to see them very much, Foscarina."
-
-"And why do you not go to them, then? What holds you here?"
-
-He took the hand that hung idly at her side, and they continued to walk
-thus. As the oblique rays of the sun lighted the right cheek of each,
-they saw their united shadows preceding them on the grass.
-
-"When you were speaking of the hills of Umbria just now," said La
-Foscarina, "perhaps you were thinking of the hills of your own part of
-the country. That figure of the pruned olive tree was not new to me.
-I remember you speaking to me once before of the pruning of trees. In
-no other form of his labor can the farmer gain a deeper sense of the
-mute life that is in a tree. When he stands before a pear, an apple,
-or a peach tree with the pruning-knife and shears that may increase
-their fertility and strength, but which could nevertheless as easily
-cause their death, the spirit of divination surges within him, from
-the wisdom he has acquired from his long communings with the earth and
-the sky. The tree is at its most delicate moment, when its senses are
-awakened, and the sap is flowing to the buds that swell and swell, and
-are just ready to open. And man, with his pitiless knife, must regulate
-the mysterious movement of the sap. The tree is there intact, ignorant
-of Hesiod and of Virgil, in labor with its flowering and its fruit; and
-every branch in the air is as full of life as is the arm of the man
-that wields the knife. Which is the branch that must be cut off? Will
-the sap heal the cut? You told me about your orchard once--I remember
-it. You said that all the cuts should be turned toward the north, so
-then the sun should not see them."
-
-She spoke as she had spoken in that far-off evening in November, when
-the young man had arrived at her house, breathless from the tempest of
-wind, after he had borne the hero in his arms.
-
-He smiled, and let himself be led by that dear hand. He inhaled
-the fragrance of that flowery branch in which was a suggestion of
-bitterness.
-
-"It is true," he said. "And Laimo would prepare the ointment of Saint
-Fiacre in the mortar, and Sofia would bring him the strong linen to
-bandage the larger wounds, after they had been cleansed."
-
-In fancy he could see the kneeling peasant, pounding cow-dung, clay,
-and barley-husks in a stone mortar, according to an ancient recipe.
-
-"In ten days," he continued, "the whole hill, seen from the seas, will
-be like a great pink cloud. Sofia wrote to remind me of it. Has she
-ever reappeared to you?"
-
-"She is with us now."
-
-"She is now standing at the window, looking out at the purpling sea;
-and our mother, leaning on the window-ledge with her, says to her: 'Who
-knows whether Stelio may not be on that sail boat which I see waiting
-at the mouth of the river for the wind? He promised me he would return
-unexpectedly by sea, in a small boat.'--And then her heart aches."
-
-"Ah, why do you disappoint her?"
-
-"Yes, Fosca, you are right. But I can live far-away from her for months
-and months, yet feel that my life is full. Then--an hour comes when
-nothing in the world appears to me so sweet as her dear eyes and there
-is a part of myself that remains inconsolable. I have heard the sailors
-of the Tyrrhenean Sea call the Adriatic the Gulf of Venice. To-night
-I remember that my house is on the Gulf, and that seems to bring it
-nearer to me."
-
-They had reached the gondola once more, but turned to look back at the
-isle of prayer, where grew the tall cypresses with their imploring arms.
-
-"Over yonder is the canal of the Tre Porti that leads to the open sea,"
-said the homesick one, fancying that he could see himself standing on
-the deck of the little brig, in sight of his tamarisks and myrtles.
-
-They reëmbarked, and floated away, silent for a long time. The aerial
-melody still fell softly on the archipelago.
-
-"Now that the plan of your work is finished," said La Foscarina,
-beginning again her gentle persuasion, though her heart trembled in her
-breast, "you will need peace and quiet for your labor upon it. Have
-you not always worked best at your home? In no other place will you be
-able to soothe the restless anxiety that possesses you. I know it well."
-
-"That is true," he replied. "When the yearning for glory seizes us,
-we believe that the conquest of art must be like the siege of a
-fortification, and that trumpets and shouts accompany the courageous
-assault; while in reality the only work that is of real value is that
-which has been developed in austere silence--work performed with slow,
-indomitable perseverance, in hard, pure solitude. Nothing is of any
-value save the complete abandonment of soul and body to the Idea which
-we desire to establish among men as a permanent and dominating force."
-
-"Ah, you know it, too!"
-
-The woman's eyes were filled with tears again, at the sound of those
-inexorable words, in which was expressed the depth of virile passion,
-the heroic necessity of mental domination, the firm determination to
-surpass himself and to force his destiny without flinching.
-
-"Yes, you know it well!"
-
-And she was thrilled, as one that beholds a noble spectacle; and,
-contemplating that embodied force of will, all else appeared vain to
-her. The tears she had felt in her eyes when he had brought her the
-flowering branch now seemed mean and weakly effeminate in comparison
-with those that in this moment welled up and were alone worthy to be
-kissed away by her friend.
-
-"Ah, well, then--go back to your sea, to your own countryside, to your
-own home. Light your lamp once more with the oil of your own olives."
-
-Stelio's lips were closely compressed, and a deep frown wrinkled his
-brow.
-
-"The dear sister will come to your side again to lay a blade of grass
-on the difficult page."
-
-He bent his brow, which was clouded with a thought.
-
-"You will rest in talking with Sofia by the window; and perhaps you
-will see again the flocks of sheep on their way from the plain to the
-mountains."
-
-The sunlight was approaching the gigantic acropolis of the Dolomites.
-The phalanx of clouds was disordered as if in battle, pierced by
-innumerable darts of light, and steeped in a marvelous blood-like
-crimson.
-
-Slowly, after a long silence, Stelio spoke:
-
-"And if she should ask me about the fate of the virgin who reads the
-lament of Antigone?"
-
-La Foscarina started.
-
-"And suppose she asks me about the love of the brother who searches
-through the tombs?"
-
-The woman felt a dread of this phantom.
-
-"And suppose the page on which she lays the blade of grass were the
-page wherein that trembling soul tells of its secret and terrible
-battle against the horrible evil?"
-
-In her sudden terror, the woman could find no words. Both relapsed into
-silence, looking long at the sharp peaks of the distant mountains,
-which glowed as if just emerging from primordial fire. The spectacle
-of this eternally desolate grandeur awakened in them a sense of
-mysterious fatality and a certain confused terror which they could
-neither conquer nor comprehend.
-
-"And you?" said Stelio suddenly, after a long silence.
-
-La Foscarina made no reply.
-
-The bells of San Marco sounded the signal for the Angelus, and their
-tremendous clamor swelled in ever-widening waves over the still crimson
-lagoon which they were leaving to the memories of shadows and death.
-From San Giorgio Maggiore and San Giorgio dei Greci, from San Giorgio
-degli Schiavoni and San Giovanni in Bragora, from San Moisé, from the
-Salute, the Redentore, and, from one place to another, throughout the
-whole domain of the Evangelists, even to the distant towers of the
-Madonna dell' Orto, of San Giobbe and Sant' Andrea, the bronze voices
-answered, mingling in one great chorus floating over the silent stones
-and waters, a veritable dome of sound, invisible, yet the vibrations of
-which seemed to communicate with the scintillation of the first stars.
-And the reverberation above the heads of the two in the gondola was so
-great that they seemed to feel it in the roots of their hair and in the
-cool shiver of their flesh.
-
-"Oh, is that you, Daniele?"
-
-Stelio had recognized at the door of his own house, on the Fondamenta
-Samedo, the figure of Daniele Glauro.
-
-"Ah, Stelio, I have been waiting for you!" cried Daniele breathlessly,
-striving to make himself heard above the pealing of bells. "Richard
-Wagner is dead!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- THE LAST FAREWELL
-
-
-All the world seemed to have diminished in value.
-
-The nomad woman had armed herself anew with courage, and planned the
-route of her next professional tour. From the thought of the hero
-lying in his coffin, a lofty inspiration came to all noble hearts. La
-Foscarina knew how to receive it and to convert it to the thoughts and
-actions of daily life.
-
-It happened that her beloved surprised her at the time she was packing
-her familiar books, the little cherished treasures from which she never
-parted--things that for her possessed the power of imparting dreams or
-consolation.
-
-"What are you doing?" Stelio asked.
-
-"I am making ready to leave the country."
-
-She saw a change pass over his face, but she did not waver.
-
-"And where are you going?"
-
-"A long distance from here--I shall cross the Atlantic."
-
-Stelio became slightly paler. But suddenly he was seized with doubt; he
-thought she was not speaking the truth; that she wished only to prove
-him; that her decision was not absolutely fixed, and that she expected
-to be persuaded to remain. The unlooked-for disillusion on the banks of
-Murano had left its mark on his heart.
-
-"Have you really decided on this, then, so suddenly?"
-
-She was simple, sure of herself, and prompt in her reply.
-
-"My decision is not exactly sudden. My idleness has lasted too long,
-and I have the responsibility of all my company on my shoulders. While
-I am waiting for the Theater of Apollo to be opened, and for _The
-Victory of Man_ to be finished, I shall go once more to bid farewell
-to the Barbarians. I must work for your beautiful enterprise. We
-shall need a great deal of gold to restore the treasures of Mycenæ.
-And all that is connected with your work must appear with unrivaled
-magnificence. I do not wish Cassandra's mask to be of some base metal.
-But, above all, I wish to satisfy your desire that for the first three
-days the populace shall have free admission to the theater, and after
-that on one day of every week. My faith aids me to leave you. Time
-flies. It is necessary that each person should be in his own place,
-ready and full of strength, when the great day comes. I shall not fail
-you. I hope that you will be satisfied with your friend. I am going
-away to work, and certainly the task will be more difficult than I ever
-have found it before. But you, my poor boy, what a burden you have to
-bear! What an effort we demand from you! What great things we expect
-from you! Ah, you know it!"
-
-She had begun courageously, in a tone that was almost blithe, trying
-to seem what above all she must be--a good and faithful instrument at
-the service of a powerful genius, a strong and willing companion. But
-a wave of repressed emotion would rise in her throat and stop her
-speech. Her pauses grew longer, and her hand wandered uncertainly among
-her books and treasures.
-
-"May everything be ever propitious to your work! That is the only thing
-that really matters--all else is nothing. Let us lift our hearts!"
-
-She shook her head, with its two wild wings, and held out both hands
-to her beloved. He, pale and grave, clasped them close. In her dear
-eyes, that were like sparkling springs of water, he saw a flash of the
-same beauty that had dazzled him one evening in the room where the fire
-had roared, and he had listened to the development of the two great
-melodies.
-
-"I love you and I have faith in you," he said; "I will not fail you and
-you will not fail me. Something springs from us that shall be stronger
-than life itself."
-
-"A great melancholy," she answered.
-
-Before her, on a table, lay the familiar book, with pages turned
-down and margins full of scribbled notes; here and there a petal, a
-flower, a blade of grass lay between the leaves--signs of the sorrow
-that had asked and obtained from them the consolation of relief or of
-forgetfulness. Before her were strewn all the little cherished objects
-dear to her, strange, varied; nearly all were things of no value: a
-doll's foot, a silver heart, an ivory compass, a watch without a dial,
-a small iron lantern, a single earring, a flint, a key, a seal, and
-other trifles; but all were consecrated by some memory, animated by
-some superstitious belief, touched by the finger of love or of death,
-relics that could speak only to one of war and of truce, of hope
-and of sadness. Among these objects were figures to which artists
-had entrusted their secret confession, signs and enigmas, profound
-allegories, hiding truths that, like the sun, could not be gazed at by
-mortal eyes.
-
-The young man put his arm around his friend's waist, and silently
-they went to the window. They saw the far-distant sky, the trees, the
-towers, the end of the lagoon over which Twilight was bending her face,
-while the Euganean hills were as quiet and blue as if they were the
-wings of earth folded in the peacefulness of eventide.
-
-They turned toward each other, looking into the depths of each other's
-eyes. Then they embraced, as if to seal a silent compact.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Yes, all the world seemed to have diminished in value.
-
-Stelio Effrena had asked of the widow of Richard Wagner that the two
-young Italian men that had carried the unconscious hero from the vessel
-to the shore that night in November, with four of their friends,
-might have granted to them the honor of bearing the coffin from the
-death-chamber to the boat and from the boat to the hearse. This request
-was granted.
-
-It was the sixteenth of February, at one o'clock in the afternoon.
-Stelio Effrena, Daniele Glauro, Francesco de Lizo, Baldassare Stampa,
-Fabio Molza, and Antimo della Bella waited in the hall of the palace.
-The latter had come from Rome, bringing with him the artisans engaged
-in the building of the Theater of Apollo, that they might bear at the
-funeral ceremony bunches of laurel gathered on the Janiculum.
-
-They waited in silence, without even looking at one another, each
-overcome by the throbbing of his own heart. Nothing was heard save a
-faint dropping of water on the steps before the great door, where, on
-the candelabra at the doorposts appeared the two words: DOMUS PACIS.
-
-The boatman, who had been dear to the hero, came to call them. In that
-rough yet faithful face, the eyes showed that the lids were burned by
-weeping.
-
-Stelio Effrena advanced first, followed by his companions. After
-ascending the stairs, they entered a low-studded, darkened room, filled
-with the melancholy odor of flowers and fluids. They paused there a few
-minutes. A door opened. They passed through the doorway one by one into
-the next room. Each turned pale as he entered.
-
-The body was there, enclosed in its crystal coffin, and beside it stood
-the woman with the face of snowy pallor. The second coffin, of polished
-metal, stood shining on the floor.
-
-The six bearers ranged themselves about the coffin, awaiting a sign.
-The silence was profound, and no one moved; but an impetuous sadness
-shook each soul like a tempest of wind.
-
-Each gazed on the elect of Life and of Death. An infinite smile
-illumined the face of the hero lying there--infinite and distant as the
-glint of a glacier, as the sparkle of the sea, as the halo of the star.
-Their eyes could not bear to look long at it, but their hearts, with
-an awe-struck fear that made them religious, felt as if they had the
-revelation of a divine secret.
-
-The woman with the snow-white face made a slight movement, yet
-preserved the same attitude, rigid as a statue.
-
-Then the six friends approached the body, extended their arms, summoned
-up their strength. Stelio Effrena took his place at the head and
-Daniele Glauro took his at the feet, as on that day in November. The
-young men lifted their burden with one movement, at a low-spoken word
-from the leader. The eyes of each were dazzled, as if a sudden ray of
-sunlight had pierced the crystal. Baldassare Stampa broke into sobs.
-The same knot was in each throat. The coffin swayed, then it was
-lowered into its metal covering, which enveloped it like a suit of
-armor.
-
-The six friends remained overcome with grief. They hesitated to put the
-cover in its place, fascinated by that infinite smile. Stelio Effrena
-heard a light rustling, and looked up. He saw the white face bending
-over the body, a superhuman apparition of love and grief. That instant
-was like eternity. The woman disappeared.
-
-When the coffin was closed, they lifted their burden a second
-time--heavier now. Out of the room and down the stairs they bore
-it slowly. Rapt in a kind of sublime anguish, they could see their
-fraternal faces reflected in the polished metal.
-
-The funeral barge awaited them at the entrance. The pall was laid
-over the coffin. The six friends waited, with heads uncovered, for the
-family to descend. They came, all together. The widow passed them,
-veiled. But the splendor of her face would remain in their memories
-forever.
-
-The procession was short; the funeral barge went first, followed by the
-widow with her relatives; then came the young men. The sky was cloudy
-above the broad road of stone and water. The deep silence was worthy of
-Him who transformed the forces of the universe for man's worship into
-infinite song.
-
-A flock of doves, flying from the marbles of the Scalsi, winged their
-way with a flash of plumage above the bier and across the canal,
-circling the cupola of San Simeone.
-
-At the quay a silent gathering of faithful friends was waiting. The
-large wreaths perfumed the air. The water rippled softly under the
-prows of the boats. The six companions lifted the coffin from the boat
-and bore it on their shoulders to the railway and placed it in the
-proper compartment. No one spoke.
-
-Then the two artisans from Rome came forward, with the clusters of
-laurel gathered on the Janiculum. They were tall, powerful men,
-chosen among the strongest and finest, and seemed cast in the mold
-of the ancient Roman race. They were calm and serious, with all the
-wild freedom of the Agro in their eyes. Their bold outlines, narrow
-foreheads, short curling hair, solid jaws and bull-necks, recalled
-the profiles of ancient consuls. Their bearing, free from any servile
-obsequiousness, showed them to be worthy of their function.
-
-The six young men, rendered equal in their fervor, took the branches of
-laurel and strewed them over the hero's coffin.
-
-Noble were those Latin laurels, cut on the hill where, in a time long
-past, the eagles descended bearing prophecies; where, in more recent
-though still fabulous times, a river of blood has been shed for the
-beauty of Italy by the legions of the Liberator. The branches were
-straight, dark, and strong; the leaves were firm, deeply veined, with
-sharp edges, green as the bronze of fountains, rich with triumphal
-aroma.
-
-And they journeyed toward the Bavarian hill still sleeping beneath its
-frost and ice, while their trunks were already budding anew in the
-light of Rome, to the murmur of invisible waters.
-
- _Settignano di Desiderio:
- February 13, 1900._
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 60601 ***
diff --git a/old/60601-h/60601-h.htm b/old/60601-h/60601-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 410be53..0000000
--- a/old/60601-h/60601-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,12503 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
- <title>
- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Flame, by Gabrielle D'Annunzio.
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css">
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
- h1,h2 {
- text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
- clear: both;
-}
-
-h2 {font-weight: normal;}
-h1 {margin-top: 4em; }
-h2 {margin-top: 4em; }
-
-.half-title
-{
- margin-top: 6em;
- text-align: center;
- font-size: 140%;
- margin-bottom: 6em;
-}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
-}
-
-.top1 {margin-top: 2em;}
-.p2 {margin-top: 2em; font-size: 130%; margin-bottom: 2em; }
-.p4 {margin-top: 4em; font-size: 120%; }
-.p6 {margin-top: 6em;}
-
-.center1 {font-size: 140%; text-align: center;}
-
- div.chapter {page-break-before: always; }
-
-
-hr.tb {width: 45%; margin-left: 27.5%; margin-right: 27.5%; }
-
-div.chapter {page-break-before: always; }
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
-}
-
-.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
- visibility: hidden;
- position: absolute;
- left: 92%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
-} /* page numbers */
-
-.blockquot {
- margin-left: 20%;
- margin-top: 2em;
-}
-
-
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.right {text-align: right;}
-
-
-.caption {font-weight: normal; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em; }
-
-/* Images */
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;
-}
-
-.box {
- border: 2px solid; margin: 5%; font-size: 1.1em;
- margin-top: 4em;
- width: 30%;
- padding: 2%;
- margin-right: 15%;
- margin-left: 30%;
-}
-
-@media handheld {
- .box {margin: 0; width: auto; font-size: 0.95em; }
-}
-
-/* Poetry */
-
-.poetry-container {text-align: center;}
-
-.poetry {display: inline-block; text-align: left;
- font-size: 0.85em;
- margin-top: 1em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;}
-
-.verse
- {padding-left: 4em; text-indent: -4em; }
-
-.ileft2 {text-indent: -3em; }
-
-
-
-.indent {padding-left: 4em; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;}
-
-.indentp {padding-left: 30%; }
-.indentq {padding-left: 15%; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 2em;}
-.indent1 {padding-left: 1em; }
-
-@media handheld {
-
-.poetry {
- display: block;
- text-align: left;
- margin-left: 2.5em;}
-}
-
-
-/* Transcriber's notes */
-.tnote
- {border: dashed 1px; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;
- padding-bottom: .5em; padding-top: .5em; padding-left: .5em;
- padding-right: .5em;}
-
- </style>
- </head>
-<body>
-<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 60601 ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 536px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="536" height="800" alt="cover" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="tnote">
-
-<p class="p2 center">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>A number of words in this book have both hyphenated and
-non-hyphenated variants. For the words with both variants present the
-one more used has been kept.</p>
-
-<p>Obvious punctuation and other printing errors have been
-corrected.</p>
-
-<p>The book cover was modified by the Transcriber and has
-been put in the public domain.</p>
-
-<p>The Transcriber would like to point out to what are considered a
-couple of translation inaccuracies from the original Italian language
-version.</p>
-
-<p>In page <a href="#id59">59</a> the text reads:</p>
-
-<p>"I know of no marsh capable of provoking in human pulses a fever more
-violent that that which at times steals up to us from the shadows of a
-silent canal."</p>
-
-<p>While in the Italian edition (Publisher: Milano Fratelli Treves; year:
-1900), the text reads:</p>
-
-<p>"Io non conosco palude capace di provocare in polsi umani una febbre
-più violenta di quella che sentimmo talvolta venire verso di noi
-all'improvviso dall'ombra di un canale taciturno."</p>
-
-<p>The Transcriber thinks a more adequate translation would be:</p>
-
-<p>"I know of no marsh capable of causing a fever in human pulses more
-violent than the one we sometimes hear coming towards us suddenly from
-the shadow of a taciturn channel."</p>
-
-<p>In page <a href="#id195">195</a> the text reads:</p>
-
-<p>"He had astonished even himself by that sudden apparition, that
-unexpected discovery which illumined the shadows of his mind, because
-exterior reality, and almost tangible."</p>
-
-<p>While in the Italian edition the text reads:</p>
-
-<p>"Si stupiva egli medessimo di quell'apparizione subitanea, di quella
-improvvisa scoperta che, illuminandosi nell buio del suo spirito si
-esternava e quasi diveniva tangibile."</p>
-
-<p>The Transcriber thinks a more adequate translation would be:</p>
-
-<p>"He was surprised himself by that sudden appearance, of that sudden
-discovery that, illuminating itself in the darkness of his spirit, it
-became external and almost became tangible."</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="tb" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="box">
-<p class="p2 center">THE LITERATURE OF ITALY</p>
-
-<p>consists of sixteen volumes, of which
-this one forms a part. For full particulars
-of the edition see the Official
-Certificate bound in the volume entitled</p>
-
-<p class="center" style="margin-top: 1em; ">"A HISTORY OF ITALIAN<br />
-LITERATURE."</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 436px;" id="estatua">
-<img src="images/ilo1.jpg" width="436" height="700" alt="statue" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 376px;">
-<img src="images/ilo2.jpg" width="376" height="600" alt="ilobox" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="indentp">
-<p>Literature<br />
-of Italy<br />
-1265 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Edited by Rossiter Johnson and<br />
-Dora Knowlton Ranous</p>
-
-<p>With a General Introduction by William<br />
-Michael Rossetti and Special Introductions<br />
-by James, Cardinal Gibbons,<br />
-Charles Eliot Norton, S. G. W. Benjamin,<br />
-William S, Walsh, Maurice<br />
-Francis Egan, and others<br />
-New translations, and former renderings<br />
-compared and revised</p>
-
-<p>Translators: James C. Brogan, Lord Charlemont,<br />
-Geoffrey Chaucer, Hartley Coleridge,<br />
-Florence Kendrick Cooper, Lady Dacre,<br />
-Theodore Dwight, Edward Fairfax, Ugo<br />
-Foscolo, G. A. Greene, Sir Thomas Hoby,<br />
-William Dean Howells, Luigi Monti, Evangeline<br />
-M. O'Connor, Thomas Okey, Dora<br />
-Knowlton Ranous, Thomas Roscoe, William<br />
-Stewart Rose, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William<br />
-Michael Rossetti, John Addington<br />
-Symonds, William S. Walsh, William<br />
-Wordsworth, Sir Thomas Wyatt</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 460px;" id="frontis">
-<img src="images/ilo3.jpg" width="460" height="700" alt="ilofronti" />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1>THE FLAME</h1>
-
-
-<p class="center">(<em>IL FUOCO</em>)</p>
-
-<p class="center" style="margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em; "><big>BY</big></p>
-
-<p class="center1">GABRIELE D'ANNUNZIO</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">TRANSLATED BY DORA KNOWLTON RANOUS</p>
-
-<p class="right" style="margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em; padding-right: 40%;" >
-.... <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">fa come natura face in foco</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="right" style="padding-right: 35%;" >&mdash;<em>DANTE</em></p>
-
-<p class="p6 center">THE NATIONAL ALUMNI</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">C<small>OPYRIGHT</small>, 1907, <small>BY</small><br />
-T<small>HE</small> N<small>ATIONAL</small> A<small>LUMNI</small></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="p4 center">CONTENTS</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
-<td align="right">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">INTRODUCTION</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_ix">ix</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="center">BOOK I<br />
-THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER I&mdash;The Bells of San Marco</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER II&mdash;The Face of Truth</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_30">30</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER III&mdash;The Nuptials of Autumn and Venice</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_40">40</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER IV&mdash;The Spirit of Melody</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_67">67</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER V&mdash;The Epiphany of the Flame</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_77">77</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VI&mdash;The Poet's Dream</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_95">95</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VII&mdash;The Promise</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_123">123</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VIII&mdash;"To Create with Joy!"</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_134">134</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="center">BOOK II<br />
-THE EMPIRE OF SILENCE.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER I&mdash;"In Time!"</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_147">147</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER II&mdash;After the Storm</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_156">156</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER III&mdash;A Fallen Giant</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_173">173</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER IV&mdash;The Master's Vision</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_181">181</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER V&mdash;Sofia</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_201">201</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VI&mdash;A Brother to Orpheus</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_209">209</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VII&mdash;Only One Condition</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_221">221</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VIII&mdash;Illusions</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_231">231</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER IX&mdash;The Labyrinth</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_239">239</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER X&mdash;The Power of the Flame</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_262">262</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER XI&mdash;Reminiscence</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_270">270</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER XII&mdash;Cassandra's Reincarnation</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_291">291</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER XIII&mdash;The Story of the Archorgan</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_304">304</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER XIV&mdash;The World's Bereavement</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_319">319</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER XV&mdash;The Last Farewell</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_333">333</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p4 center">ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="ilust">
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
-<td align="center">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">"O espousals of Paris, fatal to the beloved!"&mdash;(Page 298)</td>
-
-<td align="right"><a href="#frontis">Frontispiece</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">He gazed deep into her eyes, and saw that she was as pale<br />
-as if her blood had been sapped to nourish the rich<br />
-fruits of the garden</td>
-
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1.5em;">&nbsp;<br />
-&nbsp;<br />
-<a href="#ilop130">130</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">He watched the woman turning and running like a mad<br />
-creature along the dark, delusive paths</td>
-
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1.5em;">&nbsp;<br />
-<a href="#ilop259">259</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>INTRODUCTION</h2>
-
-
-<p>Gabriele D'Annunzio, poet, novelist, and
-dramatist, was born in 1864, on the yacht <em>Irene</em>
-near Pescara in the Abruzzi, his mother being
-the Duchess Maria Galesse of Rome. His education
-was begun in the College of Prato, in Tuscany,
-and finished in the University of Rome. His mind early
-showed signs of extraordinary power and brilliant versatility;
-he studied art and produced very creditable work
-while a mere lad, and at the age of sixteen he published
-his first poem, <cite>Primo Vere</cite>, which attracted flattering attention
-and caused him to be hailed as an infant prodigy.
-In 1880 he went to Rome and became a contributor to
-the <cite>Cronaca Bizantina</cite>, a magazine of art and literature.
-He remained in Rome three years, producing in that time
-<cite>Terra vergine</cite> ("Virgin Soil"), <cite>Canto novo</cite> ("New Song"),
-and <cite>Intermezzo di rime</cite> ("Intervals of Rhyme"), all of
-which were received with admiration and amazement,
-and with not a little criticism for their unconventional
-boldness of expression.</p>
-
-<p>D'Annunzio left Rome in 1884 and returned to his native
-hills, where he wrote <cite>Il libro delle vergine</cite> ("The
-Book of the Virgins") in 1884; <cite>San Pantaleone</cite> (1886),
-and <cite>Isottèo Guttadauro</cite>. Then, abandoning his revolutionary
-and realistic though splendid and intoxicating poetry
-for prose, the young genius next surprised his public
-with a novel, <cite>Giovanni Episcopo</cite>, followed by <cite>Il Piacere</cite>
-("The Child of Pleasure"), in 1889. The former is a
-strong yet repelling story of crude brutalism, told by a
-victim of relentless fate; the latter is a kind of poem in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span>
-prose, in which there is something above mere facility of
-literary touch; he shows the power of the master poet
-or painter to see the world at a glance, and with a dextrous
-hand to draw for eyes less keen that world in all
-its changeful aspects.</p>
-
-<p>His next important novel, <cite>Il trionfo della morte</cite> ("The
-Triumph of Death") was produced in 1896. This brought
-upon him a storm of mingled applause and criticism&mdash;admiration
-for its marvelous beauty of literary expression,
-condemnation of the realistic study of a degenerate whose
-sins lead him to suicide. But, with a proud defiance of
-criticism, with eyes fixed only on his art, he dared after
-this achievement to write the self-revelatory novel that
-is known as his masterpiece&mdash;<cite>Il fuoco</cite> ("The Flame").
-In this great novel, which may fairly be called unique,
-we recognize the personification of a renascence of Latin
-genius. Under the thinnest veil of disguise, the author
-presents his own figure and that of one of the world's
-greatest tragic actresses, revealing the most intimate details
-of their well known friendship. On this picture
-of the most romantic of love-affairs, in Venice, the most
-romantic of cities, he has lavished his finest strokes of
-genius, writing of feminine nature with rare truth and
-skill, and an exquisite intuition as to the workings of
-a woman's mind and the throbbings of her heart.</p>
-
-<p>Besides his poems and novels, D'Annunzio has written
-several plays, the best known being <cite>La Gioconda</cite> ("Joy"),
-<cite>La Gloria</cite> ("Glory"), <cite>La morta città</cite> ("The City of the
-Dead"), and <cite>Francesca da Rimini</cite>. He is unquestionably
-the greatest Italian writer of to-day, and few works of
-Italian fiction appear that do not show something of his
-influence. A European critic of keen discernment says:
-"Read his works, all ye men and women for whom life
-has no secrets and truth has no terror."</p>
-
-<p class="right" style="padding-right: 1em; ">D. K. R.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="half-title">BOOK I<br />
-THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="p4 center"><big>TO TIME AND TO HOPE</big></p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p><em>Without hope, it is impossible to find<br />
-the unhoped-for.</em></p>
-
-<p class="indentq">&mdash;<em>HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS.</em></p>
-
-
-<p><em>He who sings to the god a song of<br />
-hope shall see his wish accomplished.</em></p>
-
-<p class="indentq">&mdash;<em>ÆSCHYLUS OF ELEUSIS.</em></p>
-
-<p><em>Time is the father of miracles.</em></p>
-
-<p class="indentq">&mdash;<em>HARIRI DI BASRA.</em></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I<br />
-<small>THE BELLS OF SAN MARCO</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>"Stelio, does not your heart quail a little,
-for the first time?" inquired La Foscarina,
-with a fleeting smile, as she touched the
-hand of the taciturn friend seated beside
-her. "I see that you are pale and thoughtful. Yet this
-is a beautiful evening for the triumph of a great poet."</p>
-
-<p>With an all-comprehensive glance, she looked around
-at all the beauty of this last twilight of September. In
-the dark wells of her eyes were reflected the circles of
-light made by the oar as it flashed in the water, which
-was illuminated by the glittering angels that shone from
-afar on the campaniles of San Marco and San Giorgio
-Maggiore.</p>
-
-<p>"As always," she went on, in her sweetest tones, "as
-always, everything is in your favor. On such an evening
-as this, what mortal could shut out from his mind the
-dreams that you may choose to evoke by the magic of
-your words? Do you not feel already that the multitude
-is well disposed to receive your revelation?"</p>
-
-<p>Thus, delicately, she flattered her friend; thus she
-pleased herself by exalting him with continual praise.</p>
-
-<p>"It is impossible to imagine a more magnificent and
-unique festival than this, to persuade so disdainful a
-poet as you to come forth from his ivory tower. For
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-you was reserved this rare joy; to communicate for the
-first time with the people in a sovereign place like the
-Hall of the Greater Council, from the platform where
-once the Doge harangued the assembled patricians, with
-the <cite>Paradiso</cite> of Tintoretto for a background, and overhead
-the <cite>Gloria</cite> of Veronese."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena looked long and searchingly into her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish to intoxicate me?" he said, with a
-sudden laugh. "Your words remind me of the soothing
-cup offered to a man on his way to the scaffold. Ah,
-well, my friend, it is true: I own that my heart quails
-a little."</p>
-
-<p>The sound of applause rose from the Traghetto di San
-Gregorio, echoed through the Grand Canal, reverberating
-among the porphyry and serpentine discs ornamenting
-the ancient mansion of the Dario, which now leaned
-over slightly, like a decrepit courtesan loaded with her
-jewels.</p>
-
-<p>The royal barge passed.</p>
-
-<p>"There is the one person among your audience
-whom etiquette demands that you shall crown with some
-of your flowers of oratory," pursued the charming flatterer,
-alluding to the Queen. "I believe that, in one of
-your earlier books, you own to a taste and respect for
-ceremonials. One of your most extraordinary flights of
-fancy is that description of a day of Charles the Second,
-King of Spain."</p>
-
-<p>When the royal barge passed the gondola, the man
-and the woman saluted it. The Queen, recognizing the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-poet, the author of <cite>Persephone</cite>, and the distinguished
-tragic actress, turned to gaze at them with a movement
-of instinctive curiosity. She was blonde and rosy, and
-her face was lighted by her ever-ready smile, as she
-looked out from the cloud of creamy Buranesi laces
-clinging around her shoulders. Beside her sat Andriana
-Duodo, the patroness of Burano, where, on that industrious
-little island, she cultivated flax, and raised the
-most marvelous old-fashioned flowers.</p>
-
-<p>"Does it not seem to you that the smiles of those two
-women are so similar as to be twin-like?" said La Foscarina,
-gazing at the silvery ripples in the wake of the
-barge, wherein the double light seemed to prolong its
-self.</p>
-
-<p>"The Countess has a magnificent and ingenuous soul&mdash;one
-of those rare Venetian spirits that preserve their
-warmth, as their ancient paintings retain their vivid
-color," said Stelio, earnestly, as if in gratitude. "I have
-an absolute devotion for her sensitive hands. They fairly
-quiver with pleasure when they touch rare lace or rich
-velvet, lingering over the texture with a grace that seems
-almost shy of betraying such voluptuous joy in mere
-touch. One day, when I had accompanied her to the
-gallery of the Academia, she stopped before the <cite>Massacre
-des Innocents</cite> by the first Bonifazio. You recollect, of
-course, the green robe of the prostrate woman that one
-of Herod's soldiers is about to kill&mdash;a thing impossible to
-forget! She paused long before it, seeming fairly to
-radiate from her own person the perfect joy that filled
-her senses; then she said to me, 'Let us leave this place
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-now, Effrena! Take me away, but I must leave my eyes
-on that robe&mdash;I cannot look at anything more!' Ah, do
-not smile at her, dear friend! She was perfectly simple
-and sincere in saying that: she really did leave her spiritual
-vision behind her on that bit of canvas which Art,
-with a touch of color, has made the center of an infinitely
-pleasurable mystery. Besides, it was really a blind
-woman that I accompanied there, but I was suddenly
-seized with reverence for the privileged soul for whom
-the magic of color had power to abolish for the moment
-all memory of commonplace life, and to cut off all other
-worldly communication. What should you call such a
-state of mind? A filling of life's goblet to the brim, it
-seems to me. It is exactly what I should like to do
-to-night, if I were not discouraged."</p>
-
-<p>A new clamor, louder and more prolonged, rose between
-the two guardian columns of granite, as the royal
-barge approached the bank of the Piazzetta, now black
-with the waiting throng. During the slight pause that
-followed, the movement of the crowd shifted, like the
-changing of eddies in a current, and all the galleries
-of the Palace of the Doges were filled with a confused
-buzzing, like the mysterious murmur within a sea-shell.
-Suddenly the buzz rose to a shout, rending the
-clear air and finally dying away in the gathering twilight.
-The multitude seemed to realize the divinity of that
-poetic hour, amid those incomparable surroundings; and
-perhaps, in its acclaim to youthful royalty and beauty,
-it expressed a vague longing to forget its prosaic existence,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-and to revel in the gift of eternal poetry with
-which its storied walls and waters were endowed.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know, Perdita," Stelio suddenly exclaimed,
-"of any other place in the world that possesses, like
-Venice, at certain times, the power to stimulate all the
-forces of human life by the exaltation of all desires to a
-feverish intensity? Do you know of any more irresistible
-temptress?"</p>
-
-<p>She whom he called Perdita did not reply; she bent her
-head as if from desire to concentrate her thoughts; but
-through all her being she felt the indefinable thrill always
-felt at the sound of the voice of her friend when it
-revealed the vehemence and passionate soul toward
-which this woman was drawn by a mingling of love
-and terror that had no limit.</p>
-
-<p>"Peace! Oblivion! Do you find them down there,
-at the end of that deserted canal, when you go home
-exhausted and fevered after inhaling the commingled
-breath of the crowd that you are able to rouse to wild
-enthusiasm by a single gesture? As for myself, when I
-float on these dead waters, I feel my vital powers increase
-with bewildering rapidity; at certain times my
-brain seems on fire, as if I were in delirium."</p>
-
-<p>"The flame and the power are within yourself, Stelio,"
-said La Foscarina almost humbly, without raising her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He was silent, absorbed. Poetic imagery and impetuous
-music took form within his brain, as if by virtue
-of some magic fecundation; and his spirit reveled in the
-unexpected delight of that flood of inspiration.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was still that hour which, in one of his books, he
-had called "Titian's hour," because all things glowed
-with a rich golden light, like the nude figures of that
-great painter, appearing almost to illumine the sky
-rather than to receive light from it.</p>
-
-<p>"Perdita," said the poet, who, at the sight of so many
-things multiplying their beauties around him, was conscious
-of a kind of intellectual ecstasy, "does it not seem
-to you that we are following the funeral train of the
-dead Summer? There she lies in her funereal barge,
-robed in golden draperies, like a Doge's wife, like a
-Loredana, a Morosina, or a Soranza of the golden age;
-and her cortège conducts her toward the Isle of Murano,
-where some lord of the flames will place her in a coffin
-of opaline crystal, so that, submerged in the waters
-of the lagoon, she can, at least, through her transparent
-eyelids, behold the supple movement of the seaweed,
-and thus fancy herself enwrapped in the undulating
-tresses of her own hair, while waiting for the sun of
-resurrection to dawn."</p>
-
-<p>A spontaneous smile spread over La Foscarina's face,
-born in her eyes, which glowed as if they really had beheld
-the vision of the beautiful dead.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know, Perdita," resumed Stelio, after a moment's
-pause, during which both gazed at a file of small
-boats filled with fruit, floating upon the water like great
-baskets, "do you know anything about a particularly
-pretty detail in the chronicles of the Doges? The Doge's
-wife, to meet the expenses of her robes of ceremony, enjoyed
-a certain percentage of the tax on fruit. Does not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-this seem delightfully appropriate? The fruits of these
-isles clothed her in gold and crowned her with pearls!
-Pomona paying tribute to Arachne! an allegory that Paolo
-Veronese might well have painted on the dome of the
-Vestiario. When I conjure up the figure of the noble
-lady, tall and erect in her high, jeweled buskins, it pleases
-me to think that something fresh and rustic is connected
-with the rich folds of her heavy brocade: the tribute of
-the fruits. What a savor this seems to add to her magnificence!
-Only fancy, my friend, that these figs and
-grapes of the new-come Autumn are the price of the
-golden robe that covers the dead Summer."</p>
-
-<p>"What delightful fancies, Stelio!" said La Foscarina,
-whose face became young again when she smiled, as a
-child to whom one shows a picture-book. "Who was it
-that once called you the Image-maker?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah&mdash;images!" said the poet, his fancy warming. "In
-Venice, just as one feels everything to a musical rhythm,
-so he thinks of everything in poetic imagery. They come
-to us from everywhere, innumerable, diverse, more real
-and living to our minds than the persons we elbow in
-these narrow streets. In studying them, we can lose
-ourselves in the depths of their haunting eyes, and divine,
-by the curve of their lips, what they would say to us.
-Some art tyrannical as imperious mistresses, and hold us
-long beneath the yoke of their power. Others are enfolded
-in a veil, like timid virgins, or are tightly swaddled,
-like infants; and only he that knows how to rend
-their veils can lead them to the perfect life. This morning,
-when I awakened, my soul was filled with images;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-it was like a beautiful tree with its branches laden with
-chrysalides."</p>
-
-<p>He paused, with a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>"If they come forth from their prison to-night," he
-added, "I am saved; if they do not, I am lost!"</p>
-
-<p>"Lost?" said La Foscarina, gazing earnestly at him,
-with eyes so full of confidence that his heart went out
-to her in gratitude. "No, Stelio, you will not lose yourself.
-You are always sure of yourself; you bear your
-own destiny in your hands. I think your mother never
-could have felt any apprehension on your account, even
-in the most serious circumstances. Is not that true?
-Pride is the only thing that makes your heart falter."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, sweet friend, how I love you&mdash;how I thank you
-for saying that!" said the poet frankly, taking her hand.
-"You continually foster my pride and encourage me to
-believe that I have already acquired those virtues to
-which I never cease to aspire. Sometimes you seem to
-have the power of conferring I know not what divine
-quality on the things that are born in my soul, and of
-making them appear adorable in my own eyes. Sometimes,
-too, you fill me with the awe-struck wonder of
-the sculptor who, having in the evening borne to the
-sacred temple the marble gods still warm from his hands&mdash;I
-might say still clinging to the fingers that moulded
-them&mdash;the next day beholds them standing on their
-pedestals, surrounded by clouds of incense, and seeming
-to exhale divinity from every pore of the insensate matter
-from which he fashioned them with his perishable hands.
-And so, each time that Fortune grants me the favor of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-being near you, I realize that you are necessary to my
-life, although, during our long separations, I can live
-without you, and you without me, despite the fact that
-both of us well know what splendors would be born
-of the perfect union of our lives. Thus, knowing the
-full value of that which you give me, and, still more,
-of that which you could give me, I think of you as lost to
-me; and, by that name which it pleases my fancy to
-call you, I try to express at the same time this consciousness
-and this regret."</p>
-
-<p>He interrupted himself, because he felt a quiver of the
-hand he clasped in his own.</p>
-
-<p>"When I call you 'Perdita,'" he resumed softly, after
-a pause, "I fancy that you can see my desire approaching
-you, with a deadly blade deep in its palpitating side.
-Even should it reach you, the chill of death has already
-touched its audacious hand."</p>
-
-<p>The woman experienced an oft-felt suffering as she
-listened to the poetic words that flowed from her friend's
-lips with a spontaneity that proved them sincere. Again
-she felt an agitation and a terror that she knew not how
-to define. She felt that she was slipping out of her own
-life, and was transported into a kind of fictitious life,
-intense and hallucinating, where even to breathe was
-difficult. Drawn into that atmosphere, as fiery as the
-glow surrounding a lighted forge, she felt that she should
-be capable of passing through any transfigurations that
-it might please the master of her spirit to work in her
-to satisfy his continual craving for poetry and beauty.
-She comprehended that, in his idealistic mind, her own
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-image resembled that of the dead Summer, wrapped in
-its opalescent cerements. She felt a childish desire to
-gaze into the poet's eyes as in a mirror, to contemplate
-the likeness of her real self.</p>
-
-<p>That which rendered her melancholy most painful,
-was the recognition of a vague resemblance between
-this agitation and the anxiety that always possessed her
-when she sank her own personality in that of some
-sublime creation of dramatic art. Was not this man
-drawing her, in fact, into a similar region of higher but
-artificial life; and, that she might figure there without
-remembrance of her everyday self, did he not seek to
-cover her with a splendid disguise? But, while she was
-unable to maintain so great a degree of intensity except
-by a painful effort, she knew that he dwelt within that
-state of exaltation with perfect ease, as if in his natural
-atmosphere, ceaselessly enjoying a marvelous world of
-fancy, which he could renew or change at his own
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>He had come to realize in himself the intimate union of
-art and of life, thus finding, in the depths of his own
-soul, a source of perpetual harmony. He had become
-able to maintain within himself, without lapse, the mysterious
-psychological condition that engenders works of
-beauty, and thus, at a single stroke, to crystallize into
-ideal types the fleeting figures of his varied existence.
-It was to celebrate this conquest over his own mental
-powers that he put the following words into the mouth
-of one of his heroes: "I witnessed within myself the
-continual genesis of a higher life, wherein all appearances
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-metamorphosed themselves as if reflected in a
-magic mirror." Endowed with an extraordinary linguistic
-facility, he could instantly translate into words the
-most complicated workings of his mind, with a precision
-so exact and vivid that sometimes, as soon as expressed,
-they seemed not to be his own, having been rendered
-objective by the isolating power of style. His clear and
-penetrating voice, which, so to speak, seemed to define
-each word as distinctly as if it were a note of music, enhanced
-still more this peculiar quality of his speech, so
-that those who heard him speak for the first time experienced
-an ambiguous feeling&mdash;a mingling of admiration
-and aversion, because he revealed his own personality
-in a manner so strongly marked that it seemed to denote
-an intention to demonstrate the existence of a profound
-and impassable difference between himself and
-his listeners. But as his sensibility equaled his intelligence,
-it was easy for those that knew him well and liked
-him to absorb, through his crystalline speech, the glow of
-his vehement and passionate soul. These knew how illimitable
-was his power to feel and to dream, and from
-what fiery source sprang the beautiful images into which
-he converted the substance of his inner life.</p>
-
-<p>She whom he called Perdita knew it well; and, as a
-pious soul awaits from God some supernatural help
-that shall work out its salvation, so she seemed to be
-waiting for him to put her into the state of grace necessary
-to enable her to elevate and maintain herself in those
-fiery regions toward which a mad desire to be consumed
-impelled her, despairing as she was at the thought of her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-vanished youth, and the fear of finding herself left alone
-at last in a desert of ashes.</p>
-
-<p>"It is you now, Stelio," she said, with the slight smile
-she used to hide her sadness, "who wish to intoxicate
-me." She gently drew her hand from his. Then, to break
-the spell, she pointed to a loaded barge that was slowly
-approaching them, and said:</p>
-
-<p>"Look! Look at your pomegranates!"</p>
-
-<p>But her voice shook a little.</p>
-
-<p>Then, in the dreamy twilight, on the water as silvery-green
-as the leaves of the willow, they watched the passing
-boat overflowing with that emblematic fruit which
-suggests things rich and hidden: caskets of red leather,
-surmounted by the crown of a royal donor; some closed,
-others half-open, revealing their close-packed gems.</p>
-
-<p>In a low tone, the tragic actress repeated the words
-addressed by Hades to Persephone in the sacred drama,
-at the moment when the daughter of Demeter tastes the
-fatal pomegranate:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Quando tu coglierai il colchico in fiore su'l molle<br />
-Prato terrestre, presso la madre dal cerulo peplo.</i></p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Perdita! how well you know how to throw a shadow
-into your voice!" interrupted the poet, feeling the
-harmony of the twilight that seemed to throw a mystic
-vagueness over the syllables of his lines. "How well you
-know how to become nocturnal, even before the evening
-is upon us! Do you recall the scene where Persephone
-is on the point of throwing herself into Erebus, to the
-wailing of the chorus of the Oceanides? Her face is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-like yours when a shadow passes over it. Her crowned
-head leans backward, as she stands rigidly erect in her
-saffron-colored peplum; and the very spirit of the night
-seems flowing into her bloodless flesh, deepening under
-her chin, in the hollows of her eyes and around her nostrils,
-giving her face the look of a tragic mask. It
-is your mask, Perdita! While I was composing my
-<cite>Mystery</cite>, the remembrance of you aided me in evoking her
-divine person. That little saffron-velvet ribbon you so
-often wear around your neck gave me the note for
-Persephone's peplum. And one evening at your house,
-when I was about to take leave of you at the threshold
-of a room where the lamps were not yet lighted&mdash;an agitated
-evening of last autumn, you remember?&mdash;you succeeded,
-with a single movement, in bringing to full light
-in my being the creature that had lain long there undeveloped;
-and then, without dreaming that you had
-brought about that sudden birth, you shut yourself
-again within the solitary obscurity of your own Erebus.
-Ah, I was certain that I could hear you sob, yet a torrent
-of uncontrollable joy ran through my veins. I never
-have spoken to you of this before, have I? I ought to
-have consecrated my work to you, as to an ideal Lucina."</p>
-
-<p>She shrank under the eyes of the master of her spirit;
-she suffered because of that mask which he admired
-on her face, and because of that strange joy that she was
-aware was continually up-springing within him, like a
-perpetually playing fountain. She felt oppressed by her
-own personality; troubled because of her too-expressive
-face, the muscles of which possessed a strange power
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-of mimicry; pained to think of that involuntary art which
-governed the significance of her gestures, and of
-that expressive shadow which sometimes on the
-stage, during a moment of anxious silence, she knew
-how to throw over her face like a veil of grief&mdash;that
-shadow which now threatened to remain among the lines
-traced by time on the face that was no longer young.
-She suffered cruelly by the hand she adored&mdash;that hand
-so delicate and noble which, even with a gift or a caress,
-had power to hurt her.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not believe, Perdita," Stelio continued after
-another pause, "in the occult beneficence of signs? I do
-not mean astral science or horoscopic signs. I mean
-that, like those that believe themselves under the influence
-of one planet or another, we can create an ideal
-correspondence between our own soul and some terrestrial
-object, in such a way that this object, becoming
-impregnated, little by little, with the essence of
-ourselves, and being magnified by our illusion,
-finally becomes for us the representative sign of our
-unknown destiny, and takes on an aspect of mystery
-when it appears to us in certain crises of our life.
-This is the secret whereby we may restore to our withering
-hearts something of their pristine freshness. I know
-by experience the beneficial effect we may derive from
-intense communion with some earthly object. From
-time to time it is necessary for our natures to become
-like a hamadryad, in order to feel within us the circulation
-of new energy drawn from the source of life. Of
-course you understand that I am thinking of your words
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-just now, when the boat passed. You expressed the same
-idea when you said 'Look at your pomegranates!' For
-you, and for everyone that loves me, the pomegranate
-never can be anything but <em>mine</em>. For you and for them,
-the idea of my personality is indissolubly linked to that
-fruit which I have chosen for an emblem, and which I
-have charged with significant ideals, more numerous
-than its seeds. Had I lived in the times when men excavated
-the Grecian marbles and found under the soil
-the still damp roots of ancient fables, no painter could
-have represented me on his canvas without putting in
-my hand the Punic apple. To sever from my person
-that symbol would have seemed to the ingenuous artist
-like the amputation of a living member, for, to his pagan
-imagination, the fruit would have seemed to grow to my
-hand as to its natural branch. In short, he would not
-have conceived me in any different way than he thought
-of Hyacinthus or Narcissus or Ciparissus, all three of
-whom would appear to him as youths symbolized by a
-plant. But, even in our day, a few lively and warm
-imaginations exist that comprehend all the meaning and
-enjoy all the savor of my invention.</p>
-
-<p>"You, yourself, Perdita, do you not delight in cultivating
-in your garden a pomegranate, the beautiful
-'Effrenian' tree, that you may every summer watch
-me blossom and bring forth fruit? In one of your letters,
-flying to me like a winged messenger, you described to
-me the graceful ceremony of decorating the tree with
-garlands the day you received the first copy of <cite>Persephone</cite>.
-So, for you, and for those that love me, I have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-in reality renewed an ancient myth when, in fancy, I
-have assimilated myself with a form of eternal Nature.
-And when I am dead (and may Nature grant that I am
-able to manifest my whole self in my work before I
-die!), my disciples will honor me under a symbol of that
-tree; and in the sharp outline of the leaf, in the flame
-of the flower, and in the hidden treasure of the ripe fruit,
-they will recognize certain qualities of my art. By
-that leaf, by that flower and fruit, as if by a posthumous
-teaching of the master, their minds will be formed to
-a similar sharpness, flame-like intensity, and treasured
-richness.</p>
-
-<p>"You will see now, Perdita, what is the real beneficence
-of symbols. By affinity, I am led to develop
-myself in accord with the magnificent genius of the plant
-which it pleases me to fancy as the symbol of my aspirations
-toward a full, rich life. This arboreous
-image of myself suffices to assure me that my powers
-should follow nature in order to attain naturally the end
-for which they were created. 'Nature has disposed me
-thus' is the epigraph of Leonardo da Vinci, which I
-placed on the title-page of my first book; and the pomegranate,
-as it continually blossoms and bears its fruit,
-repeats to me that simple phrase over and over again.
-We obey only the laws written in our own substance,
-and by reason of this we shall remain intact in the midst
-of dissolution, in the unity and plenitude that make our
-joy. No discord exists between my art and my life."</p>
-
-<p>He spoke with perfect freedom, as if the mind of the
-listening woman were a chalice into which he poured
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-his thoughts till it was full to the brim. An intellectual
-felicity filled him, blended with a vague consciousness
-of the mysterious action whereby his mind was preparing
-itself for the effort it was soon to make. From time
-to time, as if by a lightning flash, his mental vision beheld,
-as he bent toward his beloved friend and listened
-to the beat of the oar in the silence of the great estuary,
-the crowd, with its thousand faces, gathering in the vast
-hall; and he felt a rapid throbbing of his heart.</p>
-
-<p>"It is a very singular thing, Perdita," said he, gazing
-at the pale distance of the waters, "to observe how readily
-chance aids our imagination in ascribing an element
-of mystery to the conjunction of certain appearances with
-the aim we have fancied. I do not understand the reason
-why the poets of to-day are so indignant at the vulgarity
-of the present, and complain that they were born
-either too late or too early. I am convinced that to-day,
-as always, every man of intelligence has power to create
-for himself his own beautiful fable of life. We should
-study the confused whirl of life with the same lively
-imagination that Leonardo encouraged in his disciples
-when he advised them to study the stains on the wall,
-the ashes on the hearth, the clouds, even mud, and similar
-objects, in order to find there 'wonderful inventions'
-and 'infinite things.' In the same way, he declared, one
-can find in the sound of bells every name and every word
-that can be imagined. That great master knew well that
-chance&mdash;as the sponge of Apelles had already shown&mdash;is
-always the friend of the ingenious artist. For example,
-I never cease to be astonished at the ease and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-grace with which chance favors the harmonious development
-of my inventions. Do you not believe that the dark
-god Hades forced his bride to eat the seven seeds of the
-pomegranate in order to furnish me with the subject of
-a masterpiece?"</p>
-
-<p>He interrupted himself with one of the bursts of boyish
-laughter that revealed so clearly the persistence of
-natural joyousness in the depths of his heart.</p>
-
-<p>"See, Perdita," he continued, still laughing, "whether
-I am not right. Early in October last year I was invited
-to Burano by Donna Andriana Duodo. We passed
-the morning in her flax-fields, and in the afternoon we
-went to visit Torcello. At that time I was beginning
-to saturate myself with the mythical story of Persephone,
-and already my poem had begun to take shape in
-my brain, and it seemed to me that I was floating on
-the waters of the Styx, and that I should arrive at the
-abode of the Manes. Never had I experienced a purer
-and sweeter understanding of death, and this feeling
-seemed to render me so ethereal that I fancied I could
-tread the field of asphodel without leaving there the
-least trace of my footsteps. The air was damp, warm,
-the sky was gray; the canals wound between the banks
-covered with half-faded verdure. (You know Torcello
-only by sunlight, perhaps.) But all this time some one
-was talking, arguing, and declaiming in Charon's boat.
-The sound of praise roused me from my reverie. Francesco
-di Lizo was speaking of me, regretting that such
-an artist, so magnificently sensual&mdash;I quote his own
-words&mdash;should be obliged to live apart from the obtuse
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-and hostile throng, and to celebrate the feast of sound,
-color, and form in the solitary palace of his dream. He
-abandoned himself to a lyric impulse, recalling the joyous
-and splendid life of the Venetian painters, the popular
-favor that swept them, like a whirlwind, up to the
-heights of the glory, beauty, strength and joy which
-they multiplied around them in producing countless images
-on walls and domes.</p>
-
-<p>"Then Donna Andriana said: 'Well, I promise solemnly
-that Stelio Effrena shall have his triumphal feast
-in Venice.' The Dogaressa had spoken! At that moment
-I beheld, on the low, mossy bank, a pomegranate
-laden with fruit, which, like the hallucination of a vision,
-broke the infinite squalor of that place. Donna Orsetta
-Contarini, who was sitting beside me, uttered a cry of
-delight, and held out her hands, as impatient as her
-lips. Nothing pleases me so much as a frank, strong expression
-of desire. 'I adore pomegranates!' she cried,
-and she seemed fairly to be tasting its fine, sharp flavor.
-She was as childish as her name is archaic. Her cry
-moved me; but Andrea Contarini appeared severely to
-disapprove of his wife's vivacity. He seemed to me
-like a Hades that has little faith in the mnemonic virtue
-of the seven seeds as applied to legitimate marriage. But
-the boatmen, too, were stirred with sympathy, and rowed
-toward the shore, approaching it so close that I was
-able to jump out first, and I began at once to despoil
-the tree, my brother. It was another case, albeit from
-the lips of a pagan of the words of the Last Supper:
-'Take, eat, this is my body, which is given for you. Do
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-this in remembrance of me.' How does this seem to
-you, Perdita? Do not think that I am inventing this
-story. I assure you it is true."</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina allowed herself to be fascinated by the
-free and elegant fancy whereby he exercised the quickness
-of his wit and his facility of expression. In his
-words was something intoxicating, variable, and vigorous,
-which suggested to her mind the double and diverse
-image of water and of fire.</p>
-
-<p>"Now," he continued, "Donna Andriana has kept her
-promise. Guided by that hereditary taste for magnificence
-which she shows so plainly, she has prepared
-a truly ducal feast in the Palace of the Doges, in imitation
-of those that were held there toward the end of
-the sixteenth century. She conceived the idea of rescuing
-from oblivion the <cite>Ariadne</cite> of Benedetto Marcello,
-and of making her sigh in the same place where Tintoretto
-painted the daughter of Minos receiving the crown
-of stars from Aphrodite. Don't you recognize in the
-beauty of this idea the woman who wished to leave her
-dear eyes behind her on that ineffable green robe? Remember,
-too, that this <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">musicale</i> in the Hall of the Greater
-Council has a historic precedent. In fifteen hundred
-seventy-three, in this same Hall, was performed a
-mythological composition by Cornelio Frangipani, with
-music by Claudio Merulo, in honor of his most Christian
-Majesty Henry Third. Own, Perdita, that my erudition
-astonishes you. Ah, if you only knew all that I
-have learned on that subject! I will read you my lecture
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-on it, some day when you deserve a severe punishment!"</p>
-
-<p>"What! Are you not to read it to-night at the festival?"
-inquired La Foscarina in surprise, fearing that,
-with his well known heedlessness of engagements, Effrena
-had resolved to disappoint the expectant public.</p>
-
-<p>He understood her anxiety, and chose to amuse himself
-with it.</p>
-
-<p>"This evening," he replied, with tranquil assurance,
-"I shall take a sherbet in your garden, and delight my
-eyes with the sight of the pomegranate, with its jewels
-gleaming in the starlight."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Stelio! What do you mean?" she cried, half
-rising.</p>
-
-<p>In her words and movement was so keen a regret, and
-at the same time so strange an evocation of the expectant
-gathering, that his mind was troubled. The image
-of the formidable monster with innumerable human
-faces amid the gold and somber purple of the vast hall
-reappeared before his mental vision; in fancy he felt its
-fixed regard and hot breath. He realized also the peril
-he had resolved to face in trusting only to the inspiration
-of the moment, and felt a horror of a possible sudden
-mental obscurity, an unexpected confusion of his
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>"Reassure yourself," he said. "I was only jesting. I
-will go <em>ad bestias</em>, and I will go unarmed. Did you not
-see the sign reappear just now? Do you believe, after
-the miracle of Torcello, that it reappeared in vain? It
-has come to warn me again that the only attitude that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-suits me is the one to which Nature disposes me. Now,
-you well know, my friend, that I do not know how to
-speak of anything but myself. And so, from the throne
-of the Doges, I must speak to my listeners only of my
-own soul, under the veil of some seductive allegory,
-with the charm of flowing musical cadences. I purpose
-to do this extemporaneously, if the fiery spirit of Tintoretto
-will only inspire me, from the heights of his
-Paradise, with sufficient ardor and audacity. The risk
-tempts me. But into what a strange error I was about
-to fall, Perdita! When the Dogaressa announced the
-feast to me, and begged me to do the honors, I undertook
-to compose a dignified discourse, a really ceremonious
-effort in prose, ample and solemn as one of
-those great robes of state behind glass in the Correr
-Museum; not without making in the exordium a profound
-genuflexion to the Queen; nor omitting to weave an
-impressive garland for the head of the most serene Andriana
-Duodo! And for several days it has given me
-a curious pleasure to dwell in spiritual communion with
-a Venetian patrician of the sixteenth century, a master
-of letters like Cardinal Bembo, a member of the Academy
-Uracini or Adorni, a frequent visitor to the gardens
-of Murano and the hills of Asolo. Certain it is that I
-felt a marked resemblance between the turn of my periods
-and the massive gold frames that surround the paintings
-on the ceiling of the Hall of Council. But, alas!
-yesterday morning, when I arrived here, and, in passing
-along the Grand Canal, when I wished to steep my
-weariness in the damp, transparent shade where the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-marble still exhales the spirit of the night, I had a sudden
-impression that my papers were worth much less than
-the dead seaweed tossed by the tide, and they seemed
-as strange to me as the <cite>Trionfi</cite> of Celio Magno and the
-<cite>Favole Marittime</cite> of Anton Maria Consalvi, quoted and
-commented on in them by me. What should I do, then?"</p>
-
-<p>He threw around him an all-sweeping glance, as if exploring
-the waters and the sky in search of an invisible
-presence, or a newly arrived phantom. A yellowish light
-spread toward the solitary shores, which stood out in
-sharp lines like the dark veins in agate. Behind him,
-toward the Salute, the sky was scattered with light rosy
-and violet ribbon-like clouds, giving it the appearance of
-a glaucous sea, peopled with Medusas. From the gardens
-near the water descended the odor of foliage saturated
-with light and heat&mdash;an odor so heavy one might
-almost see it float on the waves like aromatic oil.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you feel the Autumn, Perdita?" Stelio asked his
-dreamy friend, in a penetrating voice.</p>
-
-<p>Again she had a vision of the dead Summer, enclosed
-within opalescent glass and sunk among the masses of
-seaweed.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I feel it&mdash;within myself!" she replied, with a
-melancholy smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Did you not see it last night, when it descended
-upon the city? Where were you last night, at sunset?"</p>
-
-<p>"In a garden of the Giudecca."</p>
-
-<p>"I was here, on the Riva. When human eyes have
-contemplated such a spectacle of joy and beauty, does
-it not seem to you that the eyelids should close and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-seal themselves forever? I should like to speak to-night,
-Perdita, of these hidden, secret matters. I should like to
-celebrate within myself the nuptials of Venice and Autumn,
-in almost the same tonality that Tintoretto used
-when he painted the nuptials of Ariadne and Bacchus
-for the hall of the Anticollegio&mdash;azure, purple and gold.
-Last night an old germ of poetry suddenly blossomed
-in my soul. I recalled a fragment of a forgotten poem
-that I wrote when I began to write in <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">nona rima</i>, one
-September in my early youth, when I had come by sea
-to Venice for the first time. The title of the poem was
-simply 'The Allegory of Autumn,' and the god was no
-longer represented as crowned with vine-leaves, but with
-jewels, like one of Paolo Veronese's princes, his being
-aglow with passion, about to approach the Anadyomenean
-City, with her arms of marble and her thousand
-green girdles. But the idea had not at that time reached
-the right degree of intensity to be admitted to the
-realm of Art, and instinctively I gave up the effort to
-manifest it in its entirety. But, in an active mind, as
-in a fertile soil, no seed is lost; and now this idea returns
-to me at an opportune moment and urgently demands
-expression. What a just and mysterious fatality
-governs the mental world! It was necessary that I
-should respect that first germ in order to feel its multiplied
-virtues develop in me to-day. That Vinci, who
-looked deep into all things profound, certainly meant
-something of this kind in his fable of the grain of millet
-that says to the ant: 'If you will be kind enough to
-let me satisfy my desire to be born again, I will render
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-myself to you again a hundredfold.' Admire the touch of
-grace in those fingers capable of breaking iron! Ah, he
-is always the incomparable master! How can I forget
-him for a time, that I may give myself to the Venetians?"</p>
-
-<p>The playful irony with which he had been speaking
-was suddenly extinguished in his last words, and again
-he seemed plunged in his own thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>"It is already late; the hour approaches; we must return,"
-he said presently, rousing himself as if from a
-troubled dream, for he had seen reappear that formidable
-monster with the thousand human faces filling the depth
-and width of the great hall. "I must go back to the
-hotel in time to dress."</p>
-
-<p>Then, with a return of his boyish vanity, he thought
-of the eyes of the unknown women who would see him
-that evening for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>"To the Hotel Danieli," La Foscarina said to the boatman.</p>
-
-<p>While the dentellated iron of the prow swung around
-on the water, with a slow, animal-like movement, each
-felt a sadness different but equally painful at leaving behind
-them the infinite silence of the estuary, already
-overcome by darkness and death, and being compelled to
-return toward the magnificent and tempting city, whose
-canals, like the veins of a full-blooded woman, began
-to burn with the fever of night.</p>
-
-<p>They were quiet for some time, absorbed by their interior
-agitation, which shook each heart to it depths.
-And all things around them exalted the power of life
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-in the man who wished to attract to himself the universe
-in order not to die, and in the woman, who would
-have thrown her oppressed soul to the flames in order
-to die pure.</p>
-
-<p>Both started at the unexpected sound of the salute at
-the lowering of the flag on board a man-of-war anchored
-before the gardens. At the summit of the black mass
-they saw the tricolored flag slide down the staff and fold
-itself up, like a heroic dream that suddenly vanishes.
-For a moment the silence seemed deeper, and the gondola
-glided into darker shadows, grazing the side of
-the armed colossus.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know that Donatella Arvale who is to sing
-in <cite>Ariadne</cite>?" said Stelio suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>"She is the daughter of the great sculptor, Lorenzo
-Arvale," La Foscarina replied, after an instant of hesitation.
-"I have no dearer friend than she&mdash;and in fact
-she is my guest at present. You will meet her at my
-house this evening, after the festival."</p>
-
-<p>"Donna Andriana spoke to me of her last night as
-a prodigy. She said that the idea of resurrecting <cite>Ariadne</cite>
-had come to her on hearing Donatella Arvale sing divinely
-the air: <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Come mai puoi&mdash;Vedermi piangere?</i> We
-shall have some divine music at your house, Perdita.
-Oh, how I long to hear it! Below there, in my solitude,
-for months and months, I hear only the music of the sea,
-which is too terrible, and my own music, which is too
-tumultuous."</p>
-
-<p>The bells of San Marco gave the signal for the Angelus,
-and their powerful notes spread in great waves of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-sound over the water, vibrating among the masts of the
-vessels, and creeping out upon the infinite reach of the
-lagoon. From San Giorgio Maggiore, San Giorgio dei
-Greci, San Giorgio degli Schiavoni, San Giovanni in Bragora,
-and San Moisé, from the Salute, the Redentore,
-and beyond, over the entire domain of the Evangelista,
-to the distant towers of the Madonna dell' Orto, San
-Giobbe and Sant' Andrea, tongues of bronze responded,
-mingling in one great chorus, seeming to extend over
-the silent stones and waters a single immense and invisible
-dome of metal, the vibration of which might almost
-reach the first sparkling stars. Those sacred voices
-seemed to lend to the City of Silence an ideal and infinite
-grandeur.</p>
-
-<p>"Can you still pray?" said Stelio in a softened voice,
-looking at the woman who, with eyes downcast, and
-hands clasped on her knees, seemed absorbed in a silent
-orison.</p>
-
-<p>She did not reply; she only pressed her lips together
-more closely.</p>
-
-<p>The minds of both were confused by the strange, the
-new image, and the new name, that had risen between
-them. Perturbation and passion seized them again, drew
-them near each other with such force that they dared
-not look into each other's eyes, for fear of what might
-be read there.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I see you again this evening, after the festival?"
-said La Foscarina, with a slight unsteadiness in her
-voice. "Are you free?"</p>
-
-<p>She was eager now to hold him, to make him her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-prisoner, as if she feared he would escape her, as if she
-had hoped to find this night some magic philter that
-would bind him to her forever. And, though she comprehended
-now that the gift of all she had to give had
-become necessary, she realized only too clearly, nevertheless,
-even through the intoxication that bewildered
-her, the poverty of the gift so long withheld. And a
-mournful modesty, a mingling of terror and pride, contracted
-her slender frame.</p>
-
-<p>"I am free&mdash;and I am yours!" the young man answered
-in a half whisper, without raising his eyes to
-hers. "You know that nothing is worth to me what you
-can give."</p>
-
-<p>His heart, too, was stirred to its depths, with the two
-aims before his ambition toward which, this night, all
-his energy bent, like a powerful bow: the city and the
-woman, both tempting and mysterious, weary with having
-lived too much, and oppressed with too many loves;
-both were too much magnified by his imagination, and
-both were destined to disappoint his hopes.</p>
-
-<p>In the moment that followed, a violent wave of mingled
-regret and desire swept over him. The pride and intoxication
-of his hard, persistent labor; his boundless ambition,
-which had been curbed within a sphere too narrow
-for it; his intolerance of mediocrity, his demand for
-the privileges of princes; his superb and empurpled
-dreams; his insatiable need of preëminence, glory, pleasure&mdash;surged
-in his soul with a confusing tumult, dazzling
-and suffocating him. And the craving of his sadness
-inclined him to win the final love of this solitary,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-nomadic woman, the very folds of whose garments
-seemed to suggest the frenzy of the far-off multitudes,
-whom she had so often thrilled and shaken with her
-art, by a cry of passion, a sob of grief, or a death-like
-silence. An irresistible impulse drew him toward this
-woman, in whom he fancied he saw the traces of all
-emotions and experiences, toward that being, no longer
-young, who had known so many caresses, yet was unknown
-by him.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it a promise?" he murmured, bowing his head
-lower to conceal his agitation. "Ah! at last!"</p>
-
-<p>She made no reply, but fixed on him a gaze of almost
-mad intensity, which he did not see.</p>
-
-<p>They relapsed into silence again, while the reverberation
-of the bells passing overhead was so penetrating
-that they felt it in the roots of the hair, as from a quiver
-of their own flesh.</p>
-
-<p>"Good-by," said La Foscarina, as they were landing.
-"When we leave the hall, let us meet in the courtyard,
-near the second well, the nearest to the Molo."</p>
-
-<p>"Good-by," he answered. "Take some place where I
-may see you, among the crowd, when I speak my first
-word."</p>
-
-<p>A confused clamor arose from San Marco, above the
-sound of the bells, spread over the Piazzetta, and died
-away toward the Fortuna.</p>
-
-<p>"May all light be on your brow, Stelio!" said La Foscarina,
-holding out her burning hands to him passionately.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II<br />
-<small>THE FACE OF TRUTH</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>When he entered the court by the south door,
-Stelio Effrena, seeing the black and white
-throng that swarmed up the Giants' Stairway,
-in the ruddy light of the torches
-fixed in the iron candelabra, felt a sudden sensation of
-repugnance, and paused at the entrance. He noted the
-contrast between this paltry crowd and the noble architecture
-which, magnified by the unusual nocturnal illumination,
-expressed, by their varied harmoniousness,
-the strength and the beauty of a day that was past.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, how miserable!" he exclaimed, turning to the
-friends that accompanied him. "In the Hall of the
-Greater Council, from the throne of the Doges, how is
-it possible to find metaphors that will move a thousand
-starched shirt-bosoms? Let us go back; let us inhale
-the odor of the real crowd, the true crowd. The Queen
-has not yet left the royal palace. We have time
-enough."</p>
-
-<p>"Until the moment that I see you on the platform, I
-shall not feel sure that you will really speak," said Francesco
-de Lizo, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>"I believe that Stelio would prefer the balcony to the
-platform," said Piero Martello, wishing to flatter the
-master's taste for sedition, and his factious spirit, which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-he himself affected, in imitation. "He would like to harangue,
-between the two red columns, the mutinous people
-who threatened to set fire to the new <cite>Procuratie</cite> and
-the old <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Libreria</i>."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, certainly," said Stelio, "if the harangue had
-power to prevent or to precipitate an irreparable act. I
-hold that we use the written word to create a pure form
-of beauty, which, even in an uncut book, is enclosed and
-shut in, as in a tabernacle that may be entered only by
-election, with the same premeditated will used in the
-breaking of a seal. But the spoken word, it seems to
-me, when it is addressed directly to a multitude, should
-have only action for its aim. On this condition alone
-can a proud spirit, without lessening itself in dignity,
-communicate with the masses by means of voice and
-gesture. Otherwise, his effort becomes merely histrionic.
-And so I repent bitterly of having accepted this function
-of an ornamental orator, who must not speak unless he
-speaks agreeably. Consider, I ask you, how humiliating
-for me is the honor that they think to do me, and consider
-also the uselessness of my speech. All these
-people, strangers here, have left their mediocre occupations,
-or their favorite amusements, to come and listen
-to me with the same vain and stupid curiosity that would
-lead them to listen to some new virtuoso. For the
-women that will listen to me, the art with which I have
-tied my cravat will be much more appreciated than the
-art with which I shall round my periods. And, after
-all, the only effect of my speech will be a clapping of
-hands, deadened by gloves, or a brief, discreet murmur,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-to which I shall reply with a gracious inclination of the
-head. Does it seem to you that I am about to attain
-the summit of my ambition?"</p>
-
-<p>"You are wrong," said Francesco de Lizo. "You
-should congratulate yourself for this happy occasion,
-which will allow you, for several hours, to impress the
-rhythm of art on the life of a forgetful city, and to make
-us dream of the splendors that might embellish our existence
-by a renewed union of Art with Life. If the
-man that built the Teatro di Festa were there, he would
-praise you for that harmony which he predicted. But
-the most wonderful thing about this affair is the fact
-that, notwithstanding your absence, and your ignorance
-of the project, the festival seems to have been prepared
-under the direct inspiration of your genius. This is the
-best proof that it is possible to restore and diffuse taste,
-even in the midst of the barbaric present. Your influence
-to-day is more powerful than you think. The lady
-who has desired to honor you&mdash;she that you call the
-Dogeressa&mdash;at every new idea that came to her, asked
-herself: 'Would it please Effrena?' If you only knew
-how many young and eager spirits put to themselves to-day
-the same question, when they consider the aspects
-of their inner life!"</p>
-
-<p>"And for whom should you speak, if not for them?"
-said Daniele Glauro, the fervent and sterile ascetic of
-Beauty, with that melodious voice which seemed to reflect
-the frank and inextinguishable ardor of the soul
-beloved by the master as one of the most faithful. "If,
-when you stand upon the platform, you will look about
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-you, you will easily recognize the expression in their
-eyes. There are many of them, and some have come a
-long distance; they await your words with an eagerness
-that you perhaps do not understand. They are those
-who have imbibed the spirit of your poetry, who have
-breathed the fiery ether of your dream, and felt the grip
-of your chimera; those to whom you have announced
-the transfiguration of the world by the miracle of a new
-art. The number that you have attracted as an apostle
-of hope and of joy is very great. They have heard that
-you are to speak in Venice, in the Ducal Palace&mdash;one
-of the most splendid and glorious places on earth. They
-will be able to see you and listen to you for the first
-time, surrounded by the magnificence that seems to them
-an appropriate frame to your personality. The old Palace
-of the Doges, which has so long been wrapped in
-nocturnal darkness, is suddenly illuminated and aroused
-this night for you, and, to their minds, it is you alone
-that have had the power to rekindle these long-extinguished
-torches. Do you understand now the eagerness
-of their expectation? Does it not seem to you that to
-them only you ought to speak? The condition you impose
-on the man that harangues a multitude may be fulfilled.
-You can awaken an emotion in their breasts that
-shall turn them forever toward the Ideal. For how
-many of them, Stelio, you might make this Venetian
-night an experience never to be forgotten!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio laid his hand on the prematurely bent shoulders
-of the mystic doctor, and, smiling, repeated Petrarch's
-words: "<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Non ego loquar omnibus, sed tibi, sed mihi, et his</i>."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He saw within himself the radiant eyes of his unknown
-disciples, and heard within his soul, in clear tones,
-the sound of his own exordium.</p>
-
-<p>"Nevertheless," he replied gayly, addressing Piero
-Martello, "it would be amusing to conjure up a tempest
-on this sea."</p>
-
-<p>They were standing under the arch, near a column,
-in contact with the noisy, unanimous crowd, which gathered
-in the Piazzetta, stretched out toward the Zecca,
-was swallowed up near the <em>Procuratie</em>, barred the Torre
-dell'Orologio, occupied every space like a wave without
-form, and communicated its living warmth to the marble
-columns and the walls, against which it surged in its
-violent movement. From time to time, a louder cry arose
-from the distance, at the farther end of the Piazza,
-swelling higher and stronger until it burst out near them
-like a clap of thunder, then diminishing until it died
-away in a murmur.</p>
-
-<p>"I should like to-night to find myself for the first
-time with a woman I loved, on a floating couch, over
-there, beyond the gardens, toward the Lido," said the
-romantic poet, Paris Eglano, a blond, beardless youth,
-whose handsome mouth, with its full red lips, contrasted
-with the almost angelic delicacy of his other features.
-"Within an hour, Venice will present to some Nero-like
-lover, hidden in a gondola, the spectacle of a city set on
-fire by its own delirium."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio smiled, noting to what extent his intimates had
-become imbued with his own spiritual essence, and how
-deep the seal of his own style had stamped itself on their
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-minds. Suddenly the image of La Foscarina flashed
-across his mental vision: La Foscarina, poisoned by too
-much art, remembering too many amatory experiences,
-with the stamp of maturity and of corruption on her
-eloquent mouth, the aridity of the vein fever that burned
-in those hands that pressed out the juices of deceitful
-fruits, and the marks of a hundred masks on that face
-which had simulated the fury of all mortal passions.
-Thus she appeared to his ardent thought of her, and his
-heart throbbed faster as he pictured her emerging soon
-from the multitude, as from some element that enslaved
-her, and thought that from her glance he should draw
-the necessary inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>"Come, let us go," said he resolutely to his friends.
-"It is the hour."</p>
-
-<p>The cannon announced that the Queen had left the
-royal palace. A prolonged quiver ran through the living
-human mass, like that which precedes a storm at sea.
-From the bank of San Giorgio Maggiore, a rocket rushed
-up with a long hiss, rising in the air like a fiery stem
-and bursting into a mass of pink splendor at the top;
-then it curved, grew fainter, and dissolved in trembling
-sparks, extinguished finally with a slight crackling in
-the water. And the joyous clamor that greeted the
-beautiful Queen, repeating her name&mdash;the name of the
-starry, white flower and of the pearl&mdash;evoked in Stelio's
-imagination the pomp of the ancient Promissione, the
-triumphal procession of the Arts escorting the new
-Dogaressa to the palace; the wave of joy on which Morosina
-Grimani mounted to her throne, shimmering with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-gold, while all the Arts bowed before her, laden with
-gifts as if they bore horns of plenty.</p>
-
-<p>"Certainly," said Francesco de Lizo, "if the Queen
-loves your books, she will wear all her pearls this evening.
-You will have before you a veritable labyrinth of
-jewels&mdash;all the hereditary gems of the Venetian patricians."</p>
-
-<p>"Look toward the foot of the stairway, Stelio," said
-Daniele Glauro. "A group of devotees is waiting for
-you to pass that way."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio stopped at the well indicated by La Foscarina.
-He leaned over the bronze edge, his knees touching the
-little carved caryatides, and saw in the dark water the
-reflection of the stars. For the moment his soul isolated
-itself, shut out the surrounding sounds, and withdrew
-into the shadowy disc, from which rose a slight dampness
-betokening the presence of water. His excited desire
-felt a need to attain even greater intoxication than
-this night promised him, and he felt that in the farthest
-depths of his being lay a secret soul, which, like this
-dark, watery mirror, remained immovable, strange, and
-intangible.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you see there?" inquired Piero Martello,
-also leaning over the rim, worn in places by the ropes
-of centuries.</p>
-
-<p>"The face of Truth!" the master answered.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the apartments contiguous to the Hall of the
-Greater Council, once occupied by the Doge, but now
-by the pagan statues that were seized as booty in ancient
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-wars, Stelio awaited the summons from the master
-of the ceremonies to mount to the platform. He was
-quite calm, and smiled on the friends that spoke to him,
-but their words reached his ear between pauses, like interrupted
-sounds borne from afar by the wind. From
-time to time, with an abrupt, involuntary movement, he
-drew near to one of the statues, and ran his hand nervously
-over it, as if seeking some weak spot, that he
-might break it; or he bent curiously over some rare
-medal, as if to read on it some indecipherable sign. But
-his eyes saw nothing of all this; they were turned within,
-where the multiplied power of his will evoked the
-silent forms that his voice would presently transform
-into the perfection of verbal music. His whole being
-contracted itself in an effort to raise to the highest degree
-of intensity the representation of the extraordinary
-feelings that possessed him. Since he could speak only
-of himself, and of his own universe, at least he would
-unite in one ideal figure the sovereign qualities of his
-art, and show to his disciples by his genius for imagery
-what an invincible force hastened him through this life.
-Once more he intended to show them that, in order to
-obtain the victory over men and circumstances, there is
-no other way than to persevere in exalting oneself and
-to magnify one's own dream of beauty or of power.</p>
-
-<p>He bent over a medallion by Pisanello, feeling at his
-temples the ardent, rapid pulsation of his thought.</p>
-
-<p>"See, Stelio," said Daniele Glauro to him, with that
-pious reverence which veiled his voice whenever he spoke
-of his religion, "see how the mysterious affinities of Art
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-work upon you, and how an infallible instinct leads you,
-amid so many forms, and at the very moment when
-your thought is about to reveal itself, toward the example
-of the most perfect expression, the highest model
-of style. At the very instant of coining your own idea,
-you are led to study one of Pisanello's medallions; you
-are attracted by the impression of one of the greatest
-stylists that ever have lived in the world, the most
-frankly Hellenic soul of the whole Renaissance. And
-suddenly your forehead is illumined by a ray of light."</p>
-
-<p>The pure bronze bore the effigy of a young man with
-beautiful, waving hair, an imperial profile and Apollo-like
-neck, and the head was so perfect a type of elegance
-and vigor that the imagination could not picture him in
-life except as free from all decadence and eternally unchangeable,
-as the artist had presented him in this
-circle of bronze.&mdash;<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Dux equitum præstans Malatesta Novellus
-Cesenæ dominus. Opus Pisani pictoris.</i>&mdash;And beside it was
-another medallion by the same artist, bearing the effigy
-of a virgin, with narrow chest, a swan-like throat, and
-hair drawn back in the shape of a heavy bag; the forehead,
-high and receding, seemed already to promise the
-aureole of the blessed, and she was like a vase of purity
-sealed forever, hard, precise, and limpid as a diamond,
-an adamantine pyx where the spirit, consecrated like the
-Host, rested as a sacrifice.&mdash;<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cicilia Virgo, filia Johannis
-Francesco primi Marchionis Mantuae.</i></p>
-
-<p>"Here comes La Foscarina, with Donatella Arvale,"
-announced Francesco de Lizo, who had been watching
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-the crowd that climbed the Censors' Stairway and
-pressed into the vast hall.</p>
-
-<p>Again Stelio Effrena felt a wave of agitation sweep
-over him. The murmur of the throng seemed to come
-from afar and mingle in his ears with the throbbing of
-his arteries, and in this murmur he fancied he heard
-once more the last words of Perdita.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III<br />
-<small>THE NUPTIALS OF AUTUMN AND VENICE</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>The murmur swelled louder, diminished, then
-ceased, as Stelio, with firm, light movement,
-ascended the marble steps of the platform. As
-he turned toward the audience, his dazzled eyes
-rested upon the formidable monster with a thousand
-human faces, amid the gold and somber purple of the
-immense hall.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden thrill of pride gave him complete self-control.
-He bowed to the Queen and to Donna Andriano
-Duodo, who smiled upon him with the same twin smiles
-he had seen from the gliding gondola on the Grand
-Canal. He threw a keen glance toward the scintillating
-first rows, seeking La Foscarina, then looked toward
-the farther end of the hall, where only a dark zone,
-dotted with white spots, could be distinguished. The
-silent, attentive multitude seemed to him like an enormous,
-many-eyed chimera, its breast covered with glittering
-scales, extending its black bulk under the arches of
-the rich, heavy ceiling that hung over it like a suspended
-treasure.</p>
-
-<p>Dazzling was that chimeric breast, where sparkled
-necklaces that must once have flashed their fires under
-the same ceiling on the night of a coronation banquet.
-The tiara and the necklaces of the Queen&mdash;the rows of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-pearls, like grains of light, somehow suggesting the miraculous
-image of a smile just about to appear&mdash;the dark
-emeralds of Andriano Duodo, taken long ago from the
-handle of a scimitar; the rubies of Giustiniana Memo,
-set in the semblance of carnations by the inimitable
-craftsmanship of Vettor Camelio; the sapphires of Lucrezia
-Priuli, taken from the shoes in which the Most
-Serene Zilia had walked to her throne on the day of
-her triumph; the beryls of Orsetta Contarini, delicately
-set in dull gold by the art of Silvestro Grifo; the turquoises
-of Zenobia Corner, bathed in a strange pallor by
-the mysterious malady that, in a single night, changed
-them as they lay on the warm breast of the Princess de
-Lusignan, among the delights of Asolo&mdash;all the rich
-jewels that had illumined the nights of the Anadyomenean
-city glowed with renewed fire on the breast of
-the chimera, from which rose a moist odor of feminine
-breaths and many perfumes. The rest of that strangely
-marked and shapeless body extended to the rear of the
-hall, in a sort of long tail, passing between the two gigantic
-spheres, which recalled to the memory of the
-"Image-maker" the two bronze spheres that the monster
-with the bandaged eyes presses with his paws in
-Giambellino's allegory. And this vast animal life, devoid
-of all thought for the time before him who alone
-at that moment must think, endowed with the inert fascination
-of enigmatic idols, covered with its own silence
-as with a shield capable of receiving and resisting any
-shock, awaited the first thrill of his dominating word.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena measured this silence, upon which his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-first syllable must fall. While his voice was rising to his
-lips, an effort of will summoning it and fortifying it
-against instinctive hesitation, he perceived La Foscarina
-standing near the railing that encircled the celestial
-sphere. The pale face of the tragic actress rose from
-her bare neck, and the purity of her white shoulders was
-just above the orbit of the zodiacal figures. Stelio admired
-the art of this apparition. With his own eyes fixed
-upon those distant, adoring ones, he began to speak
-slowly, as if the rhythm of the oars still lingered in his
-ears.</p>
-
-<p>"One afternoon, not long ago, while I was returning
-from the gardens along the warm bank of the Schiavoni,
-where the souls of poets sometimes believe they see I
-know not what magic golden bridge spanning a sea of
-light and silence toward a dream of infinite beauty, I
-thought&mdash;or rather, I witnessed with my thoughts, as
-at some intimate spectacle&mdash;of the nuptial alliance, under
-those skies, of Autumn and Venice.</p>
-
-<p>"Everywhere was disseminated a spirit of life, arising
-from passionate expectation and restrained ardor, which
-made me marvel at its vehemence, but which seemed not
-altogether new to me; I had already seen it in some
-shadowy zones, under the almost death-like immobility
-of Summer; and sometimes I had felt it vibrating, like
-a mysterious pulse, in the strange feverish odor of the
-water. Thus, I thought, it is true, then, that this pure
-city of Art aspires to a supreme state of beauty which
-for her returns annually, as the flowers return to the
-forest. She tends to reveal herself in full harmony,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-as if always she bore within her bosom, powerful and
-conscious, the same desire of perfection from which
-she sprang and was formed throughout the ages, like
-some divine creature. Under the motionless fire of
-Summer, she seemed to palpitate no more, to breathe
-no more, but to lie dead in her green waters. My feeling
-did not deceive me, however, when I fancied I saw
-her secretly inspired by a spirit of life sufficient to
-renew the most sublime of the ancient miracles.</p>
-
-<p>"That is what I thought, and what I saw. But how
-can I convey to you that listen to me any idea of that
-vision of joy and beauty? No sunrise, no sunset, could
-equal the glory of that hour of light on the water and
-the marble. The unexpected apparition of the beloved
-woman in a forest in springtime could not be as intoxicating
-as this sudden revelation by daylight of the
-heroic and voluptuous city, which carries in its marble
-embrace the richest dream of a Latin soul."</p>
-
-<p>The voice of the orator, clear, penetrating, almost icy
-at the beginning, was suddenly warmed by the invisible
-sparks kindled within him by the effort of improvisation,
-yet governed by the extreme nicety of his ear. While
-his words flowed without hesitation, and the rhythmic
-line of his periods set forth their beauty with the clearness
-of a figure drawn at one stroke by a bold hand, his
-auditors were conscious of the excessive tension of his
-mind, and it captivated them as one of those terrifying
-feats at the circus, where all the herculean energies of
-the athlete show the test by his quivering tendons and
-swelling arteries. They felt the reality, the living warmth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-of the thought thus expressed, and their pleasure was
-the greater because unexpected, for most of his auditors
-had anticipated from this indefatigable searcher after
-perfection the studied reading of a laboriously composed
-discourse. His devotees observed with emotion this audacious
-test, as if they saw before them, unveiled, the
-secret labor that had brought forth the forms that had
-given them so much joy. And this first wave of emotion,
-spreading by contagion, indefinitely multiplied and
-becoming unanimous, returned to him who caused it,
-and seemed almost to overcome him.</p>
-
-<p>This was the expected danger. Under the pressure
-of a wave so strong, the speaker faltered. For a few
-seconds a thick cloud darkened his brain; the light of
-his mind was extinguished, as a torch before an irresistible
-wind; his eyes grew dim, as if he were about
-to faint. But he felt how mortifying would be the shame
-of defeat if he yielded to this seizure; and in that darkness,
-by a sort of effort of brute force, or like the striking
-of steel on flint, his will rose in triumph over the instinctive
-weakness. With glance and gesture, he directed
-the eyes of the assemblage to the great masterpiece in
-the ceiling of that hall, spreading there in a kind of
-sun-like radiance.</p>
-
-<p>"I am certain," he exclaimed, "that Venice appeared
-thus to Paolo Veronese, when he sought within himself
-for an image of the Queen triumphant."</p>
-
-<p>He explained the reason why the great master, after
-throwing upon his canvas a profusion of gold, jewels,
-silks, purple, ermine, and all imaginable richness, at last
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-could represent the glorious face only in the nimbus of
-a shadow.</p>
-
-<p>"We ought to exalt Veronese for that shadowy veil
-alone! Representing by a human face the Queen of
-Cities, he yet knew how to express its essential spirit,
-whose symbol was an inextinguishable flame seen
-through a watery veil. And one I know well, who, having
-plunged his soul in this sublime element, has withdrawn
-it enriched with a new power, and consequently
-has lived a fuller and more ardent spiritual life."</p>
-
-<p>This one he knew well&mdash;was it not himself? In the
-assertion of his own personality he found again all his
-courage, and felt that henceforth he was master of his
-thoughts and words, freed from danger, capable of drawing
-within the charmed circle of his dream the enormous,
-many-eyed chimera, with the glittering breast&mdash;the
-ephemeral and versatile monster from whose side
-emerged its offspring, the Tragic Muse, her head rising
-above the constellations.</p>
-
-<p>Obedient to his movement, the innumerable faces
-turned toward the Apotheosis, their awakened eyes contemplating
-with wonder this marvel, as if they beheld
-it for the first time, or under a new aspect. The naked
-back of the woman with the golden helmet shone under
-the cloud with an effect of muscular life so perfect
-that it looked as attractive as palpable flesh. And, from
-this nudity, more realistic than all the rest, victorious
-over Time, which had darkened around it heroic images
-of sieges and battles, seemed to emanate a powerful enchantment,
-the sweetness of which was augmented by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-the breath of the autumn night coming through the open
-windows; while, from above, the princesses of a former
-day, leaning over the balustrades between two columns,
-inclined their illumined faces and opulent breasts toward
-their worldly sisters below.</p>
-
-<p>Under the new spell of enchantment, the poet threw
-off his winged words, harmonious as lyric strophes. He
-described the Queen City palpitating with ardor within
-her thousand green girdles, extending her marble arms
-toward the wild Autumn, whose humid breath reached
-her, balmy with the delicious death of the fields and
-islands, making her sigh like a bride awaiting her hour
-of joy. By the magic of his words, Venice seemed to
-be possessed of marvelous hands, with which she wove
-for herself the inimitable tissue of allegory that covered
-her.</p>
-
-<p>"And since, in all the world, poetry alone is truth, he
-that knows how to contemplate it, and to draw it into
-his own soul by the virtue of his thought, will be very
-near to mastering the secret of victory over life."</p>
-
-<p>In pronouncing these last words, Stelio sought the
-eyes of Daniele Glauro, and saw that they sparkled with
-happiness beneath that large, meditative brow, which
-seemed swollen by the weight of an unborn world. The
-mystic doctor was there, near the platform, with several
-of those unknown disciples that he had described to
-the master as eager and anxious, full of faith and expectation,
-impatient to break the chain of their daily servitude,
-and to know the free intoxication of joy and
-sadness. Stelio noted that they were grouped, like a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-nucleus of compressed force, against the great red bookcases,
-wherein lay buried innumerable volumes of useless
-and forgotten lore. He marked their eager and attentive
-faces, their long hair, their lips, half parted with
-child-like absorption, or closed tightly in a kind of violent
-sensitiveness, their bright eyes, to which the breath
-of his words carried lights and shadows, as a changeful
-breeze stirs a parterre of delicate flowers. He felt that
-in his own hand he held all their souls blended into one
-spirit, which he could at will agitate, crush, tear, or
-burn, as if it were a filmy scarf.</p>
-
-<p>While his mind expanded and relaxed, in its continued
-effort, he still retained a strange power of exterior investigation,
-a faculty of material observation which became
-the clearer and more penetrating with the warmth
-and quickening of his eloquence.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he saw with his mental vision the picture
-he wished to present, and his verbal expression of it
-was after the manner of the master painters that had
-reigned in that place, with the luxuriance of Veronese,
-and the fire of Tintoretto.</p>
-
-<p>"All the vitalities and all the transfigurations of the
-ancient stones, where Time has accumulated so many
-mysteries, and where glory has set her emblems; all the
-alternations of marvelously easy creations and destructions
-were reflected in the water; the effulgence of a jubilant
-light glittered between the crosses of cupolas
-inflated by prayer, and the slender saline crystals hanging
-under the arch of the bridges. Like a sentinel on a
-rampart uttering his shrill cry to him that listens for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-the signal, so the golden angel from the summit of the
-highest tower at last flashed out the announcement.</p>
-
-<p>"And He appeared! The Bridegroom appeared, seated
-in his fiery chariot, which he turned toward the Queen
-of Cities, and in his youthful, superhuman countenance
-was a strange fascination springing from an animal-like
-cruelty and delicacy contrasting with the deep eyes, full
-of all knowledge. His blood rioted through his veins,
-from the tips of his fingers to his nimble feet; mysterious,
-occult things veiled his being, concealing joy
-as the grape in bloom conceals the vine; and all the
-tawny gold and purple that surrounded him were like
-the vestment of his senses.</p>
-
-<p>"With what passion, throbbing under her thousand
-emerald girdles, and the richness of her jewels, the
-Queen of Cities gave herself to the magnificent god!"</p>
-
-<p>Swept up in this rushing flight of words, the soul
-of the multitude seemed to reach the sentiment of
-Beauty, as if it were a summit never before attained. The
-pulse of the people and the voice of the poet seemed to
-give back to those ancient walls their former life, and
-to reawaken in that cold museum its original spirit: a
-flood of powerful ideas, concrete, and organized in the
-most durable substance to attest the nobility of a great
-race.</p>
-
-<p>The splendor of divine youth descended upon the
-women, as it might have descended in a sumptuous alcove,
-for each felt within herself the breathlessness of
-expectation and the joy of yielding, like that of the
-Queen of Cities. They smiled with vague languor as if
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-wearied by the strain upon their emotions; their cool,
-polished shoulders rose from their corollas of jewels.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio looked down upon the sparkling breast of the
-great, many-eyed chimera, on which rose and fell many
-fluttering feather fans, like tiny wings; and over his
-spirit passed an intoxicating glow that disquieted him.
-The vibration of his nerves, acting upon those of his
-auditors and thus reacting upon himself, unsettled him
-so much as almost to unbalance him. For an instant
-he felt that he was oscillating above the crowd, like a
-concave and sonorous body, the resonances of which
-were engendered by an indistinct yet infallible will.</p>
-
-<p>He was surprised at the unknown power that dwelt
-within him, abolishing his own personal limits and conferring
-the fulness of a chorus on his single voice.</p>
-
-<p>This, then, was the mysterious truce which the revelation
-of Beauty could grant to the daily existence of
-wearied man; this was the mysterious will that could
-possess the poet at the moment when he replied to the
-souls of his followers who questioned him as to the value
-of life and tried to raise themselves, if only once, to
-the height of the eternal Ideal. He was only the messenger
-through whom Beauty offered to those men, assembled
-in this place consecrated by centuries of human
-glory, the divine gift of oblivion. He was only the translator
-into rhythmic speech of the visible language whereby,
-in this same place, the noble craftsmen of a former
-day had expressed the prayers and aspirations of the
-race. And for one hour, at least, those men would contemplate
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-the world with different eyes; they would
-think and dream with different souls.</p>
-
-<p>In fancy, he passed beyond the walls that enclosed
-the palpitating throng in a kind of heroic cycle, a circle
-of red triremes, fortified towers, and triumphal theories.
-The place now seemed too narrow for the exaltation
-of his new feeling; and once more he was drawn toward
-the real people, the immense, unanimous crowd he had
-seen outside the palace, who had sent upward in the
-starry night a clamor that, like blood or wine, intoxicated
-them as they uttered it.</p>
-
-<p>And not alone to this multitude did his thoughts turn;
-his fancy beheld an infinity of multitudes, massed together
-in theaters, dominated by an idea of truth and of
-beauty, pale and intent before the great arch of the
-stage, which should open before them some marvelous
-transfiguration of life, or frenzied by the sudden splendor
-radiating from an immortal phrase. And the dream
-of a higher Art, as it surged up again in his thought
-showed him mankind once more reverencing poets, as
-those who alone can interrupt at intervals its daily anguish,
-quench its thirst, and dispense oblivion. He even
-judged too slight the test he was now undergoing; he
-felt himself capable of creating gigantic fictions. The
-still formless work that he nourished in his soul shook
-him with a thrill of life as he looked again at the tragedienne,
-standing above the sphere of constellations&mdash;the
-Muse with the transcendent voice, who seemed to
-carry the frenzy of far-off throngs, now silenced, in the
-classic folds of her robes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Almost overcome by the incredible intensity of emotion
-that had possessed him during the brief pause, he
-began to speak again in a lower tone. He spoke of the
-growth of art between the youth of Giorgione and the
-old age of Tintoretto, and described it as golden, purple,
-rich and expressive as the pomp of the earth irradiated
-by the glow of sunset.</p>
-
-<p>"When I consider the impetuous creators of such marvelous
-beauty, my mind recalls an image from a fragment
-of Pindar's: 'When the centaurs became acquainted
-with the virtues of wine, sweet as honey and
-a conqueror of men, they banished milk from their
-tables and hastened to quaff their wine from silver horns.'
-No one in the world better knew than they how to taste
-the wine of life. They drew from it a kind of lucid intoxication
-that multiplied their powers and communicated
-to their eloquence a fertilizing energy. And in
-their greatest creations, the violent throbbing of their
-pulses seems to have persisted throughout the ages, like
-the veritable rhythm of Venetian art.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, how pure and poetic is the slumber of the Virgin
-Ursula on her immaculate bed! The most religious silence
-reigns in that chamber, where the pious lips of the
-sleeper seem to form themselves into the act of uttering
-prayer. Through the doors and the windows steals
-the timid light of dawn, illumining the syllables inscribed
-on her pillow: INFANTIA is the simple word
-that spreads around that virginal head, like the fresh
-aurora of the morning: INFANTIA. She sleeps, the
-maiden already betrothed to the pagan prince and destined
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-to martyrdom. So chaste, so ingenuous, so fervent,
-is she not the image of Art such as the precursors
-saw it, with the sincerity of their child-like eyes? INFANTIA!
-The word evokes around that couch all those
-forgotten ones: Lorenzo Veneziano, Simone da Cusighe,
-Catarino, Jacobello, Maestro Paolo, Giambono, Semitecolo,
-Antonio, Andrea, Quirizio da Murano, and all the
-laborious family by whom color&mdash;which later was the
-rival of fire&mdash;was prepared in the burning island of furnaces.
-But would not they themselves have uttered a
-cry of admiration if they had seen the drops of blood
-that sprang from the maiden's heart when it was pierced
-by the arrow of the beautiful pagan archer? A current
-so red from a virgin nourished on white milk! This victory
-was a sort of festival: to it the archers brought their
-finest bows, their richest garments, their most elegant
-air. The golden-haired barbarian, aiming his arrows at
-the martyr, with a movement so proud and graceful,
-does he not resemble an adolescent and wingless Eros?
-That gracious slayer of innocence (or perhaps his
-brother), after laying aside his bow, will abandon himself
-to the enchantment of music to dream a dream of
-infinite pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>"It was indeed Giorgione that poured into him a new
-soul, and kindled it with an implacable longing. The
-music that charms him is not the melody that last night
-the lutes diffused among the curving arches, over radiant
-thrones, or diminishing in the silence of distances in the
-visions of the third Bellini. Under the touch of religious
-hands, it still rises from the harpsichord; but the world
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-it awakens is full of a joy and a sadness wherein sin hides
-its head.</p>
-
-<p>"He that has looked at the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Concerto</i> with the eyes of
-wisdom has comprehended an extraordinary and irrevocable
-moment of the Venetian soul. By means of a
-harmony of color&mdash;whose power of expression is as
-boundless as the mystery of sounds&mdash;the artist reveals
-the first agitation of an eager spirit to whom life has
-suddenly appeared under the aspect of a rich inheritance.</p>
-
-<p>"The monk, seated at his harpsichord, and his older
-companion, do not resemble those monks that Vettor
-Carpaccio represented as flying before the wild beast
-tamed by Jerome, in San Giorgio degli Schiavoni. Their
-essence is nobler and stronger; they breathe an atmosphere
-higher and richer, propitious to the birth of a
-great joy, a great sadness, or a superb dream. What
-notes do those beautiful, sensitive hands draw from the
-keys on which they linger? Magic notes, no doubt, since
-they have power to work in the musician a transfiguration
-so great. He is half-way through his mortal existence,
-already far from his youth and near his decline,
-yet only now life reveals itself to him, rich with all good
-things, like a forest full of ripe, red fruit, the velvety
-freshness of which his always busy hands never before
-have known. As his senses still slumber, he has not
-yet fallen under the domination of a single seductive
-image, but he suffers a sort of confused anguish wherein
-regret overcomes desire, while in the web of harmonies
-that he seeks, the vision of his past&mdash;but only as it might
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-have been and was not&mdash;weaves itself like the tissue of a
-chimera.</p>
-
-<p>"His companion divines this inner agitation, for he is
-already at the threshold of old age; calm, sweet, and
-serious, he touches the shoulder of the passionate player
-with a pacifying movement. But there, emerging from
-the warm shadows like the embodiment of youthful ardor
-itself, is the young man with hat beplumed and flowing
-locks, the glowing flower of adolescence which Giorgione
-created under the influence of a reflection from
-that Hellenic myth whence arose the ideal form of Hermaphrodite.
-He is there, present, yet a stranger, separated
-from the others, like a being that cares only for
-his own welfare. The music exalts his inexpressible
-dream, and seems to multiply indefinitely his capacity
-to enjoy. He knows himself master of that life which
-escapes the other two, and the harmonies sought by the
-musician seem to him only the prelude to his own feast.
-His glance is sidewise and intent, turned toward a certain
-point, as if he would attract to himself something
-that charms him; his closed lips are ready with a kiss
-as yet ungiven; his brow is so spacious that the thickest
-garland would not encumber it; but if I think of his
-hands, I fancy them crushing the laurel leaves to perfume
-his fingers."</p>
-
-<p>The hands of the Inspirer illustrated the gesture of
-the covetous youth, as if they were really pressing out
-the essence of the aromatic leaf; and his voice lent to the
-image an illusion so strong that the young men felt that
-here at last was one who could express their cherished
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-and secret thoughts and dreams, and give voice to their
-unspeakable, continuous, and ceaseless longings. They
-occupied the free space at the back of the seated audience,
-making a living border for that compact mass; and, as
-the edges of a flag that waves in the breeze have a
-stronger flutter, these youthful hearts beat faster than
-those of older men at the warm breath of the poet's
-words.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio recognized them, distinguishing them by their
-singularity of attitude, the intensity of emotion revealed
-by their compressed lips and the glow of ardor in their
-cheeks. On the face of one, turned toward the open
-balcony, he read the enchantment of the autumn night,
-and the delicious breeze coming from the lagoon. The
-glance of another indicated, by a ray of love, some
-woman, seated near by, looking as if she were lost in
-tender recollections, her face white, her red lips slightly
-parted, like the entrance to a hive moist with honey.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes continually returned to the promised woman,
-who looked as she stood there like the living support of
-a starry sphere. He was grateful to her for her choice
-of this manner of appearing to him when, for the first
-time, he gave himself to the people. He no longer regarded
-her as merely the passing fancy of a single night,
-a woman ripened by long experience, but the marvelous
-instrument of a new art, the interpreter of the greatest
-poetry, she that should incarnate in her changeful personality
-his future fictions of beauty, she whose unforgettable
-voice should carry to mankind the long-expected
-word. He now felt attached to her, not by a promise
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-of love, but by a promise of glory; and the formless work
-that he still cherished in his breast again leaped within
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"You that listen to me," he continued, "do you not
-see some analogy between these three symbols of Giorgione's
-and the three generations, all living at the same
-time, that illumined the dawn of a new century? Venice,
-the City Triumphant, reveals herself to their eyes like a
-great, a superabundant banquet, where all the riches accumulated
-throughout centuries of war and commerce
-are to be set out without stint. What richer fountain
-of pleasure could there be to initiate life in insatiable
-desire? It is a time of agitation, almost of distraction,
-which, because of its fulness, is worth an hour of heroic
-violence. Alluring voices and laughter seem to float
-from the hills of Asolo where, surrounded by all delights,
-reigns the daughter of San Marco, Domina Aceli,
-who found in a myrtle grove of Cyprus the cincture of
-Aphrodite. Now approaches the youth with the white
-plumes; he comes to the banquet, followed by his uncurbed
-escort, and all desires kindle and burn like torches
-quickened by the wind. And this was the beginning
-of that divine Autumn of Art toward which men will
-always turn with deep emotion as long as the human
-soul strives to transcend the narrowness of its common
-existence in order to live a life more fervent or to die
-a nobler death.</p>
-
-<p>"I see Giorgione imminent on the marvelous sphere,
-but I do not recognize his mortal person; I seek him
-in the mystery of the fiery cloud that envelops him. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-appears to us more myth-like than human. The destiny
-of no poet on earth is comparable to his. All concerning
-his life is unknown; some even go so far as to deny
-his existence. His name is inscribed on no work, and
-many refuse to attribute any work to him with absolute
-certainty. But the whole of Venetian art was illumined
-by his revelation; it was from him that the great
-Titian received the secret of infusing glowing blood into
-the veins of the beings he created. In fact, that which
-Giorgione represents in Art is the Epiphany of the
-Flame. He deserves to be called 'the Flame-Bearer,' like
-Prometheus.</p>
-
-<p>"When I consider the rapidity with which this sacred
-gift has passed from one artist to another, glowing with
-increasing splendor from color to color, I think of one
-of those <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">lampadeforie</i>, or festivals, in which the Greeks
-tried to perpetuate the memory of the Titan son of
-Japetus. On the day of the festival, a group of young
-Athenian horsemen would set off at a gallop, riding from
-Ceramicus to Colonos, their chief waving a torch that
-had been lighted at the altar of a temple. If the torch
-was extinguished by the swiftness of the course, the
-bearer handed it to a companion, who re-lighted it as
-he rode; and this one gave it to a third; the third to a
-fourth, and so on, always galloping, until the last bearer
-laid it, still alight, on the altar of the Titan. This
-image, with all it suggests of fiery vehemence, represents
-to my fancy the feast of the master-colorists of
-Venice. Each of them, even to the least illustrious, held
-in his hand the sacred gift, if only for an instant. Some
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-of them, like that first Bonifacio, whom we should glorify,
-gathered with incombustible fingers the inmost
-flower of the flame."</p>
-
-<p>His fingers made a movement in the air as if to pluck
-the ideal flower. His eyes turned again toward the celestial
-sphere, as if he wished to offer the fiery gift to
-her who guarded the divine zodiacal beasts. "To you,
-Perdita!" But the woman was smiling at some one at
-a distance.</p>
-
-<p>Following the thread of her smile, Stelio's eyes were
-led to an unknown woman, who suddenly seemed to
-stand out illumined against a shadowy background.</p>
-
-<p>Was not that the creature of music whose name had
-resounded against the iron sides of the ship that evening,
-in the silence and the shadow?</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to Stelio to be almost an interior image,
-suddenly engendered in that part of his soul where the
-brief sensation he had felt while passing through the
-shadow of the vessel had remained like an isolated and
-indistinct point. For a second she was beautiful&mdash;as
-beautiful as were his yet unexpressed thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>"The city to which such creators have given a soul so
-powerful," he continued, floating himself on the rising
-wave, "is considered to-day, by the greater number, only
-as a vast inert reliquary, or as a refuge of peace and
-oblivion.</p>
-
-<p id="id59">"In truth, I know of no other place in the world&mdash;unless
-it be Rome&mdash;where a bold and ambitious spirit can
-better foster the active virtue of his intellect, and all
-the energies of his being toward the supreme heights,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-than on these quiet waters. I know of no marsh capable
-of provoking in human pulses a fever more violent
-that that which at times steals up to us from the shadows
-of a silent canal. Nor do those men who, at noontide
-in the midsummer heat, lie among the ripe grain,
-feel in their veins a more fiery wave of blood than that
-which suffuses our eyes when we lean too intently over
-these waters, to see whether, perchance, we may descry
-in their depths some old sword or ancient diadem.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not all gracious spirits come hither, as to a place
-of sweet refuge&mdash;those that hide some secret pain, those
-that have accomplished some final renunciation, those
-that have become weak through some morbid affection,
-and those that seek silence only to hear the soft step of
-advancing Death? Perhaps in their fading eyes Venice
-appears like a clement city of death, embraced by the
-waters of oblivion. But their presence is no more important
-than the wandering weeds that float at the foot
-of the steps of the marble palaces. They only increase
-the odor of sickly things, that strange, feverish odor on
-which at times, toward evening, after a laborious day,
-we nourish the fulness of our own feelings.</p>
-
-<p>"But the ambiguous city does not always indulge the
-illusions of those that look to her as a giver of peace.
-I know one who, in the midst of sweet repose on her
-breast, started up as terror-struck as if when lying beside
-his loved one, with her hand resting on his weary
-eyelids, he had heard serpents hissing in her hair!</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, if I only knew how to tell you of that prodigious
-life which palpitates beneath her great necklaces and her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-thousand green girdles! Not a day passes that she
-does not absorb more and more of our souls: sometimes
-she gives them back to us fresh and intact, restored
-to their original newness, whereon to-morrow's events
-will be imprinted with indelible clearness; again, she
-gives them back to us infinitely subtle and voracious,
-like a flame that destroys all that it touches, so that, at
-evening, among the cinders and the ashes, we may light
-upon some wonderful sublimate. Each day she urges
-us to the act that is the very genesis of our species: the
-unceasing effort to surpass ourselves. She shows us the
-possibility of transforming pain into the most efficacious
-stimulating energy; she teaches us that pleasure is the
-most certain means of knowledge given to us by Nature,
-and that the man who has suffered much is less wise
-than he that has enjoyed much."</p>
-
-<p>At these audacious words, a slight murmur of disapproval
-passed over the auditorium; the Queen shook her
-head ever so little, in token of denial; several ladies, in
-a rapid exchange of glances, seemed to signify to one
-another a sentiment of graceful horror. But these signs
-were overbalanced by the acclamation of youthful approval
-that rose from all sides toward him that taught
-with a boldness so frank the art of rising to the superior
-forms of life by the virtue of joy.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio smiled as he recognized his own, and so numerous;
-he smiled to recognize the efficacy of his teaching,
-which already, in more than one spirit, had dissipated
-the clouds of inert sadness, shown it the cowardice
-of weak tears, and infused it with a lasting disdain for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-feeble complaint and soft compassion. He rejoiced at
-having been able to proclaim once more the principle of
-his doctrine, emanating naturally from the soul of the
-art he glorified. And those that had retired to a hermit's
-cell, there to adore a sad phantom that lived only
-in the dim mirror of their own eyes; those that had
-created themselves kings of palaces without windows,
-where, from time immemorial, they had awaited a Visitation;
-those that had sought to unearth among ruins
-the image of Beauty, but who had found only a worn
-sphinx, which had tormented them with its endless
-enigmas; those that stood every evening at their thresholds
-to greet the mysterious Stranger bearing gifts
-under his mantle, and who, with pale cheeks, laid their
-ears against the ground to catch the first sound of the
-Stranger's approach; those whose souls were sterilized
-by resigned mourning or devoured by desperate pride;
-those that were hardened by useless obstinacy, or deprived
-of sleep by hope continually disappointed&mdash;all
-these spirits he wished now to summon that they might
-recognize their ailment under the splendor of that ancient
-yet ever-new soul.</p>
-
-<p>"In truth," said he, in a tone full of exultation, "if
-the whole population, abandoning their homes, should
-emigrate, attracted to-day toward other shores as formerly
-their heroic youth were tempted by the arch of the
-Bosphorus, in the time of the Doge Pietro Ziani, and the
-voice of prayer should no more strike against the sonorous
-gold of the concave mosaics, nor the sound of the
-oar perpetuate with its rhythmic stroke the meditation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-of the silent stones, Venice would still remain a City of
-Life. The ideal creatures protected by its silence live in
-the whole past and for the whole future. In them we
-shall always discover new concordances with the edifice
-of the universe, unforeseen meetings with the idea
-born only yesterday, clear announcements of that which
-is with us only a presentiment as yet, open answers
-to that which as yet we have not dared to ask.</p>
-
-<p>"These ideal creatures are simple, but they are full
-of innumerable meanings; they are ingenuous, yet are
-clothed in strange attire. Should we contemplate them
-for an indefinite time, they never would cease to pour
-dissimilar truths into our minds. Should we visit them
-every day, every day they would appear to us under a
-new aspect, as do the sea, the rivers, the fields, the
-woods, the rocks. At times the things they say to us
-do not really reach our intellects, but reveal themselves
-to us in a sort of confused happiness, which causes our
-own substance to dilate and quiver to its inmost depths.
-Some bright day they will point out to us the path to
-the distant forest, wherein Beauty has awaited us from
-time immemorial, buried in her mystic hair.</p>
-
-<p>"Whence came to them their immeasurable power?</p>
-
-<p>"From the pure unconsciousness of the artificers that
-created them.</p>
-
-<p>"Those profound men ignored the immensity of the
-things they wished to express. Penetrating with a million
-roots into the soil of life, not like single trees, but
-like vast forests, they absorbed infinite elements, which
-they transfused and condensed into ideal species, whose
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-essences nevertheless remained unknown to them, as the
-flavor of the apple is unknown to the branch that bears
-it. They were the mysterious means chosen by Nature
-in her effort to represent in an integral form those types
-in which she has not yet succeeded. Because of this,
-continuing the work of the Divine Mother, their minds,
-as Leonardo says, have become transformed into 'a likeness
-of the Divine Mind.' And because creative force
-rushed to their fingers incessantly, like sap to the buds
-of trees, they created with joy."</p>
-
-<p>All the desire of the determined artist, panting and
-struggling to obtain this Olympian gift, all his envy
-of those gigantic creators of Beauty, all his insatiable
-thirst for happiness and glory, were revealed in the tone
-in which he pronounced these last words. Once more
-the soul of the multitude was under the magic of the
-poet's spell, strained and vibrating like a single cord
-composed of a thousand strands, the resonance of which
-could be incalculably prolonged. That resonance awakened
-within the multitude the sense of a truth that had
-lain dormant, but which the poet's words now revealed
-for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>In the sonority of the deep silence, the solitary voice
-reached its climax.</p>
-
-<p>"To create with joy! It is the attribute of Divinity!
-It is impossible to imagine at the summit of the spirit
-an act more triumphal. Even the words that signify
-it possess something of the splendor of sunrise.</p>
-
-<p>"And these artists created by a medium that is in
-itself a joyous mystery: by color, which is the ornament
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-of the world; by color, which seems the effort of matter
-to become light.</p>
-
-<p>"And the newly awakened musical sense they had
-for color was such that their creations transcend the
-narrow limits of figured symbols, and assume the high
-revealing power of an infinite harmony.</p>
-
-<p>"Never have the words of Vinci, on whom Truth
-flashed one day with her thousand secrets, appeared so
-true as when we stand before the great symphonic canvases
-of the masters: 'Music cannot be called anything
-but the sister of Painting.' They are not alone silent
-poetry, but also silent music. The most subtle seekers
-of rare symbols, and those most desirous to impress
-the sign of an internal universe on the purity of a meditative
-brow, seem to us almost sterile compared with these
-great unconscious musicians.</p>
-
-<p>"When we behold Bonifacio, in the parable of Dives,
-intoning with a note of fire the most powerful harmony
-of color in which the essence of a proud and voluptuous
-nature ever has revealed itself, we do not ask questions
-about the blond youth, listening to the music and seated
-between the two magnificent courtesans, whose faces
-glow like lamps of purest amber; but, passing beneath
-the material symbol, we abandon ourselves to the power
-of evocation of those chords, wherein our spirits
-seem to-day to find a presentiment of I know not what
-evening, heavy with beautiful destiny and autumnal gold,
-in a harbor as quiet as a basin of perfumed oil where
-a galley palpitating with oriflammes shall enter with a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-strange silence, like a butterfly of twilight darting into
-the chalice of some great flower.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall we not, with our mortal eyes, really see it, some
-glorious evening, approaching the Palace of the Doges?
-Does it not appear to us from a prophetic horizon in the
-Allegory of Autumn which Tintoretto offers us, like a
-superior, concrete image of our dream of yesterday?</p>
-
-<p>"Seated on the shore, like a deity, Venice receives the
-ring from the young, vine-wreathed god who descends
-into the water, while Beauty floats in the air with a
-starry diadem to crown the marvelous alliance!</p>
-
-<p>"Behold yon distant ship! It seems to bring a message
-from the gods. Behold the symbolic Woman! Her
-body is capable of bearing the germs of a world!"</p>
-
-<p>A whirlwind of applause broke out, dominated by the
-clamor of the young men, who hailed him who had
-kindled before their anxious eyes a hope so glowing, who
-had professed a faith so strong in the occult genius of
-the race, in the lofty virtue of the ideals handed down
-by their fathers, in the sovereign dignity of their spirit,
-the indestructible power of beauty, in all the great things
-held as naught by modern barbarity. The disciples extended
-their arms toward the master with an effusion of
-gratitude, an impulse of love, for he had illumined their
-souls as with a torch. In each lived again Giorgione's
-creation: the youth with the beautiful white plumes, who
-advanced toward the rich mass of spoils; and each fancied
-as multiplied to infinity his own power to enjoy all
-things. Their cry expressed so plainly their perturbation
-of spirit, that the master felt an inward tremor and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-the inrush of a wave of sadness as he thought of the
-ashes of this sudden fire, and of the cruel wakening of
-the morrow. Against what sharp obstacles must be
-broken this terrible desire to live, this violent will of
-each to shape the wings of Victory to his own destiny,
-and to bend all the energies of his nature toward the
-sublime end!</p>
-
-<p>But that night favored youthful delirium. All the
-dreams of domination, of pleasure and of glory, that
-Venice has first cradled, then stifled, in her marble arms,
-seemed to rise anew from the foundations of the palace,
-to enter from the open balconies, palpitating like a people
-revivified under the arch of that rich and heavy ceiling,
-which was like a suspended treasure. The strength
-which, on the ceiling and the walls, seemed to swell the
-muscles of the gods, the kings, and the heroes, the beauty
-which, in the nudity of the goddesses, the queens, and
-the courtesans, ran like visible music&mdash;all that human
-strength and beauty, transfigured by centuries of art,
-harmonized itself in a single figure, which these intoxicated
-ones fancied they beheld, real and breathing,
-erected before them by the new poet.</p>
-
-<p>They vented their intoxicated enthusiasm in that great
-cry which they sent up to him who had offered to their
-thirsty lips a cup of his own wine. Henceforth, all would
-be able to see the inextinguishable flame through its
-watery veil. Some one among them already imagined
-himself crumpling laurel leaves to perfume his hands;
-and another resolved to seek at the bottom of a silent
-canal for the old sword and the ancient diadem.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV<br />
-<small>THE SPIRIT OF MELODY</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>Alone with the statues in one of the rooms
-of the neighboring museum, Stelio Effrena
-rested for a moment, shrinking from any other
-contact, feeling the need of gathering his
-strength and quieting his nerves, to free himself from
-the unusual vibration through which it seemed to him
-all the essence of his spirit had been dissipated and
-scattered over the composite soul of the throng. Of
-his recent words, no trace remained in his memory,
-and of recent images he perceived no vestige. The
-only phrase that lingered in his mind was that "inmost
-flower of the flame," which he had conjured up in
-speaking of the glory of the first Bonifacio, and which
-he had plucked with his own incombustible fingers to
-offer to his promised love. He remembered how, at the
-precise instant of this spontaneous offering, the woman
-had turned away her head, and how, instead of a glance
-from her dreamy eyes, he had encountered the indicating
-smile. Then the intoxicating cloud that had been just on
-the point of melting away, seemed to condense itself anew
-in his brain, in the vague form of the creature of music;
-and he fancied that she held in her hand the flower of
-flame, as, in a dominating attitude, she emerged above
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-his inward agitation as from the trembling waves of a
-summer sea.</p>
-
-<p>As if to celebrate that image, from the Hall of the
-Greater Council came the first notes of the symphony
-of Benedetto Marcello, the fugue-like movement of which
-revealed at once its grand style. A sonorous idea, clear
-and strong as a living person, developed itself in the
-powerful measure; and in that melody Stelio recognized
-the virtue of the same principle around which, as around
-a thyrsus, he had twined the garlands of his poesy.</p>
-
-<p>Then the name that had already resounded against the
-sides of the vessel, in the silence and the shadow, that
-name which, in the great wave of sound from the evening
-bells, had been lost like a sibylline leaf, seemed to
-his fancy to propose its syllables to the orchestra as a
-new theme to be interpreted by the musicians' bows.
-The violins, viols, and violoncellos sang it in turn; the
-sudden blasts of the heroic trumpets exalted it; and at
-last a whole quartette, in one great, thrilling chord, flung
-it toward that heaven of joy where later would sparkle
-the starry crown offered to Ariadne by the golden
-Aphrodite.</p>
-
-<p>In the pause that followed, Stelio experienced a singular
-agitation, almost like a religious ecstasy, before
-that annunciation. He realized what it was worth to
-him, in that inestimable lyric moment, to find himself
-alone amid this group of white and motionless statues.
-A shred of the same mystery which, under the quarter
-of the ship, had seemed to float lightly across his senses
-like a misty veil, again waved before his eyes in that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-deserted hall, which was so near to the human throng.
-It was like the silence of the sea-shell, lying on the shore
-beside the stormy ocean. He again felt a conviction,
-such as he had already experienced in certain extraordinary
-hours of his journey, of the presence of his fate,
-which was about to give to his spirit a new impulse,
-perhaps to quicken within him a marvelous act of will.
-And, as he remembered the thousands of obscure
-destinies hanging over the heads of that crowd, which
-had been so stirred by his images of an ideal life, he
-congratulated himself on being able to adore alone the
-propitious demon that came to visit him secretly, to
-offer to him a veiled gift, in the name of an unknown
-mistress.</p>
-
-<p>He thrilled at the burst of human voices that saluted
-with triumphal acclamation the unvanquished god.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva il forte, viva il grande!</i></p>
-
-<p>The vast hall resounded like a great timbrel, and the
-reverberation penetrated through the Censors' Stairway,
-the Golden Stairway, the corridors and the vestibules to
-the furthermost parts of the palace, like a thunder of
-joy echoing in the serene night.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva il forte, viva il grande!<br />
-Vincitor dell' Indie dome!</i></p>
-
-<p>It seemed indeed that the chorus was saluting the
-apparition of the magnificent god invoked by the poet
-on the City Beautiful. It seemed that in those vocal
-notes the folds of his purple draperies quivered like
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-flames in a crystal tube. The living image hung suspended
-over the assemblage, which nourished it with
-its own dream.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva il forte, viva il grande!</i></p>
-
-<p>In the impetuous fugue movement, the bass, the contraltos,
-the sopranos repeated the frenzied acclamation
-to the Immortal of the thousand names and the thousand
-crowns, "born on an ineffable bed, like to a young man
-in his first youth."</p>
-
-<p>The old Dionysian intoxication seemed born again,
-diffusing itself through that divine chorus. The fulness
-and freshness of life in the smile of Zeus, who freed
-men's souls from sadness, expressed itself in a luminous
-outburst of joy. The torches of the Bacchantes blazed
-and crackled in the sound. As in an Orphic hymn, the
-brightness of conflagration illumined that youthful brow,
-surmounted by azure hair. "When the splendor of fire
-invaded the whole earth, he alone checked the whirlwinds
-of flame." As in the Homeric hymn, there palpitated
-the sterile bosom of the sea, expressing in regular
-cadences the measured stroke of the oars that propelled
-the stout vessel toward unknown lands. The Flower-bearer,
-the Fructifier, the visible Remedy for mortal man,
-the sacred Flower, The Friend of Pleasure, Dionysius,
-the liberator, suddenly appeared before mankind on the
-wings of song, crowning for them that nocturnal hour
-with happiness, placing before them once more the cup
-overflowing with all the good things of life.</p>
-
-<p>The song increased in power; all the voices blended
-in the rush of melody. The hymn celebrated the tamer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-of tigers, of panthers, lions and lynxes. A cry seemed
-to rise from Mænads with heads turned backward, flying
-locks and floating robes, who struck their cymbals and
-shook their castanets: <em>Evoé!</em></p>
-
-<p>But now suddenly surged above these heroic measures
-a broad, pastoral rhythm, invoking the Theban Bacchus,
-of the pure brow and gentle thoughts:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Quel che all'olmo la vite in stretto nodo<br />
-Pronuba accoppia, e i pampini feconda</i> ...</p>
-
-<p>Only two voices, in a succession of sixths, now sang
-the flowery nuptials, the leafy marriage, the flexible
-bonds. Before the eyes of the multitude again passed
-that image already created by the poet of the barque
-laden with clusters, like a vat filled with grapes to be
-made into wine. And again the song seemed to recall
-the miracle witnessed by the prudent pilot Medeia:
-"And behold! a sweet and fragrant wine ran over the
-swift, black boat.... And behold! a vine climbed
-to the top of the sail, and from it hung innumerable
-clusters of grapes. And a dark ivy twined about the
-mast, and it was covered with flowers, and beautiful
-fruits amid their foliage grew thereon, and garlands were
-wound about the rowlocks."</p>
-
-<p>The spirit of the fugue then passed into the orchestra,
-and mounted in exquisitely light roulades, while the
-voices struck on the orchestral web with simultaneous
-percussion. And, like a thyrsus waving over the Bacchic
-troop, a single voice floated out in the nuptial melody,
-with the laughing joy and grace of the pastoral marriage:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva dell'olmo,<br />
-E della vite<br />
-L'almo fecondo<br />
-Sostenitor!</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The voices seemed to evoke the image of erect and
-graceful Tiades, gently waving their thyrsi in the mists
-of divine intoxication, dressed in long saffron-hued robes,
-their faces lighted up, ardent as those women of Veronese,
-who leaned over their aerial balconies to listen to
-the song.</p>
-
-<p>But the heroic acclamation once more sprang up with
-final vehemence. The face of the conquering god reappeared
-amid torches frantically waved aloft. Then,
-in unison, in a supreme burst of joy, voices and orchestra
-thundered together at the many-eyed chimera under the
-suspended treasure of that dome circled by red triremes,
-armed towers, and triumphal bands:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva dell'Indie,<br />
-Viva de' mari,<br />
-Viva de' mostri<br />
-Il domator.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena had gone as far as the threshold;
-through the throng that made way before him he penetrated
-into the hall and halted near the platform occupied
-by the orchestra and the singers. His restless eyes
-sought La Foscarina near the celestial sphere, but did
-not find her. The head of the Tragic Muse no longer
-rose above the constellations. Where was she? To what
-place has she withdrawn? Could she see him, although
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-he could not see her? A confused anxiety agitated him,
-and the remembrance of the early evening on the water
-returned to him indistinctly, accompanied by the words
-of her recent promise. Glancing up at the open balconies,
-he thought that perhaps she had stepped outside to
-breathe the fresh night air, and that, perhaps, leaning
-against the balustrade she felt passing over her cool
-throat the wave of music, which would seem as sweet
-to her as the delight of a kiss from beloved lips.</p>
-
-<p>But his impatience to hear the divine voice dominated
-all other impatience, abolished all other desire. He observed
-that again a profound silence reigned throughout
-the hall, as at the instant when he had opened his lips
-to speak his first word. And, as at that instant, the
-versatile and ephemeral monster, with a thousand
-human faces, seemed to extend itself and yawn to receive
-a new soul.</p>
-
-<p>Some one near Stelio whispered the name of Donatella
-Arvale. He turned his eyes toward the platform, past
-the row of violoncellos, which formed a brown hedge.
-The singer remained invisible, hidden in the delicate,
-quivering forest of bows, whence would arise the mournful
-harmony that must accompany the Lament of
-Ariadne.</p>
-
-<p>Amid a sympathetic silence rose a prelude of violins.
-Then the viols and violoncellos added a sigh more profound
-to that imploring plaint. Was not this&mdash;after the
-Phrygian flute and the castanets, after the instruments
-of orgies, which trouble the reason and provoke delirium&mdash;was
-not this the august Doric lyre, grave and sweet,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-the harmonious support of song? Thus was the Drama
-born from the boisterous Dithyramb. The great metamorphosis
-of the Dionysian rite, the frenzy of the sacred
-festival before the creative inspiration of the tragic poet,
-were figured in that musical alternance. The fiery
-breath of the Thracian god gave life to a sublime form
-of Art. The crown and the tripod, the prize of the
-poet's victory, had displaced the lascivious goat and the
-Attic basket of figs. Æschylus, keeper of a vineyard,
-had been visited by the god, who had infused into him
-his spirit of flame. On the bank of the Acropolis, near
-the sanctuary of Dionysius, a marble theater had risen,
-capable of containing the chosen people.</p>
-
-<p>Thus suddenly opened in the mind of the Master the
-pathways of centuries, extending through the distance
-of primitive mysteries. That form of Art, toward which
-now tended the effort of his genius, attracted by the
-obscure aspirations of human multitudes, appeared to
-him in the sanctity of its origins. The divine sadness of
-Ariadne, up-springing like a melodious cry from the
-furious Thiaros, made leap once more within him the
-work he nourished in his soul, unformed yet alive. With
-a glance, again he sought the Muse of the revealing voice
-against the sphere of constellations, but he did not see
-her, and turned once more to the forest of instruments,
-whence rose the imploring plaint.</p>
-
-<p>Then, amid the slender bows, that rose and fell upon
-the strings with alternating movement, appeared the
-singer, erect as a stem; and, like a stem, she seemed
-to balance herself an instant on the softened harmony.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-The youthfulness of her agile and robust body shone
-resplendent through the texture of her robes, as a flame
-is seen through the thinness of polished ivory. Rising
-and falling around her white form, the bows seemed
-to draw their melody from the secret music that dwelt
-within her. When her lips opened in an enchanting
-curve, Stelio recognized the strength and purity of the
-voice before the singer had uttered one modulation, as
-if she were a crystal statue wherein he could behold
-the unspringing of a jet of living water.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Come mai puoi<br />
-Vedermi piangere?</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The melody of a by-gone love and long-dead sorrow
-flowed from those lips with an expression so pure and
-strong that suddenly, within the soul of the multitude,
-it was changed into a mysterious happiness. Was that
-strain indeed the divine plaint of the daughter of Minos,
-as she held out her arms in vain to the fair Stranger
-on the deserted shore of Naxos? The fable vanished;
-the illusion of the moment was abolished. The eternal
-love and eternal sorrow of gods and of men were exhaled
-in that perfect voice. The futile regret for each lost
-joy, the recollection of each fugitive blessing, the supreme
-prayer flying toward every sail on the sea, toward
-every sun hiding itself among the mountains, the implacable
-desire and the promise of death&mdash;all these things
-passed into the great, solitary song, transformed by the
-power of Art into sublime essences which the soul could
-receive without suffering. The words were dissolved
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-in tone, losing their significance, changed into notes of
-love and sadness, indefinitely illuminating. Like a circle
-that is closed, and yet dilates continually in accordance
-with the rhythm of universal life, the melody encircled
-the composite soul which dilated with it in immeasurable
-joy. Through the open balconies, in the perfect
-calm of the autumn night, the enchantment spread over
-the peaceful waters and mounted to the watchful stars,
-higher than the motionless masts of the ships, higher
-than the sacred towers, inhabited by the now silent
-bronze bells. During the interludes the singer drooped
-her youthful head and stood motionless as a white statue
-among the forest of instruments, where the long bows
-rose and fell in alternate movement, perhaps unconscious
-of that world which in a few brief moments her song
-had transfigured.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V<br />
-<small>THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>Descending to the courtyard hastily, in order
-to escape importunate curiosity, Stelio took refuge
-in a shadowy corner, to watch, among the
-crowd coming down the Giants' Stairway, for
-the appearance of the two women, the actress and the
-singer, who were to meet him near the well.</p>
-
-<p>Every instant his expectation became more anxious,
-while around him rose the tumultuous cry that extended
-to the outer walls of the palace and lost itself among
-the clouds, now lighted with a glare as of a conflagration.
-An almost terrible joy seemed to spread over the Anadyomenean
-City, as if a vehement breath had suddenly
-dilated all breasts, filling the veins of all men with a
-superabundance of life. The repetition of the Bacchic
-Chorus celebrating the crown of stars, placed by Aphrodite
-on the forgetful head of Ariadne, had drawn a cry
-from the throng on the Molo beneath the open balconies.
-When, at the final elevation, the word <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva!</i> rang out
-from the chorus of Mænads, Satyrs, and Egipans, the
-chorus of the populace had responded to it like a formidable
-echo from the harbor of San Marco. And in this
-moment of Dionysian delirium it seemed as if the people
-remembered the forests of old that were burned on sacred
-nights, and had given a signal for the conflagration that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-must light up the beauty of Venice in final, dazzling
-splendor.</p>
-
-<p>The dream of Paris Eglano&mdash;the spectacle of marvelous
-flames offered to love on a floating couch&mdash;flashed
-before Stelio's vision. The persistent image of Donatella
-Arvale lingered in his thought: a supple, youthful
-figure, strong and shapely, rising erect amid the sonorous
-forest of bows, which seemed to draw their notes from
-the hidden music within herself. And, seized with a
-strange distress, through which passed something like
-the shadow of horror, he saw the image of the other
-woman: poisoned by art, worn with experience, with the
-taste of maturity and worldly corruptness on those eloquent
-lips, a feverish dryness in those hands, which had
-pressed the juice from deceitful fruits, and with the marks
-of a thousand masks on the face that had simulated the
-fury of all mortal passions. To-night, at last, after a
-long period of waiting and of hope, he was to receive
-the gift of that heart, no longer young, which had been
-claimed by others before him, but which he never yet
-had called his own. How his heart had throbbed in
-the early evening as he sat beside that silent woman,
-floating toward the City Beautiful over the waters that
-seemed to bear them on with the terrifying smoothness
-of mysterious machinery. Ah, why did she come now to
-meet him in company with the other temptress? Why
-did she place beside her despair and worldly wisdom the
-pure splendor of innocent youth?</p>
-
-<p>He started suddenly as he perceived in the throng at
-the top of the marble staircase, by the light of the smoking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-torches, the form of La Foscarina pressed so closely
-against that of Donatella Arvale that the robes of both
-blended into one mass of whiteness. He followed them
-with his eyes until they reached the lowest stair, anxious
-as if at each step they had approached the edge of an
-abyss. The unknown during these hours had already
-led in the heart of the poet a life so intense that on
-seeing her approach him he experienced the emotion that
-would have seized him before a breathing incarnation of
-one of the ideal creatures born of his art.</p>
-
-<p>She descended slowly on the human wave. Behind
-her, the Palace of the Doges, filled with streams of lights
-and confused sounds, made one think of those fairy-tale
-awakenings which suddenly, in the depths of the forest,
-transfigure inaccessible castles where for centuries the
-hair on royal heads had grown longer and longer during
-a protracted sleep. The two guardian Giants shone
-red in the blaze of the torches; the cuspid of the Golden
-Gate sparkled with tiny lights. And still the clamor
-rose and swelled above the groups of marbles, loud as
-the moaning of the stormy sea against the walls of Malamocco.</p>
-
-<p>In this tumult, Effrena saw advancing toward him the
-two temptresses, escaping from the crowd as if from
-the clasp of a monster. And his fancy pictured extraordinary
-assimilations, which should be realized with
-the ease of dreams and the solemnity of liturgic ceremonies.
-He said to himself that Perdita was leading
-this magnificent prey to him, that he might discover
-some rarely beautiful secret, that some great work of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-love might be accomplished, in which she desired to be
-his fellow artisan. He told himself that this very night
-she would say to him most marvelous words. Across
-his spirit passed once again the indefinable melancholy
-he had felt when he leaned over the bronze rim to contemplate
-the reflection of the stars in that dark mirror;
-he waited in expectation of some event that should stir
-that secret soul in the furthermost depths of his being,
-where it lay motionless, strange, intangible. By the
-whirling of his thoughts, he comprehended that he was
-again plunged into that delirium which the glamor of the
-lagoon had given him at twilight. Then, emerging from
-the shadowy corner, he went forward to meet the two
-women with an intoxicating presentiment.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, Effrena!" said La Foscarina, as she reached the
-well, "I had given up all hope of finding you here. We
-are very late, are we not? But we were caught in the
-crowd and could not escape."</p>
-
-<p>Then, turning toward her companion with a smile, she
-said:</p>
-
-<p>"Donatella, this is the Master of the Flame."</p>
-
-<p>Without speaking, but with a slight smile, Donatella
-Arvale responded to the low bow of the young man.</p>
-
-<p>"We must find our gondola," said La Foscarina. "It
-is waiting for us at the Ponte della Paglia. Will you
-come with us, Effrena? We must profit by the opportunity.
-The crowd is rushing toward the Piazzetta. The
-Queen will leave by the Porta della Carta."</p>
-
-<p>A long, unanimous cry saluted the appearance of the
-fair Queen in her pearls, as she stood at the head of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-stairs, where long ago, in the presence of the populace,
-the Doge received the ducal ensign. Again the name of
-the white starry flower and the pearl arose from the
-crowd and was echoed among the marbles. Flashes of
-joy sparkled against the dark sky, a thousand fiery doves
-flew from the pinnacles of San Marco, like messengers
-of Fire.</p>
-
-<p>"The Epiphany of the Flame!" cried La Foscarina,
-as she reached the Molo and gazed upon the marvelous
-spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>Donatella Arvale and Stelio Effrena stood side by
-side, astonished; then they looked into each other's eyes,
-bewildered. And their faces, illumined by the reflections,
-shone as if they were leaning over a furnace or a glowing
-crater.</p>
-
-<p>All the innumerable appearances of the volatile and
-multi-colored Fire spread over the firmament, crept over
-the waters, curled around the masts of the ships, enwreathed
-the cupolas and the towers, adorned the friezes,
-draped the statuary, bejeweled the capitals, enriched
-every line and transfigured every aspect of the sacred
-and profane architectures around that profound and mysterious
-watery mirror, which multiplied these marvels.
-The astonished eye could no longer distinguish between
-the contour and the quality of the elements, but it was
-charmed by a moving vision wherein all forms lived a
-lucid, fluid life, suspended in vibrating ether, so that
-the slender prows curving over the waves and the myriad
-of golden doves against the dark sky seemed to rival
-one another in the glory of swift motion, and together to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-reach the summit of immaterial beauty. That which in
-the twilight had seemed a silvery palace of Neptune,
-built in imitation of a rare shell, at this hour had become
-a new temple, erected by the nimble genii of the Fire.
-It seemed like one of those labyrinthian constructions
-of our dreams, prodigiously enlarged, that rise on andirons,
-at the hundred gates of which stand the two-faced
-augurs who make ambiguous gestures to the watching
-maiden; or like one of those fairy-like red palaces, at
-the thousand windows of which appear the faces of salamander
-princesses, who smile amorously upon the dreaming
-poet.</p>
-
-<p>Rosy as a setting moon, the sphere of the Fortuna,
-borne on the shoulders of the Atlantides, radiated on
-the triple loggia, its rays engendering a cycle of satellites.
-From the Riva, from San Giorgio, from the Giudecca,
-with a continual crackling, clusters of fiery stems
-rose toward the clouds, and there blossomed into sparkling
-roses, lilies, and palms, a flowery paradise, forming
-an aerial garden that continually faded and bloomed
-again with yet stranger and richer blossoms. It was like
-a rapid succession of springs and autumns in the empyrean.
-An immense sparkling shower of leaves and petals
-fell from the celestial dissolutions, enveloping all things
-in its golden shimmer.</p>
-
-<p>From a distance, through gaps in the glittering rain,
-a flotilla gay with flags could be seen approaching over
-the waters of the lagoon: a fairy-like fleet such as might
-float through the dream of a sybarite sleeping his last
-sleep on a bed steeped in deadly perfumes. Like those,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-perhaps, their ropes were made from the twisted hair
-of slaves captured in conquered cities, and still redolent
-of fragrant oils; like those, perhaps, their hulls were
-laden with myrrh, spikenard, benzoin, cinnamon, aromatic
-herbs; with sandal-wood, cedar, terebinth, and all
-oderiferous woods in rich profusion. The indescribable
-colors of the flags suggested perfumes and spices. Of
-blue-green peacock shades, saffron, violet, and indistinct
-hues, those flaming flags seemed to spring from
-some burning interior and to have been colored by some
-unknown process.</p>
-
-<p>"The Epiphany of the Flame!" repeated La Foscarina.
-"What an unforeseen commentary on your poem, Effrena!
-The City of Life responds by a miracle to your
-act of adoration. She burns, through her watery veil.
-Are you not satisfied? Look! Millions of golden pomegranates
-are hanging everywhere!"</p>
-
-<p>The actress was smiling, her face illumined by the
-magic fire. She was suddenly possessed by that singular
-gayety of hers which Stelio knew well, and which, because
-of its effect of incongruity with her usual pose,
-suggested to him the image of a dark, closed house where
-violent hands had suddenly opened on rusty hinges all
-the doors and windows.</p>
-
-<p>"We must praise Ariadne," he replied, "for having uttered,
-in all this harmony, the most sublime note."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio said those flattering words only to induce the
-fair singer to speak, only through a desire to know the
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">timbre</i> of that voice when it descended from the heights
-of song. But his praise was lost in the reiterated clamor
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-of the crowd, which overflowed on the Molo, making a
-longer stay impossible. From the bank, Stelio assisted
-the two friends into their gondola; then he sat down
-on a stool at their knees, and the long, dentellated prow
-sparkled, like all else, in the magic fire.</p>
-
-<p>"To the Rio Marin, by the Grand Canal," La Foscarina
-ordered the gondolier. "Do you know, Effrena, we
-are to have at supper some of your best friends: Francesco
-de Lizo, Daniele Glauro, Prince Hoditz, Antimo
-della Bella, Fabio Molza, Baldassare Stampa"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Then it will be a banquet?"</p>
-
-<p>"But not, alas! like that of Cana."</p>
-
-<p>"And will not Lady Myrta, with her Veronese greyhounds,
-be there?"</p>
-
-<p>"Rest assured that we shall have Lady Myrta. Did
-you not see her in the hall? She sat in the first row,
-lost in admiration of you."</p>
-
-<p>Because they had looked into each other's eyes as they
-spoke, a sudden emotion seized them. The remembrance
-of that full twilight hour on the water that rippled beneath
-their oar filled their hearts with a wave of troubled
-blood; and each was surprised by a swift return of the
-same agitation felt when leaving the silent estuary already
-in the power of shadow and death. Their lips
-refused to utter vain, light words; their souls refused
-to make the effort to incline themselves through prudence
-toward the passing trivialities of the superficial
-life, which now seemed worthless to both; and their
-spirits became absorbed in the contemplation of the
-strange fancies that rose from their inmost thoughts in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-a garb of indescribable richness, like the heaped-up treasures
-the streams of light seemed to reveal in the depths
-of the nocturnal waters.</p>
-
-<p>And, because of that very silence, they felt the presence
-of the singer weigh heavily upon them, as in the moment
-when her name had first been spoken between them; and
-little by little the oppression became intolerable. Although
-Stelio was seated close to her, she appeared no
-less distant than when she rose above the forest of instruments;
-she was as absent and unconscious as she
-had been when her voice soared high in song. She had
-not yet spoken.</p>
-
-<p>Simply to hear her speak, and almost timidly, Stelio
-said:</p>
-
-<p>"Shall you remain some time longer in Venice?"</p>
-
-<p>He had pondered on the first words he should say
-to her, but was dissatisfied with whatever rose to his
-lips, for all phrases seemed too vivid, insidious, full of
-ambiguous significance, capable of infinite changes and
-transformations, like the unknown seed from which may
-spring a thousand roots. And it seemed to him that
-Perdita could not hear one of those phrases without feeling
-that a shadow darkened her love.</p>
-
-<p>After he had spoken those simple, conventional words,
-he reflected that even that question might suggest an
-infinity of hope and eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>"I must leave Venice to-morrow," Donatella replied.
-"I ought not to be here even now."</p>
-
-<p>Her voice, so clear and powerful in the heights of song,
-was low and sober, as if suffused with a slight opacity,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-suggesting the image of the most precious metal wrapped
-in the most delicate velvet. Her brief reply indicated
-that there was a place of suffering to which she must
-return, where she must undergo some familiar torture.
-Like iron tempered with tears, a strong though sorrowful
-will shone through the veil of her youthful beauty.</p>
-
-<p>"To-morrow!" Stelio exclaimed, not seeking to hide
-his sincere regret. "Have you heard, Signora?"</p>
-
-<p>"I know," the actress replied, gently taking Donatella's
-hand. "I am filled with regret to see her go. But
-she cannot remain away longer from her father. Perhaps
-you do not yet know"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"What?" asked Stelio quickly. "Is he ill? Is it true,
-then, that Lorenzo Arvale is ill?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, he is only fatigued," said La Foscarina, touching
-her forehead with a gesture perhaps involuntary but
-which revealed to Stelio the horrible menace hanging
-over the genius of the artist who had seemed as fertile
-and indefatigable as one of the old masters&mdash;a Della
-Robbia or a Verrocchio.</p>
-
-<p>"He is only fatigued," repeated La Foscarina. "He
-needs repose and quiet. And his daughter's singing is
-very soothing to him. Do you not believe, also, Effrena,
-in the healing power of music?"</p>
-
-<p>"Certainly," Stelio replied, "Ariadne possesses a divine
-gift whereby her power transcends all limits."</p>
-
-<p>The name of Ariadne came spontaneously to his lips
-to indicate the singer as she appeared to his fancy, for
-it seemed to him impossible to pronounce the young
-girl's real name preceded by the ordinary appellation imposed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-by social usage. In his eyes she was perfect and
-singular, free from the little ties of custom, living her
-own sequestered life, like a work of art on which style
-had set its inviolable seal. He thought of her as isolated
-like those figures that stand out with clear contour, far
-from common life, lost in mystic reverie; and already,
-before that impenetrable character, he felt a sort of passionate
-impatience, somewhat similar to that of a curious
-man before something hermetically sealed that tempts
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"Ariadne had for the soothing of her griefs the gift
-of forgetfulness," said Donatella, "and that I do not possess."</p>
-
-<p>A bitterness perhaps involuntary infused these words,
-in which Stelio fancied he detected the indication
-of an aspiration toward a life less oppressed by useless
-suffering. He guessed at her revolt against a certain
-form of domestic slavery, the horror of her self-imposed
-sacrifice, her vehement desire to rise toward joy, and her
-inborn aptitude for being drawn like a beautiful bow by
-a strong hand that would know how to use it for some
-high conquest. He divined that she had no longer any
-hope of her father's recovery, and that she was saddened
-at the thought that henceforth she could only be the
-guardian of a darkened hearth, of ashes without a spark.
-The image of the great artist rose in his mind, not as he
-was, since Stelio never had known him personally, but
-such as he had fancied the sculptor after studying his
-ideas of beauty expressed in imperishable bronze and
-marble. His mind fixed itself on that image with a sensation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-of terror more icy than that which the most appalling
-aspects of death could have inspired. And all his
-strength, all his pride and his ardor seemed to resound
-within him like weapons shaken by a menacing hand,
-sending a quiver through every fiber of his heart.</p>
-
-<p>Presently La Foscarina lifted the funereal black curtain,
-which suddenly, amid the splendors of the festival,
-had seemed to change the gondola into a coffin.</p>
-
-<p>"Look!" she said, pointing out to Stelio the balcony
-of Desdemona's palace: "See the beautiful Nineta receiving
-the homage of the Serenade, as she sits between
-her pet monkey and her little dog."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, the beautiful Nineta!" said Stelio, rousing himself
-from his wild thoughts, and saluting the smiling occupant
-of the balcony, a little woman who was listening
-to the music, her face illumined from two silver candelabra,
-from the branches of which hung wreaths of
-the last roses of the year. "I have not yet seen her
-this time. She is the gentlest and most graceful animal
-I know. How fortunate was our dear Howitz to discover
-her behind the lid of an old harpsichord when he was
-rummaging in that curiosity shop at San Samuele! Two
-pieces of good fortune in one day: the lovely Nineta and
-a harpsichord lid painted by Pordenone. Since that day,
-the harmony of his life has been complete. How I should
-like to have you penetrate to his nest! You would find
-there a perfect example of that which I spoke of this
-evening, at twilight. There is a man who, by obeying
-his native taste for simplicity, has arranged for himself
-with minute art his own little love-story, in which he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-lives as happily as did his Moravian ancestor in the Arcady
-of Rosswald. Ah! I know a thousand exquisite
-things about him!"</p>
-
-<p>A large gondola, decorated with many-colored lanterns,
-and laden with singers and musicians, had stopped
-beneath the balcony of Desdemona's house. The old
-song of brief youth and fleeting beauty rose sweetly toward
-the little woman who listened with her child-like
-smile, sitting between the monkey and the lapdog, making
-a group like one of Pietro Longhi's prints.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Do beni vu gharè<br />
-Beleza e zoventù;<br />
-Co i va no i torna più,<br />
-Nina mia cara....</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>"Does it not seem to you, Effrena, that these surroundings
-express the true soul of Venice, and that the
-other picture, which you presented to the multitude, is
-only your own fancy?" said La Foscarina, nodding her
-head slightly in time with the rhythm of the sweet
-song that spread through the Grand Canal and was reechoed
-from afar by singers in other gondolas.</p>
-
-<p>"No," Stelio replied, "this does not at all represent
-the true soul of Venice. In each one of us, fluttering like
-a butterfly over the surface of our deeper nature, is a
-lighter soul, an <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">animula</i>, a little playful sprite that often
-dominates us for the moment, and leads us toward simple
-and mediocre pleasures, toward puerile pastimes and
-frivolous music. This <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">animula vagula</i> exists even in the
-gravest and most violent natures, like the clown attached
-to the person of Othello; and sometimes it misleads our
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-better judgment. That which you hear now, in the songs
-and the melodies of the guitars, is the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">animula</i>, or lighter
-spirit, of Venice; but her real soul is discovered only
-in silence, and most terribly, be assured, in full summer,
-at noonday, like the soul of the great god Pan. Out in
-the harbor of San Marco, I thought that you felt its
-mystic vibration during those moments of the great conflagration.
-You are forgetting Giorgione for Rosalba!"</p>
-
-<p>Around the large gondola beneath the balcony had
-gathered other gondolas bearing languid women who
-leaned out to listen to the music in attitudes of graceful
-<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">abandon</i>, as if in fancy they felt themselves sinking into
-invisible arms. And around this romantic group the reflections
-of the lanterns in the water quivered like a
-flowering of rare and luminous water-lilies.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse ileft2"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Se lassarè passar</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">La bela e fresca età,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Un zorno i ve dirà</i></div>
-<div class="verse ileft2"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Vechia maura,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">E bramarè, ma invan,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Quel che ghavevi in man</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Co avè lassà scampar</i></div>
-<div class="verse ileft2"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">La congiontura.</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was, in truth, the song of the last roses that entwined
-the candelabra. It called up in Perdita's mind the funeral
-cortège of the dead Summer, the opalescent veil in
-which Stelio had wrapped the sweet body in its golden
-robe. Through the glass, sealed by the Master of Fire,
-she could see her own image at the bottom of the lagoon,
-lying on a field of seaweed. A sudden chill stole over
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-her; once more she felt horror and disgust of her own
-body, no longer young. And, remembering her recent
-promise, thinking that perhaps this very night the beloved
-one would claim its fulfilment, she shuddered with
-a sort of sorrowful modesty, a mingling of fear and pride.
-Her experience and despairing eyes ran over the young
-girl beside her, studying her, penetrating her, realizing
-her occult but certain power, her intact freshness, pure
-health, and that indefinable virtue of love that emanates
-like an aroma from chaste maidens when they have arrived
-at the perfection of their bloom. She felt that
-some secret current of affinity existed between this fair
-creature and the poet; she could almost divine the words
-he addressed to her in the silence of his heart. A bitter
-pang seized her, so intolerable that, with an involuntary
-movement, her fingers clutched convulsively the black
-rope of the arm-rest beside her, so that the little metal
-griffin that held it creaked audibly.</p>
-
-<p>This movement did not escape Stelio's anxious vigilance.
-He understood her agitation, and for a moment he
-experienced the same pang, but it was mingled with impatience
-and almost with anger, for her anguish, like a
-cry of destruction, interrupted the fiction of transcendent
-life that he had been constructing within himself in order
-to conciliate the contrast, to conquer this new force that
-offered itself to him like a bow to be drawn, yet at the
-same time not to lose the savor of that ripe maturity
-which life had impregnated with all its essences, and the
-benefit of that devotion and that passionate faith which
-sharpened his intelligence and fed his pride.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Perdita!" he said to himself, "From the ferment
-of your human loves, why has not a love more than
-human sprung. Ah, why have I finally vanquished you
-by my pleading, although I know it is too late? and why
-do you allow me to read in your eyes the certainty of
-your yielding, amid a flood of doubts which, nevertheless,
-never again will have power to reëstablish the abolished
-interdiction. Each of us knows full well that that
-interdiction conferred the highest dignity upon our long
-communion, yet we have not known how to preserve its
-rule, and at the last hour we yield blindly to an imperious
-internal call. Yet, a short time ago, when your noble head
-dominated the belt of constellations, I no longer saw
-in you an earthly love, but the illuminating, revelatory
-Muse of my poetry; and all my heart went out to you
-in gratitude, not for the promise of a fleeting happiness,
-but for the promise of glory. Do you not understand&mdash;you,
-who understand everything? By a marvelous inspiration,
-such as always comes to you, have you not
-turned my inclination, by the ray of your smile, toward
-a resplendent youthfulness which you have chosen and
-reserved for me? When you descended the stairway together,
-and approached me, had you not the appearance
-of one that bears a gift or an unexpected message? Not
-wholly unexpected, perhaps, Perdita! For I have anticipated
-from your infinite wisdom some extraordinary
-action toward me."</p>
-
-<p>"How happy the beautiful Nineta is, with her monkey
-and her little dog!" sighed the actress, looking back at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-the light songsters and the smiling woman on the balcony.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">La zoventù xe un fior<br />
-Che apena nato el mor,<br />
-E un zorno gnanca mi<br />
-No sarò quela.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Donatella Arvale and Stelio also looked back, while
-the light barque, without sinking, bore over the water
-and past the music the three faces of a heavy destiny.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">E vegna quel che vol,<br />
-Lassè che voga!</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Suddenly, in front of the red palace of the Foscari,
-at the curve of the canal, they saw the state vessel of
-the Doge of Venice so brightly illumined that it looked
-like a burning tower. New streaks of fire flashed against
-the sky. Other flaming doves flew up from the deck,
-rose above the terraces, sank among the statues, hissed
-as they fell into the water, multiplied themselves in
-thousands of sparks, and floated along in smoke. Along
-the parapets, from the decks, the poop, the prow, in a
-simultaneous explosion, a thousand fountains of fire
-opened, dilated, blended, illuminating with an intense,
-fiery radiance each side of the canal as far as San Vitale
-and the Rialto. Then the vessel of the Doge glided
-out of sight, transformed into a purple thunder-cloud.</p>
-
-<p>"Go through San Polo!" called La Foscarina to the
-gondolier, bending her head as under a storm, and shutting
-out the roar with her palms over her ears.</p>
-
-<p>Again Donatella Arvale and Stelio Effreno looked at
-each other with dazzled eyes. Again their faces, lighted
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-by the glare, glowed as if they were leaning over a furnace
-or a burning crater.</p>
-
-<p>The gondola turned into the canal of San Polo, gliding
-along through the darkness. A cold shadow seemed
-suddenly to fall over the spirits of the three silent occupants.
-Under the arch of the bridge, the hollow echo
-of the dipping oar struck upon their souls, and the hilarity
-of the festival sounded infinitely far-away. All the
-houses were dark; the campanile rose silent and solitary
-toward the stars; the Campiello del Remer and the
-Campiello del Pistor were deserted, and the grass
-breathed there in untrodden peace; the trees, bending
-over the low walls of the little gardens, seemed to feel
-their leaves dying on the branches pointing to the serene
-sky.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI<br />
-<small>THE POET'S DREAM</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>"So, for a few hours at least, the rhythm of
-Art and the pulse of Life have again
-throbbed in unison in Venice," said Daniele
-Glauro, raising from the table an exquisite
-chalice, to which only the Sacred Host was wanting.
-"Allow me to express, for myself and also for the many
-that are absent, the gratitude and fervor that blend in
-one single image of beauty the three persons to whom
-we owe this miracle: the mistress of the feast, the daughter
-of Lorenzo Arvale, and the poet of Persephone."</p>
-
-<p>"And why the mistress of the feast, Glauro?" asked
-La Foscarina, smiling in graceful surprise. "I, like you,
-have not given joy, but have received it. Donatella and
-the Master of the Flame: they alone merit the crown;
-and to them alone the glory must be given."</p>
-
-<p>"But, a short time ago, in the Hall of the Greater
-Council," said the mystic doctor, "your silent presence
-beside the celestial sphere was not less eloquent than
-the words of Stelio, nor less musical than the song of
-Ariadne. Once again you have divinely carved your own
-statue in silence, and it will live in our memories blended
-with the music and the words."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio shuddered as he recalled to mind the ephemeral
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-flexible monster from the side of which had emerged the
-Tragic Muse above the sphere of constellations.</p>
-
-<p>"That is true, very true," said Francesco de Lizo. "I,
-too, had the same thought. As we looked at you, we all
-realized that you were the soul of that ideal world which
-each of us forms for himself, according to his own aspirations
-and thoughts when listening to the mystic
-word, the song, the symphony."</p>
-
-<p>"And each of us," said Fabio Molza, "felt that in your
-presence, dominating the throng, before the poet, dwelt
-a great and rare significance."</p>
-
-<p>"One might almost have said that you alone were
-about to assist at the mysterious birth of a new idea,"
-said Antimo della Bella. "Everything around us seemed
-awakening itself to produce it&mdash;that idea which must
-soon be revealed to us, as a reward for the profound
-faith with which we have awaited it."</p>
-
-<p>The Animator, with another trembling of the heart,
-felt the work that he cherished within him leap once
-more, formless yet, but already living; and his whole
-soul, as if impelled by a lyric breath, suddenly felt drawn
-toward the fertile and enlightening power that emanated
-from the Dionysian woman to whom these fervent spirits
-addressed their praise.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she had become very beautiful: a nocturnal
-creature, fashioned by dreams and passion on a golden
-anvil, living embodiment of immortal fate and eternal
-enigmas. She might remain motionless and silent, but
-her famous accents and her memorable gestures seemed
-to live around her, vibrating indefinitely, as melodies
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-seem to hover over the cords accustomed to sound them,
-as rhymes seem to breathe from the poet's closed book,
-wherein love and sorrow seek comfort and intoxication.
-The heroic fidelity of Antigone, the oracular fury of Cassandra,
-the devouring fever of Phædre, the cruelty of
-Medea, the sacrifice of Iphigenia, Myrrha before her
-father, Polyxenes and Alceste before the face of death,
-Cleopatra, fitful as the wind and the fires of the world,
-Lady Macbeth, the dreamy murderess with the little
-hands; and those great, fair lilies empearled with dew
-and tears&mdash;Imogen, Juliet, Miranda, Rosalind, Jessica,
-and Perdita&mdash;the tenderest, most terrible, and most magnificent
-souls dwelt within her, inhabited her body,
-shone from her eyes, breathed through her lips, which
-knew both honey and poison, the jeweled chalice and the
-cup of wormwood. Thus, through unlimited space, and
-endless, the outlines of human life and substance appeared
-to perpetuate themselves; and from the simple
-movement of a muscle, a sign, a start, a quiver of the
-eyelids, a slight change of color, an almost imperceptible
-inclination of the head, a fugitive play of light and shade,
-a lightning-like virtue of expression radiating from that
-frail and slender body, infinite worlds of imperishable
-beauty were continually generated.</p>
-
-<p>The genii of the places consecrated by poetry hovered
-around her, and encircled her with changing visions:
-the dusty plain of Thebes, the arid Argolide, the parched
-myrtles of Trezene, the sacred olives of Colonus, the
-triumphant Cydnus, the pale country of Dunsinane,
-Prospero's cavern, the Forest of Arden, land dampened
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-with blood, toiled upon with pain, transfigured by a
-dream or illumined by an inextinguishable smile, seemed
-to appear, to recede, then to vanish behind her head.
-And a vision of countries still more remote&mdash;regions of
-mists, northern lands, and, far across the ocean, the immense
-continent where she had appeared like an unknown
-force amid astonished multitudes, bearer of the
-mystic word and the flame of genius&mdash;vanished behind
-her head: the throngs, the mountains, rivers and gulfs,
-the impure cities, the ancient, enfeebled, savage race, the
-strong people aspiring to dominate the world, the new
-nation that wrests from Nature her most secret energies
-to make them serve an all-powerful work in erecting edifices
-of iron and of crystal; the bastard colonies that
-ferment and grow corrupt on virgin soil; all the barbarous
-crowds she had visited as the messenger of Latin
-genius; all the ignorant masses to whom she had spoken
-the sublime language of Dante; all the human herds
-from which had mounted toward her, on a wave of confused
-anxieties and desires, the aspiration to Beauty.</p>
-
-<p>She stood there, a creature of perishable flesh, subject
-to the sad laws of time, but an illimitable mass of reality
-and poetry weighed upon her, surged around her, palpitated
-with the rhythm of her breath. And not upon
-the stage alone had she uttered her cries and suppressed
-her sobs: this had entered into her daily life. She had
-loved, fought and suffered violently, in her soul and in
-her body. What loves? What combats? What pangs?
-From what abysses of melancholy had she drawn the
-exaltations of her tragic force? At what springs of bitterness
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-had she watered her free genius? She had certainly
-witnessed the crudest misery, the darkest ruin;
-she had known heroic effort, pity, horror, and the threshold
-of death. All her thirst had burned in the delirium
-of Phædre, and in the submissiveness of Imogen had
-trembled all her tenderness. Thus Life and Art, the irrevocable
-Past and the eternal Present, had made her
-profound, many-souled, and mysterious, had magnified
-her ambiguous destiny beyond human limits, and rendered
-her equal to great temples and natural forests.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, she stood there, a living, breathing
-woman, under the gaze of the poets, each of whom saw
-her, and yet in her many others.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! I will embrace you as in some mad revelry; I
-will clasp you, shake you; from your ripe experience, I
-will draw all the divine and abnormal secrets that weigh
-upon you&mdash;the things you have already done, and those
-on which you still meditate in the mysterious depths of
-your soul," sang the lyric demon in the ear of the poet,
-who recognized in the mystery of this woman the surviving
-power of primitive myth, the renewed initiation
-of the god that had concentrated in one single ferment
-all the energies of Nature, and, by a variety of rhythms,
-had raised, in an enthusiastic worship of himself, the
-senses and the spirit of man to the highest summits of
-joy and of pain.</p>
-
-<p>"I have done well, I have done wisely, to wait!" said
-Stelio to himself. "The passing of years, the tumult of
-dreams, the agitation of struggle and the swiftness of
-triumph, the experience of many loves, the enchantment
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-of poets, the acclamations of the people; the marvels of
-earth, the patience and the fury, the steps in the mud,
-the blind flight, all evil, all good, that which I know and
-do not know, that which you know, as well as that
-which you are ignorant of&mdash;all this had to be to prepare
-the fulness of this night, which belongs to me!"</p>
-
-<p>He felt himself suffocate and turn pale. A wild impulse
-seized him by the throat, and would not relax its
-hold. His heart swelled with the same keen emotion
-that had possessed both in the twilight, as they floated
-over the water.</p>
-
-<p>And, as the exaggerated radiance of the city and the
-event had suddenly disappeared, the glory of this woman
-of the night reappeared to his mind still more closely
-blended with the city of the wonderful necklaces and
-the thousand emerald girdles. In the city and in the
-woman, the poet now saw a power of expression that
-he never had seen before: each glowed in the Autumn
-night; the same feverish fire that coursed through the
-canals ran also in her veins.</p>
-
-<p>The stars sparkled, the trees waved their branches behind
-Perdita's head, back of which were the shadows of
-a garden. Through the open balconies the sweet air of
-heaven entered the room; shook the flames of the candelabra
-and the chalices of flowers; swept through the
-doorways, making the draperies wave to and fro, animating
-that old house of the Capello, wherein the last great
-daughter of San Marco whom the people had covered
-with gold and glory had gathered relics of republican
-magnificence. Galleon lamps, Turkish targets, bronze
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-helmets, leathern quivers, and velvet scabbards ornamented
-the apartments inhabited by the last descendant
-of that marvelous Cesare Darbes who maintained the Art
-of Comedy against the Goldonian reform, and changed
-the agony of the Most Serene Republic into a burst of
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p>"I only ask that I may be the humble servitor of that
-idea," was La Foscarina's reply to Antimo della Bella's
-words. Her voice trembled a little, her eyes had met
-Stelio's gaze.</p>
-
-<p>"You alone could make it triumphant," said Francesco
-de Lizo. "The soul of the people is yours forever."</p>
-
-<p>"The drama can only be a rite or a message," declared
-Glauro sententiously. "Acting should again become
-as solemn as a religious ceremony, since it embraces
-the two constituent elements of all worship: the
-living person, in whom, on the stage as before an altar,
-the word of the revealer is made incarnate, before a multitude
-as silent as if in a temple"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Bayreuth!" interrupted Prince Hoditz.</p>
-
-<p>"No; the Janiculum!" exclaimed Stelio, suddenly breaking
-his silence of blissful dizziness. "A Roman hill. We
-do not need the wood and brick of Upper Franconia;
-we will have a marble theater on a Roman hill."</p>
-
-<p>The sudden opposition of his words seemed to spring
-from a light, good-natured disdain.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not admire the work of Richard Wagner?"
-Donatella Arvale inquired, with a slight frown that for
-a moment made her Hermes-like face look almost hard.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio looked deep into her eyes; he felt that there was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-something obscurely hostile in the young girl's manner,
-and also that he himself experienced against her an indistinct
-suggestion of enmity. At this moment he again
-saw her living her own isolated life, fixed in some deep,
-secret thought, strange and inviolable.</p>
-
-<p>"The work of Richard Wagner," he replied, "is founded
-in the German spirit, and its essence is purely northern.
-His reform is not without analogy with that attempted
-by Luther; his drama is the supreme flower of the genius
-of a race, the extraordinarily powerful summary of the
-aspirations that have stirred the souls of the symphonists
-and national poets, from Bach to Beethoven, from Wieland
-to Goethe. If you could imagine his work on the
-Mediterranean shores, amid our pale olive-trees, our
-slender laurels, under the glorious light of the Latin
-sky, you would see it grow pale and dissolve. Since,
-according to his own words, it is given to the artist to
-behold a world as yet unformed resplendent in its future
-perfection, and to enjoy it prophetically through
-desire and through hope, I announce to you the coming
-of a new, or rather a renewed, art which, by the strong,
-sincere simplicity of its lines, by its vigorous grace,
-by its ardor of inspiration, by the pure power of its
-harmonies, will continue and crown the immense ideal
-edifice of our elect race. I glory in being Latin, and&mdash;will
-you pardon me, most exquisite Lady Myrta, and
-you, my delicate Hoditz?&mdash;in every man of different
-blood I see a barbarian."</p>
-
-<p>"But Wagner, too," said, Baldassare Stampa, who, having
-just returned from Bayreuth, was still full of ecstasy,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-"when he first unwound the thread of his theories, departed
-from the Greeks."</p>
-
-<p>"It was an uneven and a tangled thread," the poet replied.
-"Nothing is further from the Orestiades than the
-tetralogy of the Ring. The Florentines of the Casa
-Bardi have penetrated much deeper into the true meaning
-of Greek tragedy. All honor to the Camerata of
-the Conte di Vernio!"</p>
-
-<p>"I have always thought that the Camerata was only
-an idle reunion of scholars and rhetoricians," said Baldassare
-Stampa.</p>
-
-<p>"Did you hear that, Daniele?" exclaimed Stelio, addressing
-the mystic doctor. "When was there in the
-world a more fervid intelligence? They sought the spirit
-of life in Grecian antiquity; they tried to develop harmoniously
-all human energies, to manifest man in his
-integrity by every method of art. Giulio Caccini taught
-that that, which contributed to the excellence of the
-musician is not only the study of particular things, but
-of everything in general; the tawny hair of Jacopo Peri
-and of Zazzerino flamed in their song like that of Apollo.
-In the discourse that serves as a preface to the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Rappresentazione
-di Anima et di Corpo</i>, Emilio del Cavaliere presents
-the same ideas on the organization of the new
-theater that have since been realized at Bayreuth, comprising
-the rules of perfect silence, an invisible orchestra,
-and appropriate darkness. Marco da Gagliano, in celebrating
-a festal performance, eulogizes all the arts that
-contributed to it 'in such a way that through the intellect
-all the noblest sentiments are flattered at the same time
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-by the most delightful art that the human mind has discovered.'
-That is sufficient, I think."</p>
-
-<p>"Bermino," resumed Francesco de Lizo, "presented an
-opera in Rome, for which he himself built the theater,
-painted the decorations, carved the ornamental statues,
-invented the machinery, wrote the words, composed the
-music, arranged the dances, rehearsed the actors, and in
-which he, too, danced, sang, and acted."</p>
-
-<p>"Enough! Enough!" cried Prince Hoditz, laughing.
-"The barbarian is vanquished."</p>
-
-<p>"No, that is not yet enough," said Antimo della Bella;
-"it remains to us to glorify the greatest of all these innovators;
-him that was consecrated a Venetian by his
-passion and death, him whose tomb is in the Church
-of the Frari, and is worthy of a pilgrimage&mdash;the divine
-Claudio Monteverde."</p>
-
-<p>"There was a heroic soul, of pure Italian essence,"
-warmly acceded Daniele Glauro.</p>
-
-<p>"He accomplished his work in the tempest, loving, suffering,
-struggling, alone with his faith, his passion, and
-his genius," said La Foscarina slowly, as if absorbed in
-a vision of that sad and courageous life that had nourished
-the creations of its art with its warmest blood.
-"Tell us about him, Effrena."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio thrilled as if she had suddenly touched him.
-Again her expressive mouth called up an ideal figure,
-which rose as if from a sepulcher before the eyes of the
-poets, with the color and the breath of life. The ancient
-viola-player, bereaved, ardent, and sorrowful, like the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-Orpheus of his own fable, seemed to appear before them.</p>
-
-<p>It was a fiery apparition, more fervid and dazzling
-than that which had glowed in the harbor of San Marco;
-a flaming force of life, expelled from the deepest recesses
-of Nature toward the expectant multitude; a vehement
-zone of light, flashing out from an interior sky to illumine
-the most secret depths of human will and desire;
-an unheard word emerging from original silence to say
-that which is eternal and eternally ineffable in the heart
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p>"Who could speak of him, even if he himself should
-speak to us?" said the Inspirer, agitated, unable to conceal
-the wave of emotion surging in his soul like the
-troubled waters of a stormy sea.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at the singer, and beheld her as she had appeared
-during the pauses, when she stood amid the forest
-of instruments, white and inanimate as a statue.</p>
-
-<p>But the spirit of Beauty they had called up was to
-manifest itself through her.</p>
-
-<p>"Ariadne!" Stelio murmured, as if to awaken her from
-a dream.</p>
-
-<p>She arose without speaking, reached the door, and entered
-the adjoining room. The light sweep of her skirts
-and her soft footfall were audible; then they heard the
-sound of the piano being opened. All were silent and
-expectant. A musical silence filled the vacant place in
-the supper-room. A sudden gust of wind shook the
-flames of the candles and swayed the flowers. Then
-all became motionless in the anxiety of anticipation.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Lasciatemi morire!</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Suddenly their souls were ravished by a power comparable
-to the strength of the eagle which, in Dante's
-dream, bore the poet to the region of flame. They
-burned together in eternal truth; they heard the melody
-of the world pass through their luminous ecstasy:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Lasciatemi morire!</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Was it Ariadne, still Ariadne, weeping in some new
-grief, still rising to higher martyrdom?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">E che volete<br />
-Che mi conforte<br />
-In cosa dure sorte,<br />
-In cosi gran martire?<br />
-Lasciatemi morire!</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The voice ceased; the singer did not reappear. The
-aria of Claudio Monteverde composed itself in the auditors'
-memories like an immutable lineament.</p>
-
-<p>"Is there any Greek marble that has a perfection of
-style more sure and simple?" said Daniele Glauro softly,
-as if he feared to break the musical silence.</p>
-
-<p>"But what sorrow on earth ever has wept like that?"
-stammered Lady Myrta, her eyes full of tears, that ran
-down her poor, pale cheeks, which she wiped with her
-trembling hands, misshaped by gout.</p>
-
-<p>The austere intellect of the ascetic and the sweet, sensitive
-soul shut within the old, infirm body bore witness
-to the same power. In the same way, nearly three centuries
-before, at Mantua, in the famous theater, six thousand
-spectators had been unable to repress their sobs;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-and the poets had believed in the living presence of
-Apollo on the new stage.</p>
-
-<p>"See, Baldassare," said Stelio, "here is an artist of our
-own race who by the simplest means succeeded in attaining
-the highest degree of that beauty which the
-German but rarely approached in his confused aspirations
-toward the land of Sophocles."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know the lament of the ailing king?" asked
-the young man with the sunny locks, which he wore long
-as a heritage from the Venetian Sappho, the "high Gaspara,"
-unfortunate friend of Collalto.</p>
-
-<p>"All the agony of Amfortas is contained in a <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">mottetto</i>
-that I know: <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Peccantem me quotidie</i>, but with what lyric
-impetus, what powerful simplicity! All the forces of
-tragedy are there, sublimated, so to speak, like the instincts
-of a multitude in a heroic heart. The language
-of Palestrina, much more ancient, appears to me still
-purer and more virile.</p>
-
-<p>"But the contrast between Kundry and Parsifal, in
-the second act, the Herzeleide <em>motif</em>, the impetuous figure,
-that figure of pain drawn from the word of the sacred
-feast, the <em>motif</em> of Kundry's aspiration, the prophetic
-theme of the promise, the kiss on the lips of the 'pure
-fool,' all that rending and intoxicating contrast of desire
-and horror.... 'The wound, the wound! Now
-it burns, now it bleeds within me!' And above the despairing
-frenzy of the temptress, the melody of submission:
-'Let me weep on thy breast! Let me unite myself
-with thee for one hour; then, even if God repel me,
-through thee I shall be redeemed and saved.' And Parsifal's
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-response, in which the <em>motif</em> of the 'pure fool,' now
-transfigured into the promised Hero, returns with lofty
-solemnity: 'Hell would be our fate for all eternity if
-for one single hour I should permit thee to clasp me
-in thy arms.' Then the wild ecstasy of Kundry: 'Since
-my kiss has made thee a prophet, embrace me wholly,
-and my love will render thee divine! One hour, one
-single hour with thee, and I shall be saved!' And the
-last effort of her demoniac will, the last gesture of enticement,
-the entreaty and the furious words: 'Only thy
-love can save me! Oh, let me love thee! Mine for a
-single hour! Thine for a single hour!'"</p>
-
-<p>Perdita and Stelio, entranced, gazed into each other's
-eyes; for an instant their spirits rushed together and
-mingled, in all the joy of an actual embrace.</p>
-
-<p>La Marangona, the largest bell of San Marco, sounded
-midnight, and, as at the eventide, the two enamored
-ones felt the reverberation of the bronze bell in the
-roots of their hair, almost like a quiver of their own
-flesh. Once more they felt, hovering over them, the
-whirlwind of sound, in the midst of which, in the twilight,
-they had suddenly become aware of the rising apparition
-of consoling Beauty, evoked by unanimous prayer.
-All the beauty of the waters, the timidity of concealed
-longing, the anxiety, the promise, the parting, the festival,
-the formidable, many-headed monster, the great,
-starry sphere, the clamor, the music, the song, and the
-wonders of the miraculous Flame, the return through
-the echoing canal, the song of brief youth, the mental
-struggle and silent agitation in the gondola, the sudden
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-shadow over their three destinies, the banquet illumined
-by beautiful thought, the presentiments, hopes, pride, all
-the strongest pulsations of life were renewed between
-those two, quickened, became a thousand, and again one.
-They felt that in that one moment they had lived beyond
-all human limits, and that before them was opening
-a vast unknown, which they might absorb as the
-ocean absorbs, for, though they had lived so much, they
-felt their hearts were empty; though they had drunk
-so deep, they were still athirst. An overmastering illusion
-seized upon these rich natures, and each seemed
-to grow immeasurably more desirable in the other's eyes.
-The young girl had disappeared. The expression of the
-despairing, nomadic actress seemed to repeat: "Embrace
-me wholly, and my love will render thee divine! One
-hour, one single hour with thee, and I shall be saved!
-Mine for a single hour! Thine for a single hour!"</p>
-
-<p>The eloquent commentary of the enthusiast still dwelt
-upon the sacred tragedy. Kundry, the mad temptress,
-the slave of desire, the Rose of Hell, the original perdition,
-the accursed, now reappeared in the spring dawn;
-she reappeared humble and pale in her messenger's attire,
-her head bent, her eyes cast down; and her harsh,
-broken voice spoke only the single phrase: "Let me
-serve! Let me serve!"</p>
-
-<p>The melodies of solitude, of submission, of purification
-prepared around her humility the enchantment of
-Good Friday. And behold Parsifal, in black armor and
-closed helmet, his spear lowered, lost in an infinite
-dream: "I have come by perilous paths, but perhaps
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-this day I shall be saved, since I hear the murmur of
-the sacred forest." ... Hope, pain, remorse, memory,
-the promise, faith panting for the soul's health, and the
-sacred, mysterious melodies wove the ideal mantle that
-should cover the Simple One, the Pure, the promised
-Hero sent to heal the incurable wound. "Wilt thou take
-me to Amfortas to-day?" He languished and fainted in
-the old man's arms. "Let me serve! Let me serve!"
-The melody of submission rose again from the orchestra,
-drowning the original impetuous <em>motif</em>. "Let me serve!"
-The faithful woman brings water, kneels humbly and
-eagerly, and washes the feet of her beloved. The faithful
-one drew from her bosom a vase of balm, anointed
-the beloved feet, and wiped them with her flowing hair.
-"Let me serve!" The Pure One bent over the sinner,
-sprinkling water on her wild head: "Thus I accomplish
-my first office; receive this baptism and believe in the
-Redeemer!" Kundry burst into tears, and knelt with
-her brow in the dust, freed from impurity, freed from
-the curse. And then, from the profound final harmonies
-of the prayer to the Redeemer, rose and spread with
-superhuman sweetness the melody of the flowery fields:
-"How beautiful to-day is the meadow! Once I was entwined
-with marvelous flowers; but never before were
-the grass and wild blossoms so fragrant!" In ecstasy,
-Parsifal contemplated the fields and forests, dewy and
-smiling in the light of morn.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! who could forget that sublime moment?" cried
-the fair-haired enthusiast, whose thin face seemed to
-reflect the light of that joy. "All, in the darkness of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-the theater, remained motionless, like one solid, compact
-mass. One would have said that, in order to listen
-to that marvelous music, the blood had ceased to flow in
-our veins. From the Mystic Gulf, the symphony rose
-like a shaft of light, the notes transformed into rays of
-sunshine, born with the same joy as the blade of grass
-that pierces the earth, the opening flower, the budding
-branch, the insect unfolding its wings. And all the innocence
-of new-born things entered into us, and our
-souls lived over again I know not what dream of our
-far-away childhood.... INFANTIA, the device
-of Carpaccio! Ah, Stelio! how well you brought it
-back to our riper age! How well you knew how to inspire
-us with regret for all that we have lost, and with
-hope of recovering it by means of an art that shall be
-indissolubly reunited to life!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena was silent, oppressed by the thought
-of the gigantic work accomplished by the barbaric creator,
-which the enthusiasm of Baldassare Stampa had
-evoked as a contrast to the fervid poet of <cite>Orpheus</cite> and
-of <cite>Ariadne</cite>. A kind of instinctive rancor, an obscure
-hostility that did not spring from the intellect, sustained
-him against the tenacious German who had succeeded,
-by his own unaided effort, in inflaming the world. To
-achieve his victory over men and things, he, too, had
-exalted his own image and magnified his own dreams
-of dominating beauty. He, too, had approached the
-multitude as if it were his chosen prey; he, too, had
-imposed upon himself, as if it were a discipline, an unceasing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-effort to surpass himself. And now he had the
-temple of his creed on the Bavarian hill.</p>
-
-<p>"Art alone can lead men back to unity," said Daniele
-Glauro. "Let us honor the nobler master that has proclaimed
-this dogma for all time. His Festival Theater,
-though built of bricks and wood, though narrow and
-imperfect, has none the less a sublime significance, for
-within it Art appears as a religion in a living form; the
-drama there becomes a rite."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, let us honor Richard Wagner," said Antimo
-della Bella, "but, if this hour is to be memorable by an
-announcement and a promise from him who this night
-has shown the mysterious ship to the people, let us invoke
-once more the heroic soul that has spoken to us
-through the voice of Donatella Arvale. In laying the
-corner-stone of his Festival Theater, the poet of <cite>Siegfried</cite>
-consecrated it to the hopes and victories of Germany.
-The Apollo Theater, which is now rising rapidly
-on the Janiculum, where eagles once descended, bearing
-their prophecies, must be the monumental revelation of
-the idea toward which our race is led by its genius. Let
-us reaffirm the privilege with which nature has ennobled
-our Latin blood."</p>
-
-<p>Still Stelio remained silent, deeply stirred by turbulent
-forces that worked within his soul with a sort of blind
-fury, like the subterranean energies that swell, rend, and
-transform volcanic regions for the creation of new mountains
-and new chasms. All the elements of his inner
-life, assailed by this violence, seemed to dissolve and
-multiply at the same time. Images of grandeur and of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-terror passed through this tumult, accompanied by
-strange harmonies. Swift concentrations and dispersions
-of thought succeeded one another, like electric flashes
-in a tempest. At certain moments, it seemed to him that
-he could hear songs and wild clamors through a doorway
-that was opened and closed incessantly; sounds
-as if a tempestuous wind bore to his ears the alternate
-cries of a massacre and an apotheosis.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, with the intensity of a feverish vision, he
-saw the scorched and fatal spot of earth whereon he
-wished to create the souls of his great tragedy; he felt
-all its parching thirst within himself. He saw the mythical
-fountain which alone could quench the burning aridity;
-and in the bubbling of its springs the purity of
-the maiden that must die there. He saw on Perdita's
-face the mask of the heroine, quiescent in the beauty
-of an extraordinarily calm sorrow. Then the ancient
-dryness of the plain of Argos converted itself into flames;
-the fountain of Perseia flowed with the swiftness of a
-stream. The fire and the water, the two primitive elements,
-rushed over all things, effaced all other traces,
-spread and wandered, struggled, triumphed, acquired
-a word, a language wherewith to unveil their inner essence
-and to reveal the innumerable myths born of their
-eternity. The symphony expressed the drama of the
-two elementary Souls on the stage of the Universe, the
-pathetic struggle of two great living and moving Beings,
-two cosmic Wills, such as the shepherd Arya fancied it
-when he contemplated the spectacle from the high plateau
-with his pure eyes. And, of a sudden, from the very
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-center of the musical mystery, from the depths of the
-symphonic Ocean, arose the Ode, brought by the human
-voice, and attaining the loftiest heights.</p>
-
-<p>The miracle of Beethoven renewed itself. The winged
-Ode, the Hymn, sprang from the midst of the orchestra
-to proclaim, in phrases absolute and imperious, the joy
-and the sorrow of Man. It was not the Chorus, as in the
-Ninth Symphony, but the Voice, alone and dominating,
-the interpreter, the messenger to the multitude. "Her
-voice! her voice! She has disappeared. Her song
-seemed to move the heart of the world, and she was
-beyond the veil," said the Animator, who in mental vision
-saw again the crystal statue within which he had watched
-the mounting wave of melody. "I will seek thee, I shall
-find thee again; I will possess myself of thy secret. Thou
-shalt sing my hymns, towering at the summit of my
-music!" Freed now from all earthly desire, he thought
-of that maiden form as the receptacle of a divine gift.
-He heard the disembodied voice surge from the depths
-of the orchestra to reveal the part of eternal truth that
-exists in ephemeral fact. The Ode crowned the episode
-with light. Then, as if to lead back to the play of
-imagery his ravished spirit from "beyond the veil," a
-dancing figure stood out against the rhythm of the dying
-Ode. Between the lines of a parallelogram drawn
-beneath the arch of the stage, as within the limits of a
-strophe, the mute dancer, with her body seemingly free
-for a moment from the sad laws of gravity, imitated
-the fire, the whirlwind, the revolutions of the stars. "La
-Tanagra, flower of Syracuse, made of wings, as a flower
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-is made of petals!" Thus he invoked the image of the already
-famous Sicilian who had re-discovered the ancient
-orchestic art as it had been in the days when Phrynichus
-boasted that he had within himself as many figures of
-the dance as there were waves on the ocean on a stormy
-winter night. The actress, the singer, the dancer&mdash;the
-three Dionysian women&mdash;appeared to him like perfect
-and almost divine instruments of his creations. With
-an incredible rapidity, in word, song, gesture and symphony,
-his work should crystallize itself and live an all-powerful
-life before the conquered multitude.</p>
-
-<p>He was still silent, lost in an ideal world, waiting to
-measure the effort necessary to manifest it. The voices
-surrounding him seemed to come from a long distance.</p>
-
-<p>"Wagner declares that the only creator of a work of
-art is the people," said Baldassare Stampa, "and that the
-sole function of the artist is to gather and express the
-creation of the unconscious multitude."</p>
-
-<p>The extraordinary emotion that had stirred Stelio
-when, from the throne of the Doges, he had spoken to
-the throng seized on him once more. In that communion
-between his soul and the soul of the people an almost
-divine mystery had existed; something greater and more
-exalted was added to the habitual feeling he had for his
-own person; he had felt that an unknown power converged
-within him, abolishing the limits of his earthly
-being and conferring upon his solitary voice the full harmony
-of a chorus.</p>
-
-<p>There was, then, in the multitude a secret beauty, in
-which only the poet and the hero could kindle a spark.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-Whenever that beauty revealed itself by the sudden outburst
-from a theater, a public square, or an entrenchment,
-a torrent of joy must swell the heart of him who
-had known how to inspire it by his verse, his harangue,
-or a signal from his sword. Thus, the word of the poet,
-when communicated to the people, was an act comparable
-to the deed of a hero&mdash;an act that brought to birth
-in the great composite soul of the multitude a sudden
-comprehension of beauty, as a master sculptor, from the
-mere touch of his plastic thumb upon a mass of clay,
-creates a divine statue. Then the silence that had spread
-like a sacred veil over the completed poem would cease.
-The material part of life would no longer be typified by
-immaterial symbols: life itself would be manifested in
-its perfection by the poet; the word would become flesh,
-rhythm would quicken in breathing, palpitating form,
-the idea would be embodied with all the fulness of its
-force and freedom.</p>
-
-<p>"But," said Fabio Molza, "Richard Wagner believes
-that the real heart of the people is composed only of
-those that experience grief in common&mdash;you understand,
-grief in common."</p>
-
-<p>"Toward Joy&mdash;still toward eternal Joy," Stelio reflected.
-"The real heart of the people is composed of
-those that feel vaguely the necessity of raising themselves,
-by means of Fiction, Poetry, the Ideal, out of
-the daily prison in which they serve and suffer."</p>
-
-<p>In his waking dream he beheld the disappearance of
-the small theaters of the city, where, amid suffocating
-air heavy with impurities, before a crowd of rakes and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-courtesans, the actors make public prostitution of their
-talents. And then, on the steps of the new theater, his
-mental vision beheld the true people, the great, unanimous
-multitude, whose human odor he had inhaled,
-whose clamor he had listened to in the great marble
-shell, under the stars. By the mysterious power of
-rhythm, his art, imperfectly understood though it was,
-had stirred the rude and ignorant ones with a profound
-emotion, penetrating as that felt by a prisoner about to
-be released from his chains. Little by little, the sensation
-of joy at their deliverance had crept over the most
-abject; the deep-lined brows cleared; lips accustomed to
-brutal vociferation had parted in amazement; and, above
-all, the hands&mdash;the rough hands enslaved by instruments
-of toil&mdash;had stretched out in one unanimous gesture of
-adoration toward the heroine who in their presence had
-wafted toward the stars the spirit of immortal sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>"In the life of a people like ours," said Daniele Glauro,
-"a great manifestation of art has much more weight than
-a treaty of alliance or a tributary law. That which never
-dies is more prized than that which is ephemeral. The
-astuteness and audacity of a Malatesta are crystallized
-for all time in a medal of Pisanello's. Of Machiavelli's
-politics nothing survives but the power of his prose."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true, most true!" thought Stelio; "the fortunes
-of Italy are inseparable from the fate of the Beauty
-of which she is the Mother." This sovereign truth now
-appeared to him the rising sun of that divine, ideal land
-through which wandered the great Dante. "Italy!
-Italy!" Throughout his being, like a call to arms, seemed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-to thrill that name, that name which intoxicates the
-world. From its ruins, bathed in so much heroic blood,
-should not the new art, robust in root and branch, arise
-and flourish? Should it not become a determining and
-constructive force in the third Rome, reawakening all
-the latent power possessed by the hereditary substance
-of the nation, indicating to her statesmen the primitive
-truths that are the necessary bases of new institutions?
-Faithful to the oldest instincts of his race, Richard
-Wagner had foreseen, and had fostered by his own efforts,
-the aspiration of the German States to the heroic
-grandeur of the Empire. He had evoked the noble figure
-of Henry the Fowler, standing erect beneath the ancient
-oak: "Let warriors arise from every German land!"
-And at Sadowa and at Sedan these warriors had won.
-With the same impulse, the same tenacity, people and
-artist had achieved their glorious aim. The same degree
-of victory had crowned the work of the sword and
-the work of melody. Like the hero, the poet had accomplished
-an act of deliverance. Like the will of the
-Iron Chancelor, like the blood of his soldiers, the Master's
-musical numbers had contributed toward the exalting and
-perpetuating of the soul of his race.</p>
-
-<p>"He has been here only a few days, at the Palazzo
-Vendramin-Calergi," said Prince Hoditz.</p>
-
-<p>And suddenly the image of the barbaric creator seemed
-to Stelio to approach him; the lines of his face became
-visible, the blue eyes gleamed under the wide brow, the
-lips closed tight above the powerful chin, armed with
-sensuousness, pride, and disdain. The slight body, bent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-with the weight of age and glory, straightened itself,
-appeared almost as gigantic as his work, took on the
-aspect of a god. The blood coursed like a swift mountain
-torrent, its breath sighed like a forest breeze. Suddenly
-the youth of Siegfried filled the figure and permeated
-it, radiant as the dawn shining through a cloud.
-"To follow the impulse of my heart, to obey my instinct,
-to listen to the voice of Nature within myself&mdash;that is
-my supreme law!" The heroic, resounding words, springing
-from the depths, expressed the young and healthy
-will that had triumphed over all obstacles and all evil,
-always in accord with the law of the Universe. And
-the flames, called forth from the rock by the wand of
-Wotan, arose in the magic circle: "On the flaming sea
-a way has opened! To plunge into that fire, oh, ineffable
-joy! To find my bride within that flaming circle!"
-All the phantoms of the myth seemed to blaze anew
-and then vanish.</p>
-
-<p>Then the winged helmet of Brunehilde gleamed in the
-sunlight: "Glory to the sun! Glory to the light! Glory
-to the radiant day! My sleep was long. Who has awakened
-me?" The phantoms fled in tumult, and dispersed.
-Then arose from the dark shadows the maiden of the
-song, Donatella Arvale, as she had appeared to him
-amid the purple and gold of the immense hall in a commanding
-attitude and holding a fiery flower in her hand:
-"Dost thou not see me, then? Do not my burning gaze
-and ardent blood make thee tremble. Dost thou not
-feel this wild ardor?" Though she was absent, she
-seemed to resume her power over his dream. Infinite
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-music seemed to rise from the silent, empty place in the
-supper-room. Her Hermes-like face seemed to retain
-an inviolable secret: "Do not touch me; do not trouble
-my repose, and I will reflect forever thy luminous image.
-Love only thyself and renounce all thought of me!" And
-again, as on the feverish water, a passionate impatience
-tortured the Animator, and again he fancied the absent
-one like a beautiful bow to be drawn by a strong hand
-that would know how to use it as an instrument to
-achieve some great conquest: "Awake, virgin, awake!
-Live and laugh! Be mine!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio's spirit was drawn violently into the orbit of
-the magic world created by the German god; its visions
-and harmonies overwhelmed him; the figures of the
-Northern myth towered above those of his own art and
-passion, obscuring them. His own desire and his own
-hope spoke the language of the barbarian: "I must love
-thee, blindly, and laughing: and, laughing, we must unite
-and lose ourselves, each in the other. O radiant Love!
-O smiling Death!" The joyousness of the warrior-virgin
-on the flame-circled summit reached the loftiest height;
-her cry of love and liberty mounted to the heart of the
-sun. Ah, what heights and what depths had he not
-touched, that formidable Master of human souls! What
-effort could ever equal his? What eagle could ever hope
-to soar higher? His gigantic work was there, finished,
-amidst men. Throughout the world swelled the last
-mighty chorus of the Grail, the canticle of thanksgiving:
-"Glory to the Miracle! Redemption to the Redeemer!"</p>
-
-<p>"He is tired," said Prince Hoditz, "very tired and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-feeble. That is the reason why we did not see him at
-the Doge's Palace. His heart is affected." ...</p>
-
-<p>Once more the giant became a man: the slight body,
-bent with age and glory, consumed by passion, slowly
-dying. And Stelio heard again in his heart Perdita's
-words, which had called up the image of another stricken
-artist&mdash;the father of Donatella Arvale. "The name of
-the bow is BIOS ("life"), and its work is death!"</p>
-
-<p>The young man saw his pathway blazed before him
-by victory&mdash;the long art, the short life. "Forward, still
-forward! Higher, ever higher!" Every hour, every
-second, he must strive, struggle, fortify himself against
-destruction, diminution, oppression, contagion. Every
-hour, every second, his eye must be fixed on his aim, concentrating
-and directing all his energies, without truce,
-without relaxation. He felt that victory was as necessary
-to his soul as air to his lungs. At the contact with
-the German barbarian, a furious thirst for conflict awoke
-in his Latin blood. "To you now belongs the will to
-do!" Wagner had declared, on the day of the opening
-of the new theater: "In the work of art of the future,
-the source of invention will never run dry." Art was
-infinite, like the beauty of the world. There are no
-limits to courage or to power. Man must seek and find,
-further and still further. "Forward, still forward!"</p>
-
-<p>Then a single wave, vast and shapeless, embodying all
-the aspirations and all the agitations of that delirium,
-whirling itself into a maelstrom, seemed to take on the
-qualities of plastic matter, obeying the same inexhaustible
-energy that forms all animals and all things under
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-the sun. An extraordinary image, beautiful and pure,
-was born of this travail, lived and glowed with unbearable
-intensity. The poet saw it, absorbed it with a pure
-gaze, felt that it took root in the very depths of his being.
-"Ah, to express it, to manifest it to the world, to
-fix it in perfection for all eternity!" Sublime moment
-that never would return! All visions vanished. Around
-him flowed the current of daily life; fleeting words
-sounded; expectation palpitated, desire still lived.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at the woman. The stars sparkled; the
-trees waved, and the dark garden spread out behind Perdita,
-and her eyes still said: "Let me serve! Let me
-serve!"</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII<br />
-THE PROMISE</h2>
-
-
-<p>Descending the terrace to the garden, the guests
-had dispersed among the shady paths and under
-the vine-covered trellises. The night breeze
-was damp and warm, touching the long lashes
-on delicate eyelids like lips brushing them in a caress.
-The invisible stars of the jasmine perfumed the darkness;
-the rich fragrance of fruit, too, was even stronger
-than in the island gardens. A vivid power of fertility
-emanated from this narrow trace of cultivated earth,
-which appeared like a place of exile, surrounded by a
-girdle of water, and, like an exiled soul, all the more
-intense.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish me to remain here? Shall I return after
-the others have gone? Say quickly! It is late!"</p>
-
-<p>"No, no, Stelio, I beg of you! It is late&mdash;it is too late!
-You yourself say it is."</p>
-
-<p>La Fosacarina's voice was full of mortal terror. Her
-white arms and shoulders trembled in the shadows. She
-wished at once to refuse and to yield; she wished to
-die, yet she wished to feel his strong embrace. She
-trembled more and more; her teeth chattered slightly,
-for a glacial stream seemed to submerge her, chilling her
-from head to foot. The strange emotion caused a fancy
-that her very limbs were ready to break, and she was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-conscious that the stiffness of her set features had even
-changed the sound of her voice. And still she longed
-at once to die and to be loved; still, over her terror, her
-chill, her body no longer young, hung the terrible sentence
-the beloved had pronounced, which she herself had
-repeated: "It is late&mdash;it is too late!"</p>
-
-<p>"Your promise, your promise, Perdita! I will not be
-put off!"</p>
-
-<p>The tide, swelling like a full, fair throat, the estuary,
-lost in darkness and death, the City, when illumined
-by the twilight fire, the water flowing in the invisible
-clepsydra, the bronze bells with their vibrations reaching
-to the sky, the eager wish, the contracted lips, lowered
-eyelids, feverish hands, all recurred with the memory
-of the silent promise. With wild ardor he longed
-to clasp that being, whose knowledge of all things was
-immeasurably deep and rich.</p>
-
-<p>"No, I will not be put off!"</p>
-
-<p>His ardor had come to him from far-distant ages, from
-the most ancient origins, the primitive simplicity of
-sudden unions, the antique mystery of sacred furies.
-Like the horde that was possessed by the enchantment
-of the gods, and descended the mountain side, tearing up
-trees, rushing on with blind fury, momentarily increasing,
-its numbers swelled by other madmen, spreading
-madness in its way, and finally becoming one vast bestial
-yet human multitude, impelled by a monstrous will, so
-the crudest of instincts urged him on, confusing all his
-ideas in a dizzy whirl. And what most attracted him
-in that wandering and despairing woman, whose knowledge
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-was deep and rich, was the consciousness that she
-was a being oppressed by the eternal servitude of her
-nature, destined to succumb to the sudden convulsions
-of her sex; a being who soothed the fever of stage life
-in sensuous repose, the fiery actress, who passed from
-the frenzied plaudits of the multitude to the embrace of
-a lover; the Dionysian creature who chose to crown her
-mysterious rites as they were crowned in the ancient
-orgies.</p>
-
-<p>His amorous madness was now immeasurable, and was
-a mingling of cruelty, jealousy, poetry and pride. He
-regretted that he never had sought her after some dramatic
-triumph, warm from the breath of the people,
-breathless and disheveled, showing the traces of the tragic
-soul that had wept and cried in her, with the tears
-of that alien spirit still damp on her agitated face. As
-by a flash of light, he had a sudden vision of her reclining,
-at rest, yet full of the power that had drawn forth
-a howl from the monster, panting like a Mænad after the
-dance, athirst and weary.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, do not be cruel!" entreated the woman, who
-felt in the voice of the beloved, and read in his eyes,
-the madness that possessed him. From the burning gaze
-of the young man she shrank with pathetic modesty.
-His insistence hurt the sensitive delicacy of her spirit.
-She recognized in it all that there was of mere selfish
-impulse; she well knew that he thought of her as something
-poisonous and corrupt, with memories of many
-loves, a wandering, implacable temptress. She divined
-the sudden grudgingness, jealousy and feverish resentment
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-that had blazed up in the long-beloved friend, to
-whom she had consecrated all of herself that was most
-precious and most sincere, preserving the perfection of
-that sentiment by her steadfast refusal to break down
-all barriers. Now, all was lost; all was suddenly devastated,
-like a fair domain at the mercy of rebellious
-and vindictive slaves. Then, almost as if she were passing
-through the last agonies of death, her whole bitter
-and stormy past rose before her: that life of struggle and
-pain, bewilderment, effort, passion, and triumph. She
-felt all its heavy burden weighing on her, and recalled
-the ineffable joy, the feeling of mingled terror and
-freedom, with which, in her far-distant youth, she had
-given her first, fresh love to the man who had deceived
-her. And through her mind passed the image of herself,
-that maiden who had disappeared, who perhaps was
-still dreaming in some solitary place, or weeping, or
-promising herself future happiness. "Too late&mdash;it is
-too late!" The irrevocable word rang continually in
-her ears like the reverberation of the bronze bells.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not be cruel, Stelio!" she repeated, white and
-delicate as the swansdown that encircled her shoulders.
-She seemed suddenly to have shorn herself of her power,
-to have become slight and weak, to have assumed a
-secret, tender personality, easy to kill, to destroy, to immolate
-as a bloodless sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>"No, Perdita, I will not be cruel," he stammered, suddenly
-discomposed by her face and voice, his heart stirred
-with human pity, arising from the same depths that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-had harbored his wilder instincts. "Pardon me! Forgive!"</p>
-
-<p>He would have liked to take her in his arms that moment,
-to nurse her, console her, let her weep on his breast,
-and to dry her tears. He felt that he no longer recognized
-her, that some unknown creature stood before
-him, infinitely humble and sad, deprived of all strength.
-His pity and remorse were like the emotion we feel if
-we unwillingly hurt or offend an invalid or a child&mdash;some
-lonely and inoffensive little being.</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me!"</p>
-
-<p>He would have liked to kneel, to kiss her feet in the
-grass, to murmur little fond phrases in her ear. He
-bent toward her and touched her hand. She started
-violently, opened wide her large eyes upon him; then
-lowered her eyelids and stood motionless. Shadows
-seemed to gather under her arched brows, throwing into
-relief the curve of her cheeks. Again the glacial wave
-submerged her.</p>
-
-<p>Voices arose from the guests dispersed about the
-garden, then a long silence followed.</p>
-
-<p>Presently a crunching of gravel, as if trodden by a
-heavy foot, was heard, followed by another long silence.
-Soon a confused clamor was heard coming from the
-canals; the jasmine's fragrance was heavier than before,
-as a heart in suspense quickens in movement. The night
-seemed fraught with miracles, and eternal forces worked
-harmoniously between the earth and the stars.</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me! If my love oppresses you, I will continue
-to stifle it; I will even renounce it forever, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-obey you. Perdita! Perdita! I will forget all that your
-eyes said to me a little while ago, in the midst of the idle
-talk. What embrace, what caress could more wholly
-unite our souls? All the passion of the night threw us
-together. I received your soul like a wave. And now
-it seems that never again can I separate my heart from
-yours, nor can you separate yours from mine. Together
-we must go forward to meet I know not what mysterious
-dawn...."</p>
-
-<p>He spoke in a low tone, with absolute abandon, having
-become for the moment a vibrating substance that
-responded to every change in the nocturnal spirit that
-bewitched him. That which he saw before him was no
-longer a corporeal form, an impenetrable prison of flesh;
-it was a soul unveiled by a succession of appearances
-not less expressive than melody itself, an infinite sensibility,
-delicate and powerful, which, in that slight frame,
-created in turn the fragility of the flower, the vigor of
-marble, the flash of the flame, all shadows and all light.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio!"</p>
-
-<p>She hardly breathed that name aloud; yet in the sigh
-that died on her soft lips was as thrilling a note of
-wonder and exultation as would have been revealed in
-the most piercing cry. In the accent of the man she had
-recognized love: love, real love! She, who had so often
-listened to beautiful and perfect words pronounced by
-that clear voice, and who had suffered under them as
-from a torture or a heartless jest, now saw her own life
-and all the world suddenly transformed at this new accent.
-Her very soul seemed changed; that which had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-encumbered it fell away into dim, far-off obscurity, while
-to the surface rose something free and immaculate, that
-dilated and curved over her like the sky; and, as the wave
-of light mounts from the horizon to the zenith with mute
-harmony, the illusion of happiness mounted to her lips.
-A smile softly spread over her lips, which quivered like
-leaves in the breeze, showing a glimpse as pearly as the
-jasmine's starry flowers.</p>
-
-<p>"All is abolished&mdash;all is vanished. I never have lived,
-I never have loved, I never have suffered. I am renewed.
-I never have known any love but this. My heart is
-pure. I should wish to die in the joy of your love.
-Years and experience have passed over me without reaching
-that part of my soul which I have kept for you, that
-secret heaven which has suddenly opened to the unforeseen,
-has triumphed over all my sadness, and has remained
-alone to cherish the strength and the sweetness
-of your name. Your love will save me; the fulness of my
-love will render you divine!"</p>
-
-<p>Words of wildest transport sprang from her liberated
-heart, though her lips dared not speak them. But she
-smiled&mdash;smiled her infinite, mysterious, silent smile!</p>
-
-<p>"Is it not true? Speak&mdash;answer me, Perdita! Do you
-not feel too our need of each other&mdash;all the stronger
-from our long renunciation, from the patience with which
-we have awaited this hour? Ah, it seems to me that
-all my presentiments and all my hopes would count as
-nothing, if it were fated that this hour should not come to
-pass. Say that without me you could not have waited,
-after life's darkness, for the glorious dawn, as I could
-not wait without you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, yes!"</p>
-
-<p>In that stifled syllable, she was lost irrevocably. The
-smile faded, the lines of the mouth became heavy, causing
-it to appear in sharply drawn relief against the pallor
-of her face; the lips seemed athirst, strong to attract,
-to cling, insatiable. And her whole body, which just before
-had seemed to shrink in sensitiveness and apprehension,
-now drew itself up again, as if formed anew,
-recovering all its physical power, and inundated by an
-impetuous wave of emotion.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us have no more uncertainty. It is late."</p>
-
-<p>He could not disguise his impatience of the social restraints
-that must be observed on account of the other
-guests.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes!" La Foscarina repeated, but in a new accent,
-her eyes dwelling upon his, commanding, imperious, as
-if she felt certain now of possessing a philter that should
-bind him to her forever.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio felt his heart-throbs quicken still more at the
-thought of the love this mysterious being must be able
-to give. He gazed deep into her eyes, and saw that she
-was as pale as if all her blood had been sapped by the
-earth to nourish the rich fruits of the garden; and it
-seemed to him that the present was part of a dream-life,
-wherein he and she lived alone in all the world.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 460px;" id="ilop130">
-<img src="images/ilo3.jpg" width="460" height="700" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center caption"><em><small>HE GAZED DEEP INTO HER EYES AND SAW THAT SHE<br />
-WAS AS PALE AS IF HER BLOOD HAD BEEN SAPPED<br />
-TO NOURISH THE RICH FRUITS OF THE GARDEN</small></em></p>
-
-<p class="center caption"><em>From an Original Drawing by Arthur H. Ewer</em></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>La Foscarina was standing under a shrub laden with
-fruit. The sudden beauty that had illumined her in the
-supper-room, made up of a thousand ideal forces, reappeared
-in her face with still greater intensity, kindled
-now from the flame that never dies, the fervor that never
-languishes. The magnificent fruits hung over her head,
-bearing the crown of a royal donor. The myth of the
-pomegranate was revivified in the mystery of midnight,
-as it had been at the passing of the boat in the mystic
-twilight. Who was this woman? Was she Persephone
-herself, Queen of Shades? Had she dwelt in that unknown
-region where all human agitations seem as trifling
-as idle winds on a dusty, interminable road? Had she
-contemplated the springs of the world, sunk deep in the
-earth? Had she counted the roots of the flowers, immobile
-as the veins in a petrified body? Was she weary
-or intoxicated with human tears, laughter, and sensuousness,
-and with having touched, one after another, all
-things mortal, to make them bloom only to see them
-perish? Who was she? Had she struck upon cities like
-a scourge, silenced forever with her kiss all lips that
-sang, stopped the pulsation of tyrannous hearts? Who
-was she&mdash;who? What secret past made her so pale, so
-passionate, so perilous? Had she already divulged all
-her secrets and given all her gifts, or could she still, by
-new arts, enchant her new lover, for whom life, love, and
-victory were one and the same thing? All this, and
-more, was suggested to him by the little veins in her
-temples, the curve of her cheeks, the lithe strength of
-her body.</p>
-
-<p>"All evil, all good, that which I know and do not
-know, that which you know, as well as that which you
-are ignorant of&mdash;all this had to be, to prepare the fulness
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-of this night." Life and the dream had become one.
-Thought and sense were as wines poured into the same
-cup. Even their garments, their faces, their hopes, their
-glances, were like the plants of the garden, like the air,
-the stars, the silence.</p>
-
-<p>Sublime moment, never to return! Before he realized it,
-his hands involuntarily reached out to draw her to himself.
-The woman's head fell backward, as if she were
-about to faint; between her half-closed eyelids and her
-parted lips her eyes and her teeth gleamed as things
-gleam for the last time. Then swiftly she raised her
-head again and recovered herself; her lips sought the
-lips that sought hers.</p>
-
-<p>After a moment they saw each other again in a lucid
-way. The voices of the guests in the garden were wafted
-to their ears, and an indistinct clamor from the far-off
-canal rose from time to time.</p>
-
-<p>"Well?" demanded the young man feverishly, after
-that burning kiss of body and soul.</p>
-
-<p>The lady bent to lift a fallen pomegranate from the
-grass. The fruit was ripe; it had burst open in its fall
-and now poured out its blood from the wound it had received.
-With the vision of the fruit-laden boat, the pale
-islet, and the field of asphodels, to the impassioned
-woman's mind returned the words of the Inspirer: "This
-is my body.... Take, eat!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes!"</p>
-
-<p>With a mechanical movement she crushed the fruit
-in her hand, as if she wished to expel all its juice, which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-trickled in a stream over her wrist. She trembled, as the
-glacial wave rushed over her anew.</p>
-
-<p>"Go away when the others go, but then&mdash;return! I
-will wait for you at the gate of the Gradenigo garden."</p>
-
-<p>She trembled still, partly from terror, a prey to an invincible
-power. As by a flash of light, again he saw
-her reclining, at rest, panting like a Mænad after the
-dance. They gazed at each other, but could not bear the
-fierce light of each other's eyes. They parted.</p>
-
-<p>She went in the direction of the voices of the poets
-who had exalted her ideal power.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-"TO CREATE WITH JOY!"</h2>
-
-
-<p>Lost! Lost! Now she was lost! She still lived&mdash;vanquished,
-humiliated, as if some one had
-trampled pitilessly upon her; she still lived, and
-dawn was breaking, the days were beginning
-again, the fresh tide was flowing once more into the
-City Beautiful, and Donatella was still sleeping upon her
-pure pillow. Into an infinite distance had faded the hour,
-in reality so short a time before, when she had waited
-at the gate for her beloved, recognized his step in the
-funereal silence of the deserted path, and felt her knees
-weaken as if from a blow, while a strange reverberation
-rang in her ears. How far-away now seemed that hour!
-yet the little incidents of her vigil returned to her mind
-with intensity: the cold iron rail against which she had
-leaned her head, the sharp, acrid odor that rose from
-the grass as from a retting-vat, the moist tongue of Lady
-Myrta's greyhounds that came noiselessly and licked her
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>"Good-by! Good-by!"</p>
-
-<p>She was lost! He had left her as he would have left
-some light love, almost with the manner of a stranger,
-almost impatient even, drawn by the freshness of the
-dawn, by the freedom of the morning.</p>
-
-<p>"Good-by!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From her window she perceived Stelio on the bank
-of the canal; he was inhaling deep breaths of the fresh
-morning air; then in the perfect calm that reigned over
-all things, she heard his clear, confident voice calling
-the gondolier:</p>
-
-<p>"Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>The man was asleep in the bottom of his gondola, and
-his human slumber resembled that of the curved boat
-that obeyed his movements. Stelio touched him lightly
-with his foot, and instantly he sprang up, jumped to
-his place and seized the oar. Man and boat awoke at the
-same time, as if they had but one body, ready to glide
-over the water.</p>
-
-<p>"Your servant, Signor!" said Zorzi with a smile, glancing
-up at the brightening sky. "Sit down, Signor, and I
-will row."</p>
-
-<p>Opposite the palace, the door of a large workshop was
-thrown open. It was a stonecutter's shop, where steps
-were fashioned from the stone of Val-di-Sole.</p>
-
-<p>"To ascend!" thought Stelio, and his superstitious soul
-rejoiced at the good omen. On the sign, the name of the
-quarry seemed radiant with promise&mdash;the Valley of the
-Sun. He had already seen, a short time before, the image
-of a stairway, on a coat-of-arms in the Gradenigo garden&mdash;a
-symbol of his own ascension. "Higher, always
-higher!" Joy came bubbling up from the depths of his
-being. The morning awakened all manly energies.</p>
-
-<p>"And Perdita? And Ariadne?" He saw them again,
-as they descended the marble stairway, in the light of
-the smoking torches. "And La Tanagra?" The Syracusan
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-appeared to his vision, with her long, goat-like
-eyes, reposing gracefully upon her mother earth, motionless
-as a bas-relief on the marble in which it is carved.
-"The Dionysian Trinity!" He fancied them as exempt
-from all passion, immune from all evil, like creations
-of art. The surface of his soul seemed covered with
-swift and splendid images, like sails scattered over a
-swelling sea. His heart beat calmly, and with the approaching
-sunrise he felt a renewal of his life-forces, as
-if he were born anew with the morning.</p>
-
-<p>"We do not need this light any longer," murmured
-the gondolier slyly, extinguishing the lantern of the gondola.</p>
-
-<p>"To the Grand Canal, by San Giovanni Decollato!"
-cried Stelio, seating himself.</p>
-
-<p>As the dentellated prow swung into the Canal of San
-Giacomo dall'Orio, he turned to look once more at the
-palace, of a leaden hue in the early dawn. One lighted
-window grew dark at that moment, like an eye suddenly
-blinded. "Good-by! Good-by!" The woman no
-longer young was up there alone, sad with the sadness
-of death; the Song-Maiden was preparing to return to
-the place of her long sacrifice. He knew not how to
-pity, he could only promise. From the abundance of his
-strength, he drew an illusion that he might change those
-two destinies for his own joy.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop before the Palazzo Vendramin-Calergi!" he ordered
-the gondolier.</p>
-
-<p>The canal, ancient stream of silence and of poetry, was
-deserted. The pale green sky was reflected in it with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-its last fading stars. At first glance, the palace had an
-aerial appearance, like an artificial cloud hung over the
-water. The shadows in which it was still wrapped suggested
-the quality of velvet, the beauty of something
-soft and magnificent. And, just as in studying a deep-piled
-velvet, the pattern gradually becomes discernible,
-the architectural lines revealed themselves in the three
-Corinthian columns that rose with rhythmic grace
-and strength to the point where the emblems of nobility,
-the eagles, the horses, and the amphora, were mingled
-with the roses of Loredan. NON NOBIS, DOMINE,
-NON NOBIS.</p>
-
-<p>Within that palace throbbed the great ailing heart.
-Stelio saw again the image of the barbaric creator: the
-blue eyes gleaming under the broad brow, the lips compressed
-above the powerful chin, armed with sensuousness,
-pride, and disdain. Was he sleeping? Could he
-sleep, or was he lying sleepless with his glory? The
-young man recalled strange things that were told of
-Wagner. Was it true that he could not sleep unless his
-head rested on his wife's bosom, and that, despite advancing
-years, he clung to her as a lover to his mistress?
-He remembered a story told him by Lady Myrta, who,
-while she was in Palermo, had visited the Villa d'Angri,
-where the very closets in the room occupied by the
-master had remained impregnated with an essence of
-rose so strong that it made her ill. He fancied that slight,
-tired body, wrapped in sumptuous draperies, ornamented
-with jewels, perfumed like a corpse ready for the pyre.
-Was it not Venice that had given him, as long ago it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-had given Albert Dürer, a taste for luxury and magnificence?
-Yes, and it was in the silence of her canals
-that he had heard the passing of the most ardent breath
-of all his music&mdash;the deadly passion of Tristan and Isolde.</p>
-
-<p>And now, within that palace throbbed the great ailing
-heart, and there its formidable impetuosity was flagging.
-The patrician palace, with its eagles, its horses,
-amphora, and roses, was as tightly closed and silent as
-a great tomb. Above its marble towers the sunrise
-turned the pale green sky to rosy pink.</p>
-
-<p>"Hail to the Victorious One!" Stelio stood up and
-cast his flowers at the threshold of the palace door.</p>
-
-<p>"On! On!" he cried.</p>
-
-<p>Urged by this sudden impatience, the gondolier bent to
-his oar, and the light craft threaded its way along the
-stream. A brown sail passed silently. The sea, the
-rippling waves, the laughing cry of the sea-gulls, the
-sweeping breeze arose before his desire.</p>
-
-<p>"Row, Zorzi, row! To the Veneta Marina, by the
-Canal dall'Olio!" the young man cried.</p>
-
-<p>The canal seemed too narrow for the expanse of his
-soul. Victory was now as necessary to his spirit as air
-to his lungs. After the delirium of the night, he wished
-to prove the perfection of his physical nature by the
-light of day and in the sharp breeze of the sea. He did
-not wish to sleep. He felt a circle of freshness around
-his eyes, as if he had bathed them with dew. He had
-no desire for repose, and the thought of his bed in the
-hotel filled him with disgust. "The deck of a ship, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-odor of pitch and of salt, the flutter of a red sail....
-Row, Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>The gondolier redoubled his efforts. The Fondaco dei
-Turchi disappeared from their view, a vision of marvelously
-yellow old ivory, like the only remaining portico
-of some ruined mosque. They passed the Palazzo of the
-Cornaro and the Palazzo of the Pesaro, those two giants
-blackened by time as by smoke from a fire; they passed
-the Ca' d'Oro, a divine marvel of air and stone; and suddenly
-the Rialto bridge showed its ample back, laden
-with shops, already bustling with life, sending forth the
-odor of vegetables and fish, like a great horn of plenty
-pouring out upon the shores the fruits of earth and sea
-to feed the Queen of Cities.</p>
-
-<p>"I am hungry, Zorzi, I am very hungry!" said Stelio,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>"A good sign when a wakeful night makes one hungry;
-it makes only the old feel sleepy," said Zorzi.</p>
-
-<p>"Row to shore!"</p>
-
-<p>He bought at a stall some grapes of the Vignole and
-some figs from Malamocco, laid on a plate of vine-leaves.</p>
-
-<p>"Row, Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>The gondola turned, then sped under the Fondaco dei
-Tedeschi, making its way toward the Rio de Palazzo.
-The bells were now ringing joyously in the full daylight,
-drowning the noises of the market-place with their brazen
-tongues.</p>
-
-<p>"To the Ponte della Paglia!"</p>
-
-<p>A thought, spontaneous as an instinct, led him back
-to the glorious spot where it seemed some trace must
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-remain of his lyric inspiration and of the great Dionysian
-chorus: <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva il forte!</i> The gondola grazed the side of
-the Palace of the Doge, massive as a monolith cut by
-chisels not less apt in finding melodies than the bows of
-the musicians. With all his new-born soul he embraced
-the mass; he heard once more the sound of his own
-voice and the bursts of applause. He said again to himself:
-"To create with joy! That is an attribute of Divinity!
-Impossible to imagine, in the highest flight of the
-spirit, a more triumphal act. Even the phrase itself has
-something of the splendor of the dawn."</p>
-
-<p>Again and again he repeated to the air, the waters,
-the stones, to the ancient city, to the young dawn: "To
-create with joy! To create with joy!"</p>
-
-<p>When the prow passed under the bridge and entered
-the mirror of light, a freer breath gave him fresh realization,
-with his hope and his courage, of the beauty and
-strength of the life of the past.</p>
-
-<p>"Find me a boat, Zorzi&mdash;a boat that will go out to sea."</p>
-
-<p>He longed for still wider space in which to breathe;
-he longed to feel a strong wind, salt air and dashing
-spray; to see the sails swell, and the bowsprit pointed
-toward a boundless horizon.</p>
-
-<p>"To the Veneta Marina! Find me a fishing-boat, a
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">bragozzo</i> from Chioggia."</p>
-
-<p>He perceived a large red and black sail, just hoisted,
-and now flapping in the breeze, superb as an ancient
-banner of the Republic, with the device of the Lion and
-the Book.</p>
-
-<p>"That one there&mdash;that will do. Let us catch it, Zorzi."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In his impatience he waved his hand, to sign to the
-boat to stop.</p>
-
-<p>"Call out to them to wait for me, Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>The gondolier, heated and dripping, cried out to the
-man at the sail. The gondola flew like a canoe in a
-regatta.</p>
-
-<p>"Bravo, Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>But Stelio was panting, too, as if he were in pursuit
-of fortune, some happy aim, or the certainty of a kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>"We have won the flag!" laughed the gondolier, rubbing
-his burning palms. "What foolishness!"</p>
-
-<p>The movement, the tone, the good-humor, the astonished
-faces of the fishermen leaning over the rail, the
-reflection of the red sail in the water, the cordial odor
-of fresh bread from a neighboring bake-shop, the smell
-of boiling pitch from a dock-yard, the voices of workmen
-entering the arsenal, the strong emanations from
-the quays, impregnated with the odor of the old rotten
-vessels of the Serene Republic, the resounding blows of
-the hammer on the vessels of the new Italy&mdash;all these
-rude and healthful things aroused a wonderful joyousness
-in the heart of the young man, who laughed aloud
-for very gladness.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you wish?" demanded the older of the fishermen,
-bending toward the ringing laughter his bearded
-bronzed face. "What can I do for you, Signor?"</p>
-
-<p>The mast creaked as if it were alive, swaying from
-top to bottom.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"You can come on board, if you like," he said. "Is
-that all you want?"</p>
-
-<p>He brought a ladder and attached it to the stern. It
-was a simple affair of ropes and pegs, but to Stelio it
-seemed, like all else in the rough craft, to have a life
-of its own. As he stepped upon it he felt almost ashamed
-of his light, glossy shoes. The heavy, calloused hand
-of the sailor, covered with blue tattoo-marks, helped him
-to climb up and pulled him on board with a jerk.</p>
-
-<p>"The grapes and the figs, Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>From the gondola, Zorzi handed him the vine-leaf plate.</p>
-
-<p>"May it make new blood for you, Signor!"</p>
-
-<p>"And the bread?"</p>
-
-<p>"We have some warm bread," said one of the sailors,
-"just out of the oven."</p>
-
-<p>Hunger would certainly give that bread a delicious
-flavor, finding therein all the nourishment of the grain.</p>
-
-<p>"Your servant, Signor, and a fair wind to you!" said
-the gondolier, taking leave.</p>
-
-<p>"Starboard!"</p>
-
-<p>The lateen sail, with the Lion and the Book, swelled
-crimson. The craft turned toward the open sea, directing
-its course toward San Servolo. The shore seemed
-to assume a sharp curve, as if to repel it.</p>
-
-<p>"To the right!"</p>
-
-<p>The boat veered with great force. A miracle met it:
-the first rays of the sun pierced the fluttering sail and
-illumined the angels on the campaniles of San Marco
-and San Giorgio Maggiore, setting on fire the globe of
-the Fortuna and crowning the five miters of the Basilica
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-with a diadem of light. Venice Anadyomene reigned
-over the waters, and from her beauty all her veils were
-ravished.</p>
-
-<p>"Glory to the Miracle!" An almost superhuman feeling
-of power and of freedom swelled the young man's
-heart as the wind had swollen the sail transfigured for
-him. In its crimson splendor, he saw himself as in the
-splendor of his own blood. It seemed to him that all
-the mystery of this beauty demanded of him a triumphal
-act. He felt confident that he was able to accomplish it.
-"To create with joy!"</p>
-
-<p>And the world was his!</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a><br /><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="half-title">BOOK II<br />
-THE EMPIRE OF SILENCE</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a><br /><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I<br />
-"IN TIME!"</h2>
-
-
-<p>"In time!" In a room of the Academy, La
-Foscarina had stopped before <cite>La Vecchia</cite>, by
-Francesco Torbido&mdash;that wrinkled, toothless,
-flaccid, yellow old woman, who could no
-longer either smile or weep, that human ruin worse than
-decay, that species of earthly Parca, who, instead of
-spindle, thread, or scissors, held in her hand a card
-bearing that significant warning.</p>
-
-<p>"In time!" she said again, when she and her companion
-were once more in the open air. She said it to
-break the pensive silence, during which she had felt her
-heart sink, like a stone cast into dark waters. She spoke
-again suddenly:</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio, do you know that closed house in the Calle
-Gambara?"</p>
-
-<p>"No&mdash;which house?"</p>
-
-<p>"The house of the Countess of Glanegg."</p>
-
-<p>"No, I don't know it."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not know the story of the beautiful Austrian?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, Fosca. Tell it to me."</p>
-
-<p>"Will you go with me as far as the Calle Gambara;
-it is only a short distance?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I will go."</p>
-
-<p>They walked along, side by side, toward the closed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-mansion. Stelio fell back a step, that he might observe
-the actress, that he might behold her grace as she walked
-in that warm, dead air. With his ardent gaze he seemed
-to embrace her whole person: the line of her shoulders
-sloping with noble grace, the free and pliant waist on the
-strong hips, the knees that moved lightly among the folds
-of her robe, and that pale, passionate face, those eloquent
-lips, that brow, lofty and beautiful as that of a man, the
-fringe of dark lashes over the elongated eyes, that sometimes
-were clouded over, as if tears rose to them and
-remained unshed&mdash;the whole passionate face full of lights
-and shadows, love and sadness, feverish force and quivering
-life.</p>
-
-<p>"I love you! I love you! You alone please me! Everything
-about you pleases me!" he said to her suddenly,
-whispering the words close to her cheek. He was now
-walking so close as almost to press against her, as he
-accommodated his step to hers, his arm passed under
-her arm. He could not bear to know that she was seized
-with startled anguish at those terrible warning words.</p>
-
-<p>She trembled, stopped; her eyelids drooped, her cheeks
-turned pale.</p>
-
-<p>"My friend!" she said, in a tone so faint that the two
-words seemed modulated less by her lips than by the
-rare smile of her spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Her sudden sadness melted away, changed into a wave
-of tenderness that poured in a lavish flood over her
-friend. Her unbounded gratitude inspired her with an
-eager desire to find some great gift for him.</p>
-
-<p>"Tell me, Stelio, what can I do for thee?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She imagined some marvelous test, some unheard-of
-proof of love. "Let me serve! Let me serve!" cried her
-heart. She yearned to own the whole earth, that she
-might offer it to him.</p>
-
-<p>"What dost thou wish? Tell me&mdash;what can I do for
-thee?"</p>
-
-<p>"Love me&mdash;only love me!"</p>
-
-<p>"Poor friend, my love is sad."</p>
-
-<p>"It is perfect; it crowns my life."</p>
-
-<p>"But you are young."</p>
-
-<p>"I love you!"</p>
-
-<p>"You should possess one with strength equal to your
-own."</p>
-
-<p>"But it is you, and only you, that each day increases
-my strength and exalts my hope. My blood runs quicker
-when I am near you in your mystic silence. At those
-times things are born in my brain that in time you will
-marvel to see. You are necessary to me."</p>
-
-<p>"Do not say that!"</p>
-
-<p>"Each day you confirm me in the assurance that all
-promises made to me will be kept."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you will have your own beautiful destiny. For
-you I have no fear; you are sure of yourself. No peril
-can surprise you, no obstacle can impede your progress.
-Oh, to be able to love without fear! One always fears
-when one loves. It is not for you that I fear. You seem
-to me invincible. I thank you for that also."</p>
-
-<p>She showed him her faith, deep as her passion, lucid
-and unlimited. For a long time, even in the heat of
-her own struggles and the vicissitudes of her wandering
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-life, she had kept her eyes fixed on this young, victorious
-existence, as on an ideal form born of the purification
-of her own desire. More than once, in the sadness of
-vain loves and the nobility of the prohibition imposed
-between them, she had thought: "Ah, if, some day, from
-all my courage, hardened in many storms, from all the
-strong, clear things that grief and revolt have revealed
-in the depths of my soul, from the best of myself, I
-could fashion for thee the wings that shall bear thee upward
-in thy last supreme flight!" More than once, her
-melancholy had been dissipated in a heroic presentiment.
-And then she had subjected her soul to restraint, had
-raised it to the highest plane of moral beauty that she
-could, had guided it in paths of purity, solely to merit
-that for which she hoped and feared at once&mdash;to be
-worthy of offering her servitude to him who was so impatient
-to conquer the world.</p>
-
-<p>And now a sudden violent shock of Fate had thrown
-her before him in the guise of a mere weak woman, overcome
-by earthly passion. She had united herself to him
-by the closest tie; she had watched him at dawn, sleeping;
-she had had sudden awakenings, alarmed by cruel
-fear, and had found it impossible to close her tired eyes
-again, lest he should gaze on her while she slept, and
-see in her face the lines of care and years.</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing is worth the inspiration you give me," said
-Stelio, pressing her arm close and seeking her soft wrist
-under her glove, urged by a longing to feel the pulsation
-of that devoted life. "Nothing is worth the assurance
-that nevermore until death shall I be alone."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Ah, you too feel that, do you&mdash;that it is forever?"
-she cried in a transport of joy at seeing the triumph of
-her love. "Yes, forever, Stelio&mdash;whatever happens,
-wherever your destiny may lead you, in whatever way
-you wish me to serve you, either near you or afar...."</p>
-
-<p>In the misty air rose a confused and monotonous sound,
-which La Foscarina recognized as the chorus of sparrows
-gathered among the dying trees in the garden of
-the Countess of Glanegg. The words died on her lips;
-she made an instinctive movement as if to turn back and
-to draw her companion with her.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are we going?" Stelio asked, surprised at her
-sudden movement, and at the unforeseen interruption,
-that came like a burst of magic music.</p>
-
-<p>She stopped, smiling her faint smile that showed her
-heart was aching. ("IN TIME!")</p>
-
-<p>"I wished to escape," she replied, "but I cannot."</p>
-
-<p>She looked like a pale flame, as she stood there.</p>
-
-<p>"I had forgotten, Stelio, that I was to take you to the
-closed house."</p>
-
-<p>Like one lost in a desert, she stood there, helpless,
-under the gray sky.</p>
-
-<p>"It seemed to me that we were to go somewhere else.
-But we are already here. 'In time'!"</p>
-
-<p>She appeared to him now as she had in that memorable
-night, when she had said "Do not be cruel, Stelio!"
-Clothed in her sweet, tender soul she stood there, so
-easy to kill, to destroy, to immolate in a bloodless sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Come away&mdash;let us go," he said, trying to lead her
-with him. "Let us go somewhere else."</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot."</p>
-
-<p>"Let us go home&mdash;let us go to your house; we will
-light a fire, the first fire of October. Let me pass this
-evening with you, Foscarina. It will rain soon. It would
-be so sweet to sit in your room and talk, or be silent,
-hand-in-hand. Come! Let us go."</p>
-
-<p>He would have liked to take her in his arms, to nurse
-her, soothe her, charm away her sadness. The sweetness
-of his own words augmented his tenderness. Of
-all her lovable person, he loved most fondly the delicate
-little lines that radiated from the corners of her eyes to
-her temples, the little purple veins that made her eyelids
-look like violets, the curve of her cheeks, the pointed
-chin, and all that seemed touched by the finger of Autumn,
-every shadow that overspread that passionate face.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina! Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>Whenever he called her by her real name, his heart
-beat faster, as if something more deeply human had entered
-into his love, as if suddenly her whole past had
-seized once more the figure he was pleased to isolate in
-his dream, and as if innumerable threads formed a bond
-uniting it more closely than ever to implacable life.</p>
-
-<p>"Come! Let us go!"</p>
-
-<p>She smiled pensively.</p>
-
-<p>"But why? The house is very near. Let us pass it by
-the Calle Gambara. Do you not wish to know the story
-of the Countess of Glanegg? Look! One would think
-it a convent."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The street was deserted as the path leading to a hermitage;
-it was gray, damp, strewn with dead leaves.
-The east wind had brought a light, warm mist that softened
-all sounds.</p>
-
-<p>"Behind those walls, a desolate soul survives the beauty
-of its body," said La Foscarina softly. "Look! The
-windows are closed, the blinds are nailed, the doors are
-sealed. Only one door is still open for the servants, and
-through it they carry the dead woman her nourishment,
-though she is walled up as if in an Egyptian tomb. The
-servants feed a body that no longer has the spirit of life."</p>
-
-<p>The naked trees, which rose to the top of the cloister-like
-enclosure, looked almost smoky in the mist; the
-sparrows, more numerous than the leaves, twittered incessantly.</p>
-
-<p>"Guess the Countess's name, Stelio. It is beautiful
-and rare&mdash;as beautiful as if you had originated it."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not know."</p>
-
-<p>"Radiana! The prisoner is called Radiana."</p>
-
-<p>"But whose prisoner is she?"</p>
-
-<p>"The prisoner of Time, Stelio. Time stands on guard
-at her door, with his scythe and hour-glass, as she is
-shown in old prints."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you trying to describe an allegory?"</p>
-
-<p>A boy passed, whistling. When he saw the two
-strangers looking at the closed windows, he stopped to
-gaze too, his large eyes full of curiosity and astonishment.
-They were silent. Presently the little boy grew
-tired of staring; nothing interesting could be seen; the
-windows were not opened; everything was motionless,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-so he ran away. They heard the flight of his little bare
-feet on the wet stones and rotting leaves.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," said Stelio, "and what did Radiana do? You
-have not yet told me who is this woman, nor the reason
-why she is a recluse. Tell me her story. I have already
-been thinking of Soranza Soranzo."</p>
-
-<p>"The Countess Glanegg is one of the greatest ladies
-of the aristocratic Viennese world, and perhaps the most
-beautiful I ever have seen. Franz Lenbach has painted
-her in the armor of the Valkyries, with the four-winged
-helmet. Have you ever visited his red studio in the
-Palazzo Borghese?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, never."</p>
-
-<p>"Go there some day, and ask him to show you that
-portrait. You will see it unchanged, as I see it now
-through all those walls. She has wished to remain like
-that in the memory of those that saw her in the splendor
-of her beauty. One day, when the sun shone too bright,
-she saw that the time had come for that beauty to fade,
-and she resolved to take leave of the world in such a
-way that men should not be witnesses of the decay and
-destruction of her famous beauty. Perhaps it was her
-sympathy with things that disintegrate and fall in ruins
-that has kept her in Venice. She gave a magnificent farewell
-banquet, where she appeared, still sovereignly beautiful;
-then she withdrew forever from the world to this
-house that you see, in this walled garden, where, alone
-with her servants, she awaits the end. She has become
-a legendary figure. They say that there are no mirrors
-in her house, and that she has forgotten her own face.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-She has forbidden even her most devoted friends and
-her nearest relatives to visit her. How does she live?
-What are her thoughts? By what means does she wile
-away the time of waiting? Is her soul in a state of
-grace?"</p>
-
-<p>Every pause in that veiled voice questioning the mystery
-was filled with deepest melancholy.</p>
-
-<p>"Does she pray? Does she contemplate? Does she
-weep? Or, perhaps, has she become inert, and suffers
-no more than a withered apple in the back of some old
-closet."</p>
-
-<p>"What if she should suddenly show herself at that
-window?" said Stelio, feeling something like a real sensation,
-as he fancied he heard a creaking hinge.</p>
-
-<p>Both looked closely at the nailed blinds.</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps she is sitting behind them, looking at us,"
-he added, in a half whisper.</p>
-
-<p>This thought made them both shudder.</p>
-
-<p>They were leaning against a wall facing the house,
-and did not wish to move a step. The encircling inertia
-affected them, the smoke-like mist enveloped them more
-and more thickly; the chatter of the birds lulled their
-senses as a drug given to feverish patients. The siren
-whistles pierced the air from afar. The brown leaves
-dropped from the trees. How long it took for a floating
-leaf to reach the earth! All around them was mist,
-heaviness, slow consumption, ashes.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II<br />
-AFTER THE STORM</h2>
-
-
-<p>"I must die, my dear&mdash;I must die!" said La
-Foscarina, in a heart-rending voice, after a
-long silence, raising her face from the cushions
-where she had buried it, after a stormy
-scene of passion, in which the ardent words of her beloved
-had given her as much pain as pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at Stelio, who had thrown himself, half
-reclining, on a divan near the balcony, and now lay
-silent, his eyes half-closed, his disordered hair touched
-with a ray of gold from the setting sun. She realized
-that she was possessed by an incurable madness, spreading
-throughout her declining body. Lost! Lost! She
-was irrevocably lost!</p>
-
-<p>"Die?" said her beloved, in a dreamy voice, without
-moving or opening his eyes, as if he were wrapped in
-a melancholy trance.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes&mdash;die&mdash;before you hate me!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio opened his eyes quickly, raised himself erect and
-held up one hand, as if to prevent her from saying more.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, why do you torment yourself in this way?" he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>He saw that she was ivory pale; her hair fell in wandering
-wavy locks over her cheeks; she seemed consumed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-by some corrosive poison; her face was full of
-terror and misery.</p>
-
-<p>"What are you doing with me? What are we both
-doing?" she exclaimed in anguish.</p>
-
-<p>"I love you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Not as I wish, not as I have dreamed; I do not wish
-to be loved thus."</p>
-
-<p>"But you set my heart on fire, and then madness
-seizes me."</p>
-
-<p>"It is like the madness of hatred."</p>
-
-<p>"No, no; do not say that!"</p>
-
-<p>"Your fierceness makes me feel that you hate me&mdash;that
-you even wish to kill me."</p>
-
-<p>"But you make me blind, I tell you, and then I know
-not what I say or do."</p>
-
-<p>"What is it that maddens you so? What do you see
-in me?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, I know not&mdash;I cannot tell!"</p>
-
-<p>"But I know very well what it is!"</p>
-
-<p>"Why do you torment yourself, I say? I love you!
-This is the love...."</p>
-
-<p>"That condemns me! I must die of it! Call me once
-more by the name you gave me long ago."</p>
-
-<p>"You are mine! You belong to me, and I will not lose
-you."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you will lose me."</p>
-
-<p>"But why? I do not understand. What wild fancy
-is this of yours? Does my love offend you? Do you not
-love me in the same way?"</p>
-
-<p>His irritation and misunderstanding only aggravated
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-her suffering. She covered her face with her hands. Her
-heart throbbed with hammer-like beating in her rigid
-breast, seeming to echo in her brain.</p>
-
-<p>Presently she raised her head and looked at him with
-painful effort.</p>
-
-<p>"I have a heart, Stelio," she said, with trembling lips,
-as if she were struggling with a sort of fierce timidity
-in order to force herself to speak those words. "I suffer
-from a heart, too keenly alive&mdash;oh, Stelio, alive and eager
-and anguished as you never will know...."</p>
-
-<p>She smiled the sweet, faint smile with which she sought
-to disguise her suffering; hesitated a moment, then
-reached toward a bunch of violets, which she took and
-pressed close to her lips. Her eyelids drooped, her classic
-brow, between her dark hair and the flowers, showed
-its ivory-like beauty.</p>
-
-<p>"You wound my heart sometimes, Stelio," she said
-softly, her lips still caressing the violets. "Sometimes
-you are cruel to it."</p>
-
-<p>It seemed as if those fragrant, humble blossoms helped
-her to confess her sadness, to veil still more the timid
-reproach she had made to her beloved. She was silent;
-Stelio bowed his head. The logs on the hearth crackled;
-the autumn rain fell monotonously in the fading garden.</p>
-
-<p>"I long for kindness, with a thirst that you never
-will understand. For that deep, true kindness, dear
-friend, which does not speak but which comprehends,
-which knows how to give all in a single look or a single
-movement; which is strong, sure, always armed against
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-the evil impulse that tempts us. Do you know the sort
-of kindness I mean?"</p>
-
-<p>Her voice, alternately strong and wavering, was so
-warm with inner light, was so full of revelation of a
-soul, that it passed through the young man's blood more
-like a spiritual essence than a sound.</p>
-
-<p>"In you, yes, Foscarina, I know it."</p>
-
-<p>He took in his own hands the slender hands that lay
-filled with violets on her lap; he bowed his head low
-over them and kissed them submissively. Then he knelt
-at her feet, in the same submission. The delicate perfume
-seemed to arouse his tenderness. During the long
-pause the fire and the rain continued their murmured
-speech.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she asked in a clear voice:</p>
-
-<p>"Do you think that I believe myself sure of you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Have you not watched over my slumbers?" he replied,
-but in an altered tone, for he was suddenly seized
-by a new emotion: with her query he had seen rise before
-him her naked soul; and he felt that that soul had
-penetrated his own, and recognized his secret yearning
-for the belief and confidence of others in himself.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, but what does that prove?" was her reply.
-"Youth sleeps quietly on any pillow. You are young"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I love you and I have faith in you! I give myself
-entirely to you. You are my life's companion, and your
-hand is strong."</p>
-
-<p>He saw the well known sadness in the lines of that
-loved face, and his voice trembled with tenderness.</p>
-
-<p>"Kindness!" said she, caressing with light touch the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-hair on his temples. "You know how to be kind&mdash;you
-even feel a need to comfort at times. But a fault has
-been committed, and it calls for expiation. Once it
-seemed to me that for you I could do the humblest as
-well as the highest things; but now I feel that I can
-do only one thing&mdash;to go away, disappear, and leave you
-free with your destiny."</p>
-
-<p>He interrupted her by springing to his feet and taking
-the loved face between his hands.</p>
-
-<p>"I can do this, which love alone could not do," she
-said softly, turning pale, and looking at him with an
-expression he never had seen before.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio felt that he held her soul in his hands&mdash;a living
-spring, infinitely beautiful and precious.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina, Foscarina! my soul, my life! Yes, you
-can give me more than love&mdash;I know it well, and nothing
-is worth to me that which you give me; no other offer
-could console me for not having you beside me on my
-way. Believe me, believe! I have said this to you so
-often&mdash;don't you remember?&mdash;even before you became all
-my own, when the compact still held between us"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Still holding her face between his palms, he leaned over
-and kissed her passionately on her lips.</p>
-
-<p>This time she shivered; the glacial flood she felt at
-times seemed passing over her.</p>
-
-<p>"No! no!" she pleaded, turning away from the young
-man. Dreamily she bent to gather up the scattered
-violets.</p>
-
-<p>"The compact!" she said, after an interval of silence.
-"Why have we violated it?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Stelio's eyes were fixed on the changeful splendor of
-the fire on the hearth, but in his open hands lingered the
-strange sensation, the trace of a miracle&mdash;that human
-face over which, through its sad pallor, had passed a
-wave of sublime beauty.</p>
-
-<p>"Why?" the woman repeated sadly. "Ah, confess&mdash;confess
-that you, too, before we were seized with the
-blind madness of that night, felt that the higher life was
-about to be devastated and lost; that we must not yield
-if we wished to save the good that remained in us&mdash;that
-powerful, intoxicating thing which seemed to be the only
-treasure left in my life. Confess, Stelio! speak the truth!
-I can almost name the exact moment when the better
-voice spoke to you in warning. Was it not on the water,
-on the way home, when we had with us&mdash;Donatella?"</p>
-
-<p>Before pronouncing that name she had hesitated a
-second, then she felt an almost physical bitterness&mdash;a
-bitterness that descended from her lips to the depths
-of her soul, as if the syllables held poison for her. She
-awaited his reply with suffering. "I do not know how
-to think about the past, Fosca," the young man replied;
-"moreover, I do not wish to think about it. I have lost
-no good attribute that belonged to me. It pleases me
-that your soul springs to your ripe lips, heavy with
-sweetness, and that your fair cheek pales when I embrace
-you."</p>
-
-<p>"Hush, hush!" she begged. "Do not speak like that!
-Do not prevent me from saying what it is that troubles
-me! Why do you not help me?"</p>
-
-<p>She shrank back among the cushions, and looked fixedly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-at the fire, to avoid meeting the eyes of her beloved.</p>
-
-<p>"More than once I have seen a look in your eyes that
-has filled me with horror," she said at last, with a touch
-of hoarseness in her effort to speak.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio started, but dared not contradict her.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, with horror," she repeated, in a clearer tone,
-implacable against herself, having already triumphed
-over her fear and regained her courage.</p>
-
-<p>Both were now face to face with the truth.</p>
-
-<p>She continued without faltering.</p>
-
-<p>"The first time I saw it was out there in the garden&mdash;that
-night&mdash;you know! I understood then what it
-was you saw in me; all the mire over which I have
-walked, all the infamy that clung to my feet, all the impurity
-for which I have so much disgust! Ah, you could
-not have acknowledged the visions that kindled your
-thoughts that night! Your eyes were cruel and your
-mouth was convulsed. When you felt that you wounded
-my sensitiveness, you took pity on me. But then&mdash;but
-since then"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Her face was covered with blushes; her voice had
-grown impetuous, and her eyes were brilliant.</p>
-
-<p>"To have nourished for years, with all the best that
-was in me, a sentiment of devotion and unbounded admiration,
-near you or from afar, in joy and in sadness;
-to have accepted in the purest spirit all the consolation
-offered by you to mankind through your poetry, and to
-have awaited eagerly other gifts, even higher and more
-consoling; to have believed in the great force of your
-genius since its dawn, and never to have relaxed my
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-watch over your ascent, and to have accompanied it
-with a wish that has been my morning and evening
-prayer all these years; to have continued, with silent
-fervor, the effort to give some beauty and harmony to my
-own spirit, that it might be more worthy to approach
-yours; so many times, on the stage, before an ardent
-audience, to have pronounced with a thrill some immortal
-phrase, thinking of those which perhaps one day you
-would communicate to mankind through my lips; to have
-worked without respite, to have tried always to rise to
-a higher and simpler form in my art, to have aspired
-unceasingly to perfection, fearing that nothing less would
-please you, that otherwise I should seem inferior to your
-dream; to have loved my fleeting glory only because
-some day it might serve yours; to have hastened, with
-the fervent confidence of faith, the latest of your revelations,
-that I might offer myself to you as the instrument
-of your victory before my own decay; against all and
-everything, to have defended this secret ideal in my soul,
-against all and against myself as much as against others;
-to have made of you my melancholy, my steadfast hope,
-my heroic test, the symbol of all things good, strong,
-and free&mdash;ah, Stelio! Stelio!"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She paused an instant, overcome by that memory as
-by a new shame.</p>
-
-<p>"And then to have reached that dawn&mdash;to have seen
-you leaving my house in that way on that horrible morning&mdash;Do
-you remember?"</p>
-
-<p>"I was happy&mdash;happy!" cried the young man, in a
-stifled voice, pale and agitated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"No, no! Do you remember? You left me as you
-would have left some light love, some passing fancy, after
-a few hours of idle pastime."</p>
-
-<p>"You deceive yourself!"</p>
-
-<p>"Confess! Come, speak the truth. Only through truth
-can we now hope to save ourselves."</p>
-
-<p>"I was happy, I tell you; my whole heart expanded
-with joy; I dreamed, I hoped, I felt as if I were born
-anew."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, yes!&mdash;happy to breathe freely, to feel your youth
-in the breeze and the fresh air. What did you see in her
-who in her renunciation had so many times suffered
-keenly&mdash;yes, you know it well!&mdash;rather than break the
-vow that she had taken and borne with her in her wanderings
-over the earth? Tell me! what did you see in
-me, if you did not believe me a corrupt creature, the
-heroine of chance amours, the vagabond actress who in
-her own life, as on the stage, may belong to any man
-and every man?"</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina! Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio leaned over her and closed her lips with a trembling
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>"No, no, do not say that! You are mad! Hush! hush!"</p>
-
-<p>"It is horrible!" murmured the woman, sinking back
-on the cushions, unnerved by her agitation, submerged
-in the bitter wave that had flooded her heart.</p>
-
-<p>But her eyes remained wide open, fixed as two crystal
-orbs, hard as if they had no lashes, fastened on Stelio.
-They prevented him from speaking, from denying or
-softening the truth they had discovered. In a moment
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-or two he found that gaze intolerable, and gently pressed
-the lids down with the tips of his fingers, as one closes
-the eyes of the dead. She noted the movement, which
-was full of infinite melancholy; she felt that only tender
-love and pity were in that touch. Her bitterness passed
-away, her eyes grew moist. She extended her arms,
-clasped them around his neck, and raised herself a little.
-She seemed to be shutting her soul within herself, and
-became once more gentle and weak, full of silent pleading.</p>
-
-<p>"And so I must go," she sighed at last. "Is there no
-help for it? Is there no pardon?"</p>
-
-<p>"I love you!" her lover repeated.</p>
-
-<p>She disengaged one arm, and held her open hand toward
-the fire, as if to conjure fate. Then once more
-she clasped her lover in a close embrace.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, still a little while! Let me remain with you a
-little longer. Then I will go away; I will go somewhere,
-far-away, and die on a stone under a tree. But let me
-stay with you a little longer."</p>
-
-<p>"I love you!"</p>
-
-<p>The blind and indomitable forces of life were whirling
-over them in that embrace. And because they realized
-this with terror their clasp grew closer; and from
-that embrace sprang an impulse, both good and evil, that
-stirred them to the soul. In the silent room, the voices
-of the elements spoke their obscure language, which was
-like an uncomprehended reply to their mute questioning.
-The fire, near them, and the rain, from without, discoursed,
-replied, narrated. Little by little, these voices
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-reached the spirit of the Animator, enticed it, charmed
-it, drew it into the world of innumerable myths, born of
-their eternity. His keener spiritual senses heard the deep
-resonance of the two melodies expressing the intimate
-essence of the two elementary wills&mdash;the two marvelous
-melodies that he had found, to weave them into the symphonic
-web of the new tragedy. Of a sudden, all sadness
-and anxiety left him as in a happy truce, an interval
-of enchantment. And the woman's clasp relaxed,
-as if in obedience to some command of liberation.</p>
-
-<p>"There is no help for it!" she repeated to herself,
-seeming to repeat a formula of condemnation heard by
-her in the same mysterious way that Stelio had heard
-the wonderful melodies.</p>
-
-<p>She leaned forward, resting her chin in her hand and
-her elbow on her knee; and in this attitude she gazed
-a long time into the fire, with a slight frown on her
-brow.</p>
-
-<p>As Stelio looked at her, his soul was troubled. He
-yearned to find some way of breaking the iron band that
-oppressed her, of dissipating that mist of sadness, of
-leading his beloved back to joy.</p>
-
-<p>The fire in its sudden burst of flame illumined her
-face and hair; her forehead was as beautiful as a noble
-manly brow; something natural and untamed was suggested
-in the rippling waves and changeful hue of her
-thick hair.</p>
-
-<p>"What are you looking at so intently?" she said at
-last, feeling his fixed gaze. "Have you found a gray
-hair?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He knelt before his love again, flexible and tender.</p>
-
-<p>"I see only your beauty. In you I always find something
-that delights me. I was looking then at the strange
-wave of your hair here&mdash;a wave not made by the comb,
-but by the storm!"</p>
-
-<p>He slipped his fingers through the thick tresses. She
-closed her eyes, feeling again the spell of his terrible
-power over her.</p>
-
-<p>"I see only your beauty. When you close your eyes
-thus, I feel that you are mine to the depth of your heart&mdash;lost
-in me, as the soul is one with the body: a single
-life, mine and thine."</p>
-
-<p>She listened in the half light, and his voice seemed
-to come from a long distance, and to be speaking not to
-her but to another woman; she felt as if she were overhearing
-a lover's protestations to his mistress, and suddenly
-fancied herself mad with jealousy, possessed by a
-desire to kill, filled with a spirit of revenge; but that
-body must remain motionless, her hands hanging at her
-sides, nerveless and powerless.</p>
-
-<p>"You are my delight and my inspiration. You have
-a stimulating power of which you are unconscious. Your
-simplest act suffices to reveal to me some truth of which
-I was ignorant. And love is like the intellect: it shines
-in the measure of the truth it discovers. Why, why do
-you grieve yourself? Nothing is destroyed, nothing is
-lost. It was intended that we should be united, so that
-together we might rise to joy and triumph. It was necessary
-that I should be free and happy in your true and
-perfect love in order to create the work of beauty that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-so many men expect of me. I need your faith; I need
-to pass through joy and to create. Your presence alone
-suffices to inspire my mind with incalculable fruitfulness.
-Just now, when your arms held me close, I heard a
-sudden torrent of music, a flood of melody, passing
-through the silence."</p>
-
-<p>To whom was he speaking? Whom did he ask for
-joy? Was not his imperious demand for music a yearning
-toward her that sang, transfiguring the universe with
-her song? Of whom, if not of fresh youth and maidenhood,
-could he ask joy and creation? While she had held
-him in her embrace, it was the other woman who had
-sung and spoken within him! And now, now&mdash;to whom
-was he speaking, if not to that other woman? She alone
-could give him what was necessary for his art and his
-life. The maiden was a new force, a closed beauty, an
-unused weapon, keen and magnificent for the intoxication
-of war. Malediction! Malediction!</p>
-
-<p>Mingled sorrow and anger stirred her heart, in that
-vibrating darkness which she dared not leave. She suffered
-the torments of a nightmare; as if she were rolling
-toward a precipice with the indestructible burden of
-her vanished years&mdash;years of misery and of triumph&mdash;her
-fading face with its thousand masks, her despairing
-soul, and the thousand other souls that had inhabited
-her mortal body. This grand passion of her life, which
-was to have saved her, seemed now to be pushing her
-relentlessly toward ruin and death. In order to reach
-her, and through her to attain to his highest joy, the
-passion of her beloved was compelled to make its way
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-through what he believed to be a multitude of unknown
-loves; it would contaminate, corrupt and embitter itself,
-perhaps even change by slow degrees to disgust. Always
-that shadowy multitude must keep alive in him that instinct
-of brutal ferocity which lurked in his strong nature.
-Ah, what had she done? She herself had armed a furious
-devastator, and had put him between her friend and
-herself. No escape was possible. She herself, on that
-night of the flame, had led before him the fresh and
-beautiful prey, of whom he had taken possession by one
-of those looks that are a choice and a promise. To whom
-was he speaking now, if not to that other woman. Of
-whom did he ask joy?</p>
-
-<p>"Do not be sad! do not be sad!"</p>
-
-<p>But now she heard his words only confusedly, more
-faint than before, as if her soul had sunk into a chasm;
-but she felt his impatient hands as they touched her
-caressingly. And, in that red darkness, wherein, as it
-seemed to her, all madnesses and folly were born, she
-felt a surging revolt in her veins.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish me to take you to her? Do you wish
-me to call her to you?" cried the unhappy woman, suddenly
-opening her eyes with an expression that astonished
-Stelio; she seized his wrists and shook him with a
-grasp so tight that he felt her nails in his flesh. "Go!
-go! She awaits you! Why do you remain here? Go,
-run! She awaits you!"</p>
-
-<p>She sprang up, raising him at the same time, and tried
-to push him toward the door. She was no longer recognizable,
-transfigured by fury into a dangerous, threatening
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-creature. The strength of her hands was incredible,
-like the energy of evil intent in her whole being.</p>
-
-<p>"Who awaits me? What did you say? What is the
-matter with you? Come back to your senses, Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>He stammered his appeal, he trembled, fancying he saw
-madness in that distorted face. But she was like one
-distraught and heard him not.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina!" He called her with all his soul, white
-with terror, as if to stop with his cry her escaping reason.</p>
-
-<p>She gave a great start, opened her hands, and gazed
-around as if just roused from a long sleep, of which she
-remembered nothing.</p>
-
-<p>"Come, sit down."</p>
-
-<p>He led her back to the cushions, and gently made her
-settle herself among them. She allowed herself to be
-soothed by his solicitous tenderness. Presently she
-moaned:</p>
-
-<p>"Who has beaten me?"</p>
-
-<p>She felt of her bruised arms, and touched her face
-lightly, trembling as if she were cold.</p>
-
-<p>"Come; lie down! Put your head here."</p>
-
-<p>He made her lie on the couch; disposed her head comfortably,
-put a light cushion over her feet, softly and carefully,
-leaning over her as over a dear invalid, giving
-up to her all his heart still throbbing with fear.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, yes," she repeated, in a voice no louder than a
-sigh, at each movement he made, as if she would prolong
-the sweetness of these cares.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you cold?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Shall I cover you with something?" Stelio inquired.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>He sought for some wrap, and found on a table a piece
-of antique velvet, which he spread over her. She smiled
-faintly.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you comfortable like that?"</p>
-
-<p>She made an affirmative sign by simply closing her
-eyelids.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio gathered up the violets, now warm and languid,
-and laid them on the pillow near her head.</p>
-
-<p>"So?"</p>
-
-<p>Her eyelids drooped even more slightly than before.
-He kissed her forehead, amid the perfume of the violets;
-then he turned to stir the fire, putting on more wood
-and raising a fine blaze.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you feel the heat? Are you getting warm?" he
-asked softly.</p>
-
-<p>He approached and bent over the poor soul. She slept;
-the contraction of her face had relaxed, and the lines of
-her mouth were composed in the equal rhythm of sleep;
-a calm like that of death spread over her pale face.
-"Sleep! Sleep!" He was so moved by love and pity that
-he would have liked to transfuse into that slumber an
-infinite virtue of consolation and forgetfulness.</p>
-
-<p>He remained standing on the rug, watching her, counting
-her respirations. Those lips had said: "I can do
-one thing that love alone cannot do." Those lips had
-said: "Do you wish me to take you to her? Do you
-wish me to call her to you?" He neither judged nor
-resolved, but let his thoughts scatter. Once again he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-felt the blind, indomitable forces of life whirling over his
-head, over that sleeping form, and also his terrible desire
-to cling to life. "The bow is named BIOS, and its
-work is death."</p>
-
-<p>In the silence, the fire and the rain continued to talk.
-The voice of the elements, the woman sleeping in her
-sadness, the imminence of fate, the immensity of the future,
-remembrance and presentiment, all these things
-created in his mind a state of musical mystery wherein
-the yet unwritten work surged anew and illumined his
-thought. He listened to his melodies developing themselves
-indefinitely, and heard a personage in the drama
-say: "This alone quenches our thirst, and all the thirst
-in us turns eagerly toward this freshness. If it did not
-exist, none could live here; we should all die of thirst."
-He saw a country furrowed by the dry, white bed of
-an ancient river, dotted with bonfires which lighted up
-the extraordinarily calm, pure evening. He saw a funereal
-gleam of gold, a tomb filled with corpses all covered
-with gold, and the crowned corpse of Cassandra among
-the sepulchral urns. A voice said: "How soft her ashes
-are! They run between the fingers like the sands of the
-sea." Another voice said: "She speaks of a shadow that
-passes over things, and of a damp sponge that effaces
-all traces." Then night fell; stars sparkled, the myrtles
-breathed perfume, and a voice said: "Ah! Behold the
-statue of Niobe! Before dying, Antigone sees a stone
-statue whence gushes an eternal fountain of tears." The
-error of the age had passed away; the remoteness of centuries
-was abolished.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III<br />
-A FALLEN GIANT</h2>
-
-
-<p>One afternoon in November, Stelio returned on
-the steamer from the Lido, accompanied by
-Daniele Glauro. They had left behind them
-the thunder of the greenish waves of the Adriatic,
-the trees of San Niccolò despoiled by a predaceous
-wind, whirlwinds of dead leaves, heroic phantoms of departures
-and arrivals, the memory of the archers playing
-to win the scarlet ensign, and the mad rides of Lord
-Byron, devoured by the desire to surpass his own destiny.</p>
-
-<p>"I too, to-day, would have given a kingdom for a
-horse," said Effrena, in self-ridicule, irritated by the mediocrity
-of life. "Not a cross-bow nor a horse in San
-Niccolò, not even the courage of an oarsman! <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Perge
-andacter!</i> So here we are, on this ignoble gray carcass
-that smokes and seethes like a kettle. Look at Venice,
-dancing down there!"</p>
-
-<p>The anger of the waves was extending to the lagoon.
-The waters were agitated by a violent wind, and the
-agitation seemed to reach to the foundations of the city,
-and the palaces, cupolas, and campaniles appeared to
-heave like vessels on the water. Clusters of floating seaweed
-showed their white roots; and flocks of sea-gulls
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-circled in the wind, their strange, wild laughter echoing
-above the crested waves.</p>
-
-<p>"Wagner!" Daniele Glauro said suddenly, in a low
-tone, touched with emotion, as he pointed at an old
-man leaning against the railing of a prow. "There he
-is, with Franz Liszt and Donna Cosima. Do you see
-him?"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio's heart beat quicker; for him too all other surrounding
-figures disappeared; his bitter sense of ennui
-and inertia disappeared; and he felt remaining only the
-suggestion of superhuman power evoked by that name,
-and realized that the only reality hovering over all those
-indistinct phantoms was the ideal world conjured up by
-that name around the little old man leaning over the
-troubled waters.</p>
-
-<p>Victorious genius, fidelity of love, unchangeable friendship,
-the supreme apparitions of heroic nature, were reassembled
-in silent union beneath the tempestuous sky.
-The same dazzling whiteness crowned the three heads,
-whose hair had become blanched through sadness. A
-troubled sorrow was revealed in their faces and attitudes,
-as if the same undefined presentiment oppressed their
-blended spirits. The white face of the woman had a
-beautiful, strong mouth, with clear-cut lines, revealing a
-tenacious soul; and her light, steel-like eyes were fixed
-continually on him who had chosen her for the companion
-of his noble warfare, watching over him who, having
-vanquished all hostile forces, would be powerless to vanquish
-Death, whose menace perpetually pursued him.
-That feminine vigil, full of fear, opposed itself to the invisible
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-gaze of the other Woman, and threw around the
-old man a vague, funereal shadow.</p>
-
-<p>"He seems to be suffering," said Daniele Glauro. "Do
-you not see? He seems almost on the point of swooning.
-Shall we go to them?"</p>
-
-<p>Effrena looked with inexpressible emotion at those
-white locks blown about by the sharp wind on the aged
-neck under the broad brim of the felt hat, and at the
-almost livid ear, with its swollen lobe. That body, which
-had withstood the keenest warfare by the proud instinct
-of its own domination, now looked as limp as some rag
-which the wind could bear away and destroy.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Daniele! what can we do for him?" said Stelio,
-yielding to an almost religious impulse to manifest in
-some way his reverence and pity for that great oppressed
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>"What can we do?" repeated Glauro, to whom that
-ardent desire to offer something of himself to the hero
-now suffering the human fate had immediately communicated
-itself. Their souls were blended in that impulse
-of fervor and gratitude, that sudden exaltation of
-their innate nobility; but they could give nothing more
-than that. Nothing could check the secret ravages of
-the fatal malady; and both were filled with profound
-sorrow as they saw the snowy hair tossed about on the
-old man's neck by the wind coming from afar, and bringing
-to the quivering lagoon the murmur and the foam
-of the open sea.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, glorious sea, thou shalt hear me still! Never
-shall I find on the earth the health I seek. To thee,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-therefore, will I remain faithful, O waves of the boundless
-sea!" The impetuous harmonies of <cite>The Flying Dutchman</cite>
-returned to Effrena's memory, with the despairing
-call that pierces through them from time to time; he
-fancied that in the rushing wind he could hear again the
-wild chant of the crew on the ship with the blood-red
-sails: <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">"Iohohé! Iohohé!</i> come ashore, black Captain!
-Seven years have passed!" Again his imagination conjured
-up the figure of Richard Wagner in youth; he saw
-once more the lonely one wandering in the living horror
-of Paris, poor yet undaunted, devoured by the fever of
-genius, his eyes fixed on his star, and his mind resolved
-to force the world to recognize it. In the myth of the
-shadowy captain, the exiled one had seen the image of
-his own breathless race, his furious struggle, his supreme
-hope. "But some day the pale hero may be delivered,
-should he meet on earth a woman that will be faithful
-to him until death."</p>
-
-<p>The woman was there, beside the hero, an ever vigilant
-guardian. She too, like Senta, knew the sovereign
-law of fidelity; and death was soon to dissolve the sacred
-vow.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you think that, steeped as he is in poetic myths,
-he has dreamed of some extraordinary manner of dying,
-and that he now prays every day to Nature to conform
-his end to his dream?" said Glauro, thinking of the
-mysterious will that induced the eagle to mistake for a
-rock the brow of Æschylus, and led Petrarch to die
-alone over the pages of a book. "What would be an end
-worthy of him?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"A new melody of unheard-of power, which in his
-youth had been to him indistinct and impossible to fix,
-should suddenly rend his soul like a terrible sword."</p>
-
-<p>"True!" said Glauro.</p>
-
-<p>The wind-driven clouds were battling in phalanxes
-through space; the towers and cupolas seemed swaying
-in the background; the shadows of city and sky, equally
-vast and mobile on the troubled waters, alternately
-changed and blended, as if they had been produced by
-things equally near dissolution.</p>
-
-<p>"Look at the Magyar, Daniele; there is a generous soul!
-He has served the hero with boundless faith and devotion;
-and by this service, more than by his art, he has
-won glory. But see how this very feeling, so strong
-and so sincere, inspires him with almost theatrical affectation,
-because of his continual wish to impose upon
-his spectators a magnificent image of himself, which
-shall delude them."</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé Liszt straightened his thin and bony frame,
-which seemed encased by a coat of mail, and drawing
-himself to his full height he bared his head to pray, addressing
-a mute prayer to the God of Tempests. The
-wind stirred his thick white hair, that leonine mane that
-at times seemed to emit electric currents which affected
-his listeners, and many women. His magnetic eyes were
-raised to heaven, while the words of his inaudible prayer
-moved his thin lips, lending a mystic air to that face so
-deeply furrowed with wrinkles.</p>
-
-<p>"What matters it?" said Glauro. "He possesses the
-divine faculty of fervor and a taste for all-powerful
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-strength and dominating passion. Does not his art aspire
-toward Prometheus, Orpheus, Dante, Tasso? He
-was attracted by Richard Wagner as by some great force
-of nature; perhaps he heard in him the theme he has attempted
-to express in his symphonic poem: 'That which
-is heard on the Mountain'."</p>
-
-<p>"That may be," said Effrena.</p>
-
-<p>But both started on seeing the old man turn suddenly,
-with the gesture of one groping in darkness, and clutch
-convulsively at his companion, who uttered a cry. They
-ran toward the group. Everyone on the boat crowded
-around them, struck by that cry of anguish. A look from
-the woman prevented the curious from venturing too
-close to the apparently lifeless body. She herself supported
-him, laid him on a bench, felt his pulse, and bent
-over to listen to his heart-beats. Her love and her
-grief traced an inviolable circle around the stricken one.
-The bystanders stepped back and waited in silence,
-anxiously looking on that livid face for signs of either
-life or death.</p>
-
-<p>The face was still and pale, as it lay on the woman's
-knees. Two deep furrows descended along the cheeks
-toward the half-open mouth, deepening near the imperious
-nose. Puffs of wind ruffled the thin, fine hair
-on the full forehead, and the white collar of beard below
-the square chin where the vigor of the jawbone was visible
-through the wrinkled skin. The temples were covered
-with perspiration, and one of the feet twitched
-slightly. The smallest detail of that fallen figure impressed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-itself forever on the minds of the two young
-men.</p>
-
-<p>How long did his suffering endure? The shadows continued
-to float over the dark water, broken at intervals
-by long shafts of sun-rays that appeared to pierce the
-air and bury themselves like arrows in the dark waves.
-The regular cadence of the engine beat upon the air;
-and now arose the wild laughter of the sea-gulls, and a
-sort of dull, prolonged moan from the tempest-stricken
-city.</p>
-
-<p>"We must carry him," said Stelio in his friend's ear;
-he was intoxicated by the sadness of the situation and
-by the solemnity of his own visions.</p>
-
-<p>The motionless face gave a slight sign of returning
-life.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, let us offer our services," said Glauro, whose
-face was pale.</p>
-
-<p>They looked at the woman with the snow-white cheeks;
-then they advanced and offered their arms.</p>
-
-<p>How long did that terrible removal last? The distance
-from the boat to the shore was not great, but those
-few steps seemed a long journey. The waves dashed
-against the posts of the pier; the distant moan came to
-them from the Grand Canal as if from the winding paths
-of a cavern; the bells of San Marco rang for vespers;
-but this confusion of sounds had lost all immediate reality,
-and seemed infinitely profound and distant, like a
-lament of the ocean itself.</p>
-
-<p>In their arms they bore the Hero's body&mdash;the unconscious
-form of him who had inundated the world with the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-flood of melody from his oceanic soul, the mortal being
-of the Revealer who had translated into infinite song the
-essence of the Universe for man's adoration. With an
-ineffable thrill of terror and joy, such as would stir a
-man who should see a mighty river dashing itself over
-vast rocks, a volcano bursting into flame, a conflagration
-devouring a forest, a dazzling meteor obscuring the
-light of the stars, Effrena felt beneath the hand that he
-had slipped under the shoulder to sustain the body&mdash;and
-he paused an instant to gather his strength, which was
-failing him, and gazed at that white head against his
-breast&mdash;he felt the renewed beating of that sacred heart.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV<br />
-THE MASTER'S VISION</h2>
-
-
-<p>"You were strong, Daniele&mdash;you who can hardly
-break a twig! And he was heavy, that old
-barbarian; his body seemed built over a
-framework of bronze: well constructed, firm,
-able to stand on a deck that might rise and fall&mdash;the
-body of a man that nature destined for the sea. Whence
-came your strength, Daniele? I almost feared for you,
-but you did not even stagger. Do you realize that we
-have borne a hero in our arms? This is a day we ought
-to distinguish and celebrate in some way. His eyes
-opened again and looked into mine; his pulse revived
-under my hand. We were worthy to carry him, Daniele,
-because of our fervor."</p>
-
-<p>"You are worthy not only to carry him, but of gathering
-and preserving some of the most beautiful promises
-offered by his art to men who still have hope."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, if only I am not overwhelmed by my own abundance,
-and if I can master the anxiety that suffocates
-me, Daniele!"</p>
-
-<p>The two friends walked on and on, side by side, in
-exalted and confident mood, as if their friendship had
-taken on an added nobility.</p>
-
-<p>"It seems as if the Adriatic had overthrown the Murazzi,
-in this tempest," said Daniele, pausing to look at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-the waves that had mounted even to the Piazza. "We
-must return."</p>
-
-<p>"No, let us cross the ferry. Here is a boat. Look at
-the reflection of San Marco on the water!"</p>
-
-<p>The boatman rowed them to the Torre dell' Orologio.
-The rising tide soon overflowed the Piazza, looking like
-a lake surrounded by porticoes, reflecting the greenish-yellow
-twilight sky.</p>
-
-<p>"EN VERUS FORTIS QUI FREGIT VINCULA
-MORTIS," read Stelio on the curve of an arch, below a
-mosaic of the Resurrection. "Did you know that Richard
-Wagner held his first colloquy with Death in Venice,
-exactly twenty years ago, at the time he produced Tristan?
-Consumed by a hopeless passion, he came here to
-die in silence, and here he composed that wild second
-act, which is a hymn to eternal night. And now fate
-has led him back to the lagoons. Fate, it seems, has
-decreed that here he shall breathe his last, like Claudio
-Monteverde. Is not Venice full of musical desire, immense
-and indefinable? Every sound transforms itself
-into an expressive voice. Listen!"</p>
-
-<p>The city of stone and water seemed indeed to have
-become as sonorous as a great organ. The hissing and
-moaning had changed to a sort of choral supplication,
-rising and falling in regular rhythm.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not hear the theme of a melody in that chorus
-of moans? Listen!"</p>
-
-<p>They had debarked from the little boat, and had resumed
-their walk through the narrow streets.</p>
-
-<p>"Listen!" Stelio repeated. "I can detect a melodic
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-theme, which swells and decreases without power to
-develop itself. Do you hear it?"</p>
-
-<p>"It is not given to me to hear what you hear," replied
-the sterile ascetic to the genius. "I will await the time
-when you can repeat to me the word that Nature speaks
-to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" Stelio resumed, "to be able to restore to melody
-its natural simplicity, its ingenuous perfection, its divine
-innocence; to draw it, living, from its eternal source,
-from the true mystery of nature, the inmost soul of
-the Universe! Have you ever reflected upon the myth
-connected with the infancy of Cassandra? She had
-been left one night in the temple of Apollo; and in the
-morning she was found lying on the marble floor,
-wrapped in the coils of a serpent that licked her ears.
-And from that day she understood all the voices of
-Nature in the air, all the melodies of the world. The
-power of the great seeress was only a high musical
-power; and a part of that Apollonian virtue entered the
-souls of the poets that coöperated in the creation of the
-tragic Chorus. One of those poets boasted of understanding
-the voices of all birds; another was able to hold
-converse with the winds; another comprehended perfectly
-the language of the sea. More than once I have
-dreamed that I too was lying on the marble floor, folded
-in the coils of that serpent. The magic of that old myth
-must be renewed, Daniele, in order that we may create
-the new art.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you ever thought what might be the music of
-that species of pastoral ode sung by the Chorus in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-<cite>&#338;dipus Tyrannus</cite>, &#338;when Jocasta flees, horror-struck, and
-the son of Laïus still cherishes the illusion of a last
-hope? Do you recall it? Try to imagine the strophes as
-if they were a frame, within which an expressive dance-figure
-is animated by the perfect life of melody. The
-spirit of Earth would rise before you: the consoling apparition
-of the great common Mother at the unhappiness
-of her stricken, trembling children&mdash;a celebration, as
-it were, of all that is divine and eternal above Man, who
-is dragged to madness and death by blind and cruel
-Destiny. Try now to conceive how this song has helped
-me in the writing of my great tragedy to find the
-means of the highest and at the same time the simplest
-expression."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you purpose, then, to reëstablish the ancient
-Chorus on the stage?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no! I shall not revive any ancient form; I intend
-to create a new form, obeying only my instinct and the
-genius of my own race, as did the Greeks when they
-created that marvelous structure of beauty, forever inimitable&mdash;the
-Greek drama. For a very long time, the
-three practicable arts of music, poetry, and dancing have
-been separated; the first two have developed toward a
-superior form of expression, but the third is in its decadence,
-and I think that now it is impossible to combine
-them in a single rhythmical structure without taking
-from one or another its own dominant character, which
-has already been acquired. If they are to blend in one
-common effect, each must renounce its own particular
-effect&mdash;in other words, become diminished. Among the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-things most susceptible of rhythm, Language is the
-foundation of every art that aspires to perfection. Do
-you think that language is given its full value in the
-Wagnerian drama? Do you not think that the musical
-conception itself often loses some of its primitive purity
-by being made to depend on matters outside the realm of
-music? Wagner himself certainly realizes this weakness,
-and shows it when he approaches a friend in Bayreuth,
-covering his eyes with his hand, that he may
-abandon his sense of hearing entirely to the virtue of
-the pure sound of the voice."</p>
-
-<p>"This is all new to me," said Glauro, "yet it rejoices
-and intoxicates me as we rejoice when we hear something
-that has been long foreseen and felt by presentiment.
-Then, as I understand, you will not superpose
-the three rhythmic arts, but will present them each in
-its single manifestation, yet all linked by a sovereign
-idea, and raised to the supreme degree by their own significant
-energy?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Daniele! how can I give you any idea of the
-work that lives within me?" Stelio exclaimed. "The
-words you use in trying to formulate my meaning are
-hard and mechanical."</p>
-
-<p>They stood at the foot of the Rialto steps. The gale
-swept over them; the Grand Canal, dark in the shadow
-of the palaces, seemed to bend like a river hastening
-to a cataract.</p>
-
-<p>"We cannot remain here," said Glauro, leaning against
-a door; "the wind will blow us down."</p>
-
-<p>"Go on; I will overtake you. Only a moment," cried
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-the master, covering his eyes with his hand, and concentrating
-his soul upon sound alone.</p>
-
-<p>Formidable was the voice of the tempest, in the midst
-of the immobility of centuries, turned to stone. Its
-unaccompanied song, its hopeless, wailing lamentation,
-was raised in memory of the multitudes that had become
-ashes, the scattered pageants, the fallen grandeur, the
-innumerable days of birth and of death&mdash;things of an
-age without name or form. All the melancholy of the
-world rushed in the wind over that eager, listening soul.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! I have seized you!" Stelio cried suddenly, with
-triumphant joy.</p>
-
-<p>The complete and perfect line of the melody had been
-revealed to him, now belonged to him, and would become
-immortal in his spirit and in the world.</p>
-
-<p>"Daniele! I have found it!"</p>
-
-<p>He raised his eyes, and saw the first stars in the
-adamantine sky. He feared to lose the precious treasure
-he had found. Near, a column he now saw a man
-with a flickering light at the end of a long pole, and
-heard the slight sound of the lighting of a lantern.
-Swiftly and eagerly he jotted down in his notebook,
-under the lamplight, the notes of the melodic theme,
-compressing into five lines the message of the elements.</p>
-
-<p>"O day of marvels!" said Daniele Glauro, on seeing
-Stelio on the steps, as light and agile as if he had robbed
-the air of some of its elasticity. "May Nature cherish
-you forever, my brother!"</p>
-
-<p>"Come, come!" said Stelio, taking him by the arm and
-urging him on with boyish gayety. "I must run!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He drew him through the narrow streets leading to
-San Giovanni Elemosinario.</p>
-
-<p>"What you told me one day, Daniele, is quite true.
-I mean that the voice of things is essentially different
-from their sound," said Stelio. "The sound of the wind
-may represent the moans of a frightened throng, the
-howling of wild animals, the falling of cataracts, the
-rustle of waving banners, or mockery, threats, and despair.
-But the voice of the wind is the synthesis of all
-these sounds: that is the voice which sings and tells
-of the terrible travail of time, the cruelty of human
-destiny, the eternal warfare for an illusion eternally
-born anew."</p>
-
-<p>"And have you never thought that the essence of
-music does not lie in the sounds alone?" asked the mystic
-doctor. "It often dwells in the silence that precedes
-and follows sound. Rhythm makes itself felt in these
-intervals of silence. Rhythm is the very heart of music,
-but its pulsation is inaudible except during the intervals
-between sounds."</p>
-
-<p>This metaphysical law confirmed Stelio in his belief
-of the justness of his own intuition.</p>
-
-<p>"Imagine," said he, "an interval between two scenic
-symphonies wherein all the <em>motifs</em> concur in expressing
-the inmost essence of the characters that are struggling
-in the drama as well as in revealing the inmost depths
-of the action, as, for instance, in Beethoven's great prelude
-in <cite>Leonora</cite>, or the prelude to <cite>Coriolanus</cite>. That musical
-silence, pulsating with rhythm, is like the mysterious
-living atmosphere where alone can appear words of pure
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-poetry. Thus the personages seem to emerge from the
-symphonic sea as if from the hidden truth that works
-within them; their spoken words will possess an extraordinary
-resonance in that rhythmic silence, will reach
-the farthest limit of verbal power, because it will be
-animated by a continuous aspiration to song that cannot
-be appeased except by the melody which must rise again
-from the orchestra, at the close of the tragic episode.
-Do you understand me?"</p>
-
-<p>"Then you place the episode between two symphonies,
-which prepare it and also terminate it, because music is
-the beginning and the end of human utterance."</p>
-
-<p>"Thus I bring nearer to the spectator the personages
-of the drama. Do you recall the figure employed by
-Schiller in the ode he wrote in honor of Goethe's translation
-of <cite>Mahomet</cite>, to signify that, on the stage, only the
-ideal world seems real. The chariot of Thespis, like
-the barque of Acheron, is so slight that it can carry
-only shadows or the images of human beings. On the
-stage commonly known, these images are so unreal that
-any contact with them seems as impossible as would
-be contact with mental forms. They are distant and
-strange, but in making them appear in the rhythmic
-silence, accompanied by music to the threshold of the
-visible world, I shall be able to bring them marvelously
-close, because I shall illumine the most secret depths
-of the will that produces them. I shall reveal, in short,
-the images painted on the veil and that which happens
-beyond the veil. Do you understand?"</p>
-
-<p>They were now entering the Campo di San Cassiano
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-lonely and deserted on the banks of the gray stream;
-their voices and their footsteps echoed there as if in
-an amphitheater of stone, distinct above the sound of
-the Grand Canal, which made a rushing noise like that
-of a river. A purple mist rose from the fever-laden
-waters, spreading like a poisonous breath. Death
-seemed to have reigned there a long time. The shutter
-of a high window beat in the wind against the wall,
-grinding on its hinges, a sign of abandonment and ruin.
-But, in the mind of the Inspirer, all these appearances
-produced extraordinary transfigurations. He saw again
-the wild and solitary spot near the tomb of Mycenæ.
-Myrtles flourished between the rugged rocks and the
-cyclopic ruins. Beside a rock lay the rigid, pure body
-of the Victim. In the death-like silence he could hear
-the murmuring water and the intermittent breath of
-the breeze among the myrtles.</p>
-
-<p>"It was in an august place," said he, "that I had the
-first vision of my new work&mdash;at Mycenæ, under the
-gateway of the Lions, while I was re-reading <cite>Orestes</cite>.
-Land of fire, country of thirst and delirium, birthplace of
-Clytemnestra and of the Hydra, earth forever sterile
-by the horror of the most tragic destiny that ever has
-overtaken a human race. Have you ever thought about
-that barbarian explorer who, after passing the greater
-part of his existence among his drugs behind a counter,
-undertook to find the tombs of the Atridæ among the
-ruins of Mycenæ, and who one day (the sixth anniversary
-of the event is of recent date) beheld the greatest
-and strangest vision ever offered to mortal eyes? Have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-you ever pictured to yourself that fat Schliemann at
-the moment when he discovered the most dazzling treasure
-ever held by Death in the dark obscurity of the
-earth for centuries&mdash;for thousands of years? Have you
-ever fancied that this superhuman and terrible spectacle
-might have been revealed to some one else&mdash;to a youthful
-and fervent spirit, to a poet, a life-giver, to you, to
-me, perhaps? Then the fever, the frenzy, the madness&mdash;Imagine!"</p>
-
-<p>He was on fire and vibrating, suddenly swept away
-by his own fancy as by a whirlwind. His seer's eyes
-sparkled with the gleam of the buried treasure. Creative
-force flowed to his brain as blood to his heart. He was
-an actor in his own drama, with accent and movement
-expressing transcendent beauty and passion, surpassing
-the power of the spoken word, the limit of the letter.
-And his brother spirit hung upon his speech, trembling
-before the sudden splendor that proved to him the truth
-of his own divinations.</p>
-
-<p>"Imagine! Imagine that the earth in which you explore
-is baleful&mdash;it must still exhale the miasma of
-monstrous wickedness. The curse upon the Atridæ was
-so terrific that some vestige of it must still have remained
-to be feared in the dust that they once trod upon.
-You are bewitched: the dead you seek and cannot find
-are reincarnated in you, and breathe in your body with
-the terrible breath with which Æschylus infused them,
-huge and sanguinary as they appear in the <cite>Orestes</cite>,
-pierced perpetually with the darts and flames of their
-destiny. Hereafter, all the ideal life with which you
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-have nourished yourself must assume the form and impress
-of reality. And still you go on in this land of
-thirst, at the foot of the bare mountain, enclosed within
-the fascination of the dead city, always delving in the
-earth, with those terrifying phantoms ever before your
-eyes in the burning dust. At each thrust of the spade
-you tremble to the very marrow, eager to see the face of
-one of the Atridæ, still perfect, but with the signs still
-visible of the violence he suffered, the inhuman carnage.
-And behold it! the gold, the gold, the bodies, piles of
-gold, bodies covered with gold"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The Atridæ princes seemed to be lying there on the
-stones, a miracle evoked in the obscurity of the pathway.
-And the one who had evoked these images, as
-well as his listener, shuddered at the same instant.</p>
-
-<p>"A succession of tombs: fifteen bodies, intact, one lying
-beside another, on a golden bed, with masks of gold
-on their faces, their brows crowned with gold and
-breasts bound with gold; and covering them, on their
-forms, at their sides, at their feet, everywhere, a prodigality
-of golden things, countless as the leaves falling
-in a fairy forest. Do you see? Do you see?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, yes, I see! I see!"</p>
-
-<p>"For a second, that man's soul has traversed hundreds
-and thousands of years, has breathed the terrible legend,
-has palpitated in the horror of the ancient carnage. For
-a second, his soul has lived that antique life of violence.
-The slain ones were all there: Agamemnon, Eurymedon,
-Cassandra, and the royal escort, and for a moment they
-lay under his eyes, motionless. Then&mdash;they vanished
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-into nothingness&mdash;do you see?&mdash;like a vapor exhaled,
-like scattered foam, like flying dust, like I know not what
-frail and fleeting thing&mdash;engulfed in the same fatal
-silence that surrounded their radiant immobility. And
-there was only a handful of dust and a mass of gold!"
-Daniele Glauro, deeply moved, seized his friend's hand;
-and the Inspirer read in his faithful eyes the mute flame
-of enthusiasm consecrated to the great work.</p>
-
-<p>They stopped near a door in the dark wall. A mysterious
-sense of distance possessed the mind of each,
-as if their souls were lost in the mists of time; and they
-fancied that behind that door an ancient people lived
-enthralled by a changeless Destiny. The sound of a
-rocking cradle came from the house, and the croon of a
-soft lullaby to a wailing child. The stars glowed in the
-narrow glimpse of sky; against the walls the sea was
-moaning. And in another spot a hero's heart suffered
-while waiting for death.</p>
-
-<p>"Life!" said Stelio, resuming his walk, and drawing
-Daniele with him. "Here, at this moment, all that
-trembles, weeps, hopes, breathes, and raves in the immensity
-of life, gathers itself in your mind, condensing
-itself there with a sublimation so rapid that you believe
-yourself able to express it all in a single word. But
-what word? What word? Do you know it? Who will
-ever know it well enough to speak it?"</p>
-
-<p>Again he was distressed at his inability to embrace
-all and express all.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you ever seen, at certain times, the whole universe
-standing before you, as distinct as a human head?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-I have, a thousand times. Ah, to cut it off, like him
-that cut off Medusa's head, at one stroke, and hold it
-up before the multitude so that it never should be forgotten!
-Have you ever thought that a great tragedy
-might resemble the attitude of Perseus? I tell you this:
-I should like to take the bronze of Benvenuto Cellini
-from the Loggia of Orcagna and place it in the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">foyer</i> of
-the new theater as an admonition. But who will give
-to a poet the sword of Hermes and the mirror of Athena?</p>
-
-<p>"Perseus!" continued the Inspirer. "In the ravine,
-below the citadel of Mycenæ, is a fountain called Perseia,
-and it is the only living thing in that place where
-all is parched and dead. Men are attracted toward it
-as to a spring of life in that region where the melancholy
-whiteness of the dried river-beds is visible late in the
-twilight. All human thirst ardently approaches that
-freshness. And throughout my work the music of that
-stream shall be heard&mdash;the water, the melody of the
-water. I have found it! In that, the pure element, shall
-be accomplished the pure Act which is the aim of the
-new tragedy. On its clear, cold waters shall sleep the
-virgin destined to die 'deprived of nuptials,' like Antigone.
-Do you understand? The pure Act marks the
-defeat of antique Destiny. The new soul suddenly
-breaks the iron band that held it, with a determination
-born of madness, of a lucid delirium that resembles
-ecstasy, or a deeper, clearer vision of Nature. In the
-orchestra, the final ode is of the salvation and liberation
-of man, obtained through pain and sacrifice. The
-monstrous Fate is there, vanquished, near the tombs of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-the Atridæ, before the very corpses of the victims. Do
-you understand? He that frees himself by means of
-the pure Act, the brother that kills his sister to save
-her soul from the horror that was about to seize her,
-has himself in reality seen the face of Agamemnon!"</p>
-
-<p>The fascination of the funereal gold had taken fresh
-hold upon his fancy; the evidence of his internal vision
-gave him a look as of one under a spell of hallucination.</p>
-
-<p>"One of the corpses surpasses all the others in height
-and in majesty: his brow is crowned with a golden diadem,
-and he wears a cuirass, shoulder-plates, and a girdle
-of gold, surrounded with swords, lances, daggers, cups,
-and countless golden discs scattered like petals over
-his body, more venerable than a demigod. The man
-bends over this body, while it is vanishing in the light
-before his very eyes, and lifts the heavy mask. Ah,
-does he not then see the face of Agamemnon? Is not
-this corpse perhaps the King of kings? The mouth and
-the eyes are open. Do you remember that passage of
-Homer's? 'As I lay dying, I raised my hands to my
-sword; but the woman with dog-like eyes went away,
-and would not close my eyes and my mouth, at the moment
-when I was about to descend to the abode of
-Hades.' Do you remember? Well, the mouth of this
-corpse is open, and its eyes are open. He has a high brow,
-ornamented with a single large golden leaf; the nose
-is long and straight, the chin oval"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The magician paused an instant, his eyes fixed and
-dilated. He was a seer. All about him disappeared, and
-his fiction remained the only reality. Daniele trembled,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-for he too was able to see through the eyes of the other.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, the white spot on the shoulder, too! He has
-raised the armor. The spot, the spot! the hereditary
-mark of the race of Pelops 'of the ivory shoulder'! Is
-he not indeed the King of kings?"</p>
-
-<p id="id195">The rapid, half-broken utterances of the seer were like
-a succession of flashes whereby he himself was dazzled.
-He had astonished even himself by that sudden apparition,
-that unexpected discovery which illumined the
-shadows of his mind, because exterior reality, and almost
-tangible. How had he been able to discover that spot
-on Agamemnon's shoulder? From what abyss of his
-memory had suddenly surged up that detail so strange,
-yet precise and decisive as a mark that affords recognition
-of a body dead since the preceding day?</p>
-
-<p>"You were there!" exclaimed Daniele, intoxicated. "It
-was you yourself that lifted that armor and that mask!
-If you have really seen what you have just described,
-you are no longer a man!"</p>
-
-<p>"I have seen! I have seen!"</p>
-
-<p>Again he became an actor in his own drama, and it
-was with a violent palpitation that he heard, from the
-lips of a living person, the words of the drama&mdash;the very
-words that were to be spoken in the episode itself: "If
-you have really seen what you have described, you are
-no longer a man." From that instant, the explorer of
-sepulchers took on the aspect of a noble hero fighting
-against the ancient destiny that had risen from the ashes
-of the Atridæ to contaminate and overthrow him.</p>
-
-<p>"Not with impunity," he continued, "does a man open
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-tombs and gaze upon the faces of the dead&mdash;and what
-dead! He lives alone with his sister, the sweetest creature
-that ever has breathed the air of earth&mdash;alone with
-her, in the dwelling full of light and silence, as in a
-prayer, a consecration. Now, imagine one that unconsciously
-drinks poison, a philter, I know not what impure
-thing, which poisons his blood and corrupts his
-thoughts&mdash;suddenly, while his soul is at peace. Imagine
-this terrible evil, this vengeance of the dead! He is
-suddenly seized by an unholy passion; he becomes the
-miserable, trembling prey of a monster; he fights a
-desperate, secret fight, without truce, without mercy,
-day and night, every hour, every moment&mdash;all the more
-atrocious the more the innocent pity of the poor creature
-inclines toward his evil. How can this man be freed?
-From the very beginning of the tragedy, as soon as the
-innocent one begins to speak, it is evident that she is
-destined to die. And all that is said and done in the
-episodes, all that is expressed by the music, and by the
-songs and dances of the interludes, serves to lead her
-slowly but inexorably toward death. She is the equal
-of Antigone. In her brief, tragic hour, she passes accompanied
-by the light of hope and the shadow of presentiment;
-she passes accompanied by songs and tears,
-by the noble love that offers joy, by the mad love
-that engenders mourning; and she never pauses except
-to fall asleep on the cold, clear waters of the
-fountain that called to her from the solitudes with
-its continual murmur. Hardly has her brother killed
-her when he receives from her, through death, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-gift of his redemption. 'All stain,' he cries, 'is
-effaced from my soul! I have become wholly pure!
-All the sanctity of my former love has reëntered my soul
-like a torrent of light. Were she here now, all my
-thoughts of her would be pure as lilies. Were she to
-rise again, she could walk over my heart as over immaculate
-snow. Now she is perfect; now she can be
-adored as a divinity. I will lay her in the deepest of
-my sepulchers, and around her I will lay all my treasures.'
-Thus, the act of death, into which he has been
-drawn by his lucid madness, becomes an act of purification
-and of liberation, marking the defeat of ancient
-Destiny. Emerging from the symphonic ocean, the ode
-shall sing of the victory of man, shall illumine the darkness
-of the catastrophe with an unknown light, and shall
-elevate to the summit of music the first word of the
-Drama renewed."</p>
-
-<p>"The gesture of Perseus!" exclaimed Daniele, still
-under the spell of exaltation. "At the end of the tragedy
-you cut off the head of the Moira, and show it to the
-multitude, ever young and ever-new, which shall bring
-the spectacle to a close amid great cries of enthusiasm."</p>
-
-<p>Both saw, as in a dream, the marble theater on the
-Janiculum, the multitude swayed by the idea of truth
-and of beauty, the illimitable starry Roman sky; they
-saw the frenzied multitude descending the slope of the
-hill, bearing in their rude hearts the confused revelation
-of poetry; they heard the clamor prolonging itself in
-the darkness of the immortal city.</p>
-
-<p>"And now good-by, Daniele," said the master, reminded
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-of his need to hasten, as if some one waited for
-him or called him.</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of the Tragic Muse remained immovable in
-the depths of his dream, sightless, petrified in the divine
-blindness of statues.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you going?"</p>
-
-<p>"To the Palazzo Capello."</p>
-
-<p>"Does La Foscarina know the thread of your work?"</p>
-
-<p>"Vaguely."</p>
-
-<p>"And what figure shall you give to her?"</p>
-
-<p>"She shall be blind, having already passed into another
-world, and gone beyond the life of this. She shall
-see that which others do not see. Her feet shall be in
-the shadows, but her head in the light of eternal truth.
-The contrasts of the tragic hour shall reverberate in
-the darkness of her soul, multiplying themselves there
-like thunder among the deep circles of solitary rocks.
-Like Tiresias, she shall comprehend everything, permitted
-or forbidden, celestial and terrestrial, and she shall
-know 'how hard it is to know when knowing is useless.'
-Ah, I shall put marvelous words into her mouth, and
-silences that shall give birth to infinite beauties."</p>
-
-<p>"On the stage," said Glauro, "whether she speaks or
-is silent, her power is almost more than human. She
-reveals to us the existence in our own hearts of the most
-secret evil and the most hidden hopes; by her enchantment,
-our past becomes present; and, by the virtue of
-her aspect, we recognize ourselves in the trials suffered
-by others throughout time, as if the soul she reveals to
-us were our own."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They stopped on the Ponte Savio. Stelio was silent,
-under a flood of love and melancholy, which had suddenly
-come upon him.</p>
-
-<p>"I wish I had not to leave you to-night, Stelio," confessed
-the faithful brother, who was also invaded by a
-peculiar melancholy. "When I am with you, I breathe
-more freely, and live a swifter life."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio was silent. The wind had abated somewhat.
-The brown church and the square tower of naked brick
-seemed to be praying silently to the stars.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know the green column that stands in San
-Giacomo dall' Orio?" Daniele resumed, intending to
-hold his friend a little longer, because he dreaded to say
-farewell. "What sublimity! It is like the fossilized
-condensation of an immense green forest. In following
-its innumerable veins, the eye travels in a dream through
-sylvan mysteries. When I look at it I fancy myself
-visiting Sila and Ercinna."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio knew the column. One day Perdita had leaned
-long against the precious shaft, contemplating the magic
-frieze of gold that curves above the canvas of Bassano,
-obscuring it.</p>
-
-<p>"To dream&mdash;always to dream," he sighed, with a return
-of that bitter impatience which had suggested sneering
-words to him when he had come on the boat from
-the Lido. "To live on relics! Think of Dandolo, who
-overthrew the column and an empire at the same time,
-and who preferred to remain doge when he might have
-become emperor. Perhaps he lived more than you, who
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-wander in fancy through forests when you examine the
-marble he pillaged. Good-by, Daniele."</p>
-
-<p>"I shall stop at the Palazzo Vendramin for news,"
-said the faithful brother.</p>
-
-<p>These words recalled afresh the thought of the great
-ailing heart, the weight of the hero in their arms, the
-terrible removal.</p>
-
-<p>"He has conquered&mdash;he can die," said Stelio.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V<br />
-SOFIA</h2>
-
-
-<p>Stelio entered La Foscarina's house like a
-spirit. His mental exaltation changed the aspect
-of things. The hall, lighted by a galley
-lamp, appeared immense to him. The detached
-cabin of a gondola standing on the pavement near the
-door, startled him as if he had suddenly seen a coffin.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Stelio!" exclaimed the actress, rising with a start
-and hastening toward him impetuously, with all the
-spring of her eagerness that had been repressed by expectation.
-"At last!"</p>
-
-<p>She stopped before him suddenly, without touching
-him. The swift impulse vibrated in her visibly. She
-was like a wind when it falls. "Who has detained you
-from me?" was her thought, while her heart was filled
-with doubt; for in one instant she had discerned something
-about the beloved one that rendered him intangible
-to her&mdash;something strange and far-away in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>But he had found her most beautiful at the very moment
-when she sprang from the shadows, animated by
-a violence like that of the tempest sweeping the lagoons.
-The cry, the gesture, the sudden halt, the vibration of
-her body, the light in her countenance suddenly extinguished
-like a fire fallen to ashes, the intensity of her
-gaze, like the glow of battle, the breath that parted her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-lips as heat breaks open the lips of the earth&mdash;all these
-aspects of her real self showed a capability of pathos
-comparable only to the effervescence of natural energies,
-the power of cosmic force. The artist recognized in
-her the Dionysian creature, the living material, apt for
-receiving the rhythms of art, to be modeled according
-to poetic forms. And, because he saw her character as
-varying as the waves of the sea, he found inert the blind
-mask he thought to put on her face; the tragic fable
-through which she was to pass in sadness seemed narrow,
-and too limited was the order of sentiment whence
-she should draw her expressions, almost subterranean
-the soul she must reveal. His mental images were
-seized with a sort of panic, a fleeting terror. What could
-be that single work in the immensity of life? Æschylus
-composed more than a hundred tragedies, Sophocles still
-more. They had constructed a world with gigantic fragments
-lifted by their titanic arms. Their labor was as
-vast as a cosmogony. The Æschylian figures seemed
-still warm with ethereal life, shining with sidereal light,
-humid from the fertilizing cloud. The spirit of the Earth
-worked in the creators.</p>
-
-<p>"Hide me, hide me! Do not ask me anything, and
-let me be silent!" he implored, incapable of concealing
-his perturbation, powerless to control the tumult of his
-disordered thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>The woman's heart beat fast in the ignorance of fear.</p>
-
-<p>"Why? What have you done?"</p>
-
-<p>"I suffer."</p>
-
-<p>"From what?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Anxiety, anxiety&mdash;from that trouble of mine which
-you know well."</p>
-
-<p>She clasped him in her arms. He felt that she was
-trembling in doubt.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you mine&mdash;are you still mine?" she asked, in a
-stifled voice, her lips pressed to his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes&mdash;always yours."</p>
-
-<p>This woman always suffered a horrible fear every time
-she saw him depart from her, every time she saw him
-return. When he went, was it not toward the unknown
-betrothed? When he returned, was it not to bid her
-a last farewell?</p>
-
-<p>She clasped him in her arms with the fondness of a
-lover, a sister, a mother&mdash;with all human love.</p>
-
-<p>"What can I do for you? Tell me!"</p>
-
-<p>A continual need tormented her to offer, to serve, to
-obey a command that urged her toward peril, toward
-a struggle to seize some good that she might bring to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"What can I give you?"</p>
-
-<p>He smiled wearily, overcome by sudden languor.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you wish? Ah, I know!"</p>
-
-<p>He smiled again, allowing himself to be caressed by
-that voice, by those adoring hands.</p>
-
-<p>"You wish for everything, do you not? You desire
-everything?"</p>
-
-<p>Still he smiled sadly, like an ailing child listening to
-descriptions of delightful games.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, if I only could! But no one in the world can
-give you anything of any value, dearest friend. Your
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-poetry and your music&mdash;they alone can demand everything.
-I remember that ode of yours beginning 'I was
-Pan.'"</p>
-
-<p>He leaned against the faithful heart his head now
-filled with the light of beautiful thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>"'I was Pan.'"</p>
-
-<p>Through his spirit passed the splendor of that lyrical
-moment, the delirium of that ode.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you seen your sea to-day? Did you see the
-storm?"</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head, without speaking.</p>
-
-<p>"Was it a great storm? One day you told me that
-you have many mariners among your forefathers. Have
-you been thinking to-day of your home on the dunes?
-Are you homesick for the sand? Do you wish to go
-back there? You have worked a great deal there, and
-have done great work. It is a consecrated house. Your
-mother was with you while you worked. You could
-hear her stepping softly in the next room. Sometimes
-she stopped to listen, did she not?"</p>
-
-<p>He embraced her silently. That voice penetrated his
-very soul, and refreshed it.</p>
-
-<p>"And your sister was with you, too? You told me her
-name once, and I have not forgotten it. She is called
-Sofia. I know that she is like you. I should like to
-hear her speak once, or to watch her walking along the
-road. Once you praised her hands. They are beautiful,
-are they not? You told me one day that when she
-is sad her hands hurt her, as if they were the roots of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-her soul. That is what you said&mdash;'the roots of her
-soul.'"</p>
-
-<p>He listened, almost happy. How had she discovered
-the secret of soothing him, the balm for his soul? From
-what hidden spring did she draw the fluid melody of
-those memories?</p>
-
-<p>"Sofia never will know the good she has done to the
-poor traveler. I know little of Sofia herself, but I know
-that she resembles you, and I have often pictured her
-to myself. I can see her at this moment. When I have
-been in distant countries, far-away among strangers,
-feeling almost lost, she has appeared to me often, and
-borne me company. She has appeared to me suddenly,
-when I had neither called nor expected her. Once I
-saw her at Mürren, where I had arrived after a long,
-weary journey, made in order to see a poor friend who
-was at the point of death. Day was breaking; the
-mountains had that cold, delicate color of beryl that is
-seen only among glaciers. Why did she come? We
-waited, together. The sun touched the summits of the
-mountains. Then a brilliant rainbow crowned them for
-a moment, then vanished. And Sofia vanished with the
-rainbow, with the miracle."</p>
-
-<p>He listened, almost happy. Were not all the beauty
-and all the truth that he himself would like to express
-contained in a stone, or in a flower of those mountains?
-The most tragic struggle of human passions was not
-worth the apparition of that mystic light upon the
-eternal snows.</p>
-
-<p>"And another time?" he asked softly, for the pause
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-was long, and he feared that she would not continue.
-She smiled, then looked sad.</p>
-
-<p>"Another time I was at Alexandria in Egypt, in a
-time of confused horror, as if after a shipwreck. The
-city had an aspect of putrefaction, like a city in decay.
-I remember: a street full of muddy water; a white horse,
-thin as a skeleton, that splashed in the water, its mane
-and tail of an ochre color; the turrets of an Arabian
-cemetery, the far-away gleam of the marsh of Mareotis.
-What misery! What disgust!"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, dear soul, never, never again shall you be left
-alone and despairing," said Stelio in his heart, now filled
-with fraternal tenderness for the nomad woman who
-recalled the sadness of her continual wanderings.</p>
-
-<p>"And another time?" he said aloud.</p>
-
-<p>"Another time it was in Vienna, in a museum. There
-was a great, empty hall, the rain whipped against the
-windows; innumerable precious relics were there in crystal
-cases; the signs of death were everywhere, exiled
-things no longer prayed to or adored. Together Sofia
-and I leaned over a case containing a collection of holy
-arms, with their metal hands fixed in an immovable
-gesture. There were martyr's hands sown with agates,
-amethysts, topaz, garnets, and pale turquoises. Through
-certain openings, splinters of bone were visible. One
-hand held a golden lily, another a miniature city, another
-clasped a column. One was smaller than the
-others; it had a ring on every finger, and held a vase
-full of ointment: the relics of Mary Magdalene. Exiled
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-things, become profane, no longer prayed to or adored.
-Is Sofia devout? Has she the habit of prayer?"</p>
-
-<p>He did not reply. He felt that he should not speak,
-nor give any visible sign of his own life in the enchantment
-of that distant life.</p>
-
-<p>"Sometimes your sister used to enter your room while
-you were at work, and lay a blade of grass on the page
-newly begun."</p>
-
-<p>The enchantress trembled; a veiled image seemed to
-be suddenly revealing itself.&mdash;Do you know that I began
-to love her&mdash;the girl that sings, the girl whom you
-cannot have forgotten&mdash;because I thought of your sister?
-Yes&mdash;in order to pour into a pure soul the tenderness
-my soul wished to offer to your sister, from whom so
-many cruel things separated me! Do you know that?&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Those words quivered with life, but they were not
-spoken; yet the voice trembled at their mute presence.</p>
-
-<p>"Then you would grant yourself a few moments of
-rest. You went to the window with her, and both gazed
-out upon the sea. A plowman drove his young oxen
-over the sand to teach them a straight furrow. When
-they were finally taught, they no longer plowed the
-sand, but went up on the hill. Who has told me these
-things?"</p>
-
-<p>He himself had told her once, almost in the same
-words, but now these memories came back like unexpected
-visions.</p>
-
-<p>"Then flocks of sheep passed along the shore; they
-came from the mountains, and were on the way to the
-plains of the Puglia. All was still; a golden silence covered
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-the shore. Later, you went with your sister, and
-followed the tracks left by the sheep along the wet
-sand.... Who has told me all these things?"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio's fevered mind was calmed. A slow peace, like
-slumber, descended upon him.</p>
-
-<p>"Then sudden storms sprang up; the sea sometimes
-overflowed the dunes and the land, leaving foam on
-juniper and tamarisk trees, on myrtle and rosemary.
-Heaps of seaweed and jetsam would be thrown on the
-beach. A boat had been wrecked somewhere. The sea
-brought firewood to the poor, and mourning to heaven
-knows whom! The beach would be thronged with
-people, each trying to collect the largest bundle of wood.
-Then your sister would bring other aid&mdash;bread, wine,
-vegetables, linen. Blessings would rise louder than the
-noise of the waves. You looked out of the window, and
-thought that none of your beautiful images was worth
-the odor of warm bread. You left the half-finished page,
-and hurried to help Sofia, speaking to the women, the
-children and the old men.... Who has told me all
-these things?"</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI<br />
-A BROTHER TO ORPHEUS</h2>
-
-
-<p>From that first evening, Stelio had preferred to
-go to the house of his beloved through the
-gate of the Gradenigo garden, making his way
-through trees and shrubs that had become wild
-again. The actress had received permission to open a
-communication between her own garden and that of
-the long-abandoned palace by means of an opening in
-the dividing wall. But soon afterward, the Lady Myrta
-had come to live in the great silent rooms wherein the
-last guest had been the son of the Empress Josephine,
-the Viceroy of Italy. The apartments were ornamented
-with old, stringless musical instruments, and the garden
-was peopled by graceful hounds, that lacked any prey.</p>
-
-<p>To Stelio, nothing seemed sweeter or more sad than
-that walk toward the woman that waited for him while
-counting the hours&mdash;so slow, yet so swift in their flight.
-In the afternoon, the path of San Simeone Piccolo turned
-a pale golden hue, like a bank of the finest alabaster.
-The reflected rays of sunlight danced on the iron prows
-that stood in a row by the pier. A few decaying gondola
-cabins lay in the shadow of the pavements, with
-their curtains and cushions stained and spoiled by rain,
-as if they were catafalques worn out by continual use
-in funeral ceremonies, grown old on the way to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-churchyard. The garden gate opened at the end of the
-Campiello della Comare, green and mossy like a country
-cemetery; it spread out between two columns, topped
-by broken statues, on the limbs of which the dry
-branches of ivy were outlined like veins.</p>
-
-<p>"Helion! Sirius! Altair! Donovan! Ali-Nour! Nerissa!
-Piuchebella!"</p>
-
-<p>Seated on a bench near a rose-covered wall, Lady
-Myrta was calling her dogs. La Foscarina stood near
-her, in a fawn-colored costume, the material of which
-resembled that superb textile called <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">rovana</i>, used in
-ancient times in Venice. The sunlight bathed the
-women and the roses in the same soft warmth.</p>
-
-<p>"You are dressed like Donovan to-day," said Lady
-Myrta to the actress, with a smile. "Did you know
-that Stelio prefers Donovan to all the others?"</p>
-
-<p>A slight blush rose to La Foscarina's cheeks; she
-looked at the fawn-colored greyhound.</p>
-
-<p>"He is the strongest and the most beautiful," she
-replied.</p>
-
-<p>"I believe that Stelio would like to have him," added
-the old lady, with a sweet, indulgent smile.</p>
-
-<p>"What is there that he would not like to have?"</p>
-
-<p>Lady Myrta noted the tinge of melancholy in the tone
-of the woman in love. She remained silent.</p>
-
-<p>The dogs lay near them, serious and sad, sleepy and
-dreamy, far from plains, steppes, and deserts, stretched
-out in the clover, where also grew the gourds, with
-their greenish-yellow fruit.</p>
-
-<p>"Does your lover grieve you?" the elder woman would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-have liked to ask of the woman in love, for the silence
-weighed on her, and she felt her own heart revivified by
-the fire within that sorrowful soul. But she dared not.
-She only sighed. Her heart, ever young, still throbbed
-at the sight of despairing passion and beauty menaced.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, you are still beautiful, and your lips still attract
-kisses, and the man that loves you can still be intoxicated
-with your sweet pallor and your eyes," she thought, as
-she looked at the pensive actress, toward whom the November
-roses leaned. "But I am a specter."</p>
-
-<p>She lowered her eyes, gazed upon her own deformed
-hands lying on her lap, and wondered that those hands
-were hers, they were so dead and distorted, lamentable
-monsters that could no longer touch anyone without
-exciting disgust, that had nothing to caress any more
-except the dogs. She felt the wrinkles in her face, the
-false teeth against her gums, the false hair on her head,
-all the ruin of her poor body, which once was obedient
-to the graceful will of her delicate spirit; and she wondered
-at her own persistence in struggling against the
-outrages of Time, in deceiving herself, in recomposing
-every morning that ridiculous illusion with essences, oils,
-unguents, rouge and powder. But, in the perpetual
-springtime of her dreams, was she not ever youthful?
-Was it not yesterday, only yesterday, that she had caressed
-a loved face with her perfect fingers, hunted the
-fox and the deer in the northern counties, danced with
-her betrothed in the park to an air of John Dowland's?&mdash;There
-are no mirrors in the house of the Countess
-Glanegg; there are too many in Lady Myrta's house&mdash;was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-La Foscarina's thought.&mdash;One has hidden her decline
-from herself and from everyone else; the other sees herself
-growing older day by day. She counts her wrinkles
-one by one, gathers up her dead hair in her comb, feels
-her teeth rattling against her pale gums, and tries to
-repair the damage by artificial devices. Poor tender
-soul, who wishes still to be smiling and charming! But
-we must die, disappear, descend into the earth!&mdash;She
-observed the little cluster of violets that Lady Myrta
-had pinned to her skirt. In all seasons fresh flowers
-were fastened there, barely visible, hidden among the
-folds, a sign of her daily illusion of springtime, of the
-ever-new enchantment she wove about herself by the
-aid of memory, music, poetry, and all the arts of dreams
-against old age, infirmity, and solitude.&mdash;We should live
-one supreme, flaming hour, then disappear forever in
-the earth before all charm has vanished, before all grace
-is dead!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She felt the beauty of her own eyes, the careless
-strength of her hair, blown back by the wind, all the
-power of rhythm and transport that slumbered in her
-muscles and her bones. She heard again in fancy the
-words of her lover, saw him again in his tender transport
-of love, in the sweetness of languor, the moments
-of profound oblivion.&mdash;Still a little while, still a few days
-longer I shall please him, and seem beautiful to him,
-and put fire in his blood. A little while longer!&mdash;With
-her feet in the deep grass, her brow raised to the sunlight,
-amid the fragrance of fading roses, in the fawn-colored
-robe that made her seem like the magnificent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-beast of prey, she glowed with passionate joy of life and
-hope, a sudden quickening of the blood, as if that future
-which she had renounced by her resolution to die were
-flowing back into the present.&mdash;Come! come!&mdash;Within
-herself she called to her beloved with a sort of intoxication,
-sure that he would come, because she already felt
-that he would, and never had she been deceived by her
-presentiment.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, here is Stelio!" said Lady Myrta at that instant,
-seeing the young man advancing among the laurels.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina turned swiftly, with a blush. The greyhounds
-rose, pricking up their slender ears. The meeting
-glance of those lovers had something in it like an
-electric flash. Again, as always, in the presence of that
-wonderful creature, her lover had the divine sensation
-of suddenly being enfolded in a cloud of flaming ether,
-in a vibrant wave that seemed to isolate him from ordinary
-atmosphere and almost to ravish his senses.</p>
-
-<p>"You were awaited here by all that dwell in this
-seclusion," said Lady Myrta, with a smile that hid the
-emotion that stirred the youthful heart in the infirm and
-aged body at the sight of love and longing. "In coming
-here, you have responded to a call."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true," said the young man, holding the collar
-of Donovan, which, remembering his caresses, had run
-to meet him. "The fact is, I have come a long distance.
-Guess from where?"</p>
-
-<p>"From the country of Giorgione!"</p>
-
-<p>"No, from the cloister of Santa Apollonia. Do you
-know that place?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Is that one of your inventions to-day?"</p>
-
-<p>"Invention? It is a cloister of stone, a real cloister,
-with a well and with little columns."</p>
-
-<p>"It may be so, but everything that you have once
-looked at, Stelio, becomes your invention."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Lady Myrta, I should like to offer you that gem
-of a cloister. I wish I might move it here, into your
-garden. Imagine a small, secret cloister, opening on
-a sequence of slender columns, set in pairs like nuns
-when they walk, fasting, in the sun; very delicate,
-neither white, gray nor black, but that most mysterious
-tint ever given to stone by the great master colorist&mdash;Time.
-In the midst of these is a well, and on the curb,
-which is worn by the rope, hangs a pail without a bottom.
-The nuns have disappeared, but I believe that the
-shades of the Danaïdes frequent the place."</p>
-
-<p>He stopped speaking suddenly, seeing himself surrounded
-by the greyhounds, and began to imitate the
-guttural sounds the kennel-men make to gather the
-dogs. The animals became excited; their wistful eyes
-brightened.</p>
-
-<p>"Ali-Nour! Crissa! Nerissa! Clarissa! Altair! Helion!
-Hardicanute! Veronese! Hierro!"</p>
-
-<p>He knew them all by name, and when he called them
-they seemed to recognize him for their master. There
-was the Scottish hound, native of the highlands, with
-thick, rough coat; the Irish wolf-hound, ruddy and
-strong, with brown irises showing clearly in their whites;
-the Tartary hound, spotted with black and yellow, a native
-of vast Asiatic steppes, where at night he had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-guarded a tent against hyenas and leopards; the Persian
-dog, light-colored and small, with ears covered with long
-silky hair, a fluffy tail, of lighter tint on the sides and
-legs, more graceful than the antelopes he had killed;
-there was also the Spanish <em>galgo</em> that had migrated with
-the Moors, that magnificent animal held in leash by a
-pompous dwarf in the painting by Velásquez, instructed
-to course and to force on the naked plains of the Mancha;
-the Arabian <em>sloughi</em>, illustrious depredator of the desert,
-with black tongue and palate, a noble animal, all pride,
-courage, and elegance, accustomed to sleep on rich rugs
-and to lap pure milk from a pure vase. Assembled in a
-pack, they quivered around him who knew how to reawaken
-in their torpid blood their primitive instincts of
-pursuit and carnage.</p>
-
-<p>"Which among you was Gog's best friend?" he asked,
-looking from one to another of the pairs of beautiful,
-eager eyes fixed upon him. "You, Hierro? You, Altair?"</p>
-
-<p>His peculiar accent animated the sensitive creatures,
-which listened with suppressed and intermittent growls.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I must tell you all something that I have kept
-secret till to-day. Gog&mdash;do you hear?&mdash;who could crush
-a hare with one snap of his jaws&mdash;Gog is crippled."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, indeed!" exclaimed Lady Myrta, concerned. "Is
-it possible, Stelio? And Magog&mdash;how is he?"</p>
-
-<p>"Magog is safe and well."</p>
-
-<p>These were the names of a pair of greyhounds that
-Lady Myrta had given to the young man.</p>
-
-<p>"How did it happen?"</p>
-
-<p>"Alas, poor Gog! He had already killed thirty-seven
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-hares. He possessed all the virtues of his fine breed:
-swiftness, resistance, incredible rapidity in turning, and
-the constant desire to kill his prey, besides the classical
-manner of running straight and seizing his prey from
-behind almost at the same instant. Have you ever
-watched a greyhound in coursing, Foscarina?"</p>
-
-<p>"Never."</p>
-
-<p>"Then you never have seen one of the rarest spectacles
-of daring, vehemence, and grace in the world. Look!"</p>
-
-<p>He drew Donovan toward him, knelt beside him, and
-began feeling the animal with his expert hands.</p>
-
-<p>"No machine in nature exists that is more exactly
-and powerfully adapted to its purpose. The muzzle is
-sharp in order to penetrate the air; it is long, so that
-the jaws can crush the prey at the first snap. The skull
-is wide between the ears in order to contain the greatest
-courage and skill. The jowls are dry and muscular, and
-the lips so short they hardly cover the teeth."</p>
-
-<p>With sure and easy touch, he opened the mouth of
-the dog, which offered no resistance.</p>
-
-<p>"Look at those white teeth! See how long the eyeteeth
-are, with a little curve at the top, the better to
-hold his prey. No other species of dog has a mouth so
-well constructed for biting."</p>
-
-<p>His hands lingered over the examination, and his admiration
-for the superb specimen was unbounded. He
-was kneeling in the clover, and received in his face the
-breath of the dog, which quietly permitted him to examine
-it, as if it comprehended and enjoyed the praise
-of the connoisseur.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"See what elegance in his ribs, arranged with the symmetry
-of a fine keel, and in that line curved inward toward
-the abdomen, which is hidden. All point to one
-aim. The tail, thick at the root and slender at the tip&mdash;look!
-almost like that of a rat&mdash;serves as a sort of
-rudder, necessary to enable him to turn swiftly when the
-hare doubles. Let us see, Donovan, whether you are
-perfect also in this respect."</p>
-
-<p>He took the tip of the tail, passed it under the leg,
-and drew it toward the haunch-bone, where it exactly
-touched the projecting part.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, perfect! Once I saw an Arab of the tribe of
-Arbâa measuring his <em>sloughi</em> in that way. Ali-Nour, did
-you tremble when you discovered the herd of gazelles?
-Imagine, Foscarina&mdash;the <em>sloughi</em> trembles when he discovers
-his prey, quivers like a willow, and turns his
-soft, pleading eyes toward his master, begging to be
-released. I do not know the reason why this pleases
-me and stirs me so much. His desire to kill is terrible;
-his whole body is ready to stretch itself like a bow, yet
-he trembles! Not with fear, nor with uncertainty, but
-with sheer desire. Ah, Foscarina! if you could see a
-<em>sloughi</em> at that moment, you would not fail to learn from
-him his manner of quivering, and you would render the
-manner human by the power of your tragic art, and
-would give mankind a new sensation. Up, Ali-Nour!
-swift desert arrow! Do you remember? But now you
-tremble only when you are cold."</p>
-
-<p>Blithe and graceful, he had let Donovan go, and had
-taken between his hands the serpentine head of the slayer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-of gazelles; he gazed into those deep eyes, wherein lurked
-nostalgia for the silent, tropical land; for tents unfolded
-after a march toward some deceiving mirage; for fires
-kindled for the evening meal under stars that seemed to
-throb in the waves of the wind just above the summits
-of the palm-trees.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina had entered into that physical enchantment
-of love whereby the limits of one's being seem to
-dilate and be fused in the air, so that every word and
-movement of the beloved object brings a feeling of happiness
-sweeter than any caress. Her lover had taken
-between his hands the head of Ali-Nour, but she felt
-the touch of those hands upon her own brow. He was
-gazing into Ali-Nour's eyes, but she could feel that gaze
-deep in her own soul.</p>
-
-<p>Had he not touched the obscurest mystery of her being?
-Did he not compel her to feel within herself the
-animal depths whence had sprung the unexpected revelation
-of her tragic genius, moving and maddening the
-multitude as would a splendid spectacle of sea and sky,
-a gorgeous sunrise, a tremendous tempest. When he had
-spoken of the trembling <em>sloughi</em>, had he not divined the
-natural analogies whence she drew the power of expression
-that amazed peoples and poets? It was because
-she had re-discovered the Dionysian sense of Nature
-as a naturalizer, the antique fervor of instinctive and
-creative energies, the enthusiasm of the multiform god
-emerging from the fermentation of all sap, that she appeared
-so new and so great on the stage. Sometimes
-she felt within herself something like an immanence of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-the miracle which in the mystic past swelled with divine
-milk the breasts of the Mænads at the approach of the
-hungry young panthers.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio began again to imitate the guttural call of the
-kennel-keeper. The dogs grew more excited; their eyes
-brightened again; the tense muscles swelled under the
-coats&mdash;tawny, black, white, gray, spotted; the long
-haunches were curved like bows ready to hurl into
-space those bodies dry and slender, like a quiver-full
-of arrows.</p>
-
-<p>"There, Donovan, there!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio pointed to a reddish-gray object in the grass
-at the end of the garden; it looked somewhat like a
-crouching hare with flattened ears. The imperious voice
-deceived the hesitating hounds, and it was beautiful to
-see the slender, vigorous bodies quivering in the sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>"There, Donovan!"</p>
-
-<p>The great tawny dog looked him deep in the eyes,
-gave a formidable bound toward the imaginary prey,
-with all the vehemence of his reawakened instinct. He
-reached the spot in an instant, then stopped, disappointed,
-followed by the whole pack.</p>
-
-<p>"A gourd! a gourd!" cried the deceiver, with shouts
-of laughter. "Not even a rabbit. Poor Donovan! He
-bit only a gourd! Poor Donovan! what humiliation!
-Take care, Lady Myrta, lest he drown himself in the
-canal for very shame!"</p>
-
-<p>From the contagion of her lover's gayety, La Foscarina
-laughed too. Her fawn-tinted gown and the tan coats
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-of the hounds shone in the sunlight against the green
-clover. Her white teeth, revealed by rippling laughter,
-graced her mouth with a renewal of youth.</p>
-
-<p>"Would you like to own Donovan?" said Lady Myrta,
-with a touch of graceful, malicious significance. "I
-know your arts!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio ceased laughing, and blushed like a boy.</p>
-
-<p>A wave of tenderness filled La Foscarina's heart as
-she saw the boyish blush. She fairly sparkled with love;
-she felt a wild wish to clasp him in her arms at that
-very moment.</p>
-
-<p>Before thanking Lady Myrta, Stelio looked again at
-the dog, admiring him as he was, strong, splendid, perfect,
-with the mark of style on his limbs as if Pisanello
-had drawn him for the reverse of a medal. Then he
-looked at La Foscarina, who had turned to the group of
-animals, moving over the grass with a swift undulation,
-like the movement called the greyhound step by the
-ancient Venetians. She advanced, with Donovan, holding
-him by the collar. The chill of evening began to
-be felt, the shadow of the bronze cupola grew longer on
-the grass; a purple mist, in which the last flecks of
-golden sunlight swam, began to spread over the branches
-that swayed in the breeze.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;See, we are yours!&mdash;the woman seemed to be saying
-mutely, while the animal, beginning to shiver, pressed
-close against her.&mdash;We are yours forever. We are here
-to serve you!</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII<br />
-ONLY ONE CONDITION</h2>
-
-
-<p>Heartrending was the sweetness of that November,
-smiling like a sick person who fancies
-himself to have reached a state of convalescence
-and feels an unusual sense of relief and
-well-being, knowing not that his hour of agony draws
-near.</p>
-
-<p>"What is the matter with you to-day, Fosca? What
-has happened to you? Why are you so distant to me?
-Speak! Tell me!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio had entered San Marco by chance, and had seen
-her there, leaning against the chapel-door that leads to
-the baptistry. She was alone, motionless, her face devoured
-by fever and by shadows, with terrified eyes fixed
-on the fearful figures of the mosaics that flamed in a
-yellow fire.</p>
-
-<p>"Leave me here alone, I entreat you&mdash;I beg of you!
-I must be alone! I implore you!"</p>
-
-<p>She turned as if to flee, but he detained her.</p>
-
-<p>"But tell me! Speak at least one word that I may
-understand."</p>
-
-<p>Still she sought to escape, and her movement expressed
-unspeakable anguish.</p>
-
-<p>"I implore you! If you pity me, the only thing you
-can do for me now is to let me go."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"But one word&mdash;at least one word, so that I shall
-understand."</p>
-
-<p>A flash of fury passed over the agitated face.</p>
-
-<p>"No! I wish to be alone!"</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was as hard as her glance. She turned,
-taking a step or two like a person overcome by dizziness
-seeking some support.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>But he dared not detain her longer. He saw the despairing
-one walk through the zone of sunlight that
-invaded the basilica like a rushing torrent entering
-through a door opened by an unknown hand. Behind
-her the deep golden cavern, with its apostles, martyrs,
-and sacred beasts, glittered as if the thousand torches
-of the daylight were pouring in on it.</p>
-
-<p>"I am lost in the depths of sadness.... This violent
-impulse to revolt against fate, to rush away in search of
-adventure&mdash;to seek.&mdash;Who will save my hope? Whence
-will come a ray of light?... To sing, to sing! But
-I would sing a song of life at last.... Can you tell
-me where the Lord of the Flame is at present?"</p>
-
-<p>These words, in a letter from Donatella Arvale, were
-branded on her eyes and on her soul, with all the characteristics
-of handwriting, as much alive as the hand
-that traced them, as throbbing as that impatient pulse.
-She saw them graved on the stones, outlined on the
-clouds, reflected in the water, indelible and inevitable
-as the decrees of Fate.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;Where shall I go? Where shall I go?&mdash;Through all
-her agitation and despair, she had still a sense of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-sweetness of things, the warmth of the gilded marbles,
-the perfume of the quiet air, the languor of human
-leisure.</p>
-
-<p>She turned with a start, fearing yet hoping to be followed
-by her lover. She could not see him. She would
-have fled had she seen him, but her heart ached as if
-he had sent her to death without a word of recall.&mdash;All
-is over!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She entered the Porta della Carta, having crossed the
-threshold. The intoxication of her sorrow led her to
-the spot where, on a night of glory, the three destinies
-had come together. She went to the well, the point of
-that rendezvous. Around that bronze curb the whole
-life of those few seconds rose again with the distinct
-outline of reality. There she had said, addressing her
-companion with a smile: "Donatella, this is the Lord
-of the Flame!" Then the immense cry of the multitude
-had drowned her voice, and above their head rose a
-flight of fiery pigeons against the dark sky.</p>
-
-<p>She approached the well, and gazed into it. She
-leaned over the curb, saw her own face in the deep mirror,
-saw in it terror and perdition, saw the motionless
-Medusa she carried in the depth of her soul. Without
-realizing it, she repeated the action of him she loved.
-She saw his face, too, and Donatella's, as she had seen
-them illumined for an instant that night, close together,
-lighted by the radiance in the sky.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;Love, love each other! I will go away, I shall disappear!
-Good-by!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She closed her eyes at the thought of death, and in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-that darkness she saw the kind, strong eyes of her
-mother, infinite as a horizon of peace.&mdash;You are at
-peace, and you await me&mdash;you whose life and death were
-of passion.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She stood erect, then departed by the Molo, stepped
-into a gondola, and ordered it to be rowed to the
-Giudecca. The buildings and the water formed a
-miracle of gold and opal. The image of dead Summer
-flashed across her memory&mdash;dead Summer dressed in
-gold and shut in a coffin of opalescent glass. She imagined
-herself submerged in the lagoon, sleeping on a bed
-of seaweed; but the memory of the promise made on
-that water, and kept in the delirium of that night, pierced
-her heart like a knife, and threw her into a convulsion.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;Never more, then? Never more!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She reached the Rio della Croce. The gondola stopped
-before a closed door. She landed, took out a small key,
-opened the door, and entered the garden.</p>
-
-<p>This was her refuge, the secret place for her solitude,
-defended by the fidelity of her melancholy as by silent
-guardians.</p>
-
-<p>"Never more?" She walked under the trellises, approached
-the water, stopped a moment, felt weary, and
-at last sat down on a stone, held her temples between
-her hands, and made an effort to concentrate her mind,
-to recover her self-possession. "He is still here, near
-me. I can see him again. Perhaps I shall find him
-standing on the steps of my house. He will take me in
-his arms, kiss my lips and eyes, tell me again that he
-loves me, that everything about me pleases him. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-does not know&mdash;he does not understand. Nothing irreparable
-has happened. What is it, then, that has so
-upset and disturbed me? I have received a letter written
-by a girl who is far-away, imprisoned in a lonely
-villa near her demented father, who complains of her
-lot and seeks to change it. That is all. There is no
-more to say. And here is the letter."</p>
-
-<p>Her fingers trembled, and she fancied she could detect
-Donatella's favorite perfume, as if the young girl
-were sitting beside her.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;Is she beautiful? Really beautiful? How does she
-look?&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The lines of the image were indistinct at first. She
-tried to seize them, but they eluded her. One particular
-above all others fixed itself in her mind&mdash;the large, massive
-hand.&mdash;Did he see her hand that night? He is very
-susceptible to the beauty of hands. When he meets a
-woman, he always looks at her hands. And he adores
-Sofia's hands.&mdash;She allowed herself to dwell on these
-childish considerations, then she smiled bitterly. And
-suddenly the image became perfect, lived, glowing with
-youth and power, overwhelmed and dazzled her.&mdash;Yes,
-she is beautiful! And hers is the beauty he desires.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She kept her eyes fixed on the silent splendor of the
-waters, with the letter on her lap; she was nailed there
-by the inflexible truth. And involuntary thoughts of
-destruction flashed upon her inert discouragement; the
-face of Donatella burned by fire, her body crippled by
-a fall, her voice ruined by an illness! Then she had a
-horror of herself, followed by pity for herself and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-other woman.&mdash;Has she not too the right to live? Let
-her live, let her love, let her have her joy.&mdash;She imagined
-for the young girl some magnificent adventure, a happy
-love, an adorable betrothed, prosperity, luxury, pleasure.&mdash;Is
-there only one man on this earth, then, that
-she can love? Is it impossible that to-morrow she might
-meet some one who would win her heart? Is it impossible
-that her fate should suddenly turn her in another
-direction, take her far from here, lead her through unknown
-paths, separate her from us forever? Is it necessary
-that she should be loved by the man I love? Perhaps
-they never will meet again.&mdash;She tried thus to escape
-her presentiment. But a contrary thought whispered:
-"They have met once; they will seek each other,
-they will meet again. Her soul is not obscure&mdash;not one
-that can be lost in the multitude. She possesses a gift
-that shines like a star, and it will always be easily recognizable
-even from afar&mdash;her song. The marvel of her
-voice will serve her as a signal. She will surely avail
-herself of this power; she too will pass among mankind
-leaving a wake of admiration behind her. She will have
-glory as she has beauty&mdash;two attributes that will easily
-attract Stelio. They have met once; they will meet
-again."</p>
-
-<p>The sorrowing woman bent as if under a yoke. A
-clear, pearly light bathed the lagoon in radiance. The
-islands of La Follia, San Clemente, and San Servilio
-were enveloped in a light mist. From a distance came
-at intervals a faint cry, as of shipwrecked sailors becalmed,
-answered by the harsh voice of a siren whistle
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-or by the raucous call of the sea-gulls. At first the
-silence seemed terrible, then it grew sweet.</p>
-
-<p>The woman, little by little, recovered her deep goodness
-of heart, felt again her old tenderness for the beautiful
-creature in whose personality she had once deceived
-her desire to love the good sister, Sofia. She thought
-again of the hours passed in the lonely villa on that
-hill of Settignano, where Lorenzo Arvale created his
-statues in the fulness of his strength and fervor, ignorant
-of the blow that was about to fall. She lived again
-in those days, saw again those places; she sat once more
-in memory for the famous sculptor who modeled her in
-clay, while Donatella sang some quaint old song; and
-the spirit of melody animated at once the model and the
-effigy, and her thoughts and that pure voice and the
-mystery of Art composed an appearance of a life almost
-divine in that great studio open on all sides to the light
-of heaven, whence Florence and its river was visible
-in the springtime valley.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to fancying the girl a reflection of Sofia,
-had she not been attracted otherwise to her&mdash;the sweet
-Donatella, who never had known a mother's caress since
-her birth? She saw her again, grave and calm beside her
-father, the comfort for his hard work, guardian of the
-sacred flame, and also of a resolve of her own&mdash;a secret
-resolve, which preserved itself as bright and keen as a
-sword in its sheath.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;She is sure of herself; she is mistress of her own
-power. When at last she knows she is free, she will reveal
-herself as one made to rule. Yes, she is made to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-subjugate men, to excite their curiosity and their dreams.
-Even now, her instinct, bold and prudent as experience
-itself, directs her.&mdash;La Foscarina remembered Donatella's
-attitude toward Stelio on that night; her almost disdainful
-silence, her brief, dry words, her manner of leaving the
-table, her disappearance, leaving the image of herself
-framed within the circle of an unforgettable melody.
-Ah, she knows the art of stirring the soul of a dreamer.
-Certainly he cannot have forgotten her. And just as
-certainly he awaits the hour when it shall be given him
-to meet her again&mdash;not less impatiently than she, who
-asks me where he is.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Again she lifted the letter and ran her eyes over it,
-but her memory traveled faster than her eyes. The
-enigmatic query was at the foot of the page, like a half-veiled
-postscript. Looking at the written words, she
-felt again the same sharp pang as when she read them
-the first time, and once more her heart was shaken as
-if the danger were imminent, as if her passion and her
-hope were already lost beyond recall.&mdash;What is she
-about to do? Of what is she thinking? Did she expect
-him to search for her without delay, and, disappointed
-in that, does she now wish to tempt him? What
-does she intend to do?&mdash;She struggled against that uncertainty
-as against an iron door which she must force
-in order to find again behind it the light of her life.&mdash;Shall
-I answer her? Suppose I reply in such a way
-as to make her understand the truth, would my love
-necessarily be a prohibition of hers?&mdash;But here her soul
-rose with a mingled feeling of repugnance, modesty, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-pride.&mdash;No, never! Never shall she learn of my wound
-from me&mdash;never, not even should she question me!&mdash;And
-she realized all the horror of an open rivalry between a
-woman no longer young and a girl strong in her maiden
-youth. She felt the humiliation and cruelty of such an
-unequal struggle. "But if not Donatella, would it not
-be some one else," again whispered the contrary spirit
-"Do you believe you can bind a man of his nature to
-your melancholy passion? The only condition under
-which you should have allowed yourself to love him,
-and to offer him a love faithful unto death, was in keeping
-the compact that you have broken."</p>
-
-<p>"True, true!" she murmured, as if answering a distinct
-voice, in formal judgment, pronounced in the silence
-by invisible Fate.</p>
-
-<p>"The only condition on which he can now accept your
-love, and recognize it, demands that you leave him free,
-that you give up all claim on him, that you renounce
-all, forever, and ask for nothing&mdash;the condition of being
-heroic. Do you understand?"</p>
-
-<p>"True, true!" she repeated aloud, raising her head.</p>
-
-<p>But the poison bit her. She remembered all the sweetness
-of caresses&mdash;the lips, the eyes, the strength and
-ardor of the lover had re-animated all her being.</p>
-
-<p>A far-away monotonous sound of song floated in the
-air&mdash;a song of women's voices, that seemed to rise from
-bosoms oppressed, from throats as slender as reeds, like
-the sound evoked from the broken wires of old spinets
-at a touch on the worn keys; a shrill, unequal tone, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-a lively and vulgar rhythm, which sounded sadder in
-that light and silence than the saddest things of life.</p>
-
-<p>"Who is singing?"</p>
-
-<p>With obscure emotion she arose, approached the shore,
-and listened.</p>
-
-<p>"The madwomen of San Clemente!"</p>
-
-<p>From the isle of La Follia, from the barred windows
-of the light, lonely hospital, came the lively yet melancholy
-chorus. It trembled, hesitated in the immensity
-of space, grew fainter and almost died away, then rose
-again and swelled to a piercing shriek, diminished once
-more, and finally sank to silence.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-ILLUSIONS</h2>
-
-
-<p>Yes, heart-rending was the sweetness of that November,
-smiling like a sick person who has become
-free from suffering, knowing it is the last,
-and tasting again the sweetness of life, which
-reveals to him new charms when just about to leave
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"Look at the Euganean hills below us, Foscarina; if
-the wind should come they will rise and float in the air
-like gauzy veils, and pass over our heads. I never have
-seen them so transparent. Some day I should like to
-go with you to Arquà; the villages there are as pink
-as the shells we find in myriads in the earth. When we
-arrive there, the first drops of a sudden shower will be
-robbing the peach-blossoms of their petals. We will
-wait under one of the arches of the Palladio to avoid
-getting wet. Then, without inquiring the way of anyone,
-we will look for the fountain of Petrarch. We will
-carry with us his poems in the small edition of Misserini's,
-that little book you keep beside your bed and cannot
-close any more because it is so full of pressed leaves
-and grasses. Would you like to go to Arquà some spring
-day?"</p>
-
-<p>She did not reply, but gazed silently at the lips that
-said these graceful things; and, without hope, she simply
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-took a fugitive pleasure in their movement and accent.
-For her there was in his image of the Spring the same
-enchantment as in a stanza of Petrarch's; but she could
-lay a bookmark in the one and find it again, while the
-poetic fancies must be lost with the passing hour.</p>
-
-<p>She wished to say: "I will not drink at that fountain,"
-but kept silence, that she might still enjoy the
-caress.&mdash;Oh, yes, intoxicate me with illusions! Play
-your own game; do with me as you will.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Here we are at San Giorgio in Alga. We shall reach
-Fusina in a few minutes."</p>
-
-<p>The little walled islet passed before them, with its
-marble Madonna, perpetually admiring her reflection in
-the water, like a nymph.</p>
-
-<p>"Why are you so sweet, my beloved? I never have
-seen you like this before. I know not where I am with
-you to-day. I cannot find words to tell you with what
-a sense of melody your presence inspires me. You are
-here beside me, I can hold your hand, yet you are diffused
-in the horizon, you yourself are the horizon, blended
-with the waters, with the islands, with the hills. When
-I was speaking just now, it seemed that each syllable
-created in you infinitely dilating circles, like those round
-that leaf just fallen from the gold-leaved tree. Is it true?
-Tell me that it is. Oh, look at me!"</p>
-
-<p>He felt himself enveloped in this woman's love as by
-the air and the light; he breathed in that soul as in a
-distinct element, receiving from it an ineffable fulness
-of life as if a stream of mysterious things were flowing
-from her and from the glory of the daylight at the same
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-time, and pouring itself into his heart. The desire to
-make some return for the happiness she gave him lifted
-him to an almost religious height of gratitude, and suggested
-to him words of thanks and of praise which he
-would have spoken had he been kneeling before her in
-the shadows. But the splendor of sky and sea around
-them was so great that he could only be as silent as
-she. And for both this was a moment of marvelous
-communion in the light; it was a journey brief yet immense,
-in which both traversed the dizzy distances they
-had within themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The boat reached the shore of Fusina. They roused
-themselves, and gazed at each other with dazzled eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;Does he love me, then?&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Hope and pain revived in the woman's heart. She
-did not doubt the sincerity of her beloved, nor that his
-words expressed the ardor of his heart. She knew how
-absolutely he abandoned himself to every wave of emotion,
-how incapable he was of deception or of falsehood.
-More than once she had heard him utter cruel truths
-with the same feline, flexible grace that some men adopt
-when they wish to appear charming. She knew well the
-direct, limpid gaze which sometimes became hard and icy,
-but which never was otherwise than straight; but she
-knew also the rapidity and marvelous diversity of emotion
-and thought that rendered his spirit unseizable.
-There was always in him something flexible and vigorous
-that suggested to the actress the double and diverse
-image of flame and of water. And it was this man she
-wished to fix, to captivate, to possess! There was always
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-in him an unlimited ardor of life, a sense of
-<em>euphoria</em>, or joy in existence, as if every second were the
-supreme instant, and he were about to tear himself from
-the pleasure and pain of living, as from the tears and
-embraces of a last farewell. And it was for this insatiable
-avidity that she wished to remain the only
-nourishment!</p>
-
-<p>What was she to him, if not an aspect of that "life of
-the thousand and thousand faces," toward which the
-poet's desire, according to one of his own images, continually
-shook all its thyrsi? For him she was a theme
-for visions and inventions, like the hills, the woods, the
-storms. He absorbed mystery and beauty from her as from
-all forms of the universe. Even now he had withdrawn
-his thoughts from her, and was occupied with a new
-quest; his changeful, ingenuous eyes sought for some
-miracle to marvel at and adore.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him, but he did not turn his face toward
-her; he was studying the damp, foggy region
-through which they were driving slowly. She sat beside
-him, feeling herself deprived of her strength, no
-longer capable of living in and for herself, of breathing
-with her own breath, of following a thought that was unknown
-to her beloved, hesitating even in her enjoyment
-of natural objects that he had not pointed out.</p>
-
-<p>Her life seemed to be alternately dissolving and condensing
-itself. An instant of intensity would pass, and
-then she waited for the next, and between them she
-was conscious of nothing save that time was flying, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-lamp was flickering, the body was fading, and that all
-things were perishing, dying.</p>
-
-<p>"My dear, my friend," said Stelio, suddenly turning
-and taking her hand, impelled by an emotion that had
-overcome him, "why did we come to these places? They
-seem very sweet, but they are full of terror."</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her keenly.</p>
-
-<p>"You suffer," he said, with a depth of pity in his tone
-that made the woman turn pale. "Do you too feel this
-terror?"</p>
-
-<p>She looked around with the anxiety of one pursued,
-and fancied she saw a thousand ominous phantoms rising
-from the earth.</p>
-
-<p>"Those statues!" said Stelio, in a tone that changed
-them in her eyes into witnesses of her own wasting
-life.</p>
-
-<p>The country around them was as deserted and silent
-as if its former inhabitants had been gone for centuries,
-or were sleeping in graves new-made the day before.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish to return? The boat is still there."</p>
-
-<p>She seemed not to hear.</p>
-
-<p>"Speak, Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>"Let us go&mdash;let us go on," she replied. "Wherever
-we may go our fate will not change."</p>
-
-<p>Her body swayed to the slow, lulling roll of the
-wheels, and she feared to interrupt it; she shrank from
-the least effort, the smallest fatigue, overcome by heavy
-inertia. Her face was like the delicate veil of ash that
-covers a live coal, hiding its consumption.</p>
-
-<p>"Dear, dear soul!" said Stelio, leaning toward her and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-lightly touching the pale cheek with his lips. "Lean on
-me; give yourself entirely to me; have confidence in
-me. Never will I fail you, never will you fail me. We
-shall find it&mdash;we shall find the true secret on which our
-love can rest forever, immovable. Do not be reserved
-with me. Do not suffer alone, nor hide your sorrows
-from me. When your heart swells with grief, speak to
-me. Let me believe that I can comfort you. Let us
-not hide anything from each other. I shall venture to
-recall to you a condition that you yourself made. Speak
-to me, and I will always answer you truthfully. Let
-me help you&mdash;me, who have received from you so much
-of good. Tell me that you do not fear to suffer. I believe
-your soul capable of supporting all the sadness of
-the world. Do not let me lose faith in that force of passion,
-whereby more than once you have seemed to me
-divine. Tell me you do not fear suffering.... I don't
-know.... I may be mistaken. But I have felt a
-shadow around you, like a desperate wish to withdraw
-yourself, to leave me, to find some end. Why? Why?
-And, just now, looking at all this terrible desolation that
-smiles at us, a great fear suddenly filled my heart&mdash;I
-thought that perhaps even your love might change like
-all things, and pass away into nothingness. 'You will
-lose me.' Ah, those words were yours, Foscarina! They
-fell from your own lips."</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer. For the first time since she had
-loved him, his words seemed vain, useless sounds, moving
-powerless through the air. For the first time, he
-seemed to her a weak and anxious creature, bound by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-inexorable laws. She pitied him as well as herself. He
-asked her to be heroic, a compact of grief and of violence.
-At the moment when he attempted to console and comfort
-her, he predicted a difficult test, prepared her for
-torture. But what was courage worth, of what use was
-any effort? What were all miserable human agitations
-worth, and why think of the future, even of the uncertain
-morrow?</p>
-
-<p>The Past reigned supreme around them, and they
-themselves were nothing, and everything was nothing.&mdash;We
-are dying; both of us are dying. We dream, and
-then we die.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Hush! Hush!" was all she said, softly, as if they
-were in a cemetery. A slight smile touched her lips,
-and rested there as fixedly as the smile on the lips of a
-portrait.</p>
-
-<p>The wheels rolled on over the white road, along the
-shores of the Brenta. The stream, sung and praised
-in the sonnets of the gallant abbés in the days when
-gondolas laden with music and pleasure had glided
-down its current, had now the humble aspect of a canal,
-where the iris-necked ducks splashed in flocks. On the
-damp, low plain the fields smoked, the bare trees showed
-plainly, their leaves rotting on the damp earth. A slow,
-golden mist floated above an immense vegetable decay
-that seemed to encroach even upon the walls, the
-stones, the houses, seeking to destroy them like the
-leaves. The patrician villas&mdash;where a pale life, delicately
-poisoned by cosmetics and perfumes, had burned itself
-out in languid pastimes&mdash;were now in ruins, silent and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-abandoned. Some had an aspect like a human ruin,
-with empty spaces that suggested hollow orbits and
-toothless mouths; others were crumbling, and looked
-as if ready to fall in powder, like a dead woman's hair
-when her tomb is opened; and here, there, everywhere,
-rose the still surviving statues. They seemed innumerable,
-like a scattered people. Some were still white,
-others were gray or yellow with lichens, or green and
-spotted with moss. They stood in all sorts of attitudes:
-goddesses, heroes, nymphs, seasons, hours, with their
-bows and arrows, their wreaths, cornucopias, and torches,
-with all the emblems of power, riches and pleasure,
-exiled now from fountains, grottoes, labyrinths, arbors,
-and porticoes: friends of the greenwood and the myrtle,
-protectors of fleeting loves, witnesses of eternal vows,
-figures of a dream far more ancient than the hands that
-had carved them, and the eyes that had contemplated
-them in the ruined gardens. And, in the sweet sunlight
-of the dying season, their shadows were like the shadows
-of the irrevocable Past&mdash;all, all that loves no
-longer, laughs and weeps no more, never will live, never
-will return. And the unspoken word on their marble
-lips was the same that was expressed in the fixed smile
-on the lips of the world-weary woman&mdash;NOTHING!</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX<br />
-THE LABYRINTH</h2>
-
-
-<p>But that day they were to pass through other
-shadows, to know other fears.</p>
-
-<p>Henceforth the tragic meaning of life filled
-both their minds, and they tried in vain to
-banish the physical sadness which from moment to moment
-made their spirits more clear yet more disturbed.
-They clasped each other's hand, as if they were groping
-in dark, dangerous places. They spoke little, but
-often they gazed into each other's eyes, and the look
-of the one poured into that of the other a wave of confused
-emotion, the mingling of their love and horror.
-But it did not calm their hearts.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall we go farther?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, let us go on."</p>
-
-<p>Still they clasped each other's hand closely, as if they
-were about to go through some strange test, and were
-resolved to experiment as to what depths could be
-reached by the combined force of their melancholy. At
-the Dolo, the wheels made the chestnut-leaves rustle
-and crackle beneath them, and the tall changing trees
-flamed over their heads like crimson draperies on fire.
-At a distance was the Villa Barbariga, silent, deserted,
-of a reddish hue in its denuded garden, showing vestiges
-of old paintings in the cracks of its façade, like
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-streaks of rouge on the wrinkled cheeks of an old woman.
-And, at every glance, the distances of the landscape
-seemed fainter and bluer, like things slowly submerged.</p>
-
-<p>"Here is Strà."</p>
-
-<p>They alighted before the Villa Pisani, and, accompanied
-by its guardian, they visited the deserted apartments.
-They heard the sound of their own footsteps on
-the marble that reflected them, the echoes in the historic
-arches, the creaking of the doors, the tiresome voice of
-the keeper awakening the memories of the place. The
-rooms were vast, hung with faded draperies and furnished
-in the style of the Empire, with Napoleonic emblems.
-The walls of one room were covered with portraits
-of the Pisani, procurators of San Marco; of another,
-with marble medallions of all the Doges; of a
-third, with a series of flowers painted in water-colors
-and mounted in delicate frames, pale as the dry flowers
-that are laid under glass, in memory of love or death.</p>
-
-<p>As La Foscarina entered one room, she said:</p>
-
-<p>"<em>In time!</em> Here, too!"</p>
-
-<p>There, on a bracket, stood a transformation into
-marble of <cite>La Vecchia</cite> by Francesco Torbido, made even
-more repulsive by the relief, by the subtle skill of the
-sculptor, to bring out with his chisel each tendon,
-wrinkle, and hollow place in the old woman's face. And
-at the doors of this room seemed to appear the ghosts
-of the crowned women that had hidden their unhappiness
-and their decay in that vast dwelling, at once like
-a palace and a monastery.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Maria Luisa di Parma, in eighteen hundred and seventeen,"
-continued the monotonous voice.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, the Queen of Spain, wife of Charles the Fourth,
-and mistress of Manuel Godoï," said Stelio. "She attracts
-me more than all the others. She came here when
-they were in exile. Do you know whether she stayed
-here with the King and the favorite!"</p>
-
-<p>But the guardian knew only that name and the date.</p>
-
-<p>"Why does she attract you?" La Foscarina asked. "I
-know nothing of her history."</p>
-
-<p>"Her end, the last years of her life of exile, after so
-much struggle and passion, are extraordinarily full of
-poetry."</p>
-
-<p>And he described that violent and tenacious character,
-the weak, credulous King, the handsome adventurer who
-had enjoyed the smiles of the Queen, and had been
-dragged through the streets by the infuriated mob; the
-agitations of the three lives bound together by Fate,
-and swept before Napoleon's will like leaves in a whirlwind;
-the tumult at Aranjuez, the abdication, the exile.</p>
-
-<p>"And Godoï&mdash;the Prince of Peace, as the King called
-him&mdash;faithfully followed the sovereigns into exile; he
-remained faithful to his royal mistress, and she to him.
-They all lived together under the same roof thenceforth,
-and Charles never doubted the virtue of Maria Luisa.
-Even to the day of his death, he lavished all manner of
-kindness on the two lovers. Imagine their life in this
-place; imagine here such a love coming safely through
-a storm so terrible. All was broken down, overthrown,
-reduced to powder by the destroyer. Bonaparte had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-passed that way, but had not smothered that love, already
-old, beneath the ruins. The faithfulness of those
-two violent natures moves my heart not less than the
-credulity of the kindly King. Thus they grew old.
-Imagine it! The Queen died first, then the King; and
-the favorite, who was younger than they, lived a wandering
-life a few years more."</p>
-
-<p>"This is the Emperor's room," said the guardian solemnly,
-flinging open a door.</p>
-
-<p>The great shade seemed omnipresent in the villa of
-the Doge Alvise. The imperial eagle, symbol of his
-power, dominated all the faded relics. But in the yellow
-room, the shade seemed to occupy the vast bed, to rest
-under the canopy, surrounded by the four bedposts ornamented
-at the top with golden flames. The formidable
-sigla inscribed within the laurel crown shone upon the
-polished side of the bed. And this species of funereal
-couch seemed to be prolonged in the dim mirror hanging
-between the two figures of Victory that supported the
-candelabra.</p>
-
-<p>"Did the Emperor sleep in this bed?" inquired the
-young man of the custodian, who pointed out to him on
-the wall the portrait of the great <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">condottiere</i> mantled in
-ermine, wearing a crown of laurel and holding a scepter,
-as he appeared at the coronation blessed by Pius VII.
-"Is it certain?"</p>
-
-<p>He was surprised at himself at not feeling the emotion
-experienced by ambitious spirits at the sight of the
-traces of heroes&mdash;that strong throb he knew so well.</p>
-
-<p>He lifted the edge of the yellow counterpane, and let
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-it fall as suddenly as if the pillow under it had been full
-of vermin.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us go away from this place; let us go!" said La
-Foscarina, who had been looking through the windows
-at the park, where the golden bars of the setting sun
-alternated with bluish-green zones of shade. "We cannot
-breathe here," she added.</p>
-
-<p>The air, in truth, was like that of a vault.</p>
-
-<p>"Now we pass into the room of Maximilian of Austria,"
-said the droning voice, "he took the dressing-room
-of Amélie de Beauharnais for his bedroom."</p>
-
-<p>They crossed this apartment in a flood of crimson
-light. The sunlight struck on a crimson couch, flashed
-rainbows from a frail chandelier with crystal drops that
-hung from the ceiling and kindled perpendicular red lines
-on the wall. Stelio stopped on the threshold, evoking in
-his fancy as he did so, the pensive figure of the young
-Archduke, with blue eyes, that fair flower of Hapsburg
-fallen in a barbaric land one summer morning!</p>
-
-<p>"Let us go!" begged La Foscarina again, seeing him
-still delay.</p>
-
-<p>She hastened through the immense salon, painted in
-fresco by Tiepolo; the Corinthian bronze gate closing behind
-her gave forth a clang as resonant as the stroke
-of a bell, sending prolonged vibrations through space.
-She flew along, terrified, as if the whole palace were
-about to crumble and fall, and the light to fail, and she
-dreaded lest she should find herself alone among the
-shadows with these phantoms of unhappiness and death.
-As Stelio followed, through the space wherein the air
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-was moved by her flight, between those walls enclosing
-relics, behind the famous actress who had simulated the
-fury of deadly passions, the desperate efforts of will and
-of desire, and the violent conflict of splendid destines on
-the stage of all lands, the warm blood in his veins grew
-chill, as if he were passing through a freezing atmosphere;
-he felt his heart grow cold, his courage flag; his
-reason for being lost its hold on his mind, and the magnificent
-illusions with which he had fed his soul, that it
-might surpass itself and his destiny, wavered and were
-dispersed.</p>
-
-<p>"Are we still living?" he asked, when they found themselves
-in the air without, in the park, far from the unwholesome
-odor.</p>
-
-<p>He took La Foscarina's hand, shook her gently, gazed
-into her eyes and tried to smile; then he drew her into
-the sunlight in the middle of the green meadow.</p>
-
-<p>"What heat! Do you feel it? How sweet the grass
-is!"</p>
-
-<p>He half-closed his eyes, that he might feel the sun's
-rays on his eyelids, and was once more filled with the
-joy of living. The woman imitated him, calmed by the
-pleasure her beloved showed; and she looked from under
-her half-closed eyelids at his fresh, sensuous mouth.
-They sat thus for some time, hand-in-hand, their feet
-resting on the warm grass. Her thoughts turned back
-to the Eugenean hills, which he had described, to the
-villages pink as the buried shells, to the first drops of
-rain on the tender leaves, Petrarch's fountain, to all
-things fair and pleasant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Life might still be sweet!" she sighed, in a voice
-wherein was the miracle of hope born anew.</p>
-
-<p>The heart of her beloved became like a fruit suddenly
-ripened by a miraculous ray. Joy, delight, and tenderness
-spread through his whole being. Once more he reveled
-in the joy of the moment, as if it were the last of life.
-Love was exalted above Destiny.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you love me? Tell me?"</p>
-
-<p>She made no answer, but she opened wide her eyes,
-and the vastness of the universe was within the circle
-of those pupils. Never was boundless love more powerfully
-signified by mortal woman.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, life with thee is sweet, sweet&mdash;yesterday as well
-as to-morrow!"</p>
-
-<p>He seemed intoxicated with her, with the sunlight,
-the grass, the divine sky, as with something never before
-seen or possessed. The prisoner leaving his stifling
-cell, the convalescent who beholds the sea after looking
-death in the face, are not more intoxicated.</p>
-
-<p>"Would you like to go now? Shall we leave our melancholy
-behind us? Would you like to go to a country
-where there is no autumn?"</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;The autumn is in myself, and I carry it everywhere&mdash;she
-thought; but she smiled the slight smile with which
-she veiled her sadness.&mdash;It is I&mdash;it is I that must go
-away alone; I will disappear; I will go far-away and
-die, my love, O my love!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>During this moment of respite, she had not succeeded
-either in conquering her sadness or reviving her hope;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-but her anguish was softened, and she had lost all bitterness
-and rancor.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish to go away?"</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;To go away, always to be going away, to wander
-throughout the world, to go long distances!&mdash;thought
-the nomad woman.&mdash;Never to stop, never to rest! The
-anxiety of the journey is not over yet, but already the
-truce has expired. You wish to comfort me, my friend,
-and, to console me, you propose that I should go far-away
-once more, although I returned to my home, as it
-were, but yesterday.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly her eyes looked like two sparkling springs.</p>
-
-<p>"Leave me in my home a little while longer. And
-remain here, too, if that is possible. Later, you will be
-free, you will be happy. You have so long a time before
-you! You are young. You will win what you deserve.
-They will not lose you, even if they must wait for you."</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes had two crystal masks before them; they
-glittered in the sunshine, and seemed almost fixed in
-her fevered face.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, always the same shadow!" Stelio exclaimed, with
-an impatience he could not conceal. "But what are you
-thinking of? What do you fear? Why not tell me what
-it is that troubles you? Explain yourself. Who is it
-that must wait for me?"</p>
-
-<p>She trembled with terror at that question, which
-seemed new and unexpected, although he only repeated
-her own last words. She trembled to find herself so
-near danger, as if, in walking across this fair meadow,
-a precipice had suddenly opened under her feet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And suddenly, in that unfamiliar place, on that beautiful
-grass, at the end of the day, after all those specters,
-sanguinary or bloodless, rose a living image of will and
-desire, which filled her with far greater terror. Suddenly,
-above all the figures of the Past, arose the figure
-of the Future, and again the aspect of her life was
-changed; and the sweetness of the respite was already
-lost, and the fair meadow with its sweet grass was
-worth nothing.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, let us talk, if you wish."</p>
-
-<p>But she was obliged to lift her face a little to keep
-her tears from falling.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not be sad!" pleaded the young man, whose soul
-was suspended on those eyelids, whence the tears would
-not fall. "You hold my heart in your hand. I never
-will fail you. Then why torment yourself? I am wholly
-yours."</p>
-
-<p>For him, too, the image of Donatella was there, with
-her rounded figure, her body as robust and agile as a
-wingless Victory, armed with the glory of maidenhood,
-attractive yet hostile, ready to struggle, and then to
-yield. But his soul was suspended from the eyelids of
-the other woman, like the tears that veiled the eyes
-in which he had seen the vastness of the universe, the
-infinity of love.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>At last the warm tears fell, but she did not let them
-course down her cheeks. With one of those movements
-that sometimes sprang from her sadness with the swift
-grace of a freed wing, she checked them, moistened her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-finger-tips with them, and touched her temples without
-drying them. And, while she still kept her tears upon
-herself, she tried to smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Forgive me, Stelio. I am so weak!"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, dear fingers&mdash;beautiful as Sofia's! Let me kiss
-them as they are, still wet."</p>
-
-<p>Within his caressing arm, he drew her across the
-field to a zone of golden green. Lightly, with his arm
-supporting hers, he kissed her finger-tips, one after another,
-more delicate than the buds of the tuberose. She
-startled, and he felt her tremble at each touch of his lips.</p>
-
-<p>"They are salt!"</p>
-
-<p>"Take care, Stelio! Some one may see us."</p>
-
-<p>"No one is here."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps down there, in the hothouses."</p>
-
-<p>"There is not a sound. Hark!"</p>
-
-<p>"What a strange silence! It is ecstasy."</p>
-
-<p>"We might hear the falling of a leaf."</p>
-
-<p>"And the keeper?"</p>
-
-<p>"He has gone to meet some other visitor."</p>
-
-<p>"Does anyone ever come here?"</p>
-
-<p>"The other day Richard Wagner came here with
-Daniela von Bülow."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, yes, the niece of the Countess Agoult, of 'Daniel
-Stern.'"</p>
-
-<p>"And, among all those phantoms, with which did that
-great stricken heart converse?"</p>
-
-<p>"Who can tell?"</p>
-
-<p>"Only with himself, perhaps."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Look at the glass windows and walls of the conservatories&mdash;how
-they sparkle! They appear iridescent.
-Rain, sunshine and time have painted it in that way.
-Does it not seem to reflect a distant twilight? Perhaps
-you have sometimes stopped on the Pesaro quay, to look
-at the beautiful pentafore window of the Evangelists. If
-you raised your eyes, you could see the windows of the
-palace marvelously painted by the changes of weather."</p>
-
-<p>"You know all the secrets of Venice!"</p>
-
-<p>"Not all yet."</p>
-
-<p>"How warm it is here! See how tall those cedars are.
-There is a swallow's nest hanging on that limb."</p>
-
-<p>"The swallows went away very late this year."</p>
-
-<p>"Will you really take me to the Euganean hills in the
-spring?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, Foscarina, I should like to do so."</p>
-
-<p>"Spring is so far-away!"</p>
-
-<p>"Life can still be sweet."</p>
-
-<p>"We are living in a dream."</p>
-
-<p>"Look at Orpheus with his lyre, all dressed in lichens."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, what a land of dreams! No one comes here any
-more. Grass, grass everywhere! There is not a single
-human footstep."</p>
-
-<p>"Deucalion with his stones, Ganymede with his eagle,
-Diana with her stag&mdash;all the gods of mythology."</p>
-
-<p>"How many statues! But these, at least, are not in
-exile. The ancient hornbeams still protect them."</p>
-
-<p>"Here strolled Maria Luisa di Parma, between the
-King and the favorite. From time to time she would
-pause to listen to the click of the blades that cut the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-hornbeams to form arches. She would let fall her handkerchief,
-perfumed with jessamine, and Don Manuel
-Godoï would pick it up with a graceful gesture, hiding
-the pain he suffered when he stooped&mdash;a souvenir of
-the outrages he had endured at the hands of the mob
-in the streets of Aranjuez. How warm the sun was,
-and how excellent the snuff in its enameled box, when
-the King said with a smile: 'Certainly, our dear Bonaparte
-is not so well off at Saint Helena as we are here.'
-But the demon of power, of struggle, and of passion was
-still alive in the Queen's heart. Look at those red
-roses!"</p>
-
-<p>"They fairly burn. One would think each had a live
-coal at its heart. Yes, they seem actually to burn."</p>
-
-<p>"The sun is growing red. This is the hour for the
-Chioggia sails on the lagoon."</p>
-
-<p>"Gather a rose for me."</p>
-
-<p>"Here is one."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, but its leaves are falling."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, here is another."</p>
-
-<p>"These leaves are falling too."</p>
-
-<p>"They are all at the point of death. Perhaps this one
-is not."</p>
-
-<p>"Do not break it off."</p>
-
-<p>"Look! These seem to be redder still. Bonifazio's
-velvet&mdash;do you remember it? It has the same strength."</p>
-
-<p>"'The inmost flower of the flame.'"</p>
-
-<p>"What a memory!"</p>
-
-<p>"Listen! They are closing the doors of the conservatories."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"It is time to go," said Stelio, abruptly yet gently.</p>
-
-<p>"The air is beginning to be cooler."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you feel cold?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, not yet."</p>
-
-<p>"Did you leave your cloak in the carriage?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"We will wait at Dolo for the train, and return to
-Venice by the railway."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"We still have time to spare."</p>
-
-<p>"What is this? Look!"</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know."</p>
-
-<p>"What a bitter odor! It is a sort of shrubbery of
-box and hornbeams."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, it is the labyrinth!"</p>
-
-<p>A rusty iron gate barred the entrance to the labyrinth
-between two columns that bore two Cupids riding
-on stone dolphins. Nothing was to be seen on the other
-side of the gate, except the beginning of the path, and
-a kind of solidly built and intricate thicket, dark and
-mysterious. In the center of the maze rose a tower, at
-the summit of which stood the statue of a warrior, as
-if reconnoitering from that point.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you ever been in a labyrinth?" Stelio inquired.</p>
-
-<p>"No, never," she replied.</p>
-
-<p>They lingered to examine the entrance to the deceptive
-playground, composed by an ingenious gardener for
-the amusement of ladies and their cavaliers in the days
-of hoops and flowered waistcoats. But age and neglect
-had rendered it mournful and wild, had deprived it of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-all appearance of grace and regularity, and had changed
-it into thick yellowish-brown woodland, full of inextricable
-turns through which the slanting rays of the setting
-sun shone so red that some of the shrubs looked like
-smokeless fire.</p>
-
-<p>"It is open," said Stelio, feeling the gate yield as he
-leaned on it. "Do you see?"</p>
-
-<p>He pushed back the rusty iron gate, took a step forward,
-and crossed the threshold.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you going?" asked his companion, with
-instinctive fear, putting out a hand to detain him.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not wish to go in?"</p>
-
-<p>She was perplexed. But the labyrinth attracted them
-with its mystery, illumined by deep flames.</p>
-
-<p>"Suppose we should lose ourselves?"</p>
-
-<p>"You can see for yourself that it is very small. We
-can easily find the gate again."</p>
-
-<p>"And suppose we don't find it?"</p>
-
-<p>He laughed at this childish fear.</p>
-
-<p>"We might remain in there through all eternity!" he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>"No, no! No one is anywhere near. Let us go away."</p>
-
-<p>She tried to draw him back, but he defended himself,
-stepping backward toward the path. Suddenly he disappeared,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio! Stelio!"</p>
-
-<p>She could see him no longer, but she heard his ringing
-laughter in the midst of the wild thicket.</p>
-
-<p>"Come back! come back!"</p>
-
-<p>"No, no! Come in and find me."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Stelio, come back! You will be lost," she called.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall find Ariadne."</p>
-
-<p>At that name, she felt her heart throb suddenly, then
-contract, then palpitate confusedly. Was not that the
-name he had called Donatella, that first night? Had he
-not called her Ariadne down there, in the gondola, while
-seated at the young girl's feet? She even remembered
-his words: "Ariadne possesses a divine gift, whereby
-her power transcends all limits." She recalled his accent,
-his attitude, his look.</p>
-
-<p>Tumultuous anguish seized upon her, obscured her
-reason, prevented her from realizing the spontaneity of
-the happening, and the simple careless jest in her friend's
-speech. The terror that lay hidden in the depths of her
-love rose in rebellion, mastered her, blinded her with
-misery. The trifling little accident assumed an appearance
-of cruelty and derision. She could still hear that
-laugh ringing from the melancholy maze.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio!"</p>
-
-<p>In her frantic hallucination, she cried out as if she had
-seen him embraced by the other woman, torn from her
-arms forever.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio!"</p>
-
-<p>"Come and find me!" he answered laughing, still invisible.</p>
-
-<p>She rushed into the labyrinth to find him, and advanced
-straight toward the voice and the laugh, guided
-by her impulse. But the path turned; a wall of bushes
-rose before her, impenetrable, and stopped her. She followed
-the winding, deceiving path; but one turning
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-followed another, and all looked alike, and the circle
-seemed to have no end.</p>
-
-<p>"Look for me!" cried the voice from a distance,
-through the living hedges.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you? Where are you? Can you see me?"</p>
-
-<p>She looked about for some opening in the hedge
-through which she might see. But all she saw was
-thick, interlacing branches, and the redness of the setting
-sun which lighted them on one side, while shadows
-darkened them on the other. The box-bushes and the
-hornbeams were so closely mingled that they increased
-momentarily the bewilderment of the breathless woman.</p>
-
-<p>"I am losing myself! Come and meet me!"</p>
-
-<p>Again that boyish laugh came from the maze.</p>
-
-<p>"Ariadne, Ariadne! the thread!"</p>
-
-<p>Now the words came from the opposite side, striking
-her heart as if with a blow.</p>
-
-<p>"Ariadne!"</p>
-
-<p>She turned back, ran, turned again, tried to break
-through the hedge, to see through the undergrowth, to
-break the branches. She saw nothing but the maze,
-always the same in every direction. At last she heard
-a step, so close that she thought it must be just behind
-her, and she started. But she was deceived. Again
-she explored her green prison; she listened, waited; she
-could hear no sound but her own breathing and the
-beating of her heart. The silence had become absolute.
-She gazed at the clear sky, curving in its immensity
-over the two green walls that held her prisoner. She
-felt that that immensity and narrowness were the only
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-things in the world. And she could not succeed in
-separating in her thoughts the reality of that place from
-the image of her mental torture, the natural aspect of
-things from that kind of living allegory created by her
-own anguish.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio, where are you?"</p>
-
-<p>No reply. She listened and waited in vain. The seconds
-seemed like hours.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you? I am afraid!"</p>
-
-<p>No reply. But where was he, then? Had he found
-the way out? Had he left her there all alone? Would
-he continue to play this cruel game?</p>
-
-<p>A mad desire to scream, to sob, to throw herself on
-the ground, to hurt herself, to make herself ill, to die,
-assailed the distracted woman. Again she raised her
-eyes to the silent sky. The tops of the tall hornbeams
-were reddened, like logs when they have ceased to blaze
-and are about to fall in ashes.</p>
-
-<p>"I can see you!" suddenly said a laughing voice, in
-the deep shadows, very near her.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you?"</p>
-
-<p>He laughed among the leaves, but without revealing
-himself, like a faun in hiding. This game excited him;
-his body grew warm and supple by this exercise of his
-agility; and the wild mystery, the contact with the earth,
-the odor of autumn, the strangeness of this unexpected
-adventure, the woman's bewilderment, even the presence
-of the marble deities mingled with his physical pleasure
-an illusion of antique poetry and grace.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Where are you? Oh, do not play any more! Do not
-laugh in that way! Enough!"</p>
-
-<p>He had crept, bareheaded, into the bushes on his hands
-and knees. He felt the dead leaves, the soft moss. And
-as he breathed among the branches, and felt his heart
-throb with the strange delight of the situation, with the
-communion between his own life and the vegetable life
-around him, the spell of his fancy renewed among
-those winding ways the industry of the first maker of
-wings, the myth of the monster that was born of Pasiphaë
-and the Bull, the Attic legend of Theseus in Crete.
-All that ancient world became real to him. In that
-glowing autumn evening, he was transfigured, according
-to the instincts of his blood and the recollections of his
-mind, into one of those ambiguous forms, half animal
-and half divine, one of those glittering genii whose
-throats were swollen with the same gland that hangs
-from the neck of the goat. A joyous voluptuousness suggested
-strange surprises to him, suggested the swiftness
-of pursuit, of flight, capture, and a fleeting embrace in
-the shadows of the wood. Then he desired some one
-like himself, fresh youthfulness that could share his
-laughter, two light feet to fly before him, two arms to
-resist him, a prize to capture at last. Donatella with her
-curved figure recurred to his mental vision.</p>
-
-<p>"Enough, Stelio! I cannot run any more. I shall
-fall."</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina uttered a scream on feeling her skirt
-pulled by a hand that had reached through the shrubbery.
-She bent down, and saw in the shadows the face
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-of a laughing faun. The laughter struck her ear without
-calming her distress, without breaking the sense of suffering
-that overpowered her. As she looked at his boyish
-face, she saw at the same instant the face of the
-singer, who seemed to be stooping with her, imitating
-her movement as if she were a shadow. Her mind became
-more confused, and she could not distinguish between
-illusion and reality. The other woman seemed
-to overthrow her, oppress her, suffocate her.</p>
-
-<p>"Leave me! Leave me! It is not I whom you seek!"</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was so changed that Stelio broke off his
-laughter and his sport, withdrew his arm, and rose to
-his feet. She could not see him; the leafy, impenetrable
-wall was between them again.</p>
-
-<p>"Take me away from this place. I cannot bear any
-more. My strength is gone. I suffer."</p>
-
-<p>He could find no words to comfort her. The simultaneous
-coincidence of his recent thought of Donatella,
-and her sudden divination of it, impressed him deeply.</p>
-
-<p>"Wait a little! I will try to find the way out. I will
-call some one."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you going away?"</p>
-
-<p>"Don't be afraid! There is no danger."</p>
-
-<p>But while he spoke thus to reassure her, he felt the
-inaneness of his words&mdash;the incongruity between that
-laughable adventure and the obscure emotion born of
-a far different cause. And now he too felt the strange
-ambiguity whereby the trifling event appeared in two
-confusing aspects: a suppressed desire to laugh persisted
-under his concern for her, so that his perturbation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-was new to him, like wild agitations born of extravagant
-dreams.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not go away!" she implored, a prey to her hallucinations.
-"Perhaps we can meet there at the next turning.
-Let us try. Take my hands."</p>
-
-<p>Through an opening, he took her hands; he started
-on touching them; they were icy cold.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina, what is the matter? Are you really ill?
-Wait! I will try to break through."</p>
-
-<p>He attempted to break down the hedge, and snapped
-off a few twigs, but its thickness resisted him, and he
-scratched his hands uselessly.</p>
-
-<p>"No, it is impossible."</p>
-
-<p>"Cry out! Call some one."</p>
-
-<p>He cried aloud in the silence.</p>
-
-<p>The top of the hedge had lost its deep color, but a
-red light now spread over the sky above them. A triangle
-of wild ducks passed in sweeping flight.</p>
-
-<p>"Let me go, Foscarina. I shall find the tower easily,
-and will call from there. Some one will be sure to hear
-me."</p>
-
-<p>"No! No!"</p>
-
-<p>But she heard him move away, followed the sound of
-his steps, and was once more bewildered by the maze,
-once more alone and lost. She stopped, waited, listened,
-and looked at the sky. She lost all sense of time; the
-seconds seemed hours.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio! Stelio!"</p>
-
-<p>She was no longer capable of an effort to control her
-disordered and exasperated mind. She felt the approach
-of a crisis of mad fear, as one feels the approach of a
-whirlwind.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 414px;" id="ilop259">
-<img src="images/ilo4.jpg" width="414" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="center caption"><em><small>HE WATCHED THE WOMAN TURNING AND RUNNING LIKE
-A MAD CREATURE ALONG THE DARK, DELUSIVE PATHS</small></em></p>
-
-<p class="center caption"><em>From an Original Drawing by Arthur H. Ewer</em></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>"Stelio!"</p>
-<p>He heard that cry full of anguish, and hastened his
-search along the winding paths that first seemed to lead
-him toward the tower and then away from it. The
-laughter had frozen in his heart. His whole soul shook
-to its foundation every time his name reached him, uttered
-by that invisible agony. And the gradual lessening
-of the light brought up an image of blood that is flowing
-away, of slowly fading life.</p>
-
-<p>"I am here! I am here!"</p>
-
-<p>One of the paths brought him at last to the open
-space where the tower stood. He ran furiously up the
-winding stairs, felt dizzy when he reached the top, closed
-his eyes while grasping the railing, opened them again,
-and saw a long zone of fire on the horizon, the disk
-of the rayless moon, the gray plain, and the labyrinth
-below him, black and spotted with box-bush and horn-beam,
-narrow in its endless convolutions, looking like a
-dismantled edifice covered with wild vines.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop! Stop! Do not run like that! Some one has
-heard me. A man is coming. I can see him coming.
-Wait! Stop!"</p>
-
-<p>He watched the woman turning and running like a
-mad creature along the dark, delusive paths, like something
-condemned to vain torture, to some useless but
-eternal fatigue, like a sister of the fabulous martyrs.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop!"</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that she did not hear him, or that she could
-not control her fatal agitation, and that he could not
-rescue her, but must always remain there, a witness of
-that terrible chastisement.</p>
-
-<p>"Here he is!"</p>
-
-<p>One of the keepers had heard their cries, had approached
-them, and now entered by the gateway. Stelio
-met him at the foot of the tower, and together they
-hastened to find the lost woman. The man knew the
-secret of the labyrinth, and Stelio prevented any chatter
-and jests by surprising him with his generosity.</p>
-
-<p>"Has she lost consciousness&mdash;has she fallen?" The
-darkness and the silence were sinister, and he felt
-alarmed. She did not answer when he called her, and
-he could not hear her footsteps. Night had already fallen
-on the place, and a damp veil was descending from the
-purple sky.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I find her in a swoon upon the ground," he
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>He started at seeing a mysterious figure appear at a
-turning, with a pale face that attracted all the last rays
-of daylight, white as a pearl, with large, fixed eyes, and
-lips closely compressed.</p>
-
-<p>They turned back toward the Dolo, taking the same
-route beside the Brenta. She never spoke, never opened
-her lips, never answered, as if she could not unclose her
-teeth. She lay in the bottom of the carriage, wrapped
-in her cloak, and now and then she shook with a deep
-shudder, as one attacked by malarial fever. Her friend
-tried to take her hands in his to warm them, but in vain&mdash;they
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-were inert and lifeless. And as they drove along,
-the statues passed and passed beside them.</p>
-
-<p>The river flowed black between its banks, under the
-purple and silver sky; the moon was rising. A black
-boat came down the stream, towed by two gray horses
-with heavy hoofs, led by a man who whistled cheerfully,
-and the funnel smoked on the deck like a chimney on a
-hut. The yellow light of a lantern flashed, and the odor
-of supper floated on the air; and here and there, as they
-drove along, the statues passed and passed beside them.</p>
-
-<p>It was like a Stygian landscape, like a vision of Hades,
-a region of shadows, mist, and water. Everything grew
-misty and vanished like spirits. The moon enchanted
-and attracted the plain, as it enchants and attracts the
-water, absorbing the vapors of earth with insatiable,
-silent thirst. Solitary pools shone everywhere; small,
-silvery canals were visible, glittering at uncertain distances.
-Earth seemed to be gradually losing its solidity,
-and the sky seemed to regard its own melancholy reflected
-in innumerable placid mirrors.</p>
-
-<p>And here and there, along the banks of the stream,
-like the ghosts of a people disappeared, the statues
-passed and passed!</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X<br />
-THE POWER OF THE FLAME</h2>
-
-
-<p>"Do you think often of Donatella, Stelio?" La
-Foscarina inquired suddenly, after a long
-silence, during which neither had heard anything
-but the sound of their own footsteps
-along the canal path of the Vetrai, illumined by the
-multi-colored lights from the fragile objects that filled
-the windows of the neighboring shops.</p>
-
-<p>Her voice sounded harsh and strained. Stelio stopped
-suddenly, as one who finds himself confronted by an
-unexpected difficulty. His spirit had been roaming over
-the red and green isle of Murano, begemmed with flowers
-in her present desolate poverty, which seemed to blot
-out the memory of the joyous time when poets had sung
-her praises as "a sojourn for nymphs and demigods." He
-had been thinking of the famous gardens where Andrea
-Navagero, Cardinal Bembo, Aretino, Aldo, and their
-learned followers, rivaled one another in the elegance of
-their Platonic dialogues, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">lauri sub umbra</i>. He had been
-thinking of convents, luxurious as boudoirs, inhabited by
-little nuns dressed in white camelot and laces, with curls
-on their temples, and necks uncovered, after the fashion
-of the ancient honored courtesans, given to secret loves,
-much sought after by wealthy patricians, with such euphonious
-names as Ancilla Soranzo, Cipriana Morosini,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-Zanetta Balbi, Beatrice Falier, Eugenia Muschiera, pious
-instructors in the ways of love. His changeful dreams
-were accompanied by a plaintive little air, a forgotten
-dance measure, in which the faint soul of Murano tinkled
-and whispered.</p>
-
-<p>At this abrupt question, the air fled from his memory,
-all imaginings were dispersed, the enchantment of the
-old life vanished. His wandering mind was called back,
-and came with reluctance. He felt beside him the throbbing
-of a living heart, which he must inevitably wound.
-He looked at his friend.</p>
-
-<p>She was walking beside the canal, calm, with no sign
-of agitation, between the green water and the iridescence
-of the rows of delicate vases. Only her slender
-chin trembled slightly, between her short veil and fur
-collar.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sometimes," he replied, after an instant of hesitation,
-recoiling from falsehood, and feeling the necessity
-to elevate their love above ordinary deceptions and
-pretensions, so that it should remain for him a cause
-of strength, not of weakness, a free agreement, not a
-heavy chain.</p>
-
-<p>She pursued her way without wavering, but she had
-lost all consciousness of movement in the terrible throbbing
-of her heart, which shook her from head to foot. She
-saw nothing more: all she was aware of was the nearness
-of the fascinating water.</p>
-
-<p>"Her voice is unforgettable," Stelio went on, after a
-pause, having found his courage. "Its power is amazing.
-From that first evening, I have thought that that singer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-might be the marvelous instrument for my great work.
-I wish she would consent to sing the lyric parts of my
-tragedy, the odes that arise from the symphonies and
-resolve themselves into figures of the dance at the end,
-between episodes. La Tanagra has consented to dance.
-I have confidence in your good offices, dear friend, to
-obtain also the consent of Donatella Arvale. Thus the
-Dionysiac trinity would be reëstablished in a perfect
-manner on the new stage, for the joy of mankind."</p>
-
-<p>Even while he spoke he realized that his words had a
-false ring, that his unconscious air contrasted too crudely
-with the dark shadow on the woman's face. In spite of
-himself, he had exaggerated his frank tone in speaking
-of Donatella merely as an instrument of art, a purely
-ideal force to be drawn into the circle of his magnificent
-enterprise. In spite of himself, disturbed by the anxiety
-in that soul so near his own, he had leaned slightly
-toward deception. Certainly what he had said was the
-exact truth, but his friend had demanded from him another
-truth. He broke off suddenly, unable to endure
-the sound of his own words. He felt that at that hour,
-between the actress and himself, art had no meaning,
-no vital value. Another force dominated them, more
-imperious, more disquieting. The world created by intellect
-seemed inert as the ancient stones on which they
-trod. The only real and formidable power was the poison
-running in their human blood. The will of the one said:
-"It is my will that you shall love and serve me, wholly,
-mine alone, body and soul." The will of the other said:
-"It is my will that you shall love and serve me, but while
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-I live I shall renounce nothing that may appeal to my
-wish and fancy." The struggle was bitter and unequal.</p>
-
-<p>As she remained silent, unconsciously hastening her
-steps, he prepared himself to face the other truth.</p>
-
-<p>"I understand, of course, that that was not what you
-wished to know."</p>
-
-<p>"You are right: it was not that. Well?"</p>
-
-<p>She turned to him with a sort of convulsive violence
-that reminded him of her fury one far-off evening, when
-she had cried madly: "Go! Run! She awaits you!"</p>
-
-<p>At this moment a workman met them, and offered to
-show them over the neighboring glass factory.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, let us go in there," said La Foscarina, hurriedly
-following the workman. Presently they reached the furnace room,
-and were enveloped in its fiery breath, as they
-gazed at an incandescent altar, the glow from which
-dazzled their eyes with a painful glare.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;To disappear, to be swallowed up, to leave no sign!&mdash;cried
-the woman's heart, intoxicated with the thought
-of destruction.&mdash;In one second that fire could devour me
-like a dry stick, a bundle of straw.&mdash;And she went nearer
-to the open mouths in which she could see the molten
-flame, more resplendent than a midsummer sun, rolling
-around the earthen pots in which the shapeless mass
-was melting; the workmen, standing around, awaited the
-right moment to approach with iron tubes to shape that
-mass with the breath from their lips and the instruments
-of their art.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;O virtue of Fire!&mdash;thought the Inspirer, turned from
-his anxiety by the miraculous beauty of the element that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-had become to him as familiar as a brother, since the
-day he had found the revealing melody.&mdash;Ah, that I
-might give to the life of the creatures that love me the
-perfection of the forms to which I aspire! That I might
-fuse all their weaknesses in some white heat, and make
-of the product obedient matter in which to impress the
-commandments of my heroic will and the images of my
-pure poetry! Why, my friend, why will you not be
-the divine living statue molded by my spirit, the work
-of faith and sorrow whereby our lives might surpass even
-our art? Why are we so near resembling ordinary lovers,
-who lament and curse? When I heard from your lips
-those admirable words: 'I can do one thing that love
-alone cannot do,' I believed indeed that you could give
-me more than love. You must be able always to do
-those things that love can do, besides those it cannot
-do, in order to meet my insatiable nature.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, work was going on about the furnace.
-At the end of the blow pipes the molten glass swelled,
-twisted, became silvery as a little cloud, shone like the
-moon, cracked, divided into a thousand infinitesimal
-fragments, glittering and thin as the threads we see at
-daybreak stretching from tree to tree. The glass-blowers
-were making harmonious vases. The apprentices placed
-a small, pear-shaped mass of burning paste on the spot
-chosen by the master-workmen; and the pear lengthened,
-twisted, transformed itself into a handle, a rim, a spout,
-a foot, or a stem. The glowing heat slowly died out
-under the instruments, and the half-formed cup was
-again exposed to the heat, then drawn from it docile,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-ductile, sensitive to the lightest touches that ornamented
-and refined it, conforming it to the model handed down
-by their ancestors, or to the free invention of a new
-creator.</p>
-
-<p>Extraordinarily light and agile were the human gestures
-that produced these elegant creatures of the fire,
-of breath and iron; they were like the movements of a
-silent dance. The figure of La Tanagra appeared to
-the Inspirer among the perpetual undulations of the
-flame, like a salamander. Donatella's voice seemed to
-sing to him the powerful melody.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;To-day, again, I myself have given you the thought
-of her for a companion&mdash;thought La Foscarina&mdash;I myself
-have called her up between us, and evoked her shadow
-when perhaps your thoughts were elsewhere; I have
-suddenly led her to you, as on that night of delirium.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>It was true, it was true! From the instant when the
-singer's name had been spoken on the water by Foscarina,
-she herself had unconsciously exalted the new
-image in the poet's mind, had nourished it with her
-jealousy and fear, had strengthened and increased it
-day by day, and had at last illumined it with certainty.
-More than once she had said to the young man, who
-perhaps had forgotten: "She awaits you!" More than
-once she had presented to his imagination that distant,
-mysterious figure of expectancy. As on that Dionysian
-night, when the conflagration of Venice had lighted up
-the two youthful faces with the same reflection, it was
-now her own passion that illumined them, and they
-glowed only because she herself had made them.&mdash;Certainly,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-he now possesses that image, and it possesses
-him. My anguish only augments his ardor. It is a joy
-to him to love her before my despairing eyes!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"As soon as the vase is shaped, we put it in the furnace
-room to be tempered," replied one of the men to
-a query from Stelio. "If it were exposed to the air
-immediately it would crack in a thousand pieces."</p>
-
-<p>They could see the radiant vases, still slaves of the
-fire, still under its empire, gathered in a receptacle joined
-to the furnace in which they had been fused.</p>
-
-<p>"They have been there ten hours," said the workman,
-pointing to his graceful family. "Is this our great Foscarina?"
-he added in an undertone to Stelio. He had
-recognized her when she had lifted her veil, suffocating
-with the heat.</p>
-
-<p>Revealing ingenuous emotion, the master workman
-took a step toward her and bowed respectfully.</p>
-
-<p>"One evening, my lady, you made me tremble and
-weep like a child. Will you allow me, in memory of
-that evening, which I never shall forget, to offer you a
-little work from the hands of the poor Seguso?"</p>
-
-<p>"A Seguso, are you?" said the poet, leaning toward
-the little man, to look at him closer; "are you of the
-great family of glass-blowers, one of the genuine race?"</p>
-
-<p>"At your service, master."</p>
-
-<p>"A prince, then."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, a harlequin playing the prince."</p>
-
-<p>"You know all the secrets of the art, eh?"</p>
-
-<p>The Muranese made a mysterious gesture which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-seemed to call up all the deep ancestral knowledge of
-which he affirmed himself the last heir.</p>
-
-<p>"Then, mistress, will you deign to accept it?"</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina had not spoken, fearing to trust her
-voice, but now all her affable grace rose above her
-sadness and accepted the gift while compensating the
-giver.</p>
-
-<p>The vase held by the little bent man that had created
-it was like a miraculous flower blooming on a twisted
-shrub. It was a thing of beauty, mysterious as natural
-things are mysterious; it held the life of a human breath
-in its hollow; its transparence equaled that of sky and
-water; its purple rim was like a floating seaweed; no
-one could have told the reason why it was so beautiful;
-and its value was either slight or beyond price, according
-to the eyes that looked at it.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina chose to take it with her, without having
-it packed, as one carries a flower.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI<br />
-REMINISCENCE</h2>
-
-
-<p>They left the factory, and walked along a road
-that was enclosed between the walls of silent
-gardens. The bronze-like laurels were touched
-with gold at the tops by the setting sun. The
-air was filled with sparkling gold-dust.</p>
-
-<p>"How sweet and terrible was the fate of Gaspara
-Stampa," said Stelio. "Do you know her <em>Sonnets</em>? Yes,
-I saw them one day on your table. She was a strange
-mingling of ice and fire. Sometimes her mortal passion,
-above the Petrarchism of Aretino, lifted a glorious cry.
-I remember a magnificent verse of hers:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Vivere ardendo e non sentire il male!</i>"</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>"Do you remember, Stelio," said La Foscarina, with
-that peculiar slight smile of hers which gave her face
-the look of one walking in her sleep, "do you remember
-the sonnet that begins:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Signore, io so che in me non son più viva,<br />
-E veggo omai ch'ancor in voi son morta?</i>"</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>"I don't remember, Fosca."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you remember your beautiful fancy about the
-dead Summer? Summer was lying on a funeral barge,
-dressed in gold like a dogaressa, and the procession was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-bearing her toward the Island of Murano, where a master
-of the flame was to enclose her in a shroud of
-opalescent glass, so that when she should be submerged
-in the depths of the lagoon, she could at least watch
-the waving seaweed. Do you remember?"</p>
-
-<p>"It was an evening in September."</p>
-
-<p>"The last night of September, the night of the Allegory.
-There was a great light on the water. You
-were in an exalted mood, and talked and talked. What
-things you said! You had come from solitude, and
-your overcharged soul broke forth. You poured a
-sparkling wave of poetry over your companion. A bark
-passed, laden with pomegranates. I called myself Perdita.
-Do you remember?"</p>
-
-<p>As she walked she felt the extreme lightness of her
-step and felt that something in her was vanishing, as
-if her body were on the point of being changed to an
-empty chrysalis.</p>
-
-<p>"My name was still Perdita. Stelio, do you recall
-another sonnet of Gaspara's beginning:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Io vorrei pur che Amor dicesse come<br />
-Debbo seguirlo....</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And the madrigal beginning:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Se tu credi piacere al mio signore?</i>"</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>"I did not know you were so familiar with the unhappy
-Anasilla, my dear."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, I will tell you. I was hardly fourteen years
-old when I played in an old romantic tragedy called
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-<cite>Gaspara Stampa</cite>. I played the leading part. It was at
-Dolo, where we passed the other day on our way to
-Strà. We played in a small rustic theater&mdash;a kind of
-tent. It was the year before my mother died. I remember
-it very well. I can remember the sound of my own
-voice, which was weak then, when I forced it in the
-tirades because some one in the wings kept whispering
-to me to speak louder, louder!... Well, Gaspara was
-despairing; she wept and raved for her cruel Count.
-There were many things about it all that my small, profaned
-soul did not know or understand, and I know not
-what instinct and comprehension of sorrow led me to
-find the accent and the cries that could stir the miserable
-crowd from which we expected to gain our daily
-bread. Ten hungry persons used me as a breadwinner;
-brutal necessity cut and tore away from me all the
-dream-flowers born of my trembling precocity. Oh, it
-was a time of weeping and suffocation, of terror, of
-unthinking weariness, of mute horror. Those that martyrized
-me knew not what they were doing, poor creatures,
-made stupid by poverty and work. God pardon
-them and give them peace! Only my mother&mdash;she, too,
-who 'for having loved too well and been too little loved,
-unhappy lived and died'&mdash;only my mother had pity
-on my pain, and knew how to take me in her arms, how
-to calm my horrible trembling, to weep when I wept,
-to console me. My blessed mother!"</p>
-
-<p>Her voice changed. Her mother's eyes once again
-looked upon her, kind and firm and infinite as a peaceful
-horizon.&mdash;Tell me, tell me what I must do! Guide
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-me, teach me, you who know!&mdash;Her heart felt again the
-clasp of those arms, and from the distance of years the
-old pain came back, but not harshly; it was almost
-sweet. The memory of her struggles and her sufferings
-seemed to bathe her soul in a warm wave, to sustain
-and comfort it. The test had been hard and the victory
-difficult, obtained at the price of persistent labor,
-against brutal and hostile forces. She had witnessed the
-deepest misery and ruin, she had known heroic efforts,
-pity, horror, and the face of Death.</p>
-
-<p>"I know what hunger is, Stelio, and what the approach
-of night seems like when a place of rest is uncertain,"
-she said softly.</p>
-
-<p>She stopped between the high walls, and lifted her
-little veil, looking deep into her friend's eyes.
-He grew pale under that look, so sudden was his
-emotion and surprise at her words. He felt confused,
-as if in the incoherence of a dream, incapable of applying
-the true significance of those words to the woman
-who was smiling at him, holding the delicate glass in
-her ungloved hand. Yet he had heard what she said,
-and she stood there before him in her rich fur cape,
-looking at him with beautiful soft eyes, misty with unshed
-tears.</p>
-
-<p>"And I have known other things."</p>
-
-<p>It relieved her heart to speak like this; his humility
-gave her strength, as if she had accomplished some
-proud and daring deed. She never had felt conscious of
-her power and worldly glory in the presence of her beloved,
-but now the memory of her obscure martyrdom,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-her poverty and hunger, created in her heart a feeling
-of real superiority over him she believed invincible.</p>
-
-<p>"But I have no fear of suffering," she said, remembering
-the words he had spoken once: "Tell me you do
-not fear to suffer.... I believe your soul capable of
-bearing all the sorrow of the world." And her hand
-stole up to his cheek and caressed it, and he understood
-that she had answered those words spoken long ago.</p>
-
-<p>He was silent, as intoxicated as if she had presented
-to his lips the very essence of her heart pressed out into
-that crystal cup like the blood of the grape. He waited
-for her to go on.</p>
-
-<p>They reached a crossroads where stood a miserable
-hut, falling into ruin. La Foscarina stopped to look at
-it. The rude, unhinged windows were held open by a
-stick laid across them. The low sun struck the smoked
-walls within, and revealed the furniture&mdash;a table, a
-bench, a cradle.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you remember, Stelio," said La Foscarina, "that
-inn at Dolo where we waited for the train. Vampa's
-inn, I mean. A great fire burned on the hearth, the
-dishes glittered on the shelves, and slices of <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">polenta</i> were
-toasting on the gridiron. Twenty years ago everything
-was exactly the same&mdash;the same fire, the same
-dishes, the same <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">polenta</i>. My mother and I used to go
-in there after the performance, and sit on the bench
-before a table. I had wept, cried, raved, and had died
-of poison or by the sword, on the stage. I still heard
-in my ears the resonance of the verses I had uttered, in
-a voice that was not my own, and a strange will still
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-possessed my soul, and I could not shake it off&mdash;it was
-as if another person, struggling with my inertness, persisted
-in performing over again those movements and
-actions. The simulation of an outside life remained in
-the muscles of my face, and some evenings I could not
-calm them. Already, even then, the mask, the sensation
-of the living mask, was beginning to grow. My
-eyes would remain fixed, and a chill crept at the roots
-of my hair. I had difficulty in recovering full consciousness
-of myself and my surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>"The odors from the kitchen sickened me; the food
-on our plates seemed too coarse, heavy as a stone, impossible
-to swallow. My disgust at everything sprang
-from something indescribably delicate and precious, of
-which I was conscious under all my weariness&mdash;a vague
-feeling of nobility beneath my humiliation. I hardly
-know how to express it. Perhaps it was the obscure
-presence of that power which later developed in me, of
-that election, of that difference wherewith Nature has
-marked me. Sometimes the consciousness of that difference
-from others became so strong that it almost raised
-a barrier between my mother and myself&mdash;God forgive
-me!&mdash;almost separated me from her. A great loneliness
-possessed me; nothing around me had power to touch
-me any more. I was alone with my destiny. My
-mother, even though she was with me, gradually receded
-into an infinite distance. Ah, she was to die soon,
-and was already preparing to leave me, and perhaps
-this withdrawal was the forerunner. She used to urge
-me to eat, with the words only she knew how to say.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-I answered: 'Wait! Wait!' I could only drink; I had
-a great craving for cold water. At times, when I was
-more tired and trembling than usual, I smiled a long-continued
-smile. And even that dear woman herself,
-with her deep heart, could not understand whence came
-my smile!</p>
-
-<p>"Incomparable hours, wherein it seemed that the
-bodily prison was being broken through by the soul
-that wandered to the extremest limits of life! What must
-your youth have been, Stelio! Who can imagine it?
-We have all felt the weight of sleep that descends upon
-us after fatigue or intoxication, heavy and sudden as
-a stroke from a hammer, and it seems to annihilate us.
-But the power of dreams sometimes seizes upon us in
-waking hours with the same force; it holds us and we
-cannot resist it, though the whole thread of our existence
-seems on the point of being destroyed. Ah, some
-of the beautiful things you said that night in Venice
-come back to my mind, when you spoke of her marvelous
-hands weaving her own lights and shadows in a
-continuous work of beauty. You alone know how to
-describe the indescribable.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, ... on that bench, in front of that rustic
-table, in Vampa's inn at Dolo, where destiny led me
-again with you, I had the most extraordinary visions
-that dreams ever have called up in my brain. I saw that
-which is unforgettable; I saw the real forms around me
-obliterated by the dream-figures born of my instinct
-and my thoughts. Under my fixed eyes, dazzled and
-scorched by the smoky petroleum lamps of the improvised
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-stage, the world of my expression began to throb
-with life. The first lines of my art were developed in
-that state of anguish, of weariness, fever, disgust, in
-which my sensibility became, so to speak, plastic, after
-the manner of the incandescent material we saw the
-workmen holding at the end of the tube. In it was a
-natural aspiration to be modeled, to receive breath, to
-fill a mold. On certain evenings, in that wall covered
-with copper utensils, I could see myself reflected as in
-a mirror, in attitudes of grief or rage; with an unrecognizable
-face; and, in order to escape from this hallucination,
-to break the fixity of my gaze, I opened and shut
-my eyes rapidly. My mother would say, over and over:
-'Eat, my daughter, at least eat this.' But what were
-bread, wine, meat, fruits, all those heavy things, in comparison
-with what I had within me? I said to her:
-'Wait!' and when we rose to go, I used to take only a
-large piece of bread with me. I liked to eat it in the
-country the next morning, under a tree, or sitting on
-the bank of the Brenta.... Oh, those statues! They
-did not recognize me the other day, Stelio, but I recognized
-them!</p>
-
-<p>"It was in the month of March, I remember. I went
-out into the country very early with my bread. I walked
-at random, though I meant to go to the statues. I went
-from one to another, and stopped before every one, as
-if I were paying a visit. Some appeared very beautiful
-to me, and I tried to imitate their poses. But I remained
-longer with the mutilated ones, as if to console them.
-In the evening, on the stage, I remembered some of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-them while I was acting, and with so deep a feeling of
-their distance and their solitude that I felt as if I could
-not speak any more. The audience would grow impatient
-at these pauses too prolonged. At times, when
-I had to wait for my companion in the scene to finish
-his tirade, I used to stand in the attitude of one of those
-statues, and remain as motionless as if I had been made
-of stone. I was already beginning to carve my own
-destiny.</p>
-
-<p>"I loved one of them tenderly; it had lost its arms,
-which once balanced a basket of fruit on its head. But
-the hands still remained attached to the basket, and the
-sight of them always aroused my pity. This statue
-stood on its pedestal in a flax-field; a little canal of stagnant
-water was near it, in which the reflected sky repeated
-the tender blue of the flowers. And always, since
-that time, in my most glowing moments on the stage,
-visions of some landscape rise in my memory, particularly
-when by the mere force of silence I succeed in
-producing a thrill in the listening throng."</p>
-
-<p>Her cheeks had flushed a little, and as the sun
-wrapped her in a radiant garment, drawing sparkles from
-her furs and from the crystal cup, her animation seemed
-like an increase of light.</p>
-
-<p>"What a spring that was! In one of my wandering
-journeys I saw a great river for the first time. It appeared
-to me suddenly, swollen, and flowing rapidly between
-two wild banks. I felt then how much of divinity
-there is in a great stream running through the earth.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-It was the Adige, flowing down from Verona, from the
-city of Juliet."</p>
-
-<p>An ambiguous emotion filled her heart while she recalled
-the poverty and poetry of her youth. She was
-impelled to continue, though she did not know how she
-had arrived at these confidences, when she had intended
-to speak to her friend of another young life, not belonging
-to the past, but to the present. By what surprise
-of love had she been turned from an effort of her will,
-from her firm decision to face the painful truth, from
-the concentration of her slumbering energy to linger in
-the memory of the past, and to cover with the image of
-her own lost virgin self that other image which was so
-different?</p>
-
-<p>"We reached Verona one evening in May. I was devoured
-by anxiety. I clasped close to my heart the book
-in which I had copied the lines of Juliet, and continually
-repeated to myself the words of my first entrance: 'How
-now? Who calls? I am here. What is your will?' My
-imagination was excited by a strange coincidence: on
-that very day I was fourteen years old&mdash;the age of
-Juliet. The Nurse's gossip sounded in my ears; and,
-little by little, my own destiny seemed mingled with
-that of the Veronese. At the corner of every street I
-thought I could see a throng approaching me, accompanying
-a coffin covered with white roses. When I saw
-the Arche degli Scaligeri behind its iron bars, I cried
-to my mother, 'Here is Juliet's tomb!' And I burst into
-sobs, and had a desperate desire to love and to die. 'O
-thou too early seen unknown, and known too late!'"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Her voice, repeating the immortal words, penetrated
-the heart of her lover like a heart-rending melody. She
-paused a moment, then repeated:</p>
-
-<p>"Too late!"</p>
-
-<p>They were the ominous words spoken by her lover,
-which she herself had repeated in the garden, when both
-were on the brink of being swept away on the flood of
-their passion: "It is late; too late!" The woman that
-was no longer young now faced the former image of
-herself, in her maidenhood, throbbing in the form of
-Juliet before her first dream of love. Having reached
-the limit of experience, had she not at the same time
-preserved the dream intact&mdash;but to what purpose? If
-to-day she looked at the image of her far-distant youth, it
-was only to trample upon it in leading her beloved to
-the other woman, to her who lived and waited.</p>
-
-<p>With her smile of inimitable sadness, she said:</p>
-
-<p>"I <em>was</em> Juliet! One Sunday in May, in the immense
-arena in the amphitheater under the open sky, before an
-audience that had breathed in the legend of love and
-death, I was Juliet herself. No thrill from the most responsive
-audience, no applause, no triumph, ever has
-had from me the fulness and intoxication of that unique
-hour. Actually, when I heard Romeo say: 'O, she doth
-teach the torches to burn bright,' my whole being
-kindled. With great economy, I had managed to buy a
-large bunch of roses, and these were my only ornament.
-I mingled the roses with my words, my gestures, with
-every attitude. I dropped one at Romeo's feet when we
-first met; I strewed the petals of another on his head,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-as I stood on the balcony; and I covered his body with
-them as he lay in the tomb. The words came with the
-strangest ease, almost involuntarily, as in delirium, and
-I could feel the throbbing in my veins accompanying
-them.</p>
-
-<p>"I could see the great amphitheater, half in sunlight,
-half in shadow, and in the lighter part a sparkling from
-thousands of eyes. The day was as calm as this. Not
-a breath of air disturbed the folds of my robes, or the
-hair that floated on my uncovered neck. I felt my
-strength and animation momentarily increasing. How
-I spoke of the lark and the nightingale! I had heard
-them both a thousand times in the country. I knew all
-their songs of the woods, the meadows, and the sky.
-Every word, as it left my lips, seemed to have been
-steeped in the warmth of my blood. There was no fiber
-in me that did not give forth harmonious sound. Ah,
-the grace, the state of grace! Every time it is given to
-me to rise to the highest summit of my art I live again
-in that indescribable <em>abandon</em>. Yes, I was Juliet! I cried
-out in terror at the approach of dawn. The breeze
-stirred my hair. I could feel the extraordinary silence
-on which my lamentation fell. The multitude seemed to
-have sunk into the ground. I spoke of the terror of the
-coming day, but already I felt in reality 'the mask of
-night upon my face.' Romeo had descended. We were
-already dead; already both had entered the vale of shadows.
-Do you remember? My eyes sought the fading
-light of the sky. The people were noisy in the arena;
-they were impatient for the death scene; they would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-listen no more to the mother, the nurse, or the friar.
-The quiver of that impatience quickened my throbbing
-heart. The tragedy swept on. I recall the odor of the
-pitch from the funeral torches, and of the roses that covered
-me, and I remember the sound of far-off bells, and
-of the sky that was losing its light, little by little, as
-Juliet was losing her life, and a star, the first star, that
-swam in my eyes with my tears. When I fell dead on
-Romeo's body, the cry of the multitude in the shadows
-was so violent that I was frightened. Some one lifted
-me and dragged me toward that cry. Some one held
-the torch close to my tear-stained face, which must have
-been the color of death.... And thus, Stelio, one night
-in May, Juliet came to life again, and appeared before
-the people of Verona."</p>
-
-<p>Again she paused, and closed her eyes as if she were
-dizzy, but her sorrowful lips still smiled at her friend.</p>
-
-<p>"And then? Then came the need to move, to go no
-matter where, to traverse space, to breathe in the wind.
-My mother followed me in silence. We crossed a bridge,
-walked beside the Adige, and went on and on. My
-mother asked at times where we were going. I wished
-to find the Franciscan convent where Juliet's tomb was
-hidden, since, to my great regret, she was not buried
-in one of those beautiful tombs behind the great iron
-gates. But I did not wish to say so, and I could not
-speak. My voice seemed to have been lost with the
-last word of the dying Juliet. 'Where are we going?'
-again asked that indefatigable kindness. Ah, then the
-last word of Juliet came to me in reply. We were again
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-near the Adige, beside a bridge. I think I began to
-run, because soon afterward I felt myself seized by my
-mother's arms, and I stood leaning against the parapet,
-choking with sobs. 'There let me die!' I wished to say,
-but could not. The river carried with it the night and
-all its stars. I felt that the desire to die was not mine
-alone. Ah, blessed mother!"</p>
-
-<p>She became very pale; her whole heart felt once more
-the embrace of those arms, the kiss of those lips, those
-tender tears, the depth of that suffering.</p>
-
-<p>With a mingled feeling of surprise and alarm, Stelio
-watched the great waves of life that passed over her,
-the extraordinary expressions, the alternating lights and
-shadows; but he dared not speak, dared not break in
-upon the occult workings of that great, unhappy soul.
-He could only feel confusedly in her words the beauty
-and sadness of things unexpressed.</p>
-
-<p>"Speak to me still," he said. "Draw nearer to me,
-sweet soul! No moment since I first loved you has been
-worth the steps that we have taken together to-day."</p>
-
-<p>Again her first sudden question returned to her mind:
-"Do you think often of Donatella?"</p>
-
-<p>A short path led to the Fondamenta degli Angeli,
-whence the lagoon could be seen, smooth and luminous.</p>
-
-<p>"How beautiful that light is!" she said. "It is like
-that night when my name was still Perdita, Stelio."</p>
-
-<p>She now touched a note that she had touched in an
-interrupted prelude.</p>
-
-<p>"The last night of September," she added. "Do you
-remember?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Her heart was filled with exaltation to such a degree
-that she almost feared it would fail her. But she resolved
-that her voice should utter firmly the name that
-must break the silence between her friend and herself.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you remember the ship anchored before the
-gardens? A salute greeted the flag as it slid down the
-mast. Our gondola touched the ship as we passed under
-its shadow."</p>
-
-<p>A moment's pause. Her pallor was animated by a
-wonderful vitality.</p>
-
-<p>"Then, in that shadow, you first spoke Donatella's
-name."</p>
-
-<p>She made a new effort, as a swimmer, submerged by a
-wave, rises again and shakes his head free of the foam.</p>
-
-<p>"She began then to be yours!"</p>
-
-<p>She felt as if she were growing rigid from head to
-foot. Her eyes stared fixedly at the glittering water.</p>
-
-<p>"She must be yours," she said at last, with the sternness
-of necessity in her voice, as if to repel with a second
-shock the terrible things that were ready to surge up from
-her fiery heart.</p>
-
-<p>Seized by sudden anguish, incapable of interrupting
-by a word the lightning-like apparitions of her tragic
-soul, Stelio halted, and laid his hand on his companion's
-arm to make her stop also.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it not true?" she asked with a sweetness almost
-calm, as if her tension had suddenly relaxed, and her
-passion had quietly accepted the yoke laid upon it by
-her will. "Speak! I do not fear to suffer. Let us sit
-down here. I am a little tired."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They sat down on a low wall, facing the water.</p>
-
-<p>"What can I say to you?" said the young man in a
-stifled voice, after a pause, unable to overcome the agitation
-arising from the certainty of his present love and
-the consciousness of his desires, inexorable as fate. "Perhaps
-what you have imagined is true; perhaps it is only
-a fancy of your own mind. I am certain to-day of only
-one thing, and that is that I love you and recognize
-in you all that is noble. I know one other thing that
-is noble&mdash;that I have a work to do and a life to live according
-to the dictates of Nature. You, too, must remember.
-On that September evening I spoke to you a
-long time of my life and of the genii that are leading it
-to its final destiny. You know that I can renounce
-nothing."</p>
-
-<p>He trembled as if he held in his hand a sharp weapon,
-with which, as he was compelled to move it, he could
-not avoid wounding the defenseless woman.</p>
-
-<p>"No, nothing; and especially your love, which ceaselessly
-exalts my strength and my hope. But did you not
-promise me more than love? Can you not do for me
-things that love alone cannot do? Do you not desire
-to be the constant inspiration of my life and my work?"</p>
-
-<p>She listened motionless, with fixed eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"It is true," he continued, after an anxious pause, recovering
-his courage, and feeling that on the sincerity
-of this moment depended the fate of that free alliance
-whereby he had hoped to be broadened, not confined.
-"It is true; that evening, when I saw you descend the
-stairs in the midst of the throng in company with her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-who had sung, I believed that a secret thought guided
-you from the moment that you did not come alone to
-meet me."</p>
-
-<p>The woman felt a chill run through the roots of her
-hair. Her fingers trembled round the crystal cup, wherein
-the colors of sky and water were blended.</p>
-
-<p>"I believed that you yourself had chosen her. Your
-look was that of one who knows and foresees. I was
-struck by it."</p>
-
-<p>By her keen torture, the woman realized how sweet
-a falsehood would have been. She wished that he would
-either lie or be silent. She measured the distance that
-lay between her and the canal&mdash;the water that swallows
-and lulls to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>"There was something about her that was hostile to
-me. She remained to me obscure, incomprehensible.
-Do you remember the way she disappeared? Her image
-faded, and only the desire of her song remained. You
-yourself, who led her to me, have more than once revived
-the remembrance of her. You have seen her
-shadow even where she was not."</p>
-
-<p>She saw Death itself. No other wound had gone
-deeper, had hurt her so cruelly.&mdash;I alone! I alone have
-brought it on myself!&mdash;And she remembered the cry
-that had brought this misery: "Go! She awaits you!"
-Suddenly the internal tempest seemed to become a mere
-hallucination. She thought herself non-existent, and
-wondered to see the glass shining in her hand; she lost
-all corporeal sense. All that had happened was only
-a trick of the imagination. Her name was Perdita. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-dead Summer was lying in the depths of the lagoon.
-Words were words, that was all.</p>
-
-<p>"Could I love her? Were I to see her again, should
-I desire to turn her destiny toward mine? Perhaps. But
-of what use would that be? And of what use would all
-the vicissitudes and necessities of life be against the
-faith that links us? Could you and I resemble commonplace
-lovers who pass their days in quarreling, weeping,
-and cursing?"</p>
-
-<p>The woman gnashed her teeth. She had a wild instinct
-to defend herself, and to hurt him as in a hopeless
-struggle. A murderous desire flashed across her maddened
-brain.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;No, you shall not have her!&mdash;And the brutality of
-her tyrant seemed monstrous to her. Under the measured
-and repeated blows, she felt that she was like a
-man she had once seen on the dusty road of a mining
-town, prostrated by repeated blows on his head from
-a mallet in his enemy's hand. That hideous memory
-mingled with her mental torture. She sprang up, impelled
-by the savage force that filled her being. The
-glass broke in her convulsed hand, cut her, fell in a
-sparkling shower at her feet.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio startled. The woman's motionless silence had
-deceived him, but now he looked at her and saw her
-at last; and once more he saw, as on that night in her
-room when the logs had crackled on the hearth, the expression
-of madness on her agitated face. He stammered
-some words of regret, but impatience boiled under his
-concern.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Ah," said La Foscarina, mastering her agony with a
-bitterness that convulsed her mouth, "how strong I am!
-Another time have a care that your wounds are not made
-so slowly, since my resistance is so slight, my friend."</p>
-
-<p>She saw that blood was dripping from her fingers;
-she wrapped them in her handkerchief. She looked at
-the sparkling fragments on the grass.</p>
-
-<p>"The cup is broken! You had praised it too highly.
-Shall we raise a mausoleum for it here?"</p>
-
-<p>She was very bitter, almost mocking, her lips opening
-slightly to utter a mirthless laugh. Stelio stood silent,
-chagrined, his heart full of rancor at beholding the destruction
-of so beautiful an effort as that perfect cup.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us imitate Nero, since we have already imitated
-Xerxes!"</p>
-
-<p>She felt even more keenly than he the harshness of
-her sarcasm, the insincerity of her voice, the malignity
-of the laugh that was like a muscular spasm. But she
-was unable to conquer her soul at that moment. She
-felt a bitter, irresistible necessity to scorn, to devastate,
-to trample under foot, invaded by a sort of perfidious
-demon. Every vestige of tenderness and benevolence
-had vanished, every hope, every illusion. The bitter
-hatred that lurks under the love of ardent natures was
-dominant. On the man's face she could discern the same
-shadow that darkened her own.</p>
-
-<p>"Do I irritate you? Do you wish to return to Venice
-alone? Would you like to leave the dying season behind
-you? The tide is falling, but there is always enough
-water for one who has no intention of returning. Would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-it suit you to have me try it? Am I not as docile as
-you could wish?"</p>
-
-<p>She said these insensate things in a hissing tone, and
-became almost livid, as if suddenly burned by some corroding
-poison. And Stelio remembered having seen the
-same mask on her face on a distant day of love, madness
-and sadness. His heart contracted, then softened.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, if I have hurt you, I ask for pardon," he said,
-trying to take her hand and soothe her by a gentle act.
-"But did we not begin together to approach this matter?
-Was it not you that"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She interrupted him, exasperated by his gentleness.</p>
-
-<p>"Hurt me? And what does that matter? Have no
-pity, no pity! Do not weep over the beautiful eyes of
-the wounded hare!"</p>
-
-<p>The words broke between her teeth. Her contracted
-lips opened in a convulsion of wild laughter that was
-like heart-rending sobs. Her companion shuddered, spoke
-to her in a low tone, aware of the curious eyes of the
-women who sat at the thresholds of their cabins.</p>
-
-<p>"Calm yourself! Calm yourself! Oh, Foscarina, I beg
-of you! Do not act so, I entreat! We shall soon be
-at the quay, and then we shall go home. I will tell you&mdash;You
-will understand me then. Come, now we are in
-the street. Do you hear me?"</p>
-
-<p>He feared she would fall in her hysterical convulsion,
-and stood ready to support her. But she only walked
-faster, unable to speak, smothering that wild laughter
-with her bandaged hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"What ails you? What do you see?" Stelio inquired
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>Never could he forget the change in those eyes. They
-were dull, staring, sightless, yet they seemed to see something
-that was not there; they were filled with an unknown
-vision, occupied by some monstrous image which
-without doubt had generated that mad and anguished
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall we stop here a little while? Would you like
-some water?"</p>
-
-<p>They found themselves now on the Fondamenta dei
-Vetrai. How long was it since they had walked beside
-the stagnant canal? How much of their life had vanished
-in the interval? What profound shadow were
-they leaving behind them?</p>
-
-<p>Having descended into the gondola, and wrapped herself
-in her cloak, La Foscarina tried to control her hysteria,
-holding her face with both hands, but from time
-to time the terrible laugh would escape; then she pressed
-her hands closer to her mouth, as if she were trying to
-suffocate herself.</p>
-
-<p>The lagoon and the deep twilight obliterated all forms
-and colors; only the rows of posts, like a file of monks
-on a path of ashes, showed against the dark background.
-When the bells began their clamor, her soul remembered,
-her tears gushed forth; the horror was vanquished.</p>
-
-<p>She took her hands from her face, leaned toward her
-friend's shoulder, and found again her voice in saying:</p>
-
-<p>"Forgive me!"</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII<br />
-CASSANDRA'S REINCARNATION</h2>
-
-
-<p>She humbled herself with shame. From that day
-every action of her silently begged for pardon
-and oblivion.</p>
-
-<p>A new grace seemed born within her. She became
-more cheerful, spoke more gently, walked softly
-about the house dressed in quiet colors, veiling her beautiful
-eyes with the deep shadow of her lashes, because
-she dared not look at her friend. The fear of tiring him,
-of displeasing or boring him, gave her the wings of divination.
-Her ever watchful sensibility listened at the
-inaccessible door of his dreams.</p>
-
-<p>Her spirit, determined to create a new feeling capable
-of conquering the violence of instinct, revealed
-in her face with marvelous signs the difficulty of her
-task. Never before had her supreme art found expressions
-so singular. Looking at her one day, Stelio spoke
-to her of the infinite power concentrated in the shadow
-produced by the helmet on the face of <cite>Il Pensieroso</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>"Michelangelo," he said, "has, in a small cavity in the
-marble, concentrated all the effort of human meditation.
-Just as the stream fills a hollowed palm, so the eternal
-mystery that surrounds us fills the small space made by
-the Titan's chisel in the material from the mountains;
-and there it has remained, growing denser through all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-the centuries. I know only the mobile shadow of your
-face, Fosca, that equals that shadow in intensity, and
-sometimes even surpasses it."</p>
-
-<p>Eager for poetry and knowledge, she yearned for the
-Inspirer's presence. She became for him the ideal figure
-of one that listens and understands. The strange, unique
-arrangement of her hair suggested fluttering, impatient
-wings round her pure forehead.</p>
-
-<p>She read aloud to him pages from the sovereign poets.
-The august form of the Book seemed magnified by the
-attitude she assumed in holding it, by her way of turning
-the pages, by her religious gravity of attention, and
-the harmony of the voice that changed the printed symbols
-into vocal cadences. While reading Dante, she was
-as severe and noble as the sibyls in the dome of the
-Sistine Chapel, sustaining the weight of the sacred volumes
-with all the heroism of their bodies moved by
-the breath of prophecy.</p>
-
-<p>When the last syllable had been spoken, she saw Stelio
-rise impetuously, feverishly, and roam about the rooms,
-stirred by the dart of the god, panting in the excitement
-roused by the confused tumult of his own creative force.
-Sometimes he approached her with glowing eyes transfigured
-by a sudden beatitude, kindled by an inner
-flame, as if an immortal truth had just been revealed.
-With a shudder that drove away from her heart the
-memory of every caress, she saw him lay his head upon
-her knees, overwhelmed by the tremendous struggle he
-carried on within himself, by the shock that accompanied
-some hidden metamorphosis. She suffered, yet she was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-happy, though she knew not whether he too suffered or
-was happy; her heart was filled with pity, fear, and reverence
-to feel that vigorous form laboring thus in the
-genesis of the idea. She kept silence; she waited, adoring
-that head that lay upon her knees, filled with thoughts
-unrevealed.</p>
-
-<p>But she comprehended his great emotion better when
-one day, after she had been reading to him, he spoke
-of the exile of Dante.</p>
-
-<p>"Imagine, Fosca, if you can without bewilderment,
-the transport and ardor of that great soul, when uniting
-itself with elementary energies in order to conceive his
-words! Imagine Alighieri, his mind already filled with
-his incomparable vision, on the way to exile, an implacable
-pilgrim, driven by his passion and his poverty
-from country to country, from refuge to refuge, across
-plains, over mountains, beside rivers and seas, in all seasons,
-suffocated by the sweetness of spring, shivering
-under the harshness of winter, always alert, attentive,
-with wide, voracious eyes, anxious with the inner travail
-whereby his gigantic work was formed. Imagine
-the fulness of that soul in the contrast between common
-necessities and the flaming apparitions that rose
-suddenly before him at a turn in the road, on the bank
-of a stream, from a hollow in the rocks, on the slope
-of a hill, in the depths of the forest, or in a meadow
-where the larks were singing. By means of his senses,
-life multiform and multiplex poured into his spirit, transfiguring
-into living images the abstract ideas that filled
-his brain. The sound, the appearance, and the essence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-of the very elements themselves entered into his occult
-labor, developing it with voices, lines, color, movement,
-and with innumerable mysteries. Fire, air, earth, and
-water worked in collaboration at the sacred poem, penetrated
-the sum of its doctrine, warmed it, aërated it,
-watered it, covered it with leaves and flowers. Open
-this Christian book, and imagine at the same time the
-face of a Greek god. Do you not see, springing from
-both, shadows and light, the flashes or the wind from
-the heavens?"</p>
-
-<p>She began to feel that her own life was becoming one
-with the all-absorbing work, that her own personal self
-was entering, drop by drop, into the personage of the
-drama, that her look, her poses, her gestures and voice
-were going to the composing of the figure of the heroine
-"living beyond life." She fancied that she was dissolving
-into her elements in the fire of that other intellect,
-only to be re-formed by the necessity of a heroism that
-should dominate Fate.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes it seemed to her that she was losing her
-human sincerity, and that she would always remain in
-the state of fictitious excitement into which she threw
-herself while studying a tragic rôle she was to create.
-Thus she experienced a new torment. She tried to shut
-and contract her soul under his keen glance, as if
-to prevent his intellect from penetrating her mind and
-robbing her of her secret life. She grew afraid of the
-seer.&mdash;He will read in my soul the silent words that he
-will put in the mouth of his creation, and I shall only
-speak them on the stage, under my mask.&mdash;Sometimes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-she felt a sudden need to break the spell, to withdraw
-from the image that was to be like her, to spoil those
-lines of beauty, which forced her to a determined sacrifice.
-Was there not also in the tragedy a maiden thirsting
-for love and eager for joy, a maiden in whom a great
-mind recognized the living incarnation of his most exquisite
-dream, the Victory that was to crown his life?
-And was there not also an impassioned woman no longer
-young, who had one foot already in the dark shadow,
-and who had but a few steps more to take in order to
-disappear? More than once she was tempted to contradict
-her seeming resignation by some violent act.
-Then, like a penitent, she redoubled her fervor to ward
-off the peril, hardened herself to discipline, sharpened
-her vigilance, repeating with a sort of intoxication the
-act of supreme renunciation that had risen from the
-depths of her sadness at the aspect of the purifying
-flame.&mdash;You must have all; I shall be content with seeing
-you live, seeing your joy. And do with me as you
-will!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Then Stelio loved her for the unexpected visions she
-brought him. He trembled and turned pale one day
-when she entered the room with her soft step, her face
-fixed in calm sorrow, as if she were emerging from
-depths of wisdom whence all human agitations seem
-but a puff of wind on a dusty road.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, at last! I have created you! I have created
-you!" he cried, thinking he saw his heroine herself standing
-on a threshold of the distant chamber filled with
-treasure taken from the tombs of the Atrides. "Stand
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-still a moment! Do not move your eyelids&mdash;keep your
-eyes motionless, as if they were petrified! Now you are
-blind. But you can see things that others do not see,
-and nothing can be hidden from you. Here in this place
-the man you love has declared his love to another, who
-trembles at the revelation. They are still here, they
-have just let go each other's hands, and their love
-quivers in the air. The room is full of funeral treasure,
-and on two tables are laid out the riches that covered
-the bodies of Agamemnon and Cassandra. There are
-the coffers filled with necklaces, and there are the urns
-full of ashes. The balcony looks out upon the plain
-of Argos and on the distant mountains. It is twilight,
-and all that terrible gold glitters in the creeping shadows.
-Do you understand? And you are there, on the threshold,
-led by the nurse. You are blind, yet nothing is
-hidden from you. Stop a moment!"</p>
-
-<p>He spoke in the sudden fever of invention. The
-scene appeared before him, then disappeared, submerged
-in a flood of poetry.</p>
-
-<p>"What shall you do? What shall you say?"</p>
-
-<p>The actress felt a chill at the roots of her hair. Her
-very soul vibrated. She became blind and prophetic.
-The cloud of Tragedy descended and hung over her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>"What shall you say? You will call them. You will
-call both of them by name in that silence where the great
-royal spoils repose."</p>
-
-<p>The actress felt the coursing of her blood; her voice
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-was to resound through the silence of thousands of years,
-to revive the ancient suffering of men and heroes.</p>
-
-<p>"You will take their hands; you will feel their two
-lives stretching toward each other."</p>
-
-<p>The blindness of the immortal statues was in her
-eyes. She could see herself sculptured in the great
-silence, and feel the thrill of the mute throng, seized
-with awe at the sublime power of her attitude.</p>
-
-<p>"And then? And then?"</p>
-
-<p>The Inspirer rushed impetuously toward the actress,
-as if he wished to strike her in order to draw sparks
-from her.</p>
-
-<p>"You must awake Cassandra from her sleep; you must
-feel her ashes revive in your hands; she must be present
-in your mental vision. Will you? Do you understand?
-Your living soul must touch her ancient soul, and blend
-into one soul and one grief, so that the flight of time
-seems annihilated. Cassandra is in you, and you are
-in her. Have you not loved her, and do you not love
-Priam's daughter also? Who that once shall hear it
-can ever forget, who can ever forget the deep notes of
-your voice and the convulsion of your lips at the first
-cry of fatalistic fury: 'O Earth! O Apollo!' I see you
-once more, deaf and dumb, on your chariot with the
-look of a wild beast just captured. But among so many
-terrible cries, some were infinitely sweet and sad. The
-old men compared you to the nightingale. What were
-the words you used when you spoke of your beautiful
-river? And when the old men questioned you about the
-love of the god&mdash;do you remember your answer?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Tragic Muse palpitated as if the breath of the
-god again invaded her. She had become ardent, ductile
-material, subject to all the inspirations of the poet.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you remember your answer?"</p>
-
-<p>"O espousals, espousals of Paris, fatal to the beloved!
-O you, paternal waters of the Scamandros! Once, on
-your shores, my youth was nourished by you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, divine woman, your melody does not make one
-regret the syllables of Æschylus! I remember. The
-soul of the multitude, seized by the lamentation 'of discordant
-sounds,' relaxed and was soothed by that melodious
-sigh, and each of us received the vision of years
-long past and our innocent happiness. You can say:
-'I was Cassandra.' In speaking of her, you will remember
-a former life. Her mask of gold will be in your
-hands."</p>
-
-<p>He seized both her hands; both were intent on the
-flashes generated by their blended forces; the same electric
-spark ran through their nerves.</p>
-
-<p>"You are there, near the spoil of the slave-princess,
-and you feel the mask. What shall you say?"</p>
-
-<p>In the pause that followed, both seemed to be waiting
-for a flash. The actress's eyes again became fixed
-and blind, her face became like marble. The Inspirer
-let go her hands, and they made the gesture of feeling
-the sepulchral golden mask. In a voice that created the
-tangible form, she said:</p>
-
-<p>"How large her mouth is!"</p>
-
-<p>"You see her, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I too can see her. The mouth is large; the terrible
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-effort of prophecy dilated it; she cried aloud,
-cursed, and lamented without ceasing. Can you imagine
-her mouth in silence?"</p>
-
-<p>Still in the same attitude, as if in ecstasy, she said
-slowly:</p>
-
-<p>"What profundity in her wonderful silence!"</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to be repeating words suggested to her
-by mysterious genii, and, while the poet listened to her,
-he fancied that he himself had been about to speak
-them. A profound tremor shook him, as if he were
-witnessing a miracle.</p>
-
-<p>"And her eyes?" he demanded, agitated. "Of what
-color were her eyes?"</p>
-
-<p>She made no reply.</p>
-
-<p>The marble lines of her face changed slightly, as if
-under a wave of suffering. A furrow appeared between
-her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"Her eyes," continued the revealer, "were as sweet
-and sad as two violets."</p>
-
-<p>She paused again, panting, as one who suffers in a
-dream. Her lips were dry, her temples moist.</p>
-
-<p>"Thus they were before they closed forever!"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Sometimes Stelio came to his friend's house breathless
-and excited, as if pursued by an Erinni. La Foscarina
-never questioned him, but her personality soothed
-that restless spirit.</p>
-
-<p>"Sometimes I am afraid of the vastness of my conceptions,"
-he said. "I am afraid of being suffocated by
-them. You believe me to be a little mad, do you not?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-Do you remember that stormy evening when I returned
-from the Lido? How sweet you were that evening!
-A short time before that, standing on the Bridge of the
-Rialto, I found a Motive. I had translated the words
-of the Elements into notes. Do you know what a Motive
-is? It is a small spring, from which may be born
-many other springs, a tiny seed that may give birth to
-a crown of forests; a little spark that may kindle an
-endless chain of conflagration&mdash;a nucleus that produces
-infinite force. A few days ago I began to develop the
-Motive of that stormy evening, which I shall call the
-Pipes of Æolus. Listen to it."</p>
-
-<p>He went to the piano, and struck a few notes with
-one hand.</p>
-
-<p>"It contains no more than that, but you cannot
-imagine the generating force of those few notes. A
-tempest, a whirlwind of music has been born of them,
-but I have not yet been able to master it. I am almost
-vanquished, suffocated, constrained to fly."</p>
-
-<p>He laughed a little; but his soul was swaying like the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>"The Pipes of Prince Æolus, opened by the companions
-of Ulysses. Do you remember it? The imprisoned
-winds arise and push back their vessel, and the
-men tremble with terror."</p>
-
-<p>His spirit could not rest long, and nothing could divert
-him from his mental work. He kissed his friend's
-hand, paced to and fro, stopping before the piano that
-Donatella had played when she sang Claudio's melody.
-He wandered to the window, and gazed upon the leafless
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-garden. His aspiration reached out toward the musical
-creature, toward her that must chant his hymns at the
-summit of his tragic symphonies.</p>
-
-<p>In a low, clear voice the woman said:</p>
-
-<p>"If Donatella were here with us!"</p>
-
-<p>He turned, approached her, and gazed at her fixedly,
-silently. She smiled her slight, mask-like smile at seeing
-him so near her, yet so far removed. She felt that
-he loved no one at that moment&mdash;not herself, not Donatella,
-but that he regarded both simply as instruments
-of his art, forces to employ, bows to bend. He was on
-fire with poetry, and she, with her poor wounded heart,
-her secret torture, her mute plea&mdash;she was there, intent
-on nothing but her sacrifice, ready to pass beyond love
-and life, as the heroine of the future drama. Meanwhile,
-each day must make its mark on her face, discolor
-her lips, fade her hair; each day, in the service of old
-age, would hasten the work of destruction in her miserable
-flesh. And then?</p>
-
-<p>She recognized that it was love, after all, unquenchable
-passion, that created all the illusions and all the
-hopes which seemed to aid her in accomplishing "what
-love alone cannot do."</p>
-
-<p>She realized that the torturing restraint of those days
-had not succeeded in creating in her even a symptom
-of the new feeling whereby love was to be made sublime.
-Her secret task, therefore, meant simply continual dissimulation.
-Was it worth while to live for this?</p>
-
-<p>If once the young man's madness and ardor had caused
-her to suffer, she now suffered far more in seeing that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-that ardor had grown calm, and that a sort of reserve
-had taken its place&mdash;a reserve that sometimes repelled
-the gentlest caress. She felt shame at her regret, knowing
-that he was possessed by his great idea, and was
-concentrating all his energies upon it. But a dark rancor
-often mastered her in the evening, after he had departed,
-and blind suspicions nightly tortured her sleepless soul.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;To go away!&mdash;The necessity to do this came suddenly,
-urgently. She had said to her beloved once, on
-a memorable day: "There is only one thing I can do&mdash;go
-away, and leave you free with your fate. This thing
-I can do, which love alone could not do." Henceforth,
-delay was no longer possible; she must break off with
-all hesitation, and emerge finally from that kind of fatal
-suspension of movement, in which she had lived so long
-in agitation.</p>
-
-<p>Since that October dawn, their outward life had been
-unchanged. Nevertheless, she felt that it was impossible
-for her to continue to live in that way any longer.
-She felt a consciousness of something fully accomplished,
-as in the tree that has yielded all its fruit, as in the
-river that has reached the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Her courage revived; her soul grew stronger, her
-energies awoke once more, and the virile qualities of the
-leader again came to life. In a few days she had arranged
-her professional route, reassembled her dramatic
-company, and fixed the date of departure.&mdash;You must
-go and work over there among the barbarians across
-the ocean. You must wander still from town to town,
-from hotel to hotel, from theater to theater, and every
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-night you will draw howls from the crowd that pays
-you. You will gain much money; you will return laden
-with gold and with wisdom, unless it happens that you
-are crushed by a wheel some misty day on a crowded
-street. Who knows? From whom have you received
-the order to depart? From some one within yourself&mdash;deep,
-deep within you&mdash;who sees that which you cannot
-see, like the blind woman in the tragedy. Who
-knows whether over there, on one of those wide, peaceful
-rivers, your soul will not find its harmony and your
-lips will not learn that smile they have attempted so
-many times in vain! Perhaps you will discover a few
-white hairs and that smile in your mirror at the same
-time!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>And she went on preparing for her journey.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII<br />
-THE STORY OF THE ARCHORGAN</h2>
-
-
-<p>From time to time a breath of Spring passed
-across the February sky.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you feel the Spring?" said Stelio to his
-friend, inhaling deep breaths of the new air.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina fell behind him a step or two, because
-her resolute heart was weakening; she lifted her face
-to the sky, now flecked with white clouds like floating
-plumes. The raucous shriek of a siren whistle prolonged
-itself in the estuary, becoming fainter by degrees until
-the sound was as soft as the note of a flute. It seemed
-to the woman that something rose from the depths of
-her heart and escaped with that prolonged note, as a
-poignant grief gradually changes into a tender memory.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, Spring has already arrived at the Tre Porti."</p>
-
-<p>Once more they floated aimlessly along the lagoon,
-that water as familiar to their thoughts as is the web
-to the weaver.</p>
-
-<p>"Did you say at the Tre Porti?" the young man
-cried, enthusiastically, as if his soul were reawakened.
-"It is there, near the lower bank, at the setting of the
-moon, that the sailors take the Wind prisoner, and bring
-it, chained, to Dardi Seguso. Some day I will tell you
-the story of the Archorgan."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>His air of mystery in describing the action of the
-sailors made La Foscarina smile.</p>
-
-<p>"What story?" she asked, enticed by his significant
-tone. "And what does Seguso do here? Has the story
-anything to do with the master glassblower?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, but a master of a former day, who knew Latin
-and Greek, music and architecture, who was admitted
-to the Academy of the Pellegrini, whose gardens are at
-Murano; he was often invited to sup with Titian in his
-house in the Contrada dei Biri; was a friend of Bernardo
-Cappello, of Jacopo Zane, and other ancient
-Petrarchists. At Caterino Zeno's house he saw the famous
-organ built for Matthias Corvinus, King of Hungary,
-and his magnificent idea came to him in the course
-of a discussion with that Agostino Amadi who succeeded
-in adding to his collection of instruments a true Grecian
-lyre, a great Lesbian heptachord, rich with gold and
-ivory. Ah, imagine it, that relic of the school of Mitylene,
-brought to Venice by a galley which, in passing
-through the waters of Santa Maura, caught and dragged
-the body of Sappho as far as Malamocco, like an armful
-of dead grass! But that, too, is another tale."</p>
-
-<p>Again the nomad woman recovered her youthful spirits
-enough to smile, pleased as a child to whom one shows
-a picture-book. How many marvelous stories, how many
-delightful fancies had not the Visionary conjured up
-for her on those waters, during the long hours of the
-afternoon? How many enchantments had he not known
-how to weave for her, to the rhythm of the oar, in words
-that made all things seem reality? How many times,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-seated beside her beloved in the light boat, had she not
-enjoyed that sort of waking dream in which all cares
-were banished, carried away on waves of poetry?</p>
-
-<p>"Tell it to me," she begged.</p>
-
-<p>She wished to add:&mdash;This story will be the last.&mdash;But
-she restrained herself, because up to this time she had
-not spoken to him of her fixed resolution.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed.</p>
-
-<p>"You are as eager for stories as Sofia."</p>
-
-<p>At that name, as when she heard the name of Spring,
-she felt her resolution weaken; the cruelty of her fate
-pierced her heart, and her whole being turned with
-yearning toward her escaping happiness.</p>
-
-<p>"Look!" he said, pointing to the mirror-like lagoon,
-rippled here and there by a light breeze. "Do not those
-infinite lines of silence aspire to become music?"</p>
-
-<p>Silvery-white in the calm afternoon, the estuary seemed
-to bear the islets on its breast as lightly as the softest
-clouds hung from the sky.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, the master glassblower heard at Zeno's house
-praises of the famous organ of the King of Hungary,
-and cried: '<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Corpo di Bacco!</i> You shall see what an organ
-I will build, with my stick, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">liquida musa canente!</i> I will
-make the god of organs! <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Dant sonitum glaucæ per stagna
-loquacia cannæ.</i> The waters of the lagoon shall give it its
-tone, and in it the stones, the buoys, and the fish also
-shall sing. <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Multisonum silentium.</i> You shall see, by the
-body of Diana!' All his hearers laughed, save Giulia
-da Ponte&mdash;because she had black teeth! And the Sansovino
-gave a dissertation on hydraulic organs. But the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-boaster, before taking his leave, invited the company to
-hear his new music on the day of the Sensa, and promised
-that the Doge on his Bucentaur should halt in the
-middle of the lagoon to listen. That evening the news
-that Dardi Seguso had lost his senses spread to Venice,
-and the Council, which had a tender regard for its famous
-workmen, sent a messenger to Murano to learn the truth
-about the report. The messenger found the artisan with
-his sweetheart, Perdilanza, who was very loving to him
-because she was anxious, and feared that Dardi was insane.
-The master, after looking at the messenger with
-fiery eyes, burst into a hearty laugh, which reassured
-her as to his state of mind; then, quite calm again, Seguso
-ordered the messenger to report to the Council
-that, on the day of the Sensa, Venice, San Marco, the
-Grand Canal, and the Palace of the Doges should possess
-yet another miracle. On the following day, he made a
-formal request for the possession of one of the five little
-islets that circled Murano like the satellites of a planet,
-but have now disappeared, or have dwindled to mere
-sandbanks. After exploring the waters around Temòdia,
-Trencòre, Galbaia, Mortesina, and La Folèga, he chose
-Temòdia as one chooses a bride, and Perdilanza entered
-the shadow of affliction. Look, Fosca; perhaps even now
-we are passing over the memory of Temòdia. The organ-pipes
-are sunk deep in the mud, but they never will
-decay. There are seven thousand of them. We are passing
-over the ruins of a forest of melodious glass. How
-delicate the seaweed is here!"</p>
-
-<p>"Tell me the reason why Perdilanza entered the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-shadow of affliction," said La Foscarina, as both leaned
-over and looked deep into the beautiful clear waters.</p>
-
-<p>"Because her name had been driven from the lips and
-the heart of her lover by the name of Temòdia, which
-he constantly uttered with vehement ardor, and because
-the island was the only place to which she might not
-follow him. There he had constructed his new work-rooms,
-and there he stayed the greater part of the day,
-and almost all night, assisted by his workmen, whom
-he had bound to silence by a solemn oath before the altar.
-The Council, in ordering that the master should be provided
-with everything necessary for his tremendous task,
-had decreed that he should lose his head should his
-work prove inferior to his proud boast. Then Dardi
-tied a scarlet thread around his bare neck."</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina felt as if she were in a dream. Stelio
-seemed to have been speaking of himself in those strange
-figures of speech, as on that last night of September
-when he had explained the myth of the pomegranate,
-and the name of the imaginary woman began with the
-first two syllables of the name he had given her in those
-days! Was any personal significance veiled behind this
-story? Why had he, deliberately, in the vicinity of the
-place where she had been seized with that terrible
-laughter, called up, by that fanciful tale, the memory of
-the broken vase? In trying to understand, she made
-for herself an instrument of torture, with the dream-fancies
-of Stelio's brain. She did not remember that
-as yet he was ignorant of her approaching departure.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-Instinctively she said within herself:&mdash;I am going far-away;
-do not wound me.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She wished to hear the remainder of the story, however,
-for she longed to understand him fully.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, what happened then to the man with the scarlet
-thread?" she inquired.</p>
-
-<p>"More than once he felt his head was insecure on his
-shoulders," Stelio replied laughingly. "He had to blow
-pipes as large as the trunk of a tree, and he had to do
-it with his own mouth, unaided by bellows. He blew
-and blew with all his might, without ceasing. Fancy
-it! The lungs of a Cyclops would hardly be strong
-enough for that. Ah, some day I shall describe the
-fever of that existence hanging between the ax and the
-production of a miracle, in colloquy with the elements.
-He had Fire, Water, and Earth, but lacked Air&mdash;the
-movement of the Air. But every day the Council of
-Ten sent to him a red-haired man to wish him good
-morning&mdash;you know, that red-haired man, with a cap
-over his eyes, who embraces the column in the <cite>Adoration
-of the Magi</cite> of the second Bonifazio. After colossal labors,
-Seguso had a brilliant idea. He found a magician,
-who was said to have power over the Wind in favor of
-long navigations. He said to the wizard: 'I need a
-little wind, not too light nor too strong, but steady and
-gentle, which I could manage as I wish: only a little
-breeze with which to blow some glass that I have in my
-head. <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Lenius aspirans aura secunda venit.</i> Do you understand,
-old man?'"</p>
-
-<p>The story-teller burst into a ringing laugh, for he could
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-fancy the scene with all its details in a house on the
-Calle della Testa, at San Zanepolo, where the Schiavone
-lived with his daughter.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina tried to join in his gayety; but his boyish
-laughter pained her as it had once before when she
-was lost in the labyrinth.</p>
-
-<p>"It is a long story," Stelio went on. "Some day I
-shall use it, but I am keeping it for a time when I have
-more leisure. Now fancy! The magician works the
-spell. Every night Dardi sent his sailors to the Tre
-Porti to spread a snare for the little Wind. At last, one
-night, or rather just before dawn, when the moon was
-about to set, they caught it asleep on a sandy bank in
-the midst of a flock of tired swallows it had borne
-thither.</p>
-
-<p>"There it lay, on its back, breathing as lightly as a
-child in the salty aroma of the waters, almost covered
-by innumerable little forked tails. The rising tide rocked
-it in its slumber, and the black-and-white travelers fluttered
-about it, weary with their long flight."</p>
-
-<p>"What a charming fancy!" exclaimed La Foscarina
-at this fresh picture. "Where have you seen that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Here begins the real charm of the story," he answered.
-"They seize the sleeping Wind, bind it with
-osier withes, carry it aboard their boat, and set sail for
-Temòdia. The bark is invaded by the flock of swallows,
-which will not abandon the leader of their flight."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio paused, because the details of the fantasy
-crowded his imagination to such a degree that he knew
-not which to choose to relate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"And then?" urged his companion, with interest.</p>
-
-<p>"I can tell no more now, Fosca. I know too many
-things.... Well, imagine that Dardi falls in
-love with his prisoner. It is called Ornitio, because it
-leads flights of migrating birds. A continual twittering
-of swallows surrounds Temòdia; nests hang from the
-posts and the scaffolding that surround the great structure;
-wings are singed in the flames of the furnace,
-when Ornitio blows through the tube to create a light
-and luminous column with that ball of burning paste.
-But before he had tamed it and taught it what to do,
-he had much trouble with it. The Master of the Flame
-began by speaking Latin to it, and reciting lines of Virgil
-to it, believing it would understand. But the azure-haired
-Ornitio spoke Greek, naturally, with a slightly
-sibilant accent. It knew Sappho's odes by heart, and
-while it breathed through the unequal tubes, it remembered
-the pipes of Pan."</p>
-
-<p>"And what did it eat?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pollen and salt."</p>
-
-<p>"Who gave it the food?"</p>
-
-<p>"No one. It was sufficient to inhale the pollen and
-salt scattered on the breeze."</p>
-
-<p>"And did it never try to escape?"</p>
-
-<p>"Always. But Seguso took infinite precautions, like
-the lover he was."</p>
-
-<p>"And did Ornitio return his love?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, it began to love him after a time, particularly
-because of the scarlet thread that the master wore continually
-around his bare neck."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"And Perdilanza?"</p>
-
-<p>"She was left alone, and languished in her grief. I
-will tell you more of her some day. Some day I shall
-go to the seashore of Palestrina, and I will write this
-fable for you in the golden sand."</p>
-
-<p>"But how does the story end?"</p>
-
-<p>"The miracle is accomplished. The Archorgan is
-raised at Temòdia with its seven thousand glass pipes,
-resembling one of those frozen forests which Ornitio&mdash;who
-was a little inclined to boast of the wonders it had
-met in its travels&mdash;declared it had seen in the land of
-the Iporborrei. At last comes the day of the Sensa. The
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Serenissimo</i>, between the Patriarch and the Archbishop of
-Spalatro, goes out of the harbor of San Marco on the
-<cite>Bucentaur</cite>. So great is the pomp that Ornitio believes it
-must be the triumphal return of the son of Chronos. The
-fountains are set playing all around Temòdia; and animated
-by the eternal silence of the lagoon, the gigantic
-organ peals forth, under the magic fingers of the new musicians,
-a wave of harmony so vast that it reaches as far
-as the mainland and even to the Adriatic. The <cite>Bucentaur</cite>
-stops, because its forty oars have suddenly fallen at its
-sides, abandoned by the astonished crew. But suddenly
-the wave of harmony breaks into discordant sounds, and
-at last it dies away in a faint murmur. Dardi feels the instrument
-becoming dumb under his fingers, as if his own
-soul had failed. What has happened? The master hears
-only great shouts of jeers and scorn that come to him
-through the silent pipes&mdash;the sound of firing and the
-uproar of the populace. A group embarks from the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
-<cite>Bucentaur</cite>, bringing the red-haired man, who bears a
-block and an ax. The blow is aimed exactly at the
-scarlet thread; the head falls, and is thrown into the
-water, where it floats like the head of Orpheus."</p>
-
-<p>"But what had happened?"</p>
-
-<p>"Perdilanza had thrown herself into the cataract! The
-water dragged her into the machinery of the organ.
-Her body, with its famous hair, lay across the great
-delicate instrument, and silenced its musical heart."</p>
-
-<p>"But Ornitio?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ornitio rescued the head from the water and flew
-away with it toward the sea. The swallows heard of
-its flight and followed it, and very soon a cloud of black
-wings and white surrounds the fugitive. All the nests
-in Venice remain empty after this sudden flight."</p>
-
-<p>"And Dardi's head?"</p>
-
-<p>"Where it is, no one knows," concluded the story-teller,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>The woman bent her head in thoughtful silence.</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps there is a hidden meaning in your tale,"
-she said, after a pause. "Perhaps I have understood."</p>
-
-<p>"Alas, yes! if there were any resemblance between
-my audacity and that of the master workman. Perhaps I
-too should wear a scarlet thread around my neck, as a
-sort of warning."</p>
-
-<p>"You will have your great destiny. I have no fear
-for you."</p>
-
-<p>He ceased to laugh.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, my friend, I must conquer. And you shall help
-me. Every morning I too receive my menacing visitor&mdash;the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-expectation of those that love me and those that
-hate me. Expectation should wear the dress of the executioner,
-for nothing on earth is so pitiless."</p>
-
-<p>"But it is the measure of your power."</p>
-
-<p>He felt the vulture's beak in his breast. Instinctively
-he straightened himself up, seized with an impatience of
-even their slow idling on the water. Why did he live
-in such idleness? Every hour and every minute he ought
-to be trying, struggling, fortifying himself against destruction,
-diminution, violation, contagion. Every hour
-and every minute his eyes should be fixed on his aim,
-and all his energies should be concentrated upon it.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know this saying of the great Herodotus:
-'The name of the bow is Bios, and its work is death'?
-This saying is one that excites our spirits even before
-communicating to it its exact meaning. I heard it continually
-within myself, that evening last autumn, when
-I was sitting at your table&mdash;the night of the Epiphany
-of the Flame. That night I had an hour of true Dionysian
-life, an hour of secret though terrible delight, as if
-I held in my breast the burning mountain where the
-Tiades howl and shriek. Sometimes I could really
-hear songs and clamor, and the cries of distant battle.
-It astonished me that I could remain motionless, and
-the sense of my bodily immobility increased my mental
-frenzy. I could see only your face, which suddenly
-appeared extraordinarily beautiful, revealing all the
-strength of your soul; and behind it I could see other
-countries and other peoples. If I could only tell you how
-I saw you! In the tumult, at the passage of marvelous
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-images, accompanied by floods of music, I called to you
-as in the thick of battle; I made appeals which perhaps
-you heard&mdash;not for love alone, but for glory; not
-for one thirst, but for two, and I know not which was
-the more ardent. And the face of my great work appeared
-to me then the same as your face. I saw it, I
-tell you! And with incredible rapidity my work took
-form in words, song, movement, and symphony, and was
-so real that if I succeed in infusing a part of it into that
-which I wish to express, I shall surely inflame the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>"To express oneself! That is the necessity. The
-greatest vision has no value if it is not manifested and
-condensed in vital forms. And I have everything to
-create. I am not pouring my substance into hereditary
-molds. My work is entirely my own invention. I must
-not, and I will not, obey anything but my instinct and
-the genius of my race. Nevertheless, like Dardi, who
-saw the famous organ at the house of Caterino Zeno, I
-too have another work before my mind&mdash;a work accomplished
-by a formidable creator, a gigantic work in
-the eyes of man."</p>
-
-<p>The image of the barbaric creator reappeared to him:
-the blue eyes gleamed under the vast forehead, and
-he saw once more the white hair tossed by the wind
-about that aged neck. He remembered his own indescribable
-thrill of joy and fear when he had so unexpectedly
-felt beneath his hand the throbbing of that
-sacred heart.</p>
-
-<p>"I should say not before but around my spirit. Sometimes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-it is like a stormy sea trying to draw me down
-and swallow me. My Temòdia is a granite rock in the
-open sea, and I am like an artisan trying to erect upon
-it a pure Doric temple. Compelled to defend the order
-of his columns from the violence of the waves, his spirit
-is always strained in order never to cease to hear, in
-the midst of the clamor, the secret rhythm which alone
-must regulate the intervals between lines and spaces.
-And in this sense too my tragedy is a battle."</p>
-
-<p>He took one of his friend's hands.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you hear the song?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is it?" she said, raising her face to the sky.
-"Is it in heaven or on the earth?"</p>
-
-<p>An infinite melody seemed to be flowing through the
-peaceful, silvery atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>She felt Stelio's hand quiver.</p>
-
-<p>"When Alessandro enters the illuminated chamber
-where the virgin has been reading the lament of Antigone,"
-he said, "he tells how he has come on horseback
-across the plain of Argos, where the song of the larks
-fills the sky. He says that one lark fell at his horse's
-feet, like a stone, and lay there silent, overcome by
-its own frenzy of joy in its song. He picked it up. 'Here
-it is.' Then you hold your hand toward him, you take
-the bird, and murmur: 'Ah, it is still warm!' And while
-you speak the virgin trembles. You can feel her quivering."</p>
-
-<p>The actress felt the mystic chill steal over her once
-more, as if the soul of the blind woman reëntered her
-own soul.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"At the end of the Prelude, the impetuosity of the
-chromatic progressions expresses this growing joy, this
-fever of delight.... Listen, listen!... Ah,
-what a miracle! This morning, Fosca, this morning I
-was at work upon my melody, and now it is developing
-itself in the air! Are we not in a state of grace?"</p>
-
-<p>A spirit of life seemed indeed running throughout the
-solitude; a vehement inspiration filled the silence with
-emotion. La Foscarina gave up her whole soul to it,
-as a leaf yields itself to the whirlwind, ravished to the
-very summit of love and faith.</p>
-
-<p>But a feverish impatience to act, to work, to accomplish
-seized the young man. His capacity for work
-seemed multiplied. He thought of the plenitude of the
-hours to come; he saw his work in concrete form&mdash;the
-pages, the scores, the variety of needs, the richness of
-material adaptable to rhythm.</p>
-
-<p>"In a week, Fosca, if grace assists me, my Prelude
-will be finished, and I should like to try it immediately
-with an orchestra. Perhaps I shall go to Rome to do
-this. Antimo della Bella is even more impatient than I;
-I receive a letter from him almost every day. I believe
-that my presence in Rome is necessary for a few days
-in order to prevent certain errors that may arise in the
-building of the theater. Antimo writes about the possibility
-of tearing down the old stone stairs leading
-from the Corsini Garden to the Janiculum. The street
-that will lead to the theater, after one passes the Arch
-of Septimius, will continue beside the Palazzo Corsini,
-cross the garden, and extend to the foot of the hill.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-The hill is green and mossy, covered with cypress, laurel,
-and flags. The Paulina fountain rises at the left.
-A flight of stone steps leads to a terrace from which
-open two paths bordered by Apollo-like laurels, and
-worthy of leading the people toward Poetry. Can anyone
-imagine a nobler entrance? Centuries have wrapped
-it in mystery; no sound is heard but the song of birds,
-the tinkling of fountains, the whisper of the forest. And
-I believe that poets and innocents can even hear there
-the fluttering of the Hamadryads and the breath of
-Pan!"</p>
-
-<p>The ugly shores, crumbling stones, decaying roots,
-traces of ruined buildings, the odor of dissolution, the
-funereal cypresses, the black crosses, in vain recalled to
-him the words the statues beside the Brenta had spoken
-with their marble lips. Only the great song of victory
-and liberty, stronger than all other signs, now touched
-the heart of him who was to create with joy. "On! on!
-Higher! ever higher!"</p>
-
-<p>And the heart of Perdita, purified from all cowardice,
-ready for any test, betrothed itself once more to Life!
-As in that distant hour of the delirious night, she repeated:
-"Let me serve! Let me serve!"</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV<br />
-THE WORLD'S BEREAVEMENT</h2>
-
-
-<p>The gondola entered a canal enclosed between
-two green shores, which reached the line of
-vision so precisely that the numerous reeds
-were perceptible, the newer ones discernible by
-their paler tint.</p>
-
-<p>From the fulness of her soul, and the abundance of her
-nature, La Foscarina sought everywhere for living
-things to love; her glance became child-like once more,
-and all things were reflected in it as in the peaceful
-water, and some seemed to reappear from the distant
-past, like apparitions.</p>
-
-<p>When the gondola touched the shore, she was surprised
-at having arrived.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish to land, or do you prefer to go back?"
-asked Stelio, coming out of his reverie.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment she hesitated, because her hand lay in
-his, and to move would have meant a lessening of
-sweetness.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," at last she said, with a smile. "Let us walk
-on this grass a little while."</p>
-
-<p>They landed on the Island of San Francesco. A few
-slender young cypress shrubs greeted them timidly.
-Not a human face was to be seen. The invisible myriad
-filled the desert with their canticle of praise. The mists
-rose in clouds near the sunset hour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"How many times we have walked together on the
-grass, have we not, Stelio?"</p>
-
-<p>"But now comes the steep rock," he replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Let the rock come, no matter how steep and rough
-it may be," said La Foscarina.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio was surprised at the unusual gayety in his companion's
-voice. He looked at her, and saw a sort of intoxicated
-joy deep in her beautiful eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"Why do we feel so joyous and free on this lonely
-island?"</p>
-
-<p>"And do you know the reason why?"</p>
-
-<p>"To others, this is a melancholy pilgrimage. Most
-persons, when they come to this place, leave it with the
-taste of death on their lips."</p>
-
-<p>"But we are in a state of grace," said La Foscarina.</p>
-
-<p>"The more we hope, the more we live," was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>"And the more we love, the more we hope."</p>
-
-<p>The rhythm of the aerial song continued, drawing
-from them their ideal essences.</p>
-
-<p>"How beautiful you are!" said Stelio.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden flush flowed over that impassioned face.
-She was silent, but her breath came quick, and she half-closed
-her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"A warm current of air is passing," she said in a half
-whisper. "Did you not feel on the water an occasional
-breath of warmer air?"</p>
-
-<p>She drew deep breaths.</p>
-
-<p>"There is an odor like that of new-mown hay. Don't
-you detect it?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"That is the odor that comes from the banks of seaweed
-that are beginning to be uncovered."</p>
-
-<p>"See how beautiful the country is!"</p>
-
-<p>"That is Le Vignole. Down there is the Lido. And
-over there is the Island of Sant' Erasmo."</p>
-
-<p>The sun had now thrown aside its veil and was showering
-gold upon the estuary. The damp banks emerging
-from the fog suggested the opening of flowers. The
-shadows of the slender cypresses began to grow longer
-and of a deeper blue.</p>
-
-<p>"I am certain," said La Foscarina, "that almond trees
-are in blossom somewhere near. Let us go on the
-dyke."</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head, tossing back her hair with one
-of those instinctive movements that seemed to break
-a bond or to free her of some fetter.</p>
-
-<p>"Wait!"</p>
-
-<p>And quickly withdrawing from her hat two large pins
-that held it in place, she uncovered her head. She turned
-back to the landing and tossed the sparkling hat into
-the gondola; then she rejoined her friend, running her
-fingers lightly through the waves of her hair, through
-which the air passed, while the sun shone on it warmly.
-She seemed to feel relieved, as if she breathed more
-freely.</p>
-
-<p>"Did the wings hurt?" Stelio asked with a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>And he regarded the ripples, roughened not by the
-comb but by the wind.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, the least weight annoys me. If I should not
-appear eccentric, I should always go without a hat. But
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-when I see the trees I cannot resist my impulses. My
-hair remembers that it was born wild and free, and it
-wishes to breathe in its natural way&mdash;in the desert, at
-least."</p>
-
-<p>Frank and gay in her manner, she glided over the
-grass with her graceful, swaying movement. And Stelio
-recalled the day when, in the Gradenigo garden, she had
-appeared to his eyes like the beautiful tawny greyhound.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, here comes a Capuchin!"</p>
-
-<p>The friar-guardian approached them, and greeted
-them with affability. He offered to conduct Stelio within
-the walls of the monastery, but said that the rules
-forbade the admission of his companion.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I go in?" said Stelio, with a look at La Foscarina,
-who was smiling.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, go."</p>
-
-<p>"But you will be all alone."</p>
-
-<p>"Never mind; I will stay here alone."</p>
-
-<p>"I will bring you a bit from the sacred pine."</p>
-
-<p>He followed the friar under the portico with a raftered
-roof, whence hung the empty swallows' nests.
-Before he crossed the threshold, he turned once more
-to wave his hand at his friend. Then the door closed
-after him.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-O BEATA SOLITUDO!<br />
-O SOLA BEATITUDO!</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then, as a change in the stops of an organ changes
-its whole tone, the woman's thoughts were suddenly
-transfigured. The horror of absence, to her the worst
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-of all evils, bore down upon her loving soul. Her beloved
-was no longer there; she no longer heard his voice,
-felt his breath, touched his firm and gentle hand. She
-no longer saw him live; she could no longer realize
-that the air, the lights and shadows, all the life of the
-world, harmonized itself with his life!&mdash;Suppose that
-door never should open again&mdash;that he never should return
-to me!&mdash;No, that could not be. He would surely
-cross that threshold again in a few minutes, and once
-more she would receive him into her eyes and into her
-very soul. But alas! in a few days, would he not thus
-disappear again, as he had disappeared now? And first
-the field, then the mountain, then other fields and
-mountains and rivers, then the strait and the ocean,
-the infinite space that neither tears nor cries can cross,
-would they not come between her and that brow, those
-eyes, those lips? The image of the far-off brutal city
-black with coal and bristling with arms, filled the peaceful
-island; the crash of hammers, the grinding of wheels,
-the puffing of engines, the immense groaning of iron,
-drowned the melody of the springtime. And with each
-of these simple things&mdash;with the grass, the sands, the
-brooks, the seaweed, that soft feather floating downward,
-perhaps from the breast of a songbird&mdash;was contrasted
-the vision of streets overflowing with the human
-torrent, houses with thousands of deformed eyes, full
-of fevers that are enemies to sleep, theaters filled with
-the restlessness or the stupor of men who yield one
-hour to relaxation from the ferocious battle for lucre.
-And still, as in a vision, she saw again her own face
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-and her name on walls contaminated by the leprosy of
-posters, on boards carried by stupid bearers, on gigantic
-bridges of factories, on the doors of public vehicles, here,
-there, and everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>"Look! Look at this! A branch of flowering almond!
-There is an almond tree in bloom in the monastery
-garden, in the second cloister, near the sacred pine!
-And you could detect the odor!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio ran toward her, joyous as a child, followed by
-the Capuchin, who bore a bouquet of fragrant thyme.</p>
-
-<p>"Look! Take it. See what a wonderful thing it is!"</p>
-
-<p>She took the branch, trembling, and her eyes were
-bright with tears.</p>
-
-<p>"And you knew it was blooming!" said Stelio.</p>
-
-<p>He perceived the glittering silvery drops in her eyes,
-which made them look like the petals of a flower. And
-at that instant, of all her adored person, he loved most
-blindly the delicate lines that went from the corners
-of her eyes to her temples, the tiny veins that made her
-eyelids look like violets, the sweet curve of her cheek,
-the tapering chin, and all that never would bloom again,
-all the shadows of that impassioned face.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Father," said she, with a bright glance, repressing
-her sadness, "will not Christ's Poor Man weep again
-in heaven for this broken branch?"</p>
-
-<p>The friar smiled with playful indulgence.</p>
-
-<p>"When this good gentleman saw our tree," he replied,
-"he gave me no time to speak, but had the branch
-in his hand in a moment, and I could only say Amen.
-But the almond tree is rich."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He was placid and affable, with a crown of hair still
-nearly black, with a refined, olive-skinned face, and great
-tawny eyes, as clear as a topaz.</p>
-
-<p>"Here is some savory thyme," he added, offering the
-herbs to La Foscarina.</p>
-
-<p>They could hear a choir of youthful voices singing a
-Response.</p>
-
-<p>"Those are our novices; we have fifteen with us."</p>
-
-<p>He accompanied the visitors to the meadow behind
-the convent. Standing on a bank, at the foot of a blasted
-cypress, the good monk pointed to the fertile isles,
-praised their abundance, mentioned their varieties of
-fruit, lauded the more delightful according to the seasons,
-and directed their attention toward the boats sailing
-toward the Rialto with their new harvest.</p>
-
-<p>"Praise to Thee, O Lord, for our Mother Earth!" said
-the woman with the flowering branch.</p>
-
-<p>The Franciscan was susceptible to the beauty of that
-feminine voice, and was silent.</p>
-
-<p>Lofty cypresses encircled the pious field; four of them
-showed the marks of lightning strokes. Their tops
-were motionless, and were the only sharp outlines in the
-level of the meadows, and waters that blended with the
-horizon. Not the slightest breeze now stirred the infinite
-mirror. A profound enchantment like an ecstasy filled
-the lovely place with rapture. The melody of the winged
-creatures still continued to float from invisible regions,
-but it, too, seemed to begin to flag and soften in this
-silent sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p>"At this hour, on the hills of Umbria," said he that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-had despoiled the flowering almond of the cloister,
-"every olive-tree has at its base, like a covering that is
-shed, a heap of its cut branches; and the tree seems
-more beautiful because the heap of branches hides its
-rugged roots. Saint Francis passes in the air, and with
-his finger he heals the pain of the wounds made by the
-pruning-knife."</p>
-
-<p>The Capuchin made the sign of the cross, and took
-his leave.</p>
-
-<p>"Praise be to Jesus Christ!"</p>
-
-<p>The visitors watched him as he moved away under
-the deep shadows cast by the cypresses.</p>
-
-<p>"He has found peace," said La Foscarina. "Does it
-not seem so to you, Stelio? There is great peace in his
-face and his voice. Look at his gait, too."</p>
-
-<p>Alternately a ray of light and a bar of shadow fell
-across his tonsure and his tunic.</p>
-
-<p>"He gave me a piece of the sacred pine," said Stelio.
-"I will send it to Sofia, who is devoted to the seraphic
-saint. Here it is. It has no resinous odor now. Smell
-it!"</p>
-
-<p>For Sofia's sake she kissed the relic. The lips of the
-good sister would touch the spot where she had pressed
-her own.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes&mdash;send it."</p>
-
-<p>Silently they strolled along, their heads bent, in the
-footsteps of the man of peace, approaching the landing
-between the rows of cypress trees.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not sometimes wish to see her again?" asked
-La Foscarina, with a touch of shyness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Yes, very much," was Stelio's soft-spoken answer.</p>
-
-<p>"And your mother?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, my heart yearns for her&mdash;for that mother who
-looks for me each day."</p>
-
-<p>"And would you not like to go back there?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I shall return, perhaps."</p>
-
-<p>"When?"</p>
-
-<p>"I do not know yet. But I do wish to see once more
-my mother and Sofia. I long to see them very much,
-Foscarina."</p>
-
-<p>"And why do you not go to them, then? What holds
-you here?"</p>
-
-<p>He took the hand that hung idly at her side, and they
-continued to walk thus. As the oblique rays of the sun
-lighted the right cheek of each, they saw their united
-shadows preceding them on the grass.</p>
-
-<p>"When you were speaking of the hills of Umbria
-just now," said La Foscarina, "perhaps you were thinking
-of the hills of your own part of the country. That
-figure of the pruned olive tree was not new to me. I
-remember you speaking to me once before of the pruning
-of trees. In no other form of his labor can the
-farmer gain a deeper sense of the mute life that is in a
-tree. When he stands before a pear, an apple, or a peach
-tree with the pruning-knife and shears that may increase
-their fertility and strength, but which could nevertheless
-as easily cause their death, the spirit of divination
-surges within him, from the wisdom he has acquired
-from his long communings with the earth and the sky.
-The tree is at its most delicate moment, when its senses
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-are awakened, and the sap is flowing to the buds that
-swell and swell, and are just ready to open. And man,
-with his pitiless knife, must regulate the mysterious
-movement of the sap. The tree is there intact, ignorant
-of Hesiod and of Virgil, in labor with its flowering and
-its fruit; and every branch in the air is as full of life as
-is the arm of the man that wields the knife. Which is
-the branch that must be cut off? Will the sap heal
-the cut? You told me about your orchard once&mdash;I remember
-it. You said that all the cuts should be turned
-toward the north, so then the sun should not see them."</p>
-
-<p>She spoke as she had spoken in that far-off evening
-in November, when the young man had arrived at her
-house, breathless from the tempest of wind, after he had
-borne the hero in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled, and let himself be led by that dear hand.
-He inhaled the fragrance of that flowery branch in which
-was a suggestion of bitterness.</p>
-
-<p>"It is true," he said. "And Laimo would prepare the
-ointment of Saint Fiacre in the mortar, and Sofia would
-bring him the strong linen to bandage the larger wounds,
-after they had been cleansed."</p>
-
-<p>In fancy he could see the kneeling peasant, pounding
-cow-dung, clay, and barley-husks in a stone mortar,
-according to an ancient recipe.</p>
-
-<p>"In ten days," he continued, "the whole hill, seen
-from the seas, will be like a great pink cloud. Sofia
-wrote to remind me of it. Has she ever reappeared to
-you?"</p>
-
-<p>"She is with us now."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"She is now standing at the window, looking out at
-the purpling sea; and our mother, leaning on the window-ledge
-with her, says to her: 'Who knows whether
-Stelio may not be on that sail boat which I see waiting
-at the mouth of the river for the wind? He promised
-me he would return unexpectedly by sea, in a small
-boat.'&mdash;And then her heart aches."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, why do you disappoint her?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, Fosca, you are right. But I can live far-away
-from her for months and months, yet feel that my life
-is full. Then&mdash;an hour comes when nothing in the world
-appears to me so sweet as her dear eyes and there
-is a part of myself that remains inconsolable. I have
-heard the sailors of the Tyrrhenean Sea call the Adriatic
-the Gulf of Venice. To-night I remember that my
-house is on the Gulf, and that seems to bring it nearer
-to me."</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the gondola once more, but turned
-to look back at the isle of prayer, where grew the tall
-cypresses with their imploring arms.</p>
-
-<p>"Over yonder is the canal of the Tre Porti that leads
-to the open sea," said the homesick one, fancying that
-he could see himself standing on the deck of the little
-brig, in sight of his tamarisks and myrtles.</p>
-
-<p>They reëmbarked, and floated away, silent for a long
-time. The aerial melody still fell softly on the archipelago.</p>
-
-<p>"Now that the plan of your work is finished," said La
-Foscarina, beginning again her gentle persuasion,
-though her heart trembled in her breast, "you will need
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
-peace and quiet for your labor upon it. Have you not
-always worked best at your home? In no other place
-will you be able to soothe the restless anxiety that
-possesses you. I know it well."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true," he replied. "When the yearning for
-glory seizes us, we believe that the conquest of art must
-be like the siege of a fortification, and that trumpets
-and shouts accompany the courageous assault; while in
-reality the only work that is of real value is that which
-has been developed in austere silence&mdash;work performed
-with slow, indomitable perseverance, in hard, pure solitude.
-Nothing is of any value save the complete
-abandonment of soul and body to the Idea which we
-desire to establish among men as a permanent and
-dominating force."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, you know it, too!"</p>
-
-<p>The woman's eyes were filled with tears again, at the
-sound of those inexorable words, in which was expressed
-the depth of virile passion, the heroic necessity of mental
-domination, the firm determination to surpass himself
-and to force his destiny without flinching.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you know it well!"</p>
-
-<p>And she was thrilled, as one that beholds a noble
-spectacle; and, contemplating that embodied force of
-will, all else appeared vain to her. The tears she had
-felt in her eyes when he had brought her the flowering
-branch now seemed mean and weakly effeminate in
-comparison with those that in this moment welled up
-and were alone worthy to be kissed away by her friend.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, well, then&mdash;go back to your sea, to your own
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-countryside, to your own home. Light your lamp once
-more with the oil of your own olives."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio's lips were closely compressed, and a deep
-frown wrinkled his brow.</p>
-
-<p>"The dear sister will come to your side again to lay
-a blade of grass on the difficult page."</p>
-
-<p>He bent his brow, which was clouded with a thought.</p>
-
-<p>"You will rest in talking with Sofia by the window;
-and perhaps you will see again the flocks of sheep on
-their way from the plain to the mountains."</p>
-
-<p>The sunlight was approaching the gigantic acropolis
-of the Dolomites. The phalanx of clouds was disordered
-as if in battle, pierced by innumerable darts of
-light, and steeped in a marvelous blood-like crimson.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, after a long silence, Stelio spoke:</p>
-
-<p>"And if she should ask me about the fate of the virgin
-who reads the lament of Antigone?"</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina started.</p>
-
-<p>"And suppose she asks me about the love of the
-brother who searches through the tombs?"</p>
-
-<p>The woman felt a dread of this phantom.</p>
-
-<p>"And suppose the page on which she lays the blade
-of grass were the page wherein that trembling soul
-tells of its secret and terrible battle against the horrible
-evil?"</p>
-
-<p>In her sudden terror, the woman could find no words.
-Both relapsed into silence, looking long at the sharp
-peaks of the distant mountains, which glowed as if just
-emerging from primordial fire. The spectacle of this
-eternally desolate grandeur awakened in them a sense
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-of mysterious fatality and a certain confused terror
-which they could neither conquer nor comprehend.</p>
-
-<p>"And you?" said Stelio suddenly, after a long silence.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina made no reply.</p>
-
-<p>The bells of San Marco sounded the signal for the
-Angelus, and their tremendous clamor swelled in ever-widening
-waves over the still crimson lagoon which they
-were leaving to the memories of shadows and death.
-From San Giorgio Maggiore and San Giorgio dei Greci,
-from San Giorgio degli Schiavoni and San Giovanni in
-Bragora, from San Moisé, from the Salute, the Redentore,
-and, from one place to another, throughout the
-whole domain of the Evangelists, even to the distant
-towers of the Madonna dell' Orto, of San Giobbe and
-Sant' Andrea, the bronze voices answered, mingling in
-one great chorus floating over the silent stones and
-waters, a veritable dome of sound, invisible, yet the vibrations
-of which seemed to communicate with the scintillation
-of the first stars. And the reverberation above
-the heads of the two in the gondola was so great that
-they seemed to feel it in the roots of their hair and in
-the cool shiver of their flesh.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, is that you, Daniele?"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio had recognized at the door of his own house,
-on the Fondamenta Samedo, the figure of Daniele
-Glauro.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Stelio, I have been waiting for you!" cried
-Daniele breathlessly, striving to make himself heard
-above the pealing of bells. "Richard Wagner is dead!"</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV<br />
-THE LAST FAREWELL</h2>
-
-
-<p>All the world seemed to have diminished in
-value.</p>
-
-<p>The nomad woman had armed herself anew
-with courage, and planned the route of her
-next professional tour. From the thought of the hero
-lying in his coffin, a lofty inspiration came to all noble
-hearts. La Foscarina knew how to receive it and to
-convert it to the thoughts and actions of daily life.</p>
-
-<p>It happened that her beloved surprised her at the
-time she was packing her familiar books, the little cherished
-treasures from which she never parted&mdash;things that
-for her possessed the power of imparting dreams or consolation.</p>
-
-<p>"What are you doing?" Stelio asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I am making ready to leave the country."</p>
-
-<p>She saw a change pass over his face, but she did not
-waver.</p>
-
-<p>"And where are you going?"</p>
-
-<p>"A long distance from here&mdash;I shall cross the Atlantic."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio became slightly paler. But suddenly he was
-seized with doubt; he thought she was not speaking
-the truth; that she wished only to prove him; that her
-decision was not absolutely fixed, and that she expected
-to be persuaded to remain. The unlooked-for disillusion
-on the banks of Murano had left its mark on his heart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Have you really decided on this, then, so suddenly?"</p>
-
-<p>She was simple, sure of herself, and prompt in her
-reply.</p>
-
-<p>"My decision is not exactly sudden. My idleness has
-lasted too long, and I have the responsibility of all my
-company on my shoulders. While I am waiting for the
-Theater of Apollo to be opened, and for <cite>The Victory
-of Man</cite> to be finished, I shall go once more to bid farewell
-to the Barbarians. I must work for your beautiful
-enterprise. We shall need a great deal of gold to restore
-the treasures of Mycenæ. And all that is connected with
-your work must appear with unrivaled magnificence.
-I do not wish Cassandra's mask to be of some base metal.
-But, above all, I wish to satisfy your desire that for the
-first three days the populace shall have free admission
-to the theater, and after that on one day of every week.
-My faith aids me to leave you. Time flies. It is necessary
-that each person should be in his own place, ready
-and full of strength, when the great day comes. I shall
-not fail you. I hope that you will be satisfied with your
-friend. I am going away to work, and certainly the task
-will be more difficult than I ever have found it before.
-But you, my poor boy, what a burden you have to bear!
-What an effort we demand from you! What great
-things we expect from you! Ah, you know it!"</p>
-
-<p>She had begun courageously, in a tone that was almost
-blithe, trying to seem what above all she must be&mdash;a
-good and faithful instrument at the service of a powerful
-genius, a strong and willing companion. But a
-wave of repressed emotion would rise in her throat and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-stop her speech. Her pauses grew longer, and her hand
-wandered uncertainly among her books and treasures.</p>
-
-<p>"May everything be ever propitious to your work!
-That is the only thing that really matters&mdash;all else is
-nothing. Let us lift our hearts!"</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head, with its two wild wings, and held
-out both hands to her beloved. He, pale and grave,
-clasped them close. In her dear eyes, that were like
-sparkling springs of water, he saw a flash of the same
-beauty that had dazzled him one evening in the room
-where the fire had roared, and he had listened to the development
-of the two great melodies.</p>
-
-<p>"I love you and I have faith in you," he said; "I will
-not fail you and you will not fail me. Something springs
-from us that shall be stronger than life itself."</p>
-
-<p>"A great melancholy," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>Before her, on a table, lay the familiar book, with
-pages turned down and margins full of scribbled notes;
-here and there a petal, a flower, a blade of grass lay
-between the leaves&mdash;signs of the sorrow that had asked
-and obtained from them the consolation of relief or of
-forgetfulness. Before her were strewn all the little
-cherished objects dear to her, strange, varied; nearly all
-were things of no value: a doll's foot, a silver heart, an
-ivory compass, a watch without a dial, a small iron lantern,
-a single earring, a flint, a key, a seal, and other
-trifles; but all were consecrated by some memory, animated
-by some superstitious belief, touched by the finger
-of love or of death, relics that could speak only to one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-of war and of truce, of hope and of sadness. Among
-these objects were figures to which artists had entrusted
-their secret confession, signs and enigmas, profound allegories,
-hiding truths that, like the sun, could not be
-gazed at by mortal eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The young man put his arm around his friend's waist,
-and silently they went to the window. They saw the
-far-distant sky, the trees, the towers, the end of the
-lagoon over which Twilight was bending her face, while
-the Euganean hills were as quiet and blue as if they
-were the wings of earth folded in the peacefulness of
-eventide.</p>
-
-<p>They turned toward each other, looking into the
-depths of each other's eyes. Then they embraced, as
-if to seal a silent compact.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Yes, all the world seemed to have diminished in value.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena had asked of the widow of Richard
-Wagner that the two young Italian men that had carried
-the unconscious hero from the vessel to the shore
-that night in November, with four of their friends,
-might have granted to them the honor of bearing the
-coffin from the death-chamber to the boat and from
-the boat to the hearse. This request was granted.</p>
-
-<p>It was the sixteenth of February, at one o'clock in
-the afternoon. Stelio Effrena, Daniele Glauro, Francesco
-de Lizo, Baldassare Stampa, Fabio Molza, and
-Antimo della Bella waited in the hall of the palace.
-The latter had come from Rome, bringing with him
-the artisans engaged in the building of the Theater of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-Apollo, that they might bear at the funeral ceremony
-bunches of laurel gathered on the Janiculum.</p>
-
-<p>They waited in silence, without even looking at one
-another, each overcome by the throbbing of his own
-heart. Nothing was heard save a faint dropping of
-water on the steps before the great door, where, on the
-candelabra at the doorposts appeared the two words:
-DOMUS PACIS.</p>
-
-<p>The boatman, who had been dear to the hero, came
-to call them. In that rough yet faithful face, the eyes
-showed that the lids were burned by weeping.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena advanced first, followed by his companions.
-After ascending the stairs, they entered a low-studded,
-darkened room, filled with the melancholy odor
-of flowers and fluids. They paused there a few minutes.
-A door opened. They passed through the doorway one
-by one into the next room. Each turned pale as he
-entered.</p>
-
-<p>The body was there, enclosed in its crystal coffin,
-and beside it stood the woman with the face of snowy
-pallor. The second coffin, of polished metal, stood shining
-on the floor.</p>
-
-<p>The six bearers ranged themselves about the coffin,
-awaiting a sign. The silence was profound, and no
-one moved; but an impetuous sadness shook each soul
-like a tempest of wind.</p>
-
-<p>Each gazed on the elect of Life and of Death. An
-infinite smile illumined the face of the hero lying there&mdash;infinite
-and distant as the glint of a glacier, as the
-sparkle of the sea, as the halo of the star. Their eyes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
-could not bear to look long at it, but their hearts, with
-an awe-struck fear that made them religious, felt as if
-they had the revelation of a divine secret.</p>
-
-<p>The woman with the snow-white face made a slight
-movement, yet preserved the same attitude, rigid as a
-statue.</p>
-
-<p>Then the six friends approached the body, extended
-their arms, summoned up their strength. Stelio Effrena
-took his place at the head and Daniele Glauro took his
-at the feet, as on that day in November. The young
-men lifted their burden with one movement, at a low-spoken
-word from the leader. The eyes of each were
-dazzled, as if a sudden ray of sunlight had pierced the
-crystal. Baldassare Stampa broke into sobs. The same
-knot was in each throat. The coffin swayed, then it was
-lowered into its metal covering, which enveloped it like
-a suit of armor.</p>
-
-<p>The six friends remained overcome with grief. They
-hesitated to put the cover in its place, fascinated by that
-infinite smile. Stelio Effrena heard a light rustling, and
-looked up. He saw the white face bending over the
-body, a superhuman apparition of love and grief. That
-instant was like eternity. The woman disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>When the coffin was closed, they lifted their burden
-a second time&mdash;heavier now. Out of the room and down
-the stairs they bore it slowly. Rapt in a kind of sublime
-anguish, they could see their fraternal faces reflected
-in the polished metal.</p>
-
-<p>The funeral barge awaited them at the entrance. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-pall was laid over the coffin. The six friends waited,
-with heads uncovered, for the family to descend. They
-came, all together. The widow passed them, veiled.
-But the splendor of her face would remain in their
-memories forever.</p>
-
-<p>The procession was short; the funeral barge went first,
-followed by the widow with her relatives; then came
-the young men. The sky was cloudy above the broad
-road of stone and water. The deep silence was worthy
-of Him who transformed the forces of the universe for
-man's worship into infinite song.</p>
-
-<p>A flock of doves, flying from the marbles of the Scalsi,
-winged their way with a flash of plumage above the bier
-and across the canal, circling the cupola of San Simeone.</p>
-
-<p>At the quay a silent gathering of faithful friends was
-waiting. The large wreaths perfumed the air. The
-water rippled softly under the prows of the boats. The
-six companions lifted the coffin from the boat and bore
-it on their shoulders to the railway and placed it in the
-proper compartment. No one spoke.</p>
-
-<p>Then the two artisans from Rome came forward, with
-the clusters of laurel gathered on the Janiculum. They
-were tall, powerful men, chosen among the strongest
-and finest, and seemed cast in the mold of the ancient
-Roman race. They were calm and serious, with all the
-wild freedom of the Agro in their eyes. Their bold outlines,
-narrow foreheads, short curling hair, solid jaws
-and bull-necks, recalled the profiles of ancient consuls.
-Their bearing, free from any servile obsequiousness,
-showed them to be worthy of their function.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The six young men, rendered equal in their fervor,
-took the branches of laurel and strewed them over the
-hero's coffin.</p>
-
-<p>Noble were those Latin laurels, cut on the hill where,
-in a time long past, the eagles descended bearing prophecies;
-where, in more recent though still fabulous times,
-a river of blood has been shed for the beauty of Italy by
-the legions of the Liberator. The branches were straight,
-dark, and strong; the leaves were firm, deeply veined,
-with sharp edges, green as the bronze of fountains, rich
-with triumphal aroma.</p>
-
-<p>And they journeyed toward the Bavarian hill still sleeping
-beneath its frost and ice, while their trunks were
-already budding anew in the light of Rome, to the murmur
-of invisible waters.</p>
-
-<p class="top1"><em>Settignano di Desiderio:<br />
-<span class="indent1">February 13, 1900.</span></em></p>
-
-<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 60601 ***</div>
-</body>
-</html>
-
-
-
diff --git a/old/60601-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/60601-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d8d99fb..0000000
--- a/old/60601-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60601-h/images/ilo1.jpg b/old/60601-h/images/ilo1.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 652062e..0000000
--- a/old/60601-h/images/ilo1.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60601-h/images/ilo2.jpg b/old/60601-h/images/ilo2.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 3e5ba77..0000000
--- a/old/60601-h/images/ilo2.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60601-h/images/ilo3.jpg b/old/60601-h/images/ilo3.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c203dab..0000000
--- a/old/60601-h/images/ilo3.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60601-h/images/ilo4.jpg b/old/60601-h/images/ilo4.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 3f41cbf..0000000
--- a/old/60601-h/images/ilo4.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/60601-0.txt b/old/old/60601-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 92c2309..0000000
--- a/old/old/60601-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,10281 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Flame, by Gabriele D'Annunzio
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Flame
-
-Author: Gabriele D'Annunzio
-
-Translator: Dora Ranous
-
-Release Date: October 31, 2019 [EBook #60601]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FLAME ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Andrés V. Galia, Sherry Kaufman and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
-
-
-Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
-A number of words in this book have both hyphenated and non-hyphenated
-variants. For the words with both variants present the one more used
-has been kept.
-
-Obvious punctuation and other printing errors have been corrected.
-
-The book cover was modified by the Transcriber and has been put in the
-public domain.
-
-The Transcriber would like to point out to what are considered a couple
-of translation inaccuracies from the original Italian language version.
-
-In page 59 the text reads:
-
-"I know of no marsh capable of provoking in human pulses a fever more
-violent that that which at times steals up to us from the shadows of a
-silent canal."
-
-While in the Italian edition (Publisher: Milano Fratelli Treves; year:
-1900), the text reads:
-
-"Io non conosco palude capace di provocare in polsi umani una febbre
-più violenta di quella che sentimmo talvolta venire verso di noi
-all'improvviso dall'ombra di un canale taciturno."
-
-The Transcriber thinks a more adequate translation would be:
-
-"I know of no marsh capable of causing a fever in human pulses more
-violent than the one we sometimes hear coming towards us suddenly from
-the shadow of a taciturn channel."
-
-In page 195 the text reads:
-
-"He had astonished even himself by that sudden apparition, that
-unexpected discovery which illumined the shadows of his mind, because
-exterior reality, and almost tangible."
-
-While in the Italian edition the text reads:
-
-"Si stupiva egli medessimo di quell'apparizione subitanea, di quella
-improvvisa scoperta che, illuminandosi nell buio del suo spirito si
-esternava e quasi diveniva tangibile."
-
-The Transcriber thinks a more adequate translation would be:
-
-"He was surprised himself by that sudden appearance, of that sudden
-discovery that, illuminating itself in the darkness of his spirit, it
-became external and almost became tangible."
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
- THE LITERATURE OF ITALY
-
- consists of sixteen volumes, of which
- this one forms a part. For full particulars
- of the edition see the Official
- Certificate bound in the volume entitled
-
- "A HISTORY OF ITALIAN
- LITERATURE."
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
- Literature of Italy
- 1265 1907.
-
- Edited by Rossiter Johnson and
- Dora Knowlton Ranous
-
- With a General Introduction by William
- Michael Rossetti and Special Introductions
- by James, Cardinal Gibbons,
- Charles Eliot Norton, S. G. W. Benjamin,
- William S, Walsh, Maurice
- Francis Egan, and others
-
- New translations, and former renderings
- compared and revised
-
- Translators: James C. Brogan, Lord Charlemont,
- Geoffrey Chaucer, Hartley Coleridge,
- Florence Kendrick Cooper, Lady Dacre,
- Theodore Dwight, Edward Fairfax, Ugo
- Foscolo, G. A. Greene, Sir Thomas Hoby,
- William Dean Howells, Luigi Monti, Evangeline
- M. O'Connor, Thomas Okey, Dora
- Knowlton Ranous, Thomas Roscoe, William
- Stewart Rose, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William
- Michael Rossetti, John Addington
- Symonds, William S. Walsh, William
- Wordsworth, Sir Thomas Wyatt
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- THE FLAME
- (_IL FUOCO_)
-
- BY
-
-
- GABRIELE D'ANNUNZIO
-
- TRANSLATED BY DORA KNOWLTON RANOUS
-
- .... _fa come natura face in foco_.
-
- --_DANTE_
-
-
- THE NATIONAL ALUMNI
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1907, BY
- THE NATIONAL ALUMNI
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- INTRODUCTION ix
-
-
- BOOK I
-
- THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME.
-
-
- CHAPTER I--The Bells of San Marco 1
-
- CHAPTER II--The Face of Truth 30
-
- CHAPTER III--The Nuptials of Autumn and Venice 40
-
- CHAPTER IV--The Spirit of Melody 67
-
- CHAPTER V--The Epiphany of the Flame 77
-
- CHAPTER VI--The Poet's Dream 95
-
- CHAPTER VII--The Promise 123
-
- CHAPTER VIII--"To Create with Joy!" 134
-
-
- BOOK II
-
- THE EMPIRE OF SILENCE.
-
-
- CHAPTER I--"In Time!" 147
-
- CHAPTER II--After the Storm 156
-
- CHAPTER III--A Fallen Giant 173
-
- CHAPTER IV--The Master's Vision 181
-
- CHAPTER V--Sofia 201
-
- CHAPTER VI--A Brother to Orpheus 209
-
- CHAPTER VII--Only One Condition 221
-
- CHAPTER VIII--Illusions 231
-
- CHAPTER IX--The Labyrinth 239
-
- CHAPTER X--The Power of the Flame 262
-
- CHAPTER XI--Reminiscence 270
-
- CHAPTER XII--Cassandra's Reincarnation 291
-
- CHAPTER XIII--The Story of the Archorgan 304
-
- CHAPTER XIV--The World's Bereavement 319
-
- CHAPTER XV--The Last Farewell 333
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- "O espousals of Paris, fatal to the beloved!"--(Page 298) Frontispiece
-
- He gazed deep into her eyes, and saw that she was as pale
- as if her blood had been sapped to nourish the rich
- fruits of the garden 130
-
- He watched the woman turning and running like a mad
- creature along the dark, delusive paths 259
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-Gabriele D'Annunzio, poet, novelist, and dramatist, was born in 1864,
-on the yacht _Irene_ near Pescara in the Abruzzi, his mother being the
-Duchess Maria Galesse of Rome. His education was begun in the College
-of Prato, in Tuscany, and finished in the University of Rome. His mind
-early showed signs of extraordinary power and brilliant versatility;
-he studied art and produced very creditable work while a mere lad,
-and at the age of sixteen he published his first poem, _Primo Vere_,
-which attracted flattering attention and caused him to be hailed as an
-infant prodigy. In 1880 he went to Rome and became a contributor to
-the _Cronaca Bizantina_, a magazine of art and literature. He remained
-in Rome three years, producing in that time _Terra vergine_ ("Virgin
-Soil"), _Canto novo_ ("New Song"), and _Intermezzo di rime_ ("Intervals
-of Rhyme"), all of which were received with admiration and amazement,
-and with not a little criticism for their unconventional boldness of
-expression.
-
-D'Annunzio left Rome in 1884 and returned to his native hills, where
-he wrote _Il libro delle vergine_ ("The Book of the Virgins") in 1884;
-_San Pantaleone_ (1886), and _Isottèo Guttadauro_. Then, abandoning
-his revolutionary and realistic though splendid and intoxicating
-poetry for prose, the young genius next surprised his public with a
-novel, _Giovanni Episcopo_, followed by _Il Piacere_ ("The Child of
-Pleasure"), in 1889. The former is a strong yet repelling story of
-crude brutalism, told by a victim of relentless fate; the latter is a
-kind of poem in prose, in which there is something above mere facility
-of literary touch; he shows the power of the master poet or painter to
-see the world at a glance, and with a dextrous hand to draw for eyes
-less keen that world in all its changeful aspects.
-
-His next important novel, _Il trionfo della morte_ ("The Triumph of
-Death") was produced in 1896. This brought upon him a storm of mingled
-applause and criticism--admiration for its marvelous beauty of literary
-expression, condemnation of the realistic study of a degenerate whose
-sins lead him to suicide. But, with a proud defiance of criticism, with
-eyes fixed only on his art, he dared after this achievement to write
-the self-revelatory novel that is known as his masterpiece--_Il fuoco_
-("The Flame"). In this great novel, which may fairly be called unique,
-we recognize the personification of a renascence of Latin genius. Under
-the thinnest veil of disguise, the author presents his own figure and
-that of one of the world's greatest tragic actresses, revealing the
-most intimate details of their well known friendship. On this picture
-of the most romantic of love-affairs, in Venice, the most romantic
-of cities, he has lavished his finest strokes of genius, writing of
-feminine nature with rare truth and skill, and an exquisite intuition
-as to the workings of a woman's mind and the throbbings of her heart.
-
-Besides his poems and novels, D'Annunzio has written several plays,
-the best known being _La Gioconda_ ("Joy"), _La Gloria_ ("Glory"), _La
-morta città_ ("The City of the Dead"), and _Francesca da Rimini_. He is
-unquestionably the greatest Italian writer of to-day, and few works of
-Italian fiction appear that do not show something of his influence. A
-European critic of keen discernment says: "Read his works, all ye men
-and women for whom life has no secrets and truth has no terror."
-
- D. K. R.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK I
-
- THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME
-
-
-
-
- TO TIME AND TO HOPE
-
-
- _Without hope, it is impossible to find the unhoped-for._
-
- --_HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS._
-
-
- _He who sings to the god a song of hope shall see his wish
- accomplished._
-
- --_ÆSCHYLUS OF ELEUSIS._
-
-
- _Time is the father of miracles._
-
- --_HARIRI DI BASRA._
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- THE BELLS OF SAN MARCO
-
-
-"Stelio, does not your heart quail a little, for the first time?"
-inquired La Foscarina, with a fleeting smile, as she touched the hand
-of the taciturn friend seated beside her. "I see that you are pale and
-thoughtful. Yet this is a beautiful evening for the triumph of a great
-poet."
-
-With an all-comprehensive glance, she looked around at all the beauty
-of this last twilight of September. In the dark wells of her eyes were
-reflected the circles of light made by the oar as it flashed in the
-water, which was illuminated by the glittering angels that shone from
-afar on the campaniles of San Marco and San Giorgio Maggiore.
-
-"As always," she went on, in her sweetest tones, "as always, everything
-is in your favor. On such an evening as this, what mortal could shut
-out from his mind the dreams that you may choose to evoke by the magic
-of your words? Do you not feel already that the multitude is well
-disposed to receive your revelation?"
-
-Thus, delicately, she flattered her friend; thus she pleased herself by
-exalting him with continual praise.
-
-"It is impossible to imagine a more magnificent and unique festival
-than this, to persuade so disdainful a poet as you to come forth from
-his ivory tower. For you was reserved this rare joy; to communicate
-for the first time with the people in a sovereign place like the Hall
-of the Greater Council, from the platform where once the Doge harangued
-the assembled patricians, with the _Paradiso_ of Tintoretto for a
-background, and overhead the _Gloria_ of Veronese."
-
-Stelio Effrena looked long and searchingly into her eyes.
-
-"Do you wish to intoxicate me?" he said, with a sudden laugh. "Your
-words remind me of the soothing cup offered to a man on his way to the
-scaffold. Ah, well, my friend, it is true: I own that my heart quails a
-little."
-
-The sound of applause rose from the Traghetto di San Gregorio,
-echoed through the Grand Canal, reverberating among the porphyry and
-serpentine discs ornamenting the ancient mansion of the Dario, which
-now leaned over slightly, like a decrepit courtesan loaded with her
-jewels.
-
-The royal barge passed.
-
-"There is the one person among your audience whom etiquette demands
-that you shall crown with some of your flowers of oratory," pursued the
-charming flatterer, alluding to the Queen. "I believe that, in one of
-your earlier books, you own to a taste and respect for ceremonials. One
-of your most extraordinary flights of fancy is that description of a
-day of Charles the Second, King of Spain."
-
-When the royal barge passed the gondola, the man and the woman saluted
-it. The Queen, recognizing the poet, the author of _Persephone_,
-and the distinguished tragic actress, turned to gaze at them with a
-movement of instinctive curiosity. She was blonde and rosy, and her
-face was lighted by her ever-ready smile, as she looked out from the
-cloud of creamy Buranesi laces clinging around her shoulders. Beside
-her sat Andriana Duodo, the patroness of Burano, where, on that
-industrious little island, she cultivated flax, and raised the most
-marvelous old-fashioned flowers.
-
-"Does it not seem to you that the smiles of those two women are so
-similar as to be twin-like?" said La Foscarina, gazing at the silvery
-ripples in the wake of the barge, wherein the double light seemed to
-prolong its self.
-
-"The Countess has a magnificent and ingenuous soul--one of those
-rare Venetian spirits that preserve their warmth, as their ancient
-paintings retain their vivid color," said Stelio, earnestly, as if
-in gratitude. "I have an absolute devotion for her sensitive hands.
-They fairly quiver with pleasure when they touch rare lace or rich
-velvet, lingering over the texture with a grace that seems almost shy
-of betraying such voluptuous joy in mere touch. One day, when I had
-accompanied her to the gallery of the Academia, she stopped before
-the _Massacre des Innocents_ by the first Bonifazio. You recollect,
-of course, the green robe of the prostrate woman that one of Herod's
-soldiers is about to kill--a thing impossible to forget! She paused
-long before it, seeming fairly to radiate from her own person the
-perfect joy that filled her senses; then she said to me, 'Let us leave
-this place now, Effrena! Take me away, but I must leave my eyes on
-that robe--I cannot look at anything more!' Ah, do not smile at her,
-dear friend! She was perfectly simple and sincere in saying that: she
-really did leave her spiritual vision behind her on that bit of canvas
-which Art, with a touch of color, has made the center of an infinitely
-pleasurable mystery. Besides, it was really a blind woman that I
-accompanied there, but I was suddenly seized with reverence for the
-privileged soul for whom the magic of color had power to abolish for
-the moment all memory of commonplace life, and to cut off all other
-worldly communication. What should you call such a state of mind? A
-filling of life's goblet to the brim, it seems to me. It is exactly
-what I should like to do to-night, if I were not discouraged."
-
-A new clamor, louder and more prolonged, rose between the two guardian
-columns of granite, as the royal barge approached the bank of the
-Piazzetta, now black with the waiting throng. During the slight pause
-that followed, the movement of the crowd shifted, like the changing of
-eddies in a current, and all the galleries of the Palace of the Doges
-were filled with a confused buzzing, like the mysterious murmur within
-a sea-shell. Suddenly the buzz rose to a shout, rending the clear air
-and finally dying away in the gathering twilight. The multitude seemed
-to realize the divinity of that poetic hour, amid those incomparable
-surroundings; and perhaps, in its acclaim to youthful royalty and
-beauty, it expressed a vague longing to forget its prosaic existence,
-and to revel in the gift of eternal poetry with which its storied walls
-and waters were endowed.
-
-"Do you know, Perdita," Stelio suddenly exclaimed, "of any other place
-in the world that possesses, like Venice, at certain times, the power
-to stimulate all the forces of human life by the exaltation of all
-desires to a feverish intensity? Do you know of any more irresistible
-temptress?"
-
-She whom he called Perdita did not reply; she bent her head as if from
-desire to concentrate her thoughts; but through all her being she felt
-the indefinable thrill always felt at the sound of the voice of her
-friend when it revealed the vehemence and passionate soul toward which
-this woman was drawn by a mingling of love and terror that had no limit.
-
-"Peace! Oblivion! Do you find them down there, at the end of that
-deserted canal, when you go home exhausted and fevered after inhaling
-the commingled breath of the crowd that you are able to rouse to wild
-enthusiasm by a single gesture? As for myself, when I float on these
-dead waters, I feel my vital powers increase with bewildering rapidity;
-at certain times my brain seems on fire, as if I were in delirium."
-
-"The flame and the power are within yourself, Stelio," said La
-Foscarina almost humbly, without raising her eyes.
-
-He was silent, absorbed. Poetic imagery and impetuous music took form
-within his brain, as if by virtue of some magic fecundation; and his
-spirit reveled in the unexpected delight of that flood of inspiration.
-
-It was still that hour which, in one of his books, he had called
-"Titian's hour," because all things glowed with a rich golden light,
-like the nude figures of that great painter, appearing almost to
-illumine the sky rather than to receive light from it.
-
-"Perdita," said the poet, who, at the sight of so many things
-multiplying their beauties around him, was conscious of a kind of
-intellectual ecstasy, "does it not seem to you that we are following
-the funeral train of the dead Summer? There she lies in her funereal
-barge, robed in golden draperies, like a Doge's wife, like a Loredana,
-a Morosina, or a Soranza of the golden age; and her cortège conducts
-her toward the Isle of Murano, where some lord of the flames will place
-her in a coffin of opaline crystal, so that, submerged in the waters of
-the lagoon, she can, at least, through her transparent eyelids, behold
-the supple movement of the seaweed, and thus fancy herself enwrapped in
-the undulating tresses of her own hair, while waiting for the sun of
-resurrection to dawn."
-
-A spontaneous smile spread over La Foscarina's face, born in her eyes,
-which glowed as if they really had beheld the vision of the beautiful
-dead.
-
-"Do you know, Perdita," resumed Stelio, after a moment's pause, during
-which both gazed at a file of small boats filled with fruit, floating
-upon the water like great baskets, "do you know anything about a
-particularly pretty detail in the chronicles of the Doges? The Doge's
-wife, to meet the expenses of her robes of ceremony, enjoyed a certain
-percentage of the tax on fruit. Does not this seem delightfully
-appropriate? The fruits of these isles clothed her in gold and crowned
-her with pearls! Pomona paying tribute to Arachne! an allegory that
-Paolo Veronese might well have painted on the dome of the Vestiario.
-When I conjure up the figure of the noble lady, tall and erect in her
-high, jeweled buskins, it pleases me to think that something fresh
-and rustic is connected with the rich folds of her heavy brocade:
-the tribute of the fruits. What a savor this seems to add to her
-magnificence! Only fancy, my friend, that these figs and grapes of the
-new-come Autumn are the price of the golden robe that covers the dead
-Summer."
-
-"What delightful fancies, Stelio!" said La Foscarina, whose face
-became young again when she smiled, as a child to whom one shows a
-picture-book. "Who was it that once called you the Image-maker?"
-
-"Ah--images!" said the poet, his fancy warming. "In Venice, just as one
-feels everything to a musical rhythm, so he thinks of everything in
-poetic imagery. They come to us from everywhere, innumerable, diverse,
-more real and living to our minds than the persons we elbow in these
-narrow streets. In studying them, we can lose ourselves in the depths
-of their haunting eyes, and divine, by the curve of their lips, what
-they would say to us. Some art tyrannical as imperious mistresses, and
-hold us long beneath the yoke of their power. Others are enfolded in a
-veil, like timid virgins, or are tightly swaddled, like infants; and
-only he that knows how to rend their veils can lead them to the perfect
-life. This morning, when I awakened, my soul was filled with images;
-it was like a beautiful tree with its branches laden with chrysalides."
-
-He paused, with a laugh.
-
-"If they come forth from their prison to-night," he added, "I am saved;
-if they do not, I am lost!"
-
-"Lost?" said La Foscarina, gazing earnestly at him, with eyes so full
-of confidence that his heart went out to her in gratitude. "No, Stelio,
-you will not lose yourself. You are always sure of yourself; you
-bear your own destiny in your hands. I think your mother never could
-have felt any apprehension on your account, even in the most serious
-circumstances. Is not that true? Pride is the only thing that makes
-your heart falter."
-
-"Ah, sweet friend, how I love you--how I thank you for saying that!"
-said the poet frankly, taking her hand. "You continually foster my
-pride and encourage me to believe that I have already acquired those
-virtues to which I never cease to aspire. Sometimes you seem to have
-the power of conferring I know not what divine quality on the things
-that are born in my soul, and of making them appear adorable in my
-own eyes. Sometimes, too, you fill me with the awe-struck wonder of
-the sculptor who, having in the evening borne to the sacred temple
-the marble gods still warm from his hands--I might say still clinging
-to the fingers that moulded them--the next day beholds them standing
-on their pedestals, surrounded by clouds of incense, and seeming to
-exhale divinity from every pore of the insensate matter from which
-he fashioned them with his perishable hands. And so, each time that
-Fortune grants me the favor of being near you, I realize that you are
-necessary to my life, although, during our long separations, I can
-live without you, and you without me, despite the fact that both of
-us well know what splendors would be born of the perfect union of our
-lives. Thus, knowing the full value of that which you give me, and,
-still more, of that which you could give me, I think of you as lost to
-me; and, by that name which it pleases my fancy to call you, I try to
-express at the same time this consciousness and this regret."
-
-He interrupted himself, because he felt a quiver of the hand he clasped
-in his own.
-
-"When I call you 'Perdita,'" he resumed softly, after a pause, "I fancy
-that you can see my desire approaching you, with a deadly blade deep in
-its palpitating side. Even should it reach you, the chill of death has
-already touched its audacious hand."
-
-The woman experienced an oft-felt suffering as she listened to the
-poetic words that flowed from her friend's lips with a spontaneity that
-proved them sincere. Again she felt an agitation and a terror that she
-knew not how to define. She felt that she was slipping out of her own
-life, and was transported into a kind of fictitious life, intense and
-hallucinating, where even to breathe was difficult. Drawn into that
-atmosphere, as fiery as the glow surrounding a lighted forge, she felt
-that she should be capable of passing through any transfigurations that
-it might please the master of her spirit to work in her to satisfy his
-continual craving for poetry and beauty. She comprehended that, in his
-idealistic mind, her own image resembled that of the dead Summer,
-wrapped in its opalescent cerements. She felt a childish desire to gaze
-into the poet's eyes as in a mirror, to contemplate the likeness of her
-real self.
-
-That which rendered her melancholy most painful, was the recognition of
-a vague resemblance between this agitation and the anxiety that always
-possessed her when she sank her own personality in that of some sublime
-creation of dramatic art. Was not this man drawing her, in fact, into
-a similar region of higher but artificial life; and, that she might
-figure there without remembrance of her everyday self, did he not seek
-to cover her with a splendid disguise? But, while she was unable to
-maintain so great a degree of intensity except by a painful effort, she
-knew that he dwelt within that state of exaltation with perfect ease,
-as if in his natural atmosphere, ceaselessly enjoying a marvelous world
-of fancy, which he could renew or change at his own pleasure.
-
-He had come to realize in himself the intimate union of art and
-of life, thus finding, in the depths of his own soul, a source of
-perpetual harmony. He had become able to maintain within himself,
-without lapse, the mysterious psychological condition that engenders
-works of beauty, and thus, at a single stroke, to crystallize into
-ideal types the fleeting figures of his varied existence. It was to
-celebrate this conquest over his own mental powers that he put the
-following words into the mouth of one of his heroes: "I witnessed
-within myself the continual genesis of a higher life, wherein all
-appearances metamorphosed themselves as if reflected in a magic
-mirror." Endowed with an extraordinary linguistic facility, he could
-instantly translate into words the most complicated workings of his
-mind, with a precision so exact and vivid that sometimes, as soon
-as expressed, they seemed not to be his own, having been rendered
-objective by the isolating power of style. His clear and penetrating
-voice, which, so to speak, seemed to define each word as distinctly
-as if it were a note of music, enhanced still more this peculiar
-quality of his speech, so that those who heard him speak for the
-first time experienced an ambiguous feeling--a mingling of admiration
-and aversion, because he revealed his own personality in a manner so
-strongly marked that it seemed to denote an intention to demonstrate
-the existence of a profound and impassable difference between himself
-and his listeners. But as his sensibility equaled his intelligence, it
-was easy for those that knew him well and liked him to absorb, through
-his crystalline speech, the glow of his vehement and passionate soul.
-These knew how illimitable was his power to feel and to dream, and from
-what fiery source sprang the beautiful images into which he converted
-the substance of his inner life.
-
-She whom he called Perdita knew it well; and, as a pious soul awaits
-from God some supernatural help that shall work out its salvation, so
-she seemed to be waiting for him to put her into the state of grace
-necessary to enable her to elevate and maintain herself in those
-fiery regions toward which a mad desire to be consumed impelled her,
-despairing as she was at the thought of her vanished youth, and the
-fear of finding herself left alone at last in a desert of ashes.
-
-"It is you now, Stelio," she said, with the slight smile she used to
-hide her sadness, "who wish to intoxicate me." She gently drew her hand
-from his. Then, to break the spell, she pointed to a loaded barge that
-was slowly approaching them, and said:
-
-"Look! Look at your pomegranates!"
-
-But her voice shook a little.
-
-Then, in the dreamy twilight, on the water as silvery-green as the
-leaves of the willow, they watched the passing boat overflowing with
-that emblematic fruit which suggests things rich and hidden: caskets
-of red leather, surmounted by the crown of a royal donor; some closed,
-others half-open, revealing their close-packed gems.
-
-In a low tone, the tragic actress repeated the words addressed by Hades
-to Persephone in the sacred drama, at the moment when the daughter of
-Demeter tastes the fatal pomegranate:
-
- _Quando tu coglierai il colchico in fiore su'l molle
- Prato terrestre, presso la madre dal cerulo peplo._
-
-"Ah, Perdita! how well you know how to throw a shadow into your voice!"
-interrupted the poet, feeling the harmony of the twilight that seemed
-to throw a mystic vagueness over the syllables of his lines. "How well
-you know how to become nocturnal, even before the evening is upon us!
-Do you recall the scene where Persephone is on the point of throwing
-herself into Erebus, to the wailing of the chorus of the Oceanides?
-Her face is like yours when a shadow passes over it. Her crowned head
-leans backward, as she stands rigidly erect in her saffron-colored
-peplum; and the very spirit of the night seems flowing into her
-bloodless flesh, deepening under her chin, in the hollows of her eyes
-and around her nostrils, giving her face the look of a tragic mask.
-It is your mask, Perdita! While I was composing my _Mystery_, the
-remembrance of you aided me in evoking her divine person. That little
-saffron-velvet ribbon you so often wear around your neck gave me the
-note for Persephone's peplum. And one evening at your house, when I
-was about to take leave of you at the threshold of a room where the
-lamps were not yet lighted--an agitated evening of last autumn, you
-remember?--you succeeded, with a single movement, in bringing to full
-light in my being the creature that had lain long there undeveloped;
-and then, without dreaming that you had brought about that sudden
-birth, you shut yourself again within the solitary obscurity of your
-own Erebus. Ah, I was certain that I could hear you sob, yet a torrent
-of uncontrollable joy ran through my veins. I never have spoken to you
-of this before, have I? I ought to have consecrated my work to you, as
-to an ideal Lucina."
-
-She shrank under the eyes of the master of her spirit; she suffered
-because of that mask which he admired on her face, and because of that
-strange joy that she was aware was continually up-springing within him,
-like a perpetually playing fountain. She felt oppressed by her own
-personality; troubled because of her too-expressive face, the muscles
-of which possessed a strange power of mimicry; pained to think of
-that involuntary art which governed the significance of her gestures,
-and of that expressive shadow which sometimes on the stage, during a
-moment of anxious silence, she knew how to throw over her face like a
-veil of grief--that shadow which now threatened to remain among the
-lines traced by time on the face that was no longer young. She suffered
-cruelly by the hand she adored--that hand so delicate and noble which,
-even with a gift or a caress, had power to hurt her.
-
-"Do you not believe, Perdita," Stelio continued after another pause,
-"in the occult beneficence of signs? I do not mean astral science or
-horoscopic signs. I mean that, like those that believe themselves
-under the influence of one planet or another, we can create an ideal
-correspondence between our own soul and some terrestrial object, in
-such a way that this object, becoming impregnated, little by little,
-with the essence of ourselves, and being magnified by our illusion,
-finally becomes for us the representative sign of our unknown destiny,
-and takes on an aspect of mystery when it appears to us in certain
-crises of our life. This is the secret whereby we may restore to our
-withering hearts something of their pristine freshness. I know by
-experience the beneficial effect we may derive from intense communion
-with some earthly object. From time to time it is necessary for our
-natures to become like a hamadryad, in order to feel within us the
-circulation of new energy drawn from the source of life. Of course
-you understand that I am thinking of your words just now, when the
-boat passed. You expressed the same idea when you said 'Look at
-your pomegranates!' For you, and for everyone that loves me, the
-pomegranate never can be anything but _mine_. For you and for them,
-the idea of my personality is indissolubly linked to that fruit which
-I have chosen for an emblem, and which I have charged with significant
-ideals, more numerous than its seeds. Had I lived in the times when
-men excavated the Grecian marbles and found under the soil the still
-damp roots of ancient fables, no painter could have represented me on
-his canvas without putting in my hand the Punic apple. To sever from
-my person that symbol would have seemed to the ingenuous artist like
-the amputation of a living member, for, to his pagan imagination, the
-fruit would have seemed to grow to my hand as to its natural branch.
-In short, he would not have conceived me in any different way than he
-thought of Hyacinthus or Narcissus or Ciparissus, all three of whom
-would appear to him as youths symbolized by a plant. But, even in our
-day, a few lively and warm imaginations exist that comprehend all the
-meaning and enjoy all the savor of my invention.
-
-"You, yourself, Perdita, do you not delight in cultivating in your
-garden a pomegranate, the beautiful 'Effrenian' tree, that you may
-every summer watch me blossom and bring forth fruit? In one of your
-letters, flying to me like a winged messenger, you described to me
-the graceful ceremony of decorating the tree with garlands the day
-you received the first copy of _Persephone_. So, for you, and for
-those that love me, I have in reality renewed an ancient myth when,
-in fancy, I have assimilated myself with a form of eternal Nature.
-And when I am dead (and may Nature grant that I am able to manifest
-my whole self in my work before I die!), my disciples will honor me
-under a symbol of that tree; and in the sharp outline of the leaf, in
-the flame of the flower, and in the hidden treasure of the ripe fruit,
-they will recognize certain qualities of my art. By that leaf, by that
-flower and fruit, as if by a posthumous teaching of the master, their
-minds will be formed to a similar sharpness, flame-like intensity, and
-treasured richness.
-
-"You will see now, Perdita, what is the real beneficence of symbols.
-By affinity, I am led to develop myself in accord with the magnificent
-genius of the plant which it pleases me to fancy as the symbol of my
-aspirations toward a full, rich life. This arboreous image of myself
-suffices to assure me that my powers should follow nature in order
-to attain naturally the end for which they were created. 'Nature
-has disposed me thus' is the epigraph of Leonardo da Vinci, which I
-placed on the title-page of my first book; and the pomegranate, as it
-continually blossoms and bears its fruit, repeats to me that simple
-phrase over and over again. We obey only the laws written in our own
-substance, and by reason of this we shall remain intact in the midst of
-dissolution, in the unity and plenitude that make our joy. No discord
-exists between my art and my life."
-
-He spoke with perfect freedom, as if the mind of the listening woman
-were a chalice into which he poured his thoughts till it was full to
-the brim. An intellectual felicity filled him, blended with a vague
-consciousness of the mysterious action whereby his mind was preparing
-itself for the effort it was soon to make. From time to time, as if
-by a lightning flash, his mental vision beheld, as he bent toward his
-beloved friend and listened to the beat of the oar in the silence of
-the great estuary, the crowd, with its thousand faces, gathering in the
-vast hall; and he felt a rapid throbbing of his heart.
-
-"It is a very singular thing, Perdita," said he, gazing at the pale
-distance of the waters, "to observe how readily chance aids our
-imagination in ascribing an element of mystery to the conjunction of
-certain appearances with the aim we have fancied. I do not understand
-the reason why the poets of to-day are so indignant at the vulgarity
-of the present, and complain that they were born either too late
-or too early. I am convinced that to-day, as always, every man of
-intelligence has power to create for himself his own beautiful fable
-of life. We should study the confused whirl of life with the same
-lively imagination that Leonardo encouraged in his disciples when
-he advised them to study the stains on the wall, the ashes on the
-hearth, the clouds, even mud, and similar objects, in order to find
-there 'wonderful inventions' and 'infinite things.' In the same way,
-he declared, one can find in the sound of bells every name and every
-word that can be imagined. That great master knew well that chance--as
-the sponge of Apelles had already shown--is always the friend of the
-ingenious artist. For example, I never cease to be astonished at the
-ease and grace with which chance favors the harmonious development of
-my inventions. Do you not believe that the dark god Hades forced his
-bride to eat the seven seeds of the pomegranate in order to furnish me
-with the subject of a masterpiece?"
-
-He interrupted himself with one of the bursts of boyish laughter that
-revealed so clearly the persistence of natural joyousness in the depths
-of his heart.
-
-"See, Perdita," he continued, still laughing, "whether I am not
-right. Early in October last year I was invited to Burano by Donna
-Andriana Duodo. We passed the morning in her flax-fields, and in the
-afternoon we went to visit Torcello. At that time I was beginning to
-saturate myself with the mythical story of Persephone, and already my
-poem had begun to take shape in my brain, and it seemed to me that I
-was floating on the waters of the Styx, and that I should arrive at
-the abode of the Manes. Never had I experienced a purer and sweeter
-understanding of death, and this feeling seemed to render me so
-ethereal that I fancied I could tread the field of asphodel without
-leaving there the least trace of my footsteps. The air was damp, warm,
-the sky was gray; the canals wound between the banks covered with
-half-faded verdure. (You know Torcello only by sunlight, perhaps.) But
-all this time some one was talking, arguing, and declaiming in Charon's
-boat. The sound of praise roused me from my reverie. Francesco di Lizo
-was speaking of me, regretting that such an artist, so magnificently
-sensual--I quote his own words--should be obliged to live apart from
-the obtuse and hostile throng, and to celebrate the feast of sound,
-color, and form in the solitary palace of his dream. He abandoned
-himself to a lyric impulse, recalling the joyous and splendid life
-of the Venetian painters, the popular favor that swept them, like a
-whirlwind, up to the heights of the glory, beauty, strength and joy
-which they multiplied around them in producing countless images on
-walls and domes.
-
-"Then Donna Andriana said: 'Well, I promise solemnly that Stelio
-Effrena shall have his triumphal feast in Venice.' The Dogaressa had
-spoken! At that moment I beheld, on the low, mossy bank, a pomegranate
-laden with fruit, which, like the hallucination of a vision, broke
-the infinite squalor of that place. Donna Orsetta Contarini, who was
-sitting beside me, uttered a cry of delight, and held out her hands, as
-impatient as her lips. Nothing pleases me so much as a frank, strong
-expression of desire. 'I adore pomegranates!' she cried, and she seemed
-fairly to be tasting its fine, sharp flavor. She was as childish as
-her name is archaic. Her cry moved me; but Andrea Contarini appeared
-severely to disapprove of his wife's vivacity. He seemed to me like a
-Hades that has little faith in the mnemonic virtue of the seven seeds
-as applied to legitimate marriage. But the boatmen, too, were stirred
-with sympathy, and rowed toward the shore, approaching it so close that
-I was able to jump out first, and I began at once to despoil the tree,
-my brother. It was another case, albeit from the lips of a pagan of the
-words of the Last Supper: 'Take, eat, this is my body, which is given
-for you. Do this in remembrance of me.' How does this seem to you,
-Perdita? Do not think that I am inventing this story. I assure you it
-is true."
-
-La Foscarina allowed herself to be fascinated by the free and elegant
-fancy whereby he exercised the quickness of his wit and his facility
-of expression. In his words was something intoxicating, variable, and
-vigorous, which suggested to her mind the double and diverse image of
-water and of fire.
-
-"Now," he continued, "Donna Andriana has kept her promise. Guided by
-that hereditary taste for magnificence which she shows so plainly,
-she has prepared a truly ducal feast in the Palace of the Doges,
-in imitation of those that were held there toward the end of the
-sixteenth century. She conceived the idea of rescuing from oblivion
-the _Ariadne_ of Benedetto Marcello, and of making her sigh in the
-same place where Tintoretto painted the daughter of Minos receiving
-the crown of stars from Aphrodite. Don't you recognize in the beauty
-of this idea the woman who wished to leave her dear eyes behind her
-on that ineffable green robe? Remember, too, that this _musicale_ in
-the Hall of the Greater Council has a historic precedent. In fifteen
-hundred seventy-three, in this same Hall, was performed a mythological
-composition by Cornelio Frangipani, with music by Claudio Merulo, in
-honor of his most Christian Majesty Henry Third. Own, Perdita, that my
-erudition astonishes you. Ah, if you only knew all that I have learned
-on that subject! I will read you my lecture on it, some day when you
-deserve a severe punishment!"
-
-"What! Are you not to read it to-night at the festival?" inquired La
-Foscarina in surprise, fearing that, with his well known heedlessness
-of engagements, Effrena had resolved to disappoint the expectant public.
-
-He understood her anxiety, and chose to amuse himself with it.
-
-"This evening," he replied, with tranquil assurance, "I shall take
-a sherbet in your garden, and delight my eyes with the sight of the
-pomegranate, with its jewels gleaming in the starlight."
-
-"Ah, Stelio! What do you mean?" she cried, half rising.
-
-In her words and movement was so keen a regret, and at the same time
-so strange an evocation of the expectant gathering, that his mind was
-troubled. The image of the formidable monster with innumerable human
-faces amid the gold and somber purple of the vast hall reappeared
-before his mental vision; in fancy he felt its fixed regard and hot
-breath. He realized also the peril he had resolved to face in trusting
-only to the inspiration of the moment, and felt a horror of a possible
-sudden mental obscurity, an unexpected confusion of his thought.
-
-"Reassure yourself," he said. "I was only jesting. I will go _ad
-bestias_, and I will go unarmed. Did you not see the sign reappear just
-now? Do you believe, after the miracle of Torcello, that it reappeared
-in vain? It has come to warn me again that the only attitude that
-suits me is the one to which Nature disposes me. Now, you well know, my
-friend, that I do not know how to speak of anything but myself. And so,
-from the throne of the Doges, I must speak to my listeners only of my
-own soul, under the veil of some seductive allegory, with the charm of
-flowing musical cadences. I purpose to do this extemporaneously, if the
-fiery spirit of Tintoretto will only inspire me, from the heights of
-his Paradise, with sufficient ardor and audacity. The risk tempts me.
-But into what a strange error I was about to fall, Perdita! When the
-Dogaressa announced the feast to me, and begged me to do the honors,
-I undertook to compose a dignified discourse, a really ceremonious
-effort in prose, ample and solemn as one of those great robes of state
-behind glass in the Correr Museum; not without making in the exordium a
-profound genuflexion to the Queen; nor omitting to weave an impressive
-garland for the head of the most serene Andriana Duodo! And for
-several days it has given me a curious pleasure to dwell in spiritual
-communion with a Venetian patrician of the sixteenth century, a master
-of letters like Cardinal Bembo, a member of the Academy Uracini or
-Adorni, a frequent visitor to the gardens of Murano and the hills of
-Asolo. Certain it is that I felt a marked resemblance between the turn
-of my periods and the massive gold frames that surround the paintings
-on the ceiling of the Hall of Council. But, alas! yesterday morning,
-when I arrived here, and, in passing along the Grand Canal, when I
-wished to steep my weariness in the damp, transparent shade where the
-marble still exhales the spirit of the night, I had a sudden impression
-that my papers were worth much less than the dead seaweed tossed by
-the tide, and they seemed as strange to me as the _Trionfi_ of Celio
-Magno and the _Favole Marittime_ of Anton Maria Consalvi, quoted and
-commented on in them by me. What should I do, then?"
-
-He threw around him an all-sweeping glance, as if exploring the waters
-and the sky in search of an invisible presence, or a newly arrived
-phantom. A yellowish light spread toward the solitary shores, which
-stood out in sharp lines like the dark veins in agate. Behind him,
-toward the Salute, the sky was scattered with light rosy and violet
-ribbon-like clouds, giving it the appearance of a glaucous sea, peopled
-with Medusas. From the gardens near the water descended the odor of
-foliage saturated with light and heat--an odor so heavy one might
-almost see it float on the waves like aromatic oil.
-
-"Do you feel the Autumn, Perdita?" Stelio asked his dreamy friend, in a
-penetrating voice.
-
-Again she had a vision of the dead Summer, enclosed within opalescent
-glass and sunk among the masses of seaweed.
-
-"Yes, I feel it--within myself!" she replied, with a melancholy smile.
-
-"Did you not see it last night, when it descended upon the city? Where
-were you last night, at sunset?"
-
-"In a garden of the Giudecca."
-
-"I was here, on the Riva. When human eyes have contemplated such a
-spectacle of joy and beauty, does it not seem to you that the eyelids
-should close and seal themselves forever? I should like to speak
-to-night, Perdita, of these hidden, secret matters. I should like to
-celebrate within myself the nuptials of Venice and Autumn, in almost
-the same tonality that Tintoretto used when he painted the nuptials of
-Ariadne and Bacchus for the hall of the Anticollegio--azure, purple and
-gold. Last night an old germ of poetry suddenly blossomed in my soul.
-I recalled a fragment of a forgotten poem that I wrote when I began
-to write in _nona rima_, one September in my early youth, when I had
-come by sea to Venice for the first time. The title of the poem was
-simply 'The Allegory of Autumn,' and the god was no longer represented
-as crowned with vine-leaves, but with jewels, like one of Paolo
-Veronese's princes, his being aglow with passion, about to approach
-the Anadyomenean City, with her arms of marble and her thousand green
-girdles. But the idea had not at that time reached the right degree
-of intensity to be admitted to the realm of Art, and instinctively I
-gave up the effort to manifest it in its entirety. But, in an active
-mind, as in a fertile soil, no seed is lost; and now this idea returns
-to me at an opportune moment and urgently demands expression. What a
-just and mysterious fatality governs the mental world! It was necessary
-that I should respect that first germ in order to feel its multiplied
-virtues develop in me to-day. That Vinci, who looked deep into all
-things profound, certainly meant something of this kind in his fable of
-the grain of millet that says to the ant: 'If you will be kind enough
-to let me satisfy my desire to be born again, I will render myself to
-you again a hundredfold.' Admire the touch of grace in those fingers
-capable of breaking iron! Ah, he is always the incomparable master! How
-can I forget him for a time, that I may give myself to the Venetians?"
-
-The playful irony with which he had been speaking was suddenly
-extinguished in his last words, and again he seemed plunged in his own
-thoughts.
-
-"It is already late; the hour approaches; we must return," he said
-presently, rousing himself as if from a troubled dream, for he had seen
-reappear that formidable monster with the thousand human faces filling
-the depth and width of the great hall. "I must go back to the hotel in
-time to dress."
-
-Then, with a return of his boyish vanity, he thought of the eyes of the
-unknown women who would see him that evening for the first time.
-
-"To the Hotel Danieli," La Foscarina said to the boatman.
-
-While the dentellated iron of the prow swung around on the water, with
-a slow, animal-like movement, each felt a sadness different but equally
-painful at leaving behind them the infinite silence of the estuary,
-already overcome by darkness and death, and being compelled to return
-toward the magnificent and tempting city, whose canals, like the veins
-of a full-blooded woman, began to burn with the fever of night.
-
-They were quiet for some time, absorbed by their interior agitation,
-which shook each heart to it depths. And all things around them exalted
-the power of life in the man who wished to attract to himself the
-universe in order not to die, and in the woman, who would have thrown
-her oppressed soul to the flames in order to die pure.
-
-Both started at the unexpected sound of the salute at the lowering of
-the flag on board a man-of-war anchored before the gardens. At the
-summit of the black mass they saw the tricolored flag slide down the
-staff and fold itself up, like a heroic dream that suddenly vanishes.
-For a moment the silence seemed deeper, and the gondola glided into
-darker shadows, grazing the side of the armed colossus.
-
-"Do you know that Donatella Arvale who is to sing in _Ariadne_?" said
-Stelio suddenly.
-
-"She is the daughter of the great sculptor, Lorenzo Arvale," La
-Foscarina replied, after an instant of hesitation. "I have no dearer
-friend than she--and in fact she is my guest at present. You will meet
-her at my house this evening, after the festival."
-
-"Donna Andriana spoke to me of her last night as a prodigy. She said
-that the idea of resurrecting _Ariadne_ had come to her on hearing
-Donatella Arvale sing divinely the air: _Come mai puoi--Vedermi
-piangere?_ We shall have some divine music at your house, Perdita. Oh,
-how I long to hear it! Below there, in my solitude, for months and
-months, I hear only the music of the sea, which is too terrible, and my
-own music, which is too tumultuous."
-
-The bells of San Marco gave the signal for the Angelus, and their
-powerful notes spread in great waves of sound over the water,
-vibrating among the masts of the vessels, and creeping out upon the
-infinite reach of the lagoon. From San Giorgio Maggiore, San Giorgio
-dei Greci, San Giorgio degli Schiavoni, San Giovanni in Bragora,
-and San Moisé, from the Salute, the Redentore, and beyond, over the
-entire domain of the Evangelista, to the distant towers of the Madonna
-dell' Orto, San Giobbe and Sant' Andrea, tongues of bronze responded,
-mingling in one great chorus, seeming to extend over the silent stones
-and waters a single immense and invisible dome of metal, the vibration
-of which might almost reach the first sparkling stars. Those sacred
-voices seemed to lend to the City of Silence an ideal and infinite
-grandeur.
-
-"Can you still pray?" said Stelio in a softened voice, looking at the
-woman who, with eyes downcast, and hands clasped on her knees, seemed
-absorbed in a silent orison.
-
-She did not reply; she only pressed her lips together more closely.
-
-The minds of both were confused by the strange, the new image, and the
-new name, that had risen between them. Perturbation and passion seized
-them again, drew them near each other with such force that they dared
-not look into each other's eyes, for fear of what might be read there.
-
-"Shall I see you again this evening, after the festival?" said La
-Foscarina, with a slight unsteadiness in her voice. "Are you free?"
-
-She was eager now to hold him, to make him her prisoner, as if she
-feared he would escape her, as if she had hoped to find this night
-some magic philter that would bind him to her forever. And, though
-she comprehended now that the gift of all she had to give had become
-necessary, she realized only too clearly, nevertheless, even through
-the intoxication that bewildered her, the poverty of the gift so long
-withheld. And a mournful modesty, a mingling of terror and pride,
-contracted her slender frame.
-
-"I am free--and I am yours!" the young man answered in a half whisper,
-without raising his eyes to hers. "You know that nothing is worth to me
-what you can give."
-
-His heart, too, was stirred to its depths, with the two aims before his
-ambition toward which, this night, all his energy bent, like a powerful
-bow: the city and the woman, both tempting and mysterious, weary with
-having lived too much, and oppressed with too many loves; both were too
-much magnified by his imagination, and both were destined to disappoint
-his hopes.
-
-In the moment that followed, a violent wave of mingled regret and
-desire swept over him. The pride and intoxication of his hard,
-persistent labor; his boundless ambition, which had been curbed within
-a sphere too narrow for it; his intolerance of mediocrity, his demand
-for the privileges of princes; his superb and empurpled dreams; his
-insatiable need of preëminence, glory, pleasure--surged in his soul
-with a confusing tumult, dazzling and suffocating him. And the craving
-of his sadness inclined him to win the final love of this solitary,
-nomadic woman, the very folds of whose garments seemed to suggest
-the frenzy of the far-off multitudes, whom she had so often thrilled
-and shaken with her art, by a cry of passion, a sob of grief, or a
-death-like silence. An irresistible impulse drew him toward this woman,
-in whom he fancied he saw the traces of all emotions and experiences,
-toward that being, no longer young, who had known so many caresses, yet
-was unknown by him.
-
-"Is it a promise?" he murmured, bowing his head lower to conceal his
-agitation. "Ah! at last!"
-
-She made no reply, but fixed on him a gaze of almost mad intensity,
-which he did not see.
-
-They relapsed into silence again, while the reverberation of the bells
-passing overhead was so penetrating that they felt it in the roots of
-the hair, as from a quiver of their own flesh.
-
-"Good-by," said La Foscarina, as they were landing. "When we leave the
-hall, let us meet in the courtyard, near the second well, the nearest
-to the Molo."
-
-"Good-by," he answered. "Take some place where I may see you, among the
-crowd, when I speak my first word."
-
-A confused clamor arose from San Marco, above the sound of the bells,
-spread over the Piazzetta, and died away toward the Fortuna.
-
-"May all light be on your brow, Stelio!" said La Foscarina, holding out
-her burning hands to him passionately.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- THE FACE OF TRUTH
-
-
-When he entered the court by the south door, Stelio Effrena, seeing the
-black and white throng that swarmed up the Giants' Stairway, in the
-ruddy light of the torches fixed in the iron candelabra, felt a sudden
-sensation of repugnance, and paused at the entrance. He noted the
-contrast between this paltry crowd and the noble architecture which,
-magnified by the unusual nocturnal illumination, expressed, by their
-varied harmoniousness, the strength and the beauty of a day that was
-past.
-
-"Oh, how miserable!" he exclaimed, turning to the friends that
-accompanied him. "In the Hall of the Greater Council, from the throne
-of the Doges, how is it possible to find metaphors that will move a
-thousand starched shirt-bosoms? Let us go back; let us inhale the odor
-of the real crowd, the true crowd. The Queen has not yet left the royal
-palace. We have time enough."
-
-"Until the moment that I see you on the platform, I shall not feel sure
-that you will really speak," said Francesco de Lizo, laughing.
-
-"I believe that Stelio would prefer the balcony to the platform," said
-Piero Martello, wishing to flatter the master's taste for sedition,
-and his factious spirit, which he himself affected, in imitation.
-"He would like to harangue, between the two red columns, the mutinous
-people who threatened to set fire to the new _Procuratie_ and the old
-_Libreria_."
-
-"Yes, certainly," said Stelio, "if the harangue had power to prevent
-or to precipitate an irreparable act. I hold that we use the written
-word to create a pure form of beauty, which, even in an uncut book,
-is enclosed and shut in, as in a tabernacle that may be entered only
-by election, with the same premeditated will used in the breaking of
-a seal. But the spoken word, it seems to me, when it is addressed
-directly to a multitude, should have only action for its aim. On
-this condition alone can a proud spirit, without lessening itself in
-dignity, communicate with the masses by means of voice and gesture.
-Otherwise, his effort becomes merely histrionic. And so I repent
-bitterly of having accepted this function of an ornamental orator, who
-must not speak unless he speaks agreeably. Consider, I ask you, how
-humiliating for me is the honor that they think to do me, and consider
-also the uselessness of my speech. All these people, strangers here,
-have left their mediocre occupations, or their favorite amusements,
-to come and listen to me with the same vain and stupid curiosity that
-would lead them to listen to some new virtuoso. For the women that will
-listen to me, the art with which I have tied my cravat will be much
-more appreciated than the art with which I shall round my periods. And,
-after all, the only effect of my speech will be a clapping of hands,
-deadened by gloves, or a brief, discreet murmur, to which I shall
-reply with a gracious inclination of the head. Does it seem to you that
-I am about to attain the summit of my ambition?"
-
-"You are wrong," said Francesco de Lizo. "You should congratulate
-yourself for this happy occasion, which will allow you, for several
-hours, to impress the rhythm of art on the life of a forgetful city,
-and to make us dream of the splendors that might embellish our
-existence by a renewed union of Art with Life. If the man that built
-the Teatro di Festa were there, he would praise you for that harmony
-which he predicted. But the most wonderful thing about this affair is
-the fact that, notwithstanding your absence, and your ignorance of the
-project, the festival seems to have been prepared under the direct
-inspiration of your genius. This is the best proof that it is possible
-to restore and diffuse taste, even in the midst of the barbaric
-present. Your influence to-day is more powerful than you think. The
-lady who has desired to honor you--she that you call the Dogeressa--at
-every new idea that came to her, asked herself: 'Would it please
-Effrena?' If you only knew how many young and eager spirits put to
-themselves to-day the same question, when they consider the aspects of
-their inner life!"
-
-"And for whom should you speak, if not for them?" said Daniele Glauro,
-the fervent and sterile ascetic of Beauty, with that melodious voice
-which seemed to reflect the frank and inextinguishable ardor of the
-soul beloved by the master as one of the most faithful. "If, when you
-stand upon the platform, you will look about you, you will easily
-recognize the expression in their eyes. There are many of them, and
-some have come a long distance; they await your words with an eagerness
-that you perhaps do not understand. They are those who have imbibed
-the spirit of your poetry, who have breathed the fiery ether of your
-dream, and felt the grip of your chimera; those to whom you have
-announced the transfiguration of the world by the miracle of a new
-art. The number that you have attracted as an apostle of hope and of
-joy is very great. They have heard that you are to speak in Venice,
-in the Ducal Palace--one of the most splendid and glorious places on
-earth. They will be able to see you and listen to you for the first
-time, surrounded by the magnificence that seems to them an appropriate
-frame to your personality. The old Palace of the Doges, which has so
-long been wrapped in nocturnal darkness, is suddenly illuminated and
-aroused this night for you, and, to their minds, it is you alone that
-have had the power to rekindle these long-extinguished torches. Do you
-understand now the eagerness of their expectation? Does it not seem to
-you that to them only you ought to speak? The condition you impose on
-the man that harangues a multitude may be fulfilled. You can awaken an
-emotion in their breasts that shall turn them forever toward the Ideal.
-For how many of them, Stelio, you might make this Venetian night an
-experience never to be forgotten!"
-
-Stelio laid his hand on the prematurely bent shoulders of the mystic
-doctor, and, smiling, repeated Petrarch's words: "_Non ego loquar
-omnibus, sed tibi, sed mihi, et his_."
-
-He saw within himself the radiant eyes of his unknown disciples, and
-heard within his soul, in clear tones, the sound of his own exordium.
-
-"Nevertheless," he replied gayly, addressing Piero Martello, "it would
-be amusing to conjure up a tempest on this sea."
-
-They were standing under the arch, near a column, in contact with the
-noisy, unanimous crowd, which gathered in the Piazzetta, stretched out
-toward the Zecca, was swallowed up near the _Procuratie_, barred the
-Torre dell'Orologio, occupied every space like a wave without form, and
-communicated its living warmth to the marble columns and the walls,
-against which it surged in its violent movement. From time to time, a
-louder cry arose from the distance, at the farther end of the Piazza,
-swelling higher and stronger until it burst out near them like a clap
-of thunder, then diminishing until it died away in a murmur.
-
-"I should like to-night to find myself for the first time with a woman
-I loved, on a floating couch, over there, beyond the gardens, toward
-the Lido," said the romantic poet, Paris Eglano, a blond, beardless
-youth, whose handsome mouth, with its full red lips, contrasted with
-the almost angelic delicacy of his other features. "Within an hour,
-Venice will present to some Nero-like lover, hidden in a gondola, the
-spectacle of a city set on fire by its own delirium."
-
-Stelio smiled, noting to what extent his intimates had become imbued
-with his own spiritual essence, and how deep the seal of his own style
-had stamped itself on their minds. Suddenly the image of La Foscarina
-flashed across his mental vision: La Foscarina, poisoned by too much
-art, remembering too many amatory experiences, with the stamp of
-maturity and of corruption on her eloquent mouth, the aridity of the
-vein fever that burned in those hands that pressed out the juices of
-deceitful fruits, and the marks of a hundred masks on that face which
-had simulated the fury of all mortal passions. Thus she appeared to his
-ardent thought of her, and his heart throbbed faster as he pictured her
-emerging soon from the multitude, as from some element that enslaved
-her, and thought that from her glance he should draw the necessary
-inspiration.
-
-"Come, let us go," said he resolutely to his friends. "It is the hour."
-
-The cannon announced that the Queen had left the royal palace. A
-prolonged quiver ran through the living human mass, like that which
-precedes a storm at sea. From the bank of San Giorgio Maggiore, a
-rocket rushed up with a long hiss, rising in the air like a fiery
-stem and bursting into a mass of pink splendor at the top; then it
-curved, grew fainter, and dissolved in trembling sparks, extinguished
-finally with a slight crackling in the water. And the joyous clamor
-that greeted the beautiful Queen, repeating her name--the name of the
-starry, white flower and of the pearl--evoked in Stelio's imagination
-the pomp of the ancient Promissione, the triumphal procession of the
-Arts escorting the new Dogaressa to the palace; the wave of joy on
-which Morosina Grimani mounted to her throne, shimmering with gold,
-while all the Arts bowed before her, laden with gifts as if they bore
-horns of plenty.
-
-"Certainly," said Francesco de Lizo, "if the Queen loves your books,
-she will wear all her pearls this evening. You will have before you a
-veritable labyrinth of jewels--all the hereditary gems of the Venetian
-patricians."
-
-"Look toward the foot of the stairway, Stelio," said Daniele Glauro. "A
-group of devotees is waiting for you to pass that way."
-
-Stelio stopped at the well indicated by La Foscarina. He leaned over
-the bronze edge, his knees touching the little carved caryatides, and
-saw in the dark water the reflection of the stars. For the moment his
-soul isolated itself, shut out the surrounding sounds, and withdrew
-into the shadowy disc, from which rose a slight dampness betokening
-the presence of water. His excited desire felt a need to attain even
-greater intoxication than this night promised him, and he felt that in
-the farthest depths of his being lay a secret soul, which, like this
-dark, watery mirror, remained immovable, strange, and intangible.
-
-"What do you see there?" inquired Piero Martello, also leaning over the
-rim, worn in places by the ropes of centuries.
-
-"The face of Truth!" the master answered.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the apartments contiguous to the Hall of the Greater Council, once
-occupied by the Doge, but now by the pagan statues that were seized
-as booty in ancient wars, Stelio awaited the summons from the master
-of the ceremonies to mount to the platform. He was quite calm, and
-smiled on the friends that spoke to him, but their words reached his
-ear between pauses, like interrupted sounds borne from afar by the
-wind. From time to time, with an abrupt, involuntary movement, he drew
-near to one of the statues, and ran his hand nervously over it, as if
-seeking some weak spot, that he might break it; or he bent curiously
-over some rare medal, as if to read on it some indecipherable sign.
-But his eyes saw nothing of all this; they were turned within, where
-the multiplied power of his will evoked the silent forms that his
-voice would presently transform into the perfection of verbal music.
-His whole being contracted itself in an effort to raise to the highest
-degree of intensity the representation of the extraordinary feelings
-that possessed him. Since he could speak only of himself, and of his
-own universe, at least he would unite in one ideal figure the sovereign
-qualities of his art, and show to his disciples by his genius for
-imagery what an invincible force hastened him through this life. Once
-more he intended to show them that, in order to obtain the victory
-over men and circumstances, there is no other way than to persevere in
-exalting oneself and to magnify one's own dream of beauty or of power.
-
-He bent over a medallion by Pisanello, feeling at his temples the
-ardent, rapid pulsation of his thought.
-
-"See, Stelio," said Daniele Glauro to him, with that pious reverence
-which veiled his voice whenever he spoke of his religion, "see how the
-mysterious affinities of Art work upon you, and how an infallible
-instinct leads you, amid so many forms, and at the very moment when
-your thought is about to reveal itself, toward the example of the most
-perfect expression, the highest model of style. At the very instant
-of coining your own idea, you are led to study one of Pisanello's
-medallions; you are attracted by the impression of one of the greatest
-stylists that ever have lived in the world, the most frankly Hellenic
-soul of the whole Renaissance. And suddenly your forehead is illumined
-by a ray of light."
-
-The pure bronze bore the effigy of a young man with beautiful, waving
-hair, an imperial profile and Apollo-like neck, and the head was so
-perfect a type of elegance and vigor that the imagination could not
-picture him in life except as free from all decadence and eternally
-unchangeable, as the artist had presented him in this circle of
-bronze.--_Dux equitum præstans Malatesta Novellus Cesenæ dominus.
-Opus Pisani pictoris._--And beside it was another medallion by the
-same artist, bearing the effigy of a virgin, with narrow chest, a
-swan-like throat, and hair drawn back in the shape of a heavy bag; the
-forehead, high and receding, seemed already to promise the aureole of
-the blessed, and she was like a vase of purity sealed forever, hard,
-precise, and limpid as a diamond, an adamantine pyx where the spirit,
-consecrated like the Host, rested as a sacrifice.--_Cicilia Virgo,
-filia Johannis Francesco primi Marchionis Mantuae._
-
-"Here comes La Foscarina, with Donatella Arvale," announced Francesco
-de Lizo, who had been watching the crowd that climbed the Censors'
-Stairway and pressed into the vast hall.
-
-Again Stelio Effrena felt a wave of agitation sweep over him. The
-murmur of the throng seemed to come from afar and mingle in his ears
-with the throbbing of his arteries, and in this murmur he fancied he
-heard once more the last words of Perdita.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- THE NUPTIALS OF AUTUMN AND VENICE
-
-
-The murmur swelled louder, diminished, then ceased, as Stelio, with
-firm, light movement, ascended the marble steps of the platform. As he
-turned toward the audience, his dazzled eyes rested upon the formidable
-monster with a thousand human faces, amid the gold and somber purple of
-the immense hall.
-
-A sudden thrill of pride gave him complete self-control. He bowed
-to the Queen and to Donna Andriano Duodo, who smiled upon him with
-the same twin smiles he had seen from the gliding gondola on the
-Grand Canal. He threw a keen glance toward the scintillating first
-rows, seeking La Foscarina, then looked toward the farther end of
-the hall, where only a dark zone, dotted with white spots, could be
-distinguished. The silent, attentive multitude seemed to him like an
-enormous, many-eyed chimera, its breast covered with glittering scales,
-extending its black bulk under the arches of the rich, heavy ceiling
-that hung over it like a suspended treasure.
-
-Dazzling was that chimeric breast, where sparkled necklaces that
-must once have flashed their fires under the same ceiling on the
-night of a coronation banquet. The tiara and the necklaces of the
-Queen--the rows of pearls, like grains of light, somehow suggesting
-the miraculous image of a smile just about to appear--the dark emeralds
-of Andriano Duodo, taken long ago from the handle of a scimitar;
-the rubies of Giustiniana Memo, set in the semblance of carnations
-by the inimitable craftsmanship of Vettor Camelio; the sapphires of
-Lucrezia Priuli, taken from the shoes in which the Most Serene Zilia
-had walked to her throne on the day of her triumph; the beryls of
-Orsetta Contarini, delicately set in dull gold by the art of Silvestro
-Grifo; the turquoises of Zenobia Corner, bathed in a strange pallor
-by the mysterious malady that, in a single night, changed them as
-they lay on the warm breast of the Princess de Lusignan, among the
-delights of Asolo--all the rich jewels that had illumined the nights
-of the Anadyomenean city glowed with renewed fire on the breast of the
-chimera, from which rose a moist odor of feminine breaths and many
-perfumes. The rest of that strangely marked and shapeless body extended
-to the rear of the hall, in a sort of long tail, passing between the
-two gigantic spheres, which recalled to the memory of the "Image-maker"
-the two bronze spheres that the monster with the bandaged eyes presses
-with his paws in Giambellino's allegory. And this vast animal life,
-devoid of all thought for the time before him who alone at that moment
-must think, endowed with the inert fascination of enigmatic idols,
-covered with its own silence as with a shield capable of receiving and
-resisting any shock, awaited the first thrill of his dominating word.
-
-Stelio Effrena measured this silence, upon which his first syllable
-must fall. While his voice was rising to his lips, an effort of
-will summoning it and fortifying it against instinctive hesitation,
-he perceived La Foscarina standing near the railing that encircled
-the celestial sphere. The pale face of the tragic actress rose from
-her bare neck, and the purity of her white shoulders was just above
-the orbit of the zodiacal figures. Stelio admired the art of this
-apparition. With his own eyes fixed upon those distant, adoring ones,
-he began to speak slowly, as if the rhythm of the oars still lingered
-in his ears.
-
-"One afternoon, not long ago, while I was returning from the gardens
-along the warm bank of the Schiavoni, where the souls of poets
-sometimes believe they see I know not what magic golden bridge spanning
-a sea of light and silence toward a dream of infinite beauty, I
-thought--or rather, I witnessed with my thoughts, as at some intimate
-spectacle--of the nuptial alliance, under those skies, of Autumn and
-Venice.
-
-"Everywhere was disseminated a spirit of life, arising from passionate
-expectation and restrained ardor, which made me marvel at its
-vehemence, but which seemed not altogether new to me; I had already
-seen it in some shadowy zones, under the almost death-like immobility
-of Summer; and sometimes I had felt it vibrating, like a mysterious
-pulse, in the strange feverish odor of the water. Thus, I thought, it
-is true, then, that this pure city of Art aspires to a supreme state
-of beauty which for her returns annually, as the flowers return to the
-forest. She tends to reveal herself in full harmony, as if always
-she bore within her bosom, powerful and conscious, the same desire of
-perfection from which she sprang and was formed throughout the ages,
-like some divine creature. Under the motionless fire of Summer, she
-seemed to palpitate no more, to breathe no more, but to lie dead in her
-green waters. My feeling did not deceive me, however, when I fancied I
-saw her secretly inspired by a spirit of life sufficient to renew the
-most sublime of the ancient miracles.
-
-"That is what I thought, and what I saw. But how can I convey to
-you that listen to me any idea of that vision of joy and beauty? No
-sunrise, no sunset, could equal the glory of that hour of light on the
-water and the marble. The unexpected apparition of the beloved woman
-in a forest in springtime could not be as intoxicating as this sudden
-revelation by daylight of the heroic and voluptuous city, which carries
-in its marble embrace the richest dream of a Latin soul."
-
-The voice of the orator, clear, penetrating, almost icy at the
-beginning, was suddenly warmed by the invisible sparks kindled within
-him by the effort of improvisation, yet governed by the extreme nicety
-of his ear. While his words flowed without hesitation, and the rhythmic
-line of his periods set forth their beauty with the clearness of a
-figure drawn at one stroke by a bold hand, his auditors were conscious
-of the excessive tension of his mind, and it captivated them as one of
-those terrifying feats at the circus, where all the herculean energies
-of the athlete show the test by his quivering tendons and swelling
-arteries. They felt the reality, the living warmth of the thought
-thus expressed, and their pleasure was the greater because unexpected,
-for most of his auditors had anticipated from this indefatigable
-searcher after perfection the studied reading of a laboriously composed
-discourse. His devotees observed with emotion this audacious test, as
-if they saw before them, unveiled, the secret labor that had brought
-forth the forms that had given them so much joy. And this first wave of
-emotion, spreading by contagion, indefinitely multiplied and becoming
-unanimous, returned to him who caused it, and seemed almost to overcome
-him.
-
-This was the expected danger. Under the pressure of a wave so strong,
-the speaker faltered. For a few seconds a thick cloud darkened his
-brain; the light of his mind was extinguished, as a torch before an
-irresistible wind; his eyes grew dim, as if he were about to faint. But
-he felt how mortifying would be the shame of defeat if he yielded to
-this seizure; and in that darkness, by a sort of effort of brute force,
-or like the striking of steel on flint, his will rose in triumph over
-the instinctive weakness. With glance and gesture, he directed the eyes
-of the assemblage to the great masterpiece in the ceiling of that hall,
-spreading there in a kind of sun-like radiance.
-
-"I am certain," he exclaimed, "that Venice appeared thus to Paolo
-Veronese, when he sought within himself for an image of the Queen
-triumphant."
-
-He explained the reason why the great master, after throwing upon his
-canvas a profusion of gold, jewels, silks, purple, ermine, and all
-imaginable richness, at last could represent the glorious face only in
-the nimbus of a shadow.
-
-"We ought to exalt Veronese for that shadowy veil alone! Representing
-by a human face the Queen of Cities, he yet knew how to express its
-essential spirit, whose symbol was an inextinguishable flame seen
-through a watery veil. And one I know well, who, having plunged his
-soul in this sublime element, has withdrawn it enriched with a new
-power, and consequently has lived a fuller and more ardent spiritual
-life."
-
-This one he knew well--was it not himself? In the assertion of his own
-personality he found again all his courage, and felt that henceforth
-he was master of his thoughts and words, freed from danger, capable of
-drawing within the charmed circle of his dream the enormous, many-eyed
-chimera, with the glittering breast--the ephemeral and versatile
-monster from whose side emerged its offspring, the Tragic Muse, her
-head rising above the constellations.
-
-Obedient to his movement, the innumerable faces turned toward the
-Apotheosis, their awakened eyes contemplating with wonder this marvel,
-as if they beheld it for the first time, or under a new aspect. The
-naked back of the woman with the golden helmet shone under the cloud
-with an effect of muscular life so perfect that it looked as attractive
-as palpable flesh. And, from this nudity, more realistic than all the
-rest, victorious over Time, which had darkened around it heroic images
-of sieges and battles, seemed to emanate a powerful enchantment, the
-sweetness of which was augmented by the breath of the autumn night
-coming through the open windows; while, from above, the princesses of a
-former day, leaning over the balustrades between two columns, inclined
-their illumined faces and opulent breasts toward their worldly sisters
-below.
-
-Under the new spell of enchantment, the poet threw off his winged
-words, harmonious as lyric strophes. He described the Queen City
-palpitating with ardor within her thousand green girdles, extending her
-marble arms toward the wild Autumn, whose humid breath reached her,
-balmy with the delicious death of the fields and islands, making her
-sigh like a bride awaiting her hour of joy. By the magic of his words,
-Venice seemed to be possessed of marvelous hands, with which she wove
-for herself the inimitable tissue of allegory that covered her.
-
-"And since, in all the world, poetry alone is truth, he that knows how
-to contemplate it, and to draw it into his own soul by the virtue of
-his thought, will be very near to mastering the secret of victory over
-life."
-
-In pronouncing these last words, Stelio sought the eyes of Daniele
-Glauro, and saw that they sparkled with happiness beneath that large,
-meditative brow, which seemed swollen by the weight of an unborn world.
-The mystic doctor was there, near the platform, with several of those
-unknown disciples that he had described to the master as eager and
-anxious, full of faith and expectation, impatient to break the chain
-of their daily servitude, and to know the free intoxication of joy
-and sadness. Stelio noted that they were grouped, like a nucleus of
-compressed force, against the great red bookcases, wherein lay buried
-innumerable volumes of useless and forgotten lore. He marked their
-eager and attentive faces, their long hair, their lips, half parted
-with child-like absorption, or closed tightly in a kind of violent
-sensitiveness, their bright eyes, to which the breath of his words
-carried lights and shadows, as a changeful breeze stirs a parterre of
-delicate flowers. He felt that in his own hand he held all their souls
-blended into one spirit, which he could at will agitate, crush, tear,
-or burn, as if it were a filmy scarf.
-
-While his mind expanded and relaxed, in its continued effort, he still
-retained a strange power of exterior investigation, a faculty of
-material observation which became the clearer and more penetrating with
-the warmth and quickening of his eloquence.
-
-Suddenly he saw with his mental vision the picture he wished to
-present, and his verbal expression of it was after the manner of the
-master painters that had reigned in that place, with the luxuriance of
-Veronese, and the fire of Tintoretto.
-
-"All the vitalities and all the transfigurations of the ancient stones,
-where Time has accumulated so many mysteries, and where glory has set
-her emblems; all the alternations of marvelously easy creations and
-destructions were reflected in the water; the effulgence of a jubilant
-light glittered between the crosses of cupolas inflated by prayer, and
-the slender saline crystals hanging under the arch of the bridges. Like
-a sentinel on a rampart uttering his shrill cry to him that listens
-for the signal, so the golden angel from the summit of the highest
-tower at last flashed out the announcement.
-
-"And He appeared! The Bridegroom appeared, seated in his fiery chariot,
-which he turned toward the Queen of Cities, and in his youthful,
-superhuman countenance was a strange fascination springing from an
-animal-like cruelty and delicacy contrasting with the deep eyes, full
-of all knowledge. His blood rioted through his veins, from the tips of
-his fingers to his nimble feet; mysterious, occult things veiled his
-being, concealing joy as the grape in bloom conceals the vine; and all
-the tawny gold and purple that surrounded him were like the vestment of
-his senses.
-
-"With what passion, throbbing under her thousand emerald girdles, and
-the richness of her jewels, the Queen of Cities gave herself to the
-magnificent god!"
-
-Swept up in this rushing flight of words, the soul of the multitude
-seemed to reach the sentiment of Beauty, as if it were a summit never
-before attained. The pulse of the people and the voice of the poet
-seemed to give back to those ancient walls their former life, and to
-reawaken in that cold museum its original spirit: a flood of powerful
-ideas, concrete, and organized in the most durable substance to attest
-the nobility of a great race.
-
-The splendor of divine youth descended upon the women, as it might
-have descended in a sumptuous alcove, for each felt within herself the
-breathlessness of expectation and the joy of yielding, like that of the
-Queen of Cities. They smiled with vague languor as if wearied by the
-strain upon their emotions; their cool, polished shoulders rose from
-their corollas of jewels.
-
-Stelio looked down upon the sparkling breast of the great, many-eyed
-chimera, on which rose and fell many fluttering feather fans, like tiny
-wings; and over his spirit passed an intoxicating glow that disquieted
-him. The vibration of his nerves, acting upon those of his auditors
-and thus reacting upon himself, unsettled him so much as almost to
-unbalance him. For an instant he felt that he was oscillating above the
-crowd, like a concave and sonorous body, the resonances of which were
-engendered by an indistinct yet infallible will.
-
-He was surprised at the unknown power that dwelt within him, abolishing
-his own personal limits and conferring the fulness of a chorus on his
-single voice.
-
-This, then, was the mysterious truce which the revelation of Beauty
-could grant to the daily existence of wearied man; this was the
-mysterious will that could possess the poet at the moment when he
-replied to the souls of his followers who questioned him as to the
-value of life and tried to raise themselves, if only once, to the
-height of the eternal Ideal. He was only the messenger through whom
-Beauty offered to those men, assembled in this place consecrated by
-centuries of human glory, the divine gift of oblivion. He was only the
-translator into rhythmic speech of the visible language whereby, in
-this same place, the noble craftsmen of a former day had expressed the
-prayers and aspirations of the race. And for one hour, at least, those
-men would contemplate the world with different eyes; they would think
-and dream with different souls.
-
-In fancy, he passed beyond the walls that enclosed the palpitating
-throng in a kind of heroic cycle, a circle of red triremes, fortified
-towers, and triumphal theories. The place now seemed too narrow for
-the exaltation of his new feeling; and once more he was drawn toward
-the real people, the immense, unanimous crowd he had seen outside the
-palace, who had sent upward in the starry night a clamor that, like
-blood or wine, intoxicated them as they uttered it.
-
-And not alone to this multitude did his thoughts turn; his fancy beheld
-an infinity of multitudes, massed together in theaters, dominated by an
-idea of truth and of beauty, pale and intent before the great arch of
-the stage, which should open before them some marvelous transfiguration
-of life, or frenzied by the sudden splendor radiating from an immortal
-phrase. And the dream of a higher Art, as it surged up again in his
-thought showed him mankind once more reverencing poets, as those who
-alone can interrupt at intervals its daily anguish, quench its thirst,
-and dispense oblivion. He even judged too slight the test he was now
-undergoing; he felt himself capable of creating gigantic fictions. The
-still formless work that he nourished in his soul shook him with a
-thrill of life as he looked again at the tragedienne, standing above
-the sphere of constellations--the Muse with the transcendent voice, who
-seemed to carry the frenzy of far-off throngs, now silenced, in the
-classic folds of her robes.
-
-Almost overcome by the incredible intensity of emotion that had
-possessed him during the brief pause, he began to speak again in
-a lower tone. He spoke of the growth of art between the youth of
-Giorgione and the old age of Tintoretto, and described it as golden,
-purple, rich and expressive as the pomp of the earth irradiated by the
-glow of sunset.
-
-"When I consider the impetuous creators of such marvelous beauty, my
-mind recalls an image from a fragment of Pindar's: 'When the centaurs
-became acquainted with the virtues of wine, sweet as honey and a
-conqueror of men, they banished milk from their tables and hastened to
-quaff their wine from silver horns.' No one in the world better knew
-than they how to taste the wine of life. They drew from it a kind of
-lucid intoxication that multiplied their powers and communicated to
-their eloquence a fertilizing energy. And in their greatest creations,
-the violent throbbing of their pulses seems to have persisted
-throughout the ages, like the veritable rhythm of Venetian art.
-
-"Ah, how pure and poetic is the slumber of the Virgin Ursula on her
-immaculate bed! The most religious silence reigns in that chamber,
-where the pious lips of the sleeper seem to form themselves into the
-act of uttering prayer. Through the doors and the windows steals the
-timid light of dawn, illumining the syllables inscribed on her pillow:
-INFANTIA is the simple word that spreads around that virginal head,
-like the fresh aurora of the morning: INFANTIA. She sleeps, the maiden
-already betrothed to the pagan prince and destined to martyrdom. So
-chaste, so ingenuous, so fervent, is she not the image of Art such as
-the precursors saw it, with the sincerity of their child-like eyes?
-INFANTIA! The word evokes around that couch all those forgotten ones:
-Lorenzo Veneziano, Simone da Cusighe, Catarino, Jacobello, Maestro
-Paolo, Giambono, Semitecolo, Antonio, Andrea, Quirizio da Murano, and
-all the laborious family by whom color--which later was the rival of
-fire--was prepared in the burning island of furnaces. But would not
-they themselves have uttered a cry of admiration if they had seen the
-drops of blood that sprang from the maiden's heart when it was pierced
-by the arrow of the beautiful pagan archer? A current so red from a
-virgin nourished on white milk! This victory was a sort of festival: to
-it the archers brought their finest bows, their richest garments, their
-most elegant air. The golden-haired barbarian, aiming his arrows at the
-martyr, with a movement so proud and graceful, does he not resemble an
-adolescent and wingless Eros? That gracious slayer of innocence (or
-perhaps his brother), after laying aside his bow, will abandon himself
-to the enchantment of music to dream a dream of infinite pleasure.
-
-"It was indeed Giorgione that poured into him a new soul, and kindled
-it with an implacable longing. The music that charms him is not the
-melody that last night the lutes diffused among the curving arches,
-over radiant thrones, or diminishing in the silence of distances in the
-visions of the third Bellini. Under the touch of religious hands, it
-still rises from the harpsichord; but the world it awakens is full of
-a joy and a sadness wherein sin hides its head.
-
-"He that has looked at the _Concerto_ with the eyes of wisdom has
-comprehended an extraordinary and irrevocable moment of the Venetian
-soul. By means of a harmony of color--whose power of expression is
-as boundless as the mystery of sounds--the artist reveals the first
-agitation of an eager spirit to whom life has suddenly appeared under
-the aspect of a rich inheritance.
-
-"The monk, seated at his harpsichord, and his older companion, do not
-resemble those monks that Vettor Carpaccio represented as flying before
-the wild beast tamed by Jerome, in San Giorgio degli Schiavoni. Their
-essence is nobler and stronger; they breathe an atmosphere higher and
-richer, propitious to the birth of a great joy, a great sadness, or
-a superb dream. What notes do those beautiful, sensitive hands draw
-from the keys on which they linger? Magic notes, no doubt, since they
-have power to work in the musician a transfiguration so great. He is
-half-way through his mortal existence, already far from his youth and
-near his decline, yet only now life reveals itself to him, rich with
-all good things, like a forest full of ripe, red fruit, the velvety
-freshness of which his always busy hands never before have known. As
-his senses still slumber, he has not yet fallen under the domination
-of a single seductive image, but he suffers a sort of confused anguish
-wherein regret overcomes desire, while in the web of harmonies that he
-seeks, the vision of his past--but only as it might have been and was
-not--weaves itself like the tissue of a chimera.
-
-"His companion divines this inner agitation, for he is already at the
-threshold of old age; calm, sweet, and serious, he touches the shoulder
-of the passionate player with a pacifying movement. But there, emerging
-from the warm shadows like the embodiment of youthful ardor itself,
-is the young man with hat beplumed and flowing locks, the glowing
-flower of adolescence which Giorgione created under the influence of
-a reflection from that Hellenic myth whence arose the ideal form of
-Hermaphrodite. He is there, present, yet a stranger, separated from the
-others, like a being that cares only for his own welfare. The music
-exalts his inexpressible dream, and seems to multiply indefinitely his
-capacity to enjoy. He knows himself master of that life which escapes
-the other two, and the harmonies sought by the musician seem to him
-only the prelude to his own feast. His glance is sidewise and intent,
-turned toward a certain point, as if he would attract to himself
-something that charms him; his closed lips are ready with a kiss as yet
-ungiven; his brow is so spacious that the thickest garland would not
-encumber it; but if I think of his hands, I fancy them crushing the
-laurel leaves to perfume his fingers."
-
-The hands of the Inspirer illustrated the gesture of the covetous
-youth, as if they were really pressing out the essence of the aromatic
-leaf; and his voice lent to the image an illusion so strong that the
-young men felt that here at last was one who could express their
-cherished and secret thoughts and dreams, and give voice to their
-unspeakable, continuous, and ceaseless longings. They occupied the free
-space at the back of the seated audience, making a living border for
-that compact mass; and, as the edges of a flag that waves in the breeze
-have a stronger flutter, these youthful hearts beat faster than those
-of older men at the warm breath of the poet's words.
-
-Stelio recognized them, distinguishing them by their singularity of
-attitude, the intensity of emotion revealed by their compressed lips
-and the glow of ardor in their cheeks. On the face of one, turned
-toward the open balcony, he read the enchantment of the autumn night,
-and the delicious breeze coming from the lagoon. The glance of another
-indicated, by a ray of love, some woman, seated near by, looking as if
-she were lost in tender recollections, her face white, her red lips
-slightly parted, like the entrance to a hive moist with honey.
-
-His eyes continually returned to the promised woman, who looked as she
-stood there like the living support of a starry sphere. He was grateful
-to her for her choice of this manner of appearing to him when, for the
-first time, he gave himself to the people. He no longer regarded her
-as merely the passing fancy of a single night, a woman ripened by long
-experience, but the marvelous instrument of a new art, the interpreter
-of the greatest poetry, she that should incarnate in her changeful
-personality his future fictions of beauty, she whose unforgettable
-voice should carry to mankind the long-expected word. He now felt
-attached to her, not by a promise of love, but by a promise of glory;
-and the formless work that he still cherished in his breast again
-leaped within him.
-
-"You that listen to me," he continued, "do you not see some analogy
-between these three symbols of Giorgione's and the three generations,
-all living at the same time, that illumined the dawn of a new century?
-Venice, the City Triumphant, reveals herself to their eyes like a
-great, a superabundant banquet, where all the riches accumulated
-throughout centuries of war and commerce are to be set out without
-stint. What richer fountain of pleasure could there be to initiate life
-in insatiable desire? It is a time of agitation, almost of distraction,
-which, because of its fulness, is worth an hour of heroic violence.
-Alluring voices and laughter seem to float from the hills of Asolo
-where, surrounded by all delights, reigns the daughter of San Marco,
-Domina Aceli, who found in a myrtle grove of Cyprus the cincture of
-Aphrodite. Now approaches the youth with the white plumes; he comes to
-the banquet, followed by his uncurbed escort, and all desires kindle
-and burn like torches quickened by the wind. And this was the beginning
-of that divine Autumn of Art toward which men will always turn with
-deep emotion as long as the human soul strives to transcend the
-narrowness of its common existence in order to live a life more fervent
-or to die a nobler death.
-
-"I see Giorgione imminent on the marvelous sphere, but I do not
-recognize his mortal person; I seek him in the mystery of the fiery
-cloud that envelops him. He appears to us more myth-like than human.
-The destiny of no poet on earth is comparable to his. All concerning
-his life is unknown; some even go so far as to deny his existence.
-His name is inscribed on no work, and many refuse to attribute any
-work to him with absolute certainty. But the whole of Venetian art was
-illumined by his revelation; it was from him that the great Titian
-received the secret of infusing glowing blood into the veins of the
-beings he created. In fact, that which Giorgione represents in Art is
-the Epiphany of the Flame. He deserves to be called 'the Flame-Bearer,'
-like Prometheus.
-
-"When I consider the rapidity with which this sacred gift has passed
-from one artist to another, glowing with increasing splendor from color
-to color, I think of one of those _lampadeforie_, or festivals, in
-which the Greeks tried to perpetuate the memory of the Titan son of
-Japetus. On the day of the festival, a group of young Athenian horsemen
-would set off at a gallop, riding from Ceramicus to Colonos, their
-chief waving a torch that had been lighted at the altar of a temple. If
-the torch was extinguished by the swiftness of the course, the bearer
-handed it to a companion, who re-lighted it as he rode; and this one
-gave it to a third; the third to a fourth, and so on, always galloping,
-until the last bearer laid it, still alight, on the altar of the Titan.
-This image, with all it suggests of fiery vehemence, represents to my
-fancy the feast of the master-colorists of Venice. Each of them, even
-to the least illustrious, held in his hand the sacred gift, if only for
-an instant. Some of them, like that first Bonifacio, whom we should
-glorify, gathered with incombustible fingers the inmost flower of the
-flame."
-
-His fingers made a movement in the air as if to pluck the ideal flower.
-His eyes turned again toward the celestial sphere, as if he wished to
-offer the fiery gift to her who guarded the divine zodiacal beasts. "To
-you, Perdita!" But the woman was smiling at some one at a distance.
-
-Following the thread of her smile, Stelio's eyes were led to an unknown
-woman, who suddenly seemed to stand out illumined against a shadowy
-background.
-
-Was not that the creature of music whose name had resounded against the
-iron sides of the ship that evening, in the silence and the shadow?
-
-She seemed to Stelio to be almost an interior image, suddenly
-engendered in that part of his soul where the brief sensation he had
-felt while passing through the shadow of the vessel had remained like
-an isolated and indistinct point. For a second she was beautiful--as
-beautiful as were his yet unexpressed thoughts.
-
-"The city to which such creators have given a soul so powerful," he
-continued, floating himself on the rising wave, "is considered to-day,
-by the greater number, only as a vast inert reliquary, or as a refuge
-of peace and oblivion.
-
-"In truth, I know of no other place in the world--unless it be
-Rome--where a bold and ambitious spirit can better foster the active
-virtue of his intellect, and all the energies of his being toward
-the supreme heights, than on these quiet waters. I know of no marsh
-capable of provoking in human pulses a fever more violent that that
-which at times steals up to us from the shadows of a silent canal. Nor
-do those men who, at noontide in the midsummer heat, lie among the ripe
-grain, feel in their veins a more fiery wave of blood than that which
-suffuses our eyes when we lean too intently over these waters, to see
-whether, perchance, we may descry in their depths some old sword or
-ancient diadem.
-
-"Do not all gracious spirits come hither, as to a place of sweet
-refuge--those that hide some secret pain, those that have accomplished
-some final renunciation, those that have become weak through some
-morbid affection, and those that seek silence only to hear the soft
-step of advancing Death? Perhaps in their fading eyes Venice appears
-like a clement city of death, embraced by the waters of oblivion. But
-their presence is no more important than the wandering weeds that float
-at the foot of the steps of the marble palaces. They only increase the
-odor of sickly things, that strange, feverish odor on which at times,
-toward evening, after a laborious day, we nourish the fulness of our
-own feelings.
-
-"But the ambiguous city does not always indulge the illusions of those
-that look to her as a giver of peace. I know one who, in the midst of
-sweet repose on her breast, started up as terror-struck as if when
-lying beside his loved one, with her hand resting on his weary eyelids,
-he had heard serpents hissing in her hair!
-
-"Ah, if I only knew how to tell you of that prodigious life which
-palpitates beneath her great necklaces and her thousand green girdles!
-Not a day passes that she does not absorb more and more of our souls:
-sometimes she gives them back to us fresh and intact, restored to their
-original newness, whereon to-morrow's events will be imprinted with
-indelible clearness; again, she gives them back to us infinitely subtle
-and voracious, like a flame that destroys all that it touches, so that,
-at evening, among the cinders and the ashes, we may light upon some
-wonderful sublimate. Each day she urges us to the act that is the very
-genesis of our species: the unceasing effort to surpass ourselves. She
-shows us the possibility of transforming pain into the most efficacious
-stimulating energy; she teaches us that pleasure is the most certain
-means of knowledge given to us by Nature, and that the man who has
-suffered much is less wise than he that has enjoyed much."
-
-At these audacious words, a slight murmur of disapproval passed over
-the auditorium; the Queen shook her head ever so little, in token of
-denial; several ladies, in a rapid exchange of glances, seemed to
-signify to one another a sentiment of graceful horror. But these signs
-were overbalanced by the acclamation of youthful approval that rose
-from all sides toward him that taught with a boldness so frank the art
-of rising to the superior forms of life by the virtue of joy.
-
-Stelio smiled as he recognized his own, and so numerous; he smiled
-to recognize the efficacy of his teaching, which already, in more
-than one spirit, had dissipated the clouds of inert sadness, shown it
-the cowardice of weak tears, and infused it with a lasting disdain
-for feeble complaint and soft compassion. He rejoiced at having
-been able to proclaim once more the principle of his doctrine,
-emanating naturally from the soul of the art he glorified. And those
-that had retired to a hermit's cell, there to adore a sad phantom
-that lived only in the dim mirror of their own eyes; those that had
-created themselves kings of palaces without windows, where, from time
-immemorial, they had awaited a Visitation; those that had sought to
-unearth among ruins the image of Beauty, but who had found only a
-worn sphinx, which had tormented them with its endless enigmas; those
-that stood every evening at their thresholds to greet the mysterious
-Stranger bearing gifts under his mantle, and who, with pale cheeks,
-laid their ears against the ground to catch the first sound of the
-Stranger's approach; those whose souls were sterilized by resigned
-mourning or devoured by desperate pride; those that were hardened
-by useless obstinacy, or deprived of sleep by hope continually
-disappointed--all these spirits he wished now to summon that they might
-recognize their ailment under the splendor of that ancient yet ever-new
-soul.
-
-"In truth," said he, in a tone full of exultation, "if the whole
-population, abandoning their homes, should emigrate, attracted to-day
-toward other shores as formerly their heroic youth were tempted by the
-arch of the Bosphorus, in the time of the Doge Pietro Ziani, and the
-voice of prayer should no more strike against the sonorous gold of the
-concave mosaics, nor the sound of the oar perpetuate with its rhythmic
-stroke the meditation of the silent stones, Venice would still remain
-a City of Life. The ideal creatures protected by its silence live
-in the whole past and for the whole future. In them we shall always
-discover new concordances with the edifice of the universe, unforeseen
-meetings with the idea born only yesterday, clear announcements of that
-which is with us only a presentiment as yet, open answers to that which
-as yet we have not dared to ask.
-
-"These ideal creatures are simple, but they are full of innumerable
-meanings; they are ingenuous, yet are clothed in strange attire. Should
-we contemplate them for an indefinite time, they never would cease to
-pour dissimilar truths into our minds. Should we visit them every day,
-every day they would appear to us under a new aspect, as do the sea,
-the rivers, the fields, the woods, the rocks. At times the things they
-say to us do not really reach our intellects, but reveal themselves to
-us in a sort of confused happiness, which causes our own substance to
-dilate and quiver to its inmost depths. Some bright day they will point
-out to us the path to the distant forest, wherein Beauty has awaited us
-from time immemorial, buried in her mystic hair.
-
-"Whence came to them their immeasurable power?
-
-"From the pure unconsciousness of the artificers that created them.
-
-"Those profound men ignored the immensity of the things they wished
-to express. Penetrating with a million roots into the soil of life,
-not like single trees, but like vast forests, they absorbed infinite
-elements, which they transfused and condensed into ideal species,
-whose essences nevertheless remained unknown to them, as the flavor
-of the apple is unknown to the branch that bears it. They were the
-mysterious means chosen by Nature in her effort to represent in an
-integral form those types in which she has not yet succeeded. Because
-of this, continuing the work of the Divine Mother, their minds, as
-Leonardo says, have become transformed into 'a likeness of the Divine
-Mind.' And because creative force rushed to their fingers incessantly,
-like sap to the buds of trees, they created with joy."
-
-All the desire of the determined artist, panting and struggling to
-obtain this Olympian gift, all his envy of those gigantic creators
-of Beauty, all his insatiable thirst for happiness and glory, were
-revealed in the tone in which he pronounced these last words. Once more
-the soul of the multitude was under the magic of the poet's spell,
-strained and vibrating like a single cord composed of a thousand
-strands, the resonance of which could be incalculably prolonged. That
-resonance awakened within the multitude the sense of a truth that had
-lain dormant, but which the poet's words now revealed for the first
-time.
-
-In the sonority of the deep silence, the solitary voice reached its
-climax.
-
-"To create with joy! It is the attribute of Divinity! It is impossible
-to imagine at the summit of the spirit an act more triumphal. Even the
-words that signify it possess something of the splendor of sunrise.
-
-"And these artists created by a medium that is in itself a joyous
-mystery: by color, which is the ornament of the world; by color, which
-seems the effort of matter to become light.
-
-"And the newly awakened musical sense they had for color was such that
-their creations transcend the narrow limits of figured symbols, and
-assume the high revealing power of an infinite harmony.
-
-"Never have the words of Vinci, on whom Truth flashed one day with her
-thousand secrets, appeared so true as when we stand before the great
-symphonic canvases of the masters: 'Music cannot be called anything but
-the sister of Painting.' They are not alone silent poetry, but also
-silent music. The most subtle seekers of rare symbols, and those most
-desirous to impress the sign of an internal universe on the purity of
-a meditative brow, seem to us almost sterile compared with these great
-unconscious musicians.
-
-"When we behold Bonifacio, in the parable of Dives, intoning with a
-note of fire the most powerful harmony of color in which the essence
-of a proud and voluptuous nature ever has revealed itself, we do not
-ask questions about the blond youth, listening to the music and seated
-between the two magnificent courtesans, whose faces glow like lamps
-of purest amber; but, passing beneath the material symbol, we abandon
-ourselves to the power of evocation of those chords, wherein our
-spirits seem to-day to find a presentiment of I know not what evening,
-heavy with beautiful destiny and autumnal gold, in a harbor as quiet
-as a basin of perfumed oil where a galley palpitating with oriflammes
-shall enter with a strange silence, like a butterfly of twilight
-darting into the chalice of some great flower.
-
-"Shall we not, with our mortal eyes, really see it, some glorious
-evening, approaching the Palace of the Doges? Does it not appear to us
-from a prophetic horizon in the Allegory of Autumn which Tintoretto
-offers us, like a superior, concrete image of our dream of yesterday?
-
-"Seated on the shore, like a deity, Venice receives the ring from the
-young, vine-wreathed god who descends into the water, while Beauty
-floats in the air with a starry diadem to crown the marvelous alliance!
-
-"Behold yon distant ship! It seems to bring a message from the gods.
-Behold the symbolic Woman! Her body is capable of bearing the germs of
-a world!"
-
-A whirlwind of applause broke out, dominated by the clamor of the young
-men, who hailed him who had kindled before their anxious eyes a hope
-so glowing, who had professed a faith so strong in the occult genius
-of the race, in the lofty virtue of the ideals handed down by their
-fathers, in the sovereign dignity of their spirit, the indestructible
-power of beauty, in all the great things held as naught by modern
-barbarity. The disciples extended their arms toward the master with
-an effusion of gratitude, an impulse of love, for he had illumined
-their souls as with a torch. In each lived again Giorgione's creation:
-the youth with the beautiful white plumes, who advanced toward the
-rich mass of spoils; and each fancied as multiplied to infinity his
-own power to enjoy all things. Their cry expressed so plainly their
-perturbation of spirit, that the master felt an inward tremor and the
-inrush of a wave of sadness as he thought of the ashes of this sudden
-fire, and of the cruel wakening of the morrow. Against what sharp
-obstacles must be broken this terrible desire to live, this violent
-will of each to shape the wings of Victory to his own destiny, and to
-bend all the energies of his nature toward the sublime end!
-
-But that night favored youthful delirium. All the dreams of domination,
-of pleasure and of glory, that Venice has first cradled, then stifled,
-in her marble arms, seemed to rise anew from the foundations of the
-palace, to enter from the open balconies, palpitating like a people
-revivified under the arch of that rich and heavy ceiling, which was
-like a suspended treasure. The strength which, on the ceiling and the
-walls, seemed to swell the muscles of the gods, the kings, and the
-heroes, the beauty which, in the nudity of the goddesses, the queens,
-and the courtesans, ran like visible music--all that human strength and
-beauty, transfigured by centuries of art, harmonized itself in a single
-figure, which these intoxicated ones fancied they beheld, real and
-breathing, erected before them by the new poet.
-
-They vented their intoxicated enthusiasm in that great cry which they
-sent up to him who had offered to their thirsty lips a cup of his own
-wine. Henceforth, all would be able to see the inextinguishable flame
-through its watery veil. Some one among them already imagined himself
-crumpling laurel leaves to perfume his hands; and another resolved to
-seek at the bottom of a silent canal for the old sword and the ancient
-diadem.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- THE SPIRIT OF MELODY
-
-
-Alone with the statues in one of the rooms of the neighboring museum,
-Stelio Effrena rested for a moment, shrinking from any other contact,
-feeling the need of gathering his strength and quieting his nerves,
-to free himself from the unusual vibration through which it seemed to
-him all the essence of his spirit had been dissipated and scattered
-over the composite soul of the throng. Of his recent words, no trace
-remained in his memory, and of recent images he perceived no vestige.
-The only phrase that lingered in his mind was that "inmost flower of
-the flame," which he had conjured up in speaking of the glory of the
-first Bonifacio, and which he had plucked with his own incombustible
-fingers to offer to his promised love. He remembered how, at the
-precise instant of this spontaneous offering, the woman had turned
-away her head, and how, instead of a glance from her dreamy eyes, he
-had encountered the indicating smile. Then the intoxicating cloud that
-had been just on the point of melting away, seemed to condense itself
-anew in his brain, in the vague form of the creature of music; and
-he fancied that she held in her hand the flower of flame, as, in a
-dominating attitude, she emerged above his inward agitation as from
-the trembling waves of a summer sea.
-
-As if to celebrate that image, from the Hall of the Greater Council
-came the first notes of the symphony of Benedetto Marcello, the
-fugue-like movement of which revealed at once its grand style. A
-sonorous idea, clear and strong as a living person, developed itself in
-the powerful measure; and in that melody Stelio recognized the virtue
-of the same principle around which, as around a thyrsus, he had twined
-the garlands of his poesy.
-
-Then the name that had already resounded against the sides of the
-vessel, in the silence and the shadow, that name which, in the great
-wave of sound from the evening bells, had been lost like a sibylline
-leaf, seemed to his fancy to propose its syllables to the orchestra
-as a new theme to be interpreted by the musicians' bows. The violins,
-viols, and violoncellos sang it in turn; the sudden blasts of the
-heroic trumpets exalted it; and at last a whole quartette, in one
-great, thrilling chord, flung it toward that heaven of joy where
-later would sparkle the starry crown offered to Ariadne by the golden
-Aphrodite.
-
-In the pause that followed, Stelio experienced a singular agitation,
-almost like a religious ecstasy, before that annunciation. He realized
-what it was worth to him, in that inestimable lyric moment, to find
-himself alone amid this group of white and motionless statues. A shred
-of the same mystery which, under the quarter of the ship, had seemed
-to float lightly across his senses like a misty veil, again waved
-before his eyes in that deserted hall, which was so near to the human
-throng. It was like the silence of the sea-shell, lying on the shore
-beside the stormy ocean. He again felt a conviction, such as he had
-already experienced in certain extraordinary hours of his journey, of
-the presence of his fate, which was about to give to his spirit a new
-impulse, perhaps to quicken within him a marvelous act of will. And,
-as he remembered the thousands of obscure destinies hanging over the
-heads of that crowd, which had been so stirred by his images of an
-ideal life, he congratulated himself on being able to adore alone the
-propitious demon that came to visit him secretly, to offer to him a
-veiled gift, in the name of an unknown mistress.
-
-He thrilled at the burst of human voices that saluted with triumphal
-acclamation the unvanquished god.
-
- _Viva il forte, viva il grande!_
-
-The vast hall resounded like a great timbrel, and the reverberation
-penetrated through the Censors' Stairway, the Golden Stairway, the
-corridors and the vestibules to the furthermost parts of the palace,
-like a thunder of joy echoing in the serene night.
-
- _Viva il forte, viva il grande!
- Vincitor dell' Indie dome!_
-
-It seemed indeed that the chorus was saluting the apparition of the
-magnificent god invoked by the poet on the City Beautiful. It seemed
-that in those vocal notes the folds of his purple draperies quivered
-like flames in a crystal tube. The living image hung suspended over
-the assemblage, which nourished it with its own dream.
-
- _Viva il forte, viva il grande!_
-
-In the impetuous fugue movement, the bass, the contraltos, the sopranos
-repeated the frenzied acclamation to the Immortal of the thousand names
-and the thousand crowns, "born on an ineffable bed, like to a young man
-in his first youth."
-
-The old Dionysian intoxication seemed born again, diffusing itself
-through that divine chorus. The fulness and freshness of life in the
-smile of Zeus, who freed men's souls from sadness, expressed itself
-in a luminous outburst of joy. The torches of the Bacchantes blazed
-and crackled in the sound. As in an Orphic hymn, the brightness of
-conflagration illumined that youthful brow, surmounted by azure hair.
-"When the splendor of fire invaded the whole earth, he alone checked
-the whirlwinds of flame." As in the Homeric hymn, there palpitated
-the sterile bosom of the sea, expressing in regular cadences the
-measured stroke of the oars that propelled the stout vessel toward
-unknown lands. The Flower-bearer, the Fructifier, the visible Remedy
-for mortal man, the sacred Flower, The Friend of Pleasure, Dionysius,
-the liberator, suddenly appeared before mankind on the wings of song,
-crowning for them that nocturnal hour with happiness, placing before
-them once more the cup overflowing with all the good things of life.
-
-The song increased in power; all the voices blended in the rush
-of melody. The hymn celebrated the tamer of tigers, of panthers,
-lions and lynxes. A cry seemed to rise from Mænads with heads turned
-backward, flying locks and floating robes, who struck their cymbals and
-shook their castanets: _Evoé!_
-
-But now suddenly surged above these heroic measures a broad, pastoral
-rhythm, invoking the Theban Bacchus, of the pure brow and gentle
-thoughts:
-
- _Quel che all'olmo la vite in stretto nodo
- Pronuba accoppia, e i pampini feconda_ ...
-
-Only two voices, in a succession of sixths, now sang the flowery
-nuptials, the leafy marriage, the flexible bonds. Before the eyes of
-the multitude again passed that image already created by the poet
-of the barque laden with clusters, like a vat filled with grapes to
-be made into wine. And again the song seemed to recall the miracle
-witnessed by the prudent pilot Medeia: "And behold! a sweet and
-fragrant wine ran over the swift, black boat.... And behold! a vine
-climbed to the top of the sail, and from it hung innumerable clusters
-of grapes. And a dark ivy twined about the mast, and it was covered
-with flowers, and beautiful fruits amid their foliage grew thereon, and
-garlands were wound about the rowlocks."
-
-The spirit of the fugue then passed into the orchestra, and mounted in
-exquisitely light roulades, while the voices struck on the orchestral
-web with simultaneous percussion. And, like a thyrsus waving over the
-Bacchic troop, a single voice floated out in the nuptial melody, with
-the laughing joy and grace of the pastoral marriage:
-
- _Viva dell'olmo,
- E della vite
- L'almo fecondo
- Sostenitor!_
-
-The voices seemed to evoke the image of erect and graceful Tiades,
-gently waving their thyrsi in the mists of divine intoxication, dressed
-in long saffron-hued robes, their faces lighted up, ardent as those
-women of Veronese, who leaned over their aerial balconies to listen to
-the song.
-
-But the heroic acclamation once more sprang up with final vehemence.
-The face of the conquering god reappeared amid torches frantically
-waved aloft. Then, in unison, in a supreme burst of joy, voices and
-orchestra thundered together at the many-eyed chimera under the
-suspended treasure of that dome circled by red triremes, armed towers,
-and triumphal bands:
-
- _Viva dell'Indie,
- Viva de' mari,
- Viva de' mostri
- Il domator._
-
-Stelio Effrena had gone as far as the threshold; through the throng
-that made way before him he penetrated into the hall and halted
-near the platform occupied by the orchestra and the singers. His
-restless eyes sought La Foscarina near the celestial sphere, but
-did not find her. The head of the Tragic Muse no longer rose above
-the constellations. Where was she? To what place has she withdrawn?
-Could she see him, although he could not see her? A confused anxiety
-agitated him, and the remembrance of the early evening on the water
-returned to him indistinctly, accompanied by the words of her recent
-promise. Glancing up at the open balconies, he thought that perhaps she
-had stepped outside to breathe the fresh night air, and that, perhaps,
-leaning against the balustrade she felt passing over her cool throat
-the wave of music, which would seem as sweet to her as the delight of a
-kiss from beloved lips.
-
-But his impatience to hear the divine voice dominated all other
-impatience, abolished all other desire. He observed that again a
-profound silence reigned throughout the hall, as at the instant when he
-had opened his lips to speak his first word. And, as at that instant,
-the versatile and ephemeral monster, with a thousand human faces,
-seemed to extend itself and yawn to receive a new soul.
-
-Some one near Stelio whispered the name of Donatella Arvale. He turned
-his eyes toward the platform, past the row of violoncellos, which
-formed a brown hedge. The singer remained invisible, hidden in the
-delicate, quivering forest of bows, whence would arise the mournful
-harmony that must accompany the Lament of Ariadne.
-
-Amid a sympathetic silence rose a prelude of violins. Then the
-viols and violoncellos added a sigh more profound to that imploring
-plaint. Was not this--after the Phrygian flute and the castanets,
-after the instruments of orgies, which trouble the reason and provoke
-delirium--was not this the august Doric lyre, grave and sweet, the
-harmonious support of song? Thus was the Drama born from the boisterous
-Dithyramb. The great metamorphosis of the Dionysian rite, the frenzy
-of the sacred festival before the creative inspiration of the tragic
-poet, were figured in that musical alternance. The fiery breath of the
-Thracian god gave life to a sublime form of Art. The crown and the
-tripod, the prize of the poet's victory, had displaced the lascivious
-goat and the Attic basket of figs. Æschylus, keeper of a vineyard, had
-been visited by the god, who had infused into him his spirit of flame.
-On the bank of the Acropolis, near the sanctuary of Dionysius, a marble
-theater had risen, capable of containing the chosen people.
-
-Thus suddenly opened in the mind of the Master the pathways of
-centuries, extending through the distance of primitive mysteries.
-That form of Art, toward which now tended the effort of his genius,
-attracted by the obscure aspirations of human multitudes, appeared to
-him in the sanctity of its origins. The divine sadness of Ariadne,
-up-springing like a melodious cry from the furious Thiaros, made leap
-once more within him the work he nourished in his soul, unformed
-yet alive. With a glance, again he sought the Muse of the revealing
-voice against the sphere of constellations, but he did not see her,
-and turned once more to the forest of instruments, whence rose the
-imploring plaint.
-
-Then, amid the slender bows, that rose and fell upon the strings
-with alternating movement, appeared the singer, erect as a stem;
-and, like a stem, she seemed to balance herself an instant on the
-softened harmony. The youthfulness of her agile and robust body shone
-resplendent through the texture of her robes, as a flame is seen
-through the thinness of polished ivory. Rising and falling around
-her white form, the bows seemed to draw their melody from the secret
-music that dwelt within her. When her lips opened in an enchanting
-curve, Stelio recognized the strength and purity of the voice before
-the singer had uttered one modulation, as if she were a crystal statue
-wherein he could behold the unspringing of a jet of living water.
-
- _Come mai puoi
- Vedermi piangere?_
-
-The melody of a by-gone love and long-dead sorrow flowed from those
-lips with an expression so pure and strong that suddenly, within the
-soul of the multitude, it was changed into a mysterious happiness.
-Was that strain indeed the divine plaint of the daughter of Minos, as
-she held out her arms in vain to the fair Stranger on the deserted
-shore of Naxos? The fable vanished; the illusion of the moment was
-abolished. The eternal love and eternal sorrow of gods and of men were
-exhaled in that perfect voice. The futile regret for each lost joy,
-the recollection of each fugitive blessing, the supreme prayer flying
-toward every sail on the sea, toward every sun hiding itself among
-the mountains, the implacable desire and the promise of death--all
-these things passed into the great, solitary song, transformed by
-the power of Art into sublime essences which the soul could receive
-without suffering. The words were dissolved in tone, losing their
-significance, changed into notes of love and sadness, indefinitely
-illuminating. Like a circle that is closed, and yet dilates continually
-in accordance with the rhythm of universal life, the melody encircled
-the composite soul which dilated with it in immeasurable joy. Through
-the open balconies, in the perfect calm of the autumn night, the
-enchantment spread over the peaceful waters and mounted to the watchful
-stars, higher than the motionless masts of the ships, higher than the
-sacred towers, inhabited by the now silent bronze bells. During the
-interludes the singer drooped her youthful head and stood motionless
-as a white statue among the forest of instruments, where the long bows
-rose and fell in alternate movement, perhaps unconscious of that world
-which in a few brief moments her song had transfigured.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME
-
-
-Descending to the courtyard hastily, in order to escape importunate
-curiosity, Stelio took refuge in a shadowy corner, to watch, among the
-crowd coming down the Giants' Stairway, for the appearance of the two
-women, the actress and the singer, who were to meet him near the well.
-
-Every instant his expectation became more anxious, while around him
-rose the tumultuous cry that extended to the outer walls of the
-palace and lost itself among the clouds, now lighted with a glare as
-of a conflagration. An almost terrible joy seemed to spread over the
-Anadyomenean City, as if a vehement breath had suddenly dilated all
-breasts, filling the veins of all men with a superabundance of life.
-The repetition of the Bacchic Chorus celebrating the crown of stars,
-placed by Aphrodite on the forgetful head of Ariadne, had drawn a cry
-from the throng on the Molo beneath the open balconies. When, at the
-final elevation, the word _Viva!_ rang out from the chorus of Mænads,
-Satyrs, and Egipans, the chorus of the populace had responded to it
-like a formidable echo from the harbor of San Marco. And in this moment
-of Dionysian delirium it seemed as if the people remembered the forests
-of old that were burned on sacred nights, and had given a signal for
-the conflagration that must light up the beauty of Venice in final,
-dazzling splendor.
-
-The dream of Paris Eglano--the spectacle of marvelous flames offered
-to love on a floating couch--flashed before Stelio's vision. The
-persistent image of Donatella Arvale lingered in his thought: a supple,
-youthful figure, strong and shapely, rising erect amid the sonorous
-forest of bows, which seemed to draw their notes from the hidden music
-within herself. And, seized with a strange distress, through which
-passed something like the shadow of horror, he saw the image of the
-other woman: poisoned by art, worn with experience, with the taste of
-maturity and worldly corruptness on those eloquent lips, a feverish
-dryness in those hands, which had pressed the juice from deceitful
-fruits, and with the marks of a thousand masks on the face that had
-simulated the fury of all mortal passions. To-night, at last, after a
-long period of waiting and of hope, he was to receive the gift of that
-heart, no longer young, which had been claimed by others before him,
-but which he never yet had called his own. How his heart had throbbed
-in the early evening as he sat beside that silent woman, floating
-toward the City Beautiful over the waters that seemed to bear them on
-with the terrifying smoothness of mysterious machinery. Ah, why did
-she come now to meet him in company with the other temptress? Why did
-she place beside her despair and worldly wisdom the pure splendor of
-innocent youth?
-
-He started suddenly as he perceived in the throng at the top of the
-marble staircase, by the light of the smoking torches, the form of La
-Foscarina pressed so closely against that of Donatella Arvale that the
-robes of both blended into one mass of whiteness. He followed them with
-his eyes until they reached the lowest stair, anxious as if at each
-step they had approached the edge of an abyss. The unknown during these
-hours had already led in the heart of the poet a life so intense that
-on seeing her approach him he experienced the emotion that would have
-seized him before a breathing incarnation of one of the ideal creatures
-born of his art.
-
-She descended slowly on the human wave. Behind her, the Palace of the
-Doges, filled with streams of lights and confused sounds, made one
-think of those fairy-tale awakenings which suddenly, in the depths of
-the forest, transfigure inaccessible castles where for centuries the
-hair on royal heads had grown longer and longer during a protracted
-sleep. The two guardian Giants shone red in the blaze of the torches;
-the cuspid of the Golden Gate sparkled with tiny lights. And still
-the clamor rose and swelled above the groups of marbles, loud as the
-moaning of the stormy sea against the walls of Malamocco.
-
-In this tumult, Effrena saw advancing toward him the two temptresses,
-escaping from the crowd as if from the clasp of a monster. And his
-fancy pictured extraordinary assimilations, which should be realized
-with the ease of dreams and the solemnity of liturgic ceremonies. He
-said to himself that Perdita was leading this magnificent prey to
-him, that he might discover some rarely beautiful secret, that some
-great work of love might be accomplished, in which she desired to be
-his fellow artisan. He told himself that this very night she would
-say to him most marvelous words. Across his spirit passed once again
-the indefinable melancholy he had felt when he leaned over the bronze
-rim to contemplate the reflection of the stars in that dark mirror;
-he waited in expectation of some event that should stir that secret
-soul in the furthermost depths of his being, where it lay motionless,
-strange, intangible. By the whirling of his thoughts, he comprehended
-that he was again plunged into that delirium which the glamor of the
-lagoon had given him at twilight. Then, emerging from the shadowy
-corner, he went forward to meet the two women with an intoxicating
-presentiment.
-
-"Oh, Effrena!" said La Foscarina, as she reached the well, "I had given
-up all hope of finding you here. We are very late, are we not? But we
-were caught in the crowd and could not escape."
-
-Then, turning toward her companion with a smile, she said:
-
-"Donatella, this is the Master of the Flame."
-
-Without speaking, but with a slight smile, Donatella Arvale responded
-to the low bow of the young man.
-
-"We must find our gondola," said La Foscarina. "It is waiting for us at
-the Ponte della Paglia. Will you come with us, Effrena? We must profit
-by the opportunity. The crowd is rushing toward the Piazzetta. The
-Queen will leave by the Porta della Carta."
-
-A long, unanimous cry saluted the appearance of the fair Queen in her
-pearls, as she stood at the head of the stairs, where long ago, in the
-presence of the populace, the Doge received the ducal ensign. Again the
-name of the white starry flower and the pearl arose from the crowd and
-was echoed among the marbles. Flashes of joy sparkled against the dark
-sky, a thousand fiery doves flew from the pinnacles of San Marco, like
-messengers of Fire.
-
-"The Epiphany of the Flame!" cried La Foscarina, as she reached the
-Molo and gazed upon the marvelous spectacle.
-
-Donatella Arvale and Stelio Effrena stood side by side, astonished;
-then they looked into each other's eyes, bewildered. And their faces,
-illumined by the reflections, shone as if they were leaning over a
-furnace or a glowing crater.
-
-All the innumerable appearances of the volatile and multi-colored Fire
-spread over the firmament, crept over the waters, curled around the
-masts of the ships, enwreathed the cupolas and the towers, adorned
-the friezes, draped the statuary, bejeweled the capitals, enriched
-every line and transfigured every aspect of the sacred and profane
-architectures around that profound and mysterious watery mirror,
-which multiplied these marvels. The astonished eye could no longer
-distinguish between the contour and the quality of the elements, but
-it was charmed by a moving vision wherein all forms lived a lucid,
-fluid life, suspended in vibrating ether, so that the slender prows
-curving over the waves and the myriad of golden doves against the dark
-sky seemed to rival one another in the glory of swift motion, and
-together to reach the summit of immaterial beauty. That which in the
-twilight had seemed a silvery palace of Neptune, built in imitation
-of a rare shell, at this hour had become a new temple, erected by the
-nimble genii of the Fire. It seemed like one of those labyrinthian
-constructions of our dreams, prodigiously enlarged, that rise on
-andirons, at the hundred gates of which stand the two-faced augurs who
-make ambiguous gestures to the watching maiden; or like one of those
-fairy-like red palaces, at the thousand windows of which appear the
-faces of salamander princesses, who smile amorously upon the dreaming
-poet.
-
-Rosy as a setting moon, the sphere of the Fortuna, borne on the
-shoulders of the Atlantides, radiated on the triple loggia, its rays
-engendering a cycle of satellites. From the Riva, from San Giorgio,
-from the Giudecca, with a continual crackling, clusters of fiery stems
-rose toward the clouds, and there blossomed into sparkling roses,
-lilies, and palms, a flowery paradise, forming an aerial garden that
-continually faded and bloomed again with yet stranger and richer
-blossoms. It was like a rapid succession of springs and autumns in the
-empyrean. An immense sparkling shower of leaves and petals fell from
-the celestial dissolutions, enveloping all things in its golden shimmer.
-
-From a distance, through gaps in the glittering rain, a flotilla gay
-with flags could be seen approaching over the waters of the lagoon: a
-fairy-like fleet such as might float through the dream of a sybarite
-sleeping his last sleep on a bed steeped in deadly perfumes. Like
-those, perhaps, their ropes were made from the twisted hair of slaves
-captured in conquered cities, and still redolent of fragrant oils; like
-those, perhaps, their hulls were laden with myrrh, spikenard, benzoin,
-cinnamon, aromatic herbs; with sandal-wood, cedar, terebinth, and all
-oderiferous woods in rich profusion. The indescribable colors of the
-flags suggested perfumes and spices. Of blue-green peacock shades,
-saffron, violet, and indistinct hues, those flaming flags seemed to
-spring from some burning interior and to have been colored by some
-unknown process.
-
-"The Epiphany of the Flame!" repeated La Foscarina. "What an unforeseen
-commentary on your poem, Effrena! The City of Life responds by a
-miracle to your act of adoration. She burns, through her watery veil.
-Are you not satisfied? Look! Millions of golden pomegranates are
-hanging everywhere!"
-
-The actress was smiling, her face illumined by the magic fire. She was
-suddenly possessed by that singular gayety of hers which Stelio knew
-well, and which, because of its effect of incongruity with her usual
-pose, suggested to him the image of a dark, closed house where violent
-hands had suddenly opened on rusty hinges all the doors and windows.
-
-"We must praise Ariadne," he replied, "for having uttered, in all this
-harmony, the most sublime note."
-
-Stelio said those flattering words only to induce the fair singer to
-speak, only through a desire to know the _timbre_ of that voice when
-it descended from the heights of song. But his praise was lost in the
-reiterated clamor of the crowd, which overflowed on the Molo, making a
-longer stay impossible. From the bank, Stelio assisted the two friends
-into their gondola; then he sat down on a stool at their knees, and the
-long, dentellated prow sparkled, like all else, in the magic fire.
-
-"To the Rio Marin, by the Grand Canal," La Foscarina ordered the
-gondolier. "Do you know, Effrena, we are to have at supper some of your
-best friends: Francesco de Lizo, Daniele Glauro, Prince Hoditz, Antimo
-della Bella, Fabio Molza, Baldassare Stampa"--
-
-"Then it will be a banquet?"
-
-"But not, alas! like that of Cana."
-
-"And will not Lady Myrta, with her Veronese greyhounds, be there?"
-
-"Rest assured that we shall have Lady Myrta. Did you not see her in the
-hall? She sat in the first row, lost in admiration of you."
-
-Because they had looked into each other's eyes as they spoke, a sudden
-emotion seized them. The remembrance of that full twilight hour on the
-water that rippled beneath their oar filled their hearts with a wave of
-troubled blood; and each was surprised by a swift return of the same
-agitation felt when leaving the silent estuary already in the power
-of shadow and death. Their lips refused to utter vain, light words;
-their souls refused to make the effort to incline themselves through
-prudence toward the passing trivialities of the superficial life, which
-now seemed worthless to both; and their spirits became absorbed in
-the contemplation of the strange fancies that rose from their inmost
-thoughts in a garb of indescribable richness, like the heaped-up
-treasures the streams of light seemed to reveal in the depths of the
-nocturnal waters.
-
-And, because of that very silence, they felt the presence of the singer
-weigh heavily upon them, as in the moment when her name had first
-been spoken between them; and little by little the oppression became
-intolerable. Although Stelio was seated close to her, she appeared no
-less distant than when she rose above the forest of instruments; she
-was as absent and unconscious as she had been when her voice soared
-high in song. She had not yet spoken.
-
-Simply to hear her speak, and almost timidly, Stelio said:
-
-"Shall you remain some time longer in Venice?"
-
-He had pondered on the first words he should say to her, but was
-dissatisfied with whatever rose to his lips, for all phrases seemed too
-vivid, insidious, full of ambiguous significance, capable of infinite
-changes and transformations, like the unknown seed from which may
-spring a thousand roots. And it seemed to him that Perdita could not
-hear one of those phrases without feeling that a shadow darkened her
-love.
-
-After he had spoken those simple, conventional words, he reflected that
-even that question might suggest an infinity of hope and eagerness.
-
-"I must leave Venice to-morrow," Donatella replied. "I ought not to be
-here even now."
-
-Her voice, so clear and powerful in the heights of song, was low and
-sober, as if suffused with a slight opacity, suggesting the image
-of the most precious metal wrapped in the most delicate velvet. Her
-brief reply indicated that there was a place of suffering to which she
-must return, where she must undergo some familiar torture. Like iron
-tempered with tears, a strong though sorrowful will shone through the
-veil of her youthful beauty.
-
-"To-morrow!" Stelio exclaimed, not seeking to hide his sincere regret.
-"Have you heard, Signora?"
-
-"I know," the actress replied, gently taking Donatella's hand. "I am
-filled with regret to see her go. But she cannot remain away longer
-from her father. Perhaps you do not yet know"--
-
-"What?" asked Stelio quickly. "Is he ill? Is it true, then, that
-Lorenzo Arvale is ill?"
-
-"No, he is only fatigued," said La Foscarina, touching her forehead
-with a gesture perhaps involuntary but which revealed to Stelio the
-horrible menace hanging over the genius of the artist who had seemed as
-fertile and indefatigable as one of the old masters--a Della Robbia or
-a Verrocchio.
-
-"He is only fatigued," repeated La Foscarina. "He needs repose and
-quiet. And his daughter's singing is very soothing to him. Do you not
-believe, also, Effrena, in the healing power of music?"
-
-"Certainly," Stelio replied, "Ariadne possesses a divine gift whereby
-her power transcends all limits."
-
-The name of Ariadne came spontaneously to his lips to indicate the
-singer as she appeared to his fancy, for it seemed to him impossible
-to pronounce the young girl's real name preceded by the ordinary
-appellation imposed by social usage. In his eyes she was perfect
-and singular, free from the little ties of custom, living her own
-sequestered life, like a work of art on which style had set its
-inviolable seal. He thought of her as isolated like those figures that
-stand out with clear contour, far from common life, lost in mystic
-reverie; and already, before that impenetrable character, he felt a
-sort of passionate impatience, somewhat similar to that of a curious
-man before something hermetically sealed that tempts him.
-
-"Ariadne had for the soothing of her griefs the gift of forgetfulness,"
-said Donatella, "and that I do not possess."
-
-A bitterness perhaps involuntary infused these words, in which Stelio
-fancied he detected the indication of an aspiration toward a life
-less oppressed by useless suffering. He guessed at her revolt against
-a certain form of domestic slavery, the horror of her self-imposed
-sacrifice, her vehement desire to rise toward joy, and her inborn
-aptitude for being drawn like a beautiful bow by a strong hand that
-would know how to use it for some high conquest. He divined that she
-had no longer any hope of her father's recovery, and that she was
-saddened at the thought that henceforth she could only be the guardian
-of a darkened hearth, of ashes without a spark. The image of the great
-artist rose in his mind, not as he was, since Stelio never had known
-him personally, but such as he had fancied the sculptor after studying
-his ideas of beauty expressed in imperishable bronze and marble. His
-mind fixed itself on that image with a sensation of terror more
-icy than that which the most appalling aspects of death could have
-inspired. And all his strength, all his pride and his ardor seemed to
-resound within him like weapons shaken by a menacing hand, sending a
-quiver through every fiber of his heart.
-
-Presently La Foscarina lifted the funereal black curtain, which
-suddenly, amid the splendors of the festival, had seemed to change the
-gondola into a coffin.
-
-"Look!" she said, pointing out to Stelio the balcony of Desdemona's
-palace: "See the beautiful Nineta receiving the homage of the Serenade,
-as she sits between her pet monkey and her little dog."
-
-"Ah, the beautiful Nineta!" said Stelio, rousing himself from his
-wild thoughts, and saluting the smiling occupant of the balcony, a
-little woman who was listening to the music, her face illumined from
-two silver candelabra, from the branches of which hung wreaths of the
-last roses of the year. "I have not yet seen her this time. She is
-the gentlest and most graceful animal I know. How fortunate was our
-dear Howitz to discover her behind the lid of an old harpsichord when
-he was rummaging in that curiosity shop at San Samuele! Two pieces
-of good fortune in one day: the lovely Nineta and a harpsichord lid
-painted by Pordenone. Since that day, the harmony of his life has
-been complete. How I should like to have you penetrate to his nest!
-You would find there a perfect example of that which I spoke of this
-evening, at twilight. There is a man who, by obeying his native taste
-for simplicity, has arranged for himself with minute art his own little
-love-story, in which he lives as happily as did his Moravian ancestor
-in the Arcady of Rosswald. Ah! I know a thousand exquisite things about
-him!"
-
-A large gondola, decorated with many-colored lanterns, and laden with
-singers and musicians, had stopped beneath the balcony of Desdemona's
-house. The old song of brief youth and fleeting beauty rose sweetly
-toward the little woman who listened with her child-like smile, sitting
-between the monkey and the lapdog, making a group like one of Pietro
-Longhi's prints.
-
- _Do beni vu gharè
- Beleza e zoventù;
- Co i va no i torna più,
- Nina mia cara...._
-
-"Does it not seem to you, Effrena, that these surroundings express the
-true soul of Venice, and that the other picture, which you presented
-to the multitude, is only your own fancy?" said La Foscarina, nodding
-her head slightly in time with the rhythm of the sweet song that spread
-through the Grand Canal and was reechoed from afar by singers in other
-gondolas.
-
-"No," Stelio replied, "this does not at all represent the true soul of
-Venice. In each one of us, fluttering like a butterfly over the surface
-of our deeper nature, is a lighter soul, an _animula_, a little playful
-sprite that often dominates us for the moment, and leads us toward
-simple and mediocre pleasures, toward puerile pastimes and frivolous
-music. This _animula vagula_ exists even in the gravest and most
-violent natures, like the clown attached to the person of Othello; and
-sometimes it misleads our better judgment. That which you hear now, in
-the songs and the melodies of the guitars, is the _animula_, or lighter
-spirit, of Venice; but her real soul is discovered only in silence,
-and most terribly, be assured, in full summer, at noonday, like the
-soul of the great god Pan. Out in the harbor of San Marco, I thought
-that you felt its mystic vibration during those moments of the great
-conflagration. You are forgetting Giorgione for Rosalba!"
-
-Around the large gondola beneath the balcony had gathered other
-gondolas bearing languid women who leaned out to listen to the music in
-attitudes of graceful _abandon_, as if in fancy they felt themselves
-sinking into invisible arms. And around this romantic group the
-reflections of the lanterns in the water quivered like a flowering of
-rare and luminous water-lilies.
-
- _Se lassarè passar
- La bela e fresca età,
- Un zorno i ve dirà
- Vechia maura,
- E bramarè, ma invan,
- Quel che ghavevi in man
- Co avè lassà scampar
- La congiontura._
-
-It was, in truth, the song of the last roses that entwined the
-candelabra. It called up in Perdita's mind the funeral cortège of the
-dead Summer, the opalescent veil in which Stelio had wrapped the sweet
-body in its golden robe. Through the glass, sealed by the Master of
-Fire, she could see her own image at the bottom of the lagoon, lying on
-a field of seaweed. A sudden chill stole over her; once more she felt
-horror and disgust of her own body, no longer young. And, remembering
-her recent promise, thinking that perhaps this very night the beloved
-one would claim its fulfilment, she shuddered with a sort of sorrowful
-modesty, a mingling of fear and pride. Her experience and despairing
-eyes ran over the young girl beside her, studying her, penetrating her,
-realizing her occult but certain power, her intact freshness, pure
-health, and that indefinable virtue of love that emanates like an aroma
-from chaste maidens when they have arrived at the perfection of their
-bloom. She felt that some secret current of affinity existed between
-this fair creature and the poet; she could almost divine the words he
-addressed to her in the silence of his heart. A bitter pang seized her,
-so intolerable that, with an involuntary movement, her fingers clutched
-convulsively the black rope of the arm-rest beside her, so that the
-little metal griffin that held it creaked audibly.
-
-This movement did not escape Stelio's anxious vigilance. He understood
-her agitation, and for a moment he experienced the same pang, but it
-was mingled with impatience and almost with anger, for her anguish,
-like a cry of destruction, interrupted the fiction of transcendent life
-that he had been constructing within himself in order to conciliate the
-contrast, to conquer this new force that offered itself to him like a
-bow to be drawn, yet at the same time not to lose the savor of that
-ripe maturity which life had impregnated with all its essences, and the
-benefit of that devotion and that passionate faith which sharpened his
-intelligence and fed his pride.
-
-"Ah, Perdita!" he said to himself, "From the ferment of your human
-loves, why has not a love more than human sprung. Ah, why have I
-finally vanquished you by my pleading, although I know it is too late?
-and why do you allow me to read in your eyes the certainty of your
-yielding, amid a flood of doubts which, nevertheless, never again
-will have power to reëstablish the abolished interdiction. Each of us
-knows full well that that interdiction conferred the highest dignity
-upon our long communion, yet we have not known how to preserve its
-rule, and at the last hour we yield blindly to an imperious internal
-call. Yet, a short time ago, when your noble head dominated the belt
-of constellations, I no longer saw in you an earthly love, but the
-illuminating, revelatory Muse of my poetry; and all my heart went out
-to you in gratitude, not for the promise of a fleeting happiness, but
-for the promise of glory. Do you not understand--you, who understand
-everything? By a marvelous inspiration, such as always comes to you,
-have you not turned my inclination, by the ray of your smile, toward
-a resplendent youthfulness which you have chosen and reserved for me?
-When you descended the stairway together, and approached me, had you
-not the appearance of one that bears a gift or an unexpected message?
-Not wholly unexpected, perhaps, Perdita! For I have anticipated from
-your infinite wisdom some extraordinary action toward me."
-
-"How happy the beautiful Nineta is, with her monkey and her little
-dog!" sighed the actress, looking back at the light songsters and the
-smiling woman on the balcony.
-
- _La zoventù xe un fior
- Che apena nato el mor,
- E un zorno gnanca mi
- No sarò quela._
-
-Donatella Arvale and Stelio also looked back, while the light barque,
-without sinking, bore over the water and past the music the three faces
-of a heavy destiny.
-
- _E vegna quel che vol,
- Lassè che voga!_
-
-Suddenly, in front of the red palace of the Foscari, at the curve of
-the canal, they saw the state vessel of the Doge of Venice so brightly
-illumined that it looked like a burning tower. New streaks of fire
-flashed against the sky. Other flaming doves flew up from the deck,
-rose above the terraces, sank among the statues, hissed as they fell
-into the water, multiplied themselves in thousands of sparks, and
-floated along in smoke. Along the parapets, from the decks, the poop,
-the prow, in a simultaneous explosion, a thousand fountains of fire
-opened, dilated, blended, illuminating with an intense, fiery radiance
-each side of the canal as far as San Vitale and the Rialto. Then the
-vessel of the Doge glided out of sight, transformed into a purple
-thunder-cloud.
-
-"Go through San Polo!" called La Foscarina to the gondolier, bending
-her head as under a storm, and shutting out the roar with her palms
-over her ears.
-
-Again Donatella Arvale and Stelio Effreno looked at each other with
-dazzled eyes. Again their faces, lighted by the glare, glowed as if
-they were leaning over a furnace or a burning crater.
-
-The gondola turned into the canal of San Polo, gliding along through
-the darkness. A cold shadow seemed suddenly to fall over the spirits of
-the three silent occupants. Under the arch of the bridge, the hollow
-echo of the dipping oar struck upon their souls, and the hilarity of
-the festival sounded infinitely far-away. All the houses were dark;
-the campanile rose silent and solitary toward the stars; the Campiello
-del Remer and the Campiello del Pistor were deserted, and the grass
-breathed there in untrodden peace; the trees, bending over the low
-walls of the little gardens, seemed to feel their leaves dying on the
-branches pointing to the serene sky.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- THE POET'S DREAM
-
-
-"So, for a few hours at least, the rhythm of Art and the pulse of Life
-have again throbbed in unison in Venice," said Daniele Glauro, raising
-from the table an exquisite chalice, to which only the Sacred Host was
-wanting. "Allow me to express, for myself and also for the many that
-are absent, the gratitude and fervor that blend in one single image of
-beauty the three persons to whom we owe this miracle: the mistress of
-the feast, the daughter of Lorenzo Arvale, and the poet of Persephone."
-
-"And why the mistress of the feast, Glauro?" asked La Foscarina,
-smiling in graceful surprise. "I, like you, have not given joy, but
-have received it. Donatella and the Master of the Flame: they alone
-merit the crown; and to them alone the glory must be given."
-
-"But, a short time ago, in the Hall of the Greater Council," said the
-mystic doctor, "your silent presence beside the celestial sphere was
-not less eloquent than the words of Stelio, nor less musical than the
-song of Ariadne. Once again you have divinely carved your own statue in
-silence, and it will live in our memories blended with the music and
-the words."
-
-Stelio shuddered as he recalled to mind the ephemeral flexible monster
-from the side of which had emerged the Tragic Muse above the sphere of
-constellations.
-
-"That is true, very true," said Francesco de Lizo. "I, too, had the
-same thought. As we looked at you, we all realized that you were the
-soul of that ideal world which each of us forms for himself, according
-to his own aspirations and thoughts when listening to the mystic word,
-the song, the symphony."
-
-"And each of us," said Fabio Molza, "felt that in your presence,
-dominating the throng, before the poet, dwelt a great and rare
-significance."
-
-"One might almost have said that you alone were about to assist at the
-mysterious birth of a new idea," said Antimo della Bella. "Everything
-around us seemed awakening itself to produce it--that idea which must
-soon be revealed to us, as a reward for the profound faith with which
-we have awaited it."
-
-The Animator, with another trembling of the heart, felt the work that
-he cherished within him leap once more, formless yet, but already
-living; and his whole soul, as if impelled by a lyric breath, suddenly
-felt drawn toward the fertile and enlightening power that emanated
-from the Dionysian woman to whom these fervent spirits addressed their
-praise.
-
-Suddenly she had become very beautiful: a nocturnal creature, fashioned
-by dreams and passion on a golden anvil, living embodiment of immortal
-fate and eternal enigmas. She might remain motionless and silent, but
-her famous accents and her memorable gestures seemed to live around
-her, vibrating indefinitely, as melodies seem to hover over the cords
-accustomed to sound them, as rhymes seem to breathe from the poet's
-closed book, wherein love and sorrow seek comfort and intoxication.
-The heroic fidelity of Antigone, the oracular fury of Cassandra, the
-devouring fever of Phædre, the cruelty of Medea, the sacrifice of
-Iphigenia, Myrrha before her father, Polyxenes and Alceste before the
-face of death, Cleopatra, fitful as the wind and the fires of the
-world, Lady Macbeth, the dreamy murderess with the little hands; and
-those great, fair lilies empearled with dew and tears--Imogen, Juliet,
-Miranda, Rosalind, Jessica, and Perdita--the tenderest, most terrible,
-and most magnificent souls dwelt within her, inhabited her body, shone
-from her eyes, breathed through her lips, which knew both honey and
-poison, the jeweled chalice and the cup of wormwood. Thus, through
-unlimited space, and endless, the outlines of human life and substance
-appeared to perpetuate themselves; and from the simple movement of a
-muscle, a sign, a start, a quiver of the eyelids, a slight change of
-color, an almost imperceptible inclination of the head, a fugitive play
-of light and shade, a lightning-like virtue of expression radiating
-from that frail and slender body, infinite worlds of imperishable
-beauty were continually generated.
-
-The genii of the places consecrated by poetry hovered around her,
-and encircled her with changing visions: the dusty plain of Thebes,
-the arid Argolide, the parched myrtles of Trezene, the sacred olives
-of Colonus, the triumphant Cydnus, the pale country of Dunsinane,
-Prospero's cavern, the Forest of Arden, land dampened with blood,
-toiled upon with pain, transfigured by a dream or illumined by an
-inextinguishable smile, seemed to appear, to recede, then to vanish
-behind her head. And a vision of countries still more remote--regions
-of mists, northern lands, and, far across the ocean, the immense
-continent where she had appeared like an unknown force amid astonished
-multitudes, bearer of the mystic word and the flame of genius--vanished
-behind her head: the throngs, the mountains, rivers and gulfs, the
-impure cities, the ancient, enfeebled, savage race, the strong people
-aspiring to dominate the world, the new nation that wrests from Nature
-her most secret energies to make them serve an all-powerful work in
-erecting edifices of iron and of crystal; the bastard colonies that
-ferment and grow corrupt on virgin soil; all the barbarous crowds
-she had visited as the messenger of Latin genius; all the ignorant
-masses to whom she had spoken the sublime language of Dante; all the
-human herds from which had mounted toward her, on a wave of confused
-anxieties and desires, the aspiration to Beauty.
-
-She stood there, a creature of perishable flesh, subject to the sad
-laws of time, but an illimitable mass of reality and poetry weighed
-upon her, surged around her, palpitated with the rhythm of her breath.
-And not upon the stage alone had she uttered her cries and suppressed
-her sobs: this had entered into her daily life. She had loved, fought
-and suffered violently, in her soul and in her body. What loves? What
-combats? What pangs? From what abysses of melancholy had she drawn the
-exaltations of her tragic force? At what springs of bitterness had
-she watered her free genius? She had certainly witnessed the crudest
-misery, the darkest ruin; she had known heroic effort, pity, horror,
-and the threshold of death. All her thirst had burned in the delirium
-of Phædre, and in the submissiveness of Imogen had trembled all her
-tenderness. Thus Life and Art, the irrevocable Past and the eternal
-Present, had made her profound, many-souled, and mysterious, had
-magnified her ambiguous destiny beyond human limits, and rendered her
-equal to great temples and natural forests.
-
-Nevertheless, she stood there, a living, breathing woman, under the
-gaze of the poets, each of whom saw her, and yet in her many others.
-
-"Ah! I will embrace you as in some mad revelry; I will clasp you,
-shake you; from your ripe experience, I will draw all the divine and
-abnormal secrets that weigh upon you--the things you have already done,
-and those on which you still meditate in the mysterious depths of your
-soul," sang the lyric demon in the ear of the poet, who recognized
-in the mystery of this woman the surviving power of primitive myth,
-the renewed initiation of the god that had concentrated in one single
-ferment all the energies of Nature, and, by a variety of rhythms, had
-raised, in an enthusiastic worship of himself, the senses and the
-spirit of man to the highest summits of joy and of pain.
-
-"I have done well, I have done wisely, to wait!" said Stelio to
-himself. "The passing of years, the tumult of dreams, the agitation of
-struggle and the swiftness of triumph, the experience of many loves,
-the enchantment of poets, the acclamations of the people; the marvels
-of earth, the patience and the fury, the steps in the mud, the blind
-flight, all evil, all good, that which I know and do not know, that
-which you know, as well as that which you are ignorant of--all this had
-to be to prepare the fulness of this night, which belongs to me!"
-
-He felt himself suffocate and turn pale. A wild impulse seized him by
-the throat, and would not relax its hold. His heart swelled with the
-same keen emotion that had possessed both in the twilight, as they
-floated over the water.
-
-And, as the exaggerated radiance of the city and the event had suddenly
-disappeared, the glory of this woman of the night reappeared to
-his mind still more closely blended with the city of the wonderful
-necklaces and the thousand emerald girdles. In the city and in the
-woman, the poet now saw a power of expression that he never had seen
-before: each glowed in the Autumn night; the same feverish fire that
-coursed through the canals ran also in her veins.
-
-The stars sparkled, the trees waved their branches behind Perdita's
-head, back of which were the shadows of a garden. Through the open
-balconies the sweet air of heaven entered the room; shook the flames of
-the candelabra and the chalices of flowers; swept through the doorways,
-making the draperies wave to and fro, animating that old house of the
-Capello, wherein the last great daughter of San Marco whom the people
-had covered with gold and glory had gathered relics of republican
-magnificence. Galleon lamps, Turkish targets, bronze helmets, leathern
-quivers, and velvet scabbards ornamented the apartments inhabited by
-the last descendant of that marvelous Cesare Darbes who maintained the
-Art of Comedy against the Goldonian reform, and changed the agony of
-the Most Serene Republic into a burst of laughter.
-
-"I only ask that I may be the humble servitor of that idea," was La
-Foscarina's reply to Antimo della Bella's words. Her voice trembled a
-little, her eyes had met Stelio's gaze.
-
-"You alone could make it triumphant," said Francesco de Lizo. "The soul
-of the people is yours forever."
-
-"The drama can only be a rite or a message," declared Glauro
-sententiously. "Acting should again become as solemn as a religious
-ceremony, since it embraces the two constituent elements of all
-worship: the living person, in whom, on the stage as before an altar,
-the word of the revealer is made incarnate, before a multitude as
-silent as if in a temple"--
-
-"Bayreuth!" interrupted Prince Hoditz.
-
-"No; the Janiculum!" exclaimed Stelio, suddenly breaking his silence of
-blissful dizziness. "A Roman hill. We do not need the wood and brick of
-Upper Franconia; we will have a marble theater on a Roman hill."
-
-The sudden opposition of his words seemed to spring from a light,
-good-natured disdain.
-
-"Do you not admire the work of Richard Wagner?" Donatella Arvale
-inquired, with a slight frown that for a moment made her Hermes-like
-face look almost hard.
-
-Stelio looked deep into her eyes; he felt that there was something
-obscurely hostile in the young girl's manner, and also that he himself
-experienced against her an indistinct suggestion of enmity. At this
-moment he again saw her living her own isolated life, fixed in some
-deep, secret thought, strange and inviolable.
-
-"The work of Richard Wagner," he replied, "is founded in the German
-spirit, and its essence is purely northern. His reform is not without
-analogy with that attempted by Luther; his drama is the supreme flower
-of the genius of a race, the extraordinarily powerful summary of
-the aspirations that have stirred the souls of the symphonists and
-national poets, from Bach to Beethoven, from Wieland to Goethe. If
-you could imagine his work on the Mediterranean shores, amid our pale
-olive-trees, our slender laurels, under the glorious light of the Latin
-sky, you would see it grow pale and dissolve. Since, according to his
-own words, it is given to the artist to behold a world as yet unformed
-resplendent in its future perfection, and to enjoy it prophetically
-through desire and through hope, I announce to you the coming of a new,
-or rather a renewed, art which, by the strong, sincere simplicity of
-its lines, by its vigorous grace, by its ardor of inspiration, by the
-pure power of its harmonies, will continue and crown the immense ideal
-edifice of our elect race. I glory in being Latin, and--will you pardon
-me, most exquisite Lady Myrta, and you, my delicate Hoditz?--in every
-man of different blood I see a barbarian."
-
-"But Wagner, too," said, Baldassare Stampa, who, having just returned
-from Bayreuth, was still full of ecstasy, "when he first unwound the
-thread of his theories, departed from the Greeks."
-
-"It was an uneven and a tangled thread," the poet replied. "Nothing
-is further from the Orestiades than the tetralogy of the Ring. The
-Florentines of the Casa Bardi have penetrated much deeper into the true
-meaning of Greek tragedy. All honor to the Camerata of the Conte di
-Vernio!"
-
-"I have always thought that the Camerata was only an idle reunion of
-scholars and rhetoricians," said Baldassare Stampa.
-
-"Did you hear that, Daniele?" exclaimed Stelio, addressing the mystic
-doctor. "When was there in the world a more fervid intelligence? They
-sought the spirit of life in Grecian antiquity; they tried to develop
-harmoniously all human energies, to manifest man in his integrity
-by every method of art. Giulio Caccini taught that that, which
-contributed to the excellence of the musician is not only the study
-of particular things, but of everything in general; the tawny hair of
-Jacopo Peri and of Zazzerino flamed in their song like that of Apollo.
-In the discourse that serves as a preface to the _Rappresentazione
-di Anima et di Corpo_, Emilio del Cavaliere presents the same ideas
-on the organization of the new theater that have since been realized
-at Bayreuth, comprising the rules of perfect silence, an invisible
-orchestra, and appropriate darkness. Marco da Gagliano, in celebrating
-a festal performance, eulogizes all the arts that contributed to it 'in
-such a way that through the intellect all the noblest sentiments are
-flattered at the same time by the most delightful art that the human
-mind has discovered.' That is sufficient, I think."
-
-"Bermino," resumed Francesco de Lizo, "presented an opera in Rome, for
-which he himself built the theater, painted the decorations, carved the
-ornamental statues, invented the machinery, wrote the words, composed
-the music, arranged the dances, rehearsed the actors, and in which he,
-too, danced, sang, and acted."
-
-"Enough! Enough!" cried Prince Hoditz, laughing. "The barbarian is
-vanquished."
-
-"No, that is not yet enough," said Antimo della Bella; "it remains
-to us to glorify the greatest of all these innovators; him that was
-consecrated a Venetian by his passion and death, him whose tomb is in
-the Church of the Frari, and is worthy of a pilgrimage--the divine
-Claudio Monteverde."
-
-"There was a heroic soul, of pure Italian essence," warmly acceded
-Daniele Glauro.
-
-"He accomplished his work in the tempest, loving, suffering,
-struggling, alone with his faith, his passion, and his genius," said La
-Foscarina slowly, as if absorbed in a vision of that sad and courageous
-life that had nourished the creations of its art with its warmest
-blood. "Tell us about him, Effrena."
-
-Stelio thrilled as if she had suddenly touched him. Again her
-expressive mouth called up an ideal figure, which rose as if from a
-sepulcher before the eyes of the poets, with the color and the breath
-of life. The ancient viola-player, bereaved, ardent, and sorrowful,
-like the Orpheus of his own fable, seemed to appear before them.
-
-It was a fiery apparition, more fervid and dazzling than that which had
-glowed in the harbor of San Marco; a flaming force of life, expelled
-from the deepest recesses of Nature toward the expectant multitude;
-a vehement zone of light, flashing out from an interior sky to
-illumine the most secret depths of human will and desire; an unheard
-word emerging from original silence to say that which is eternal and
-eternally ineffable in the heart of the world.
-
-"Who could speak of him, even if he himself should speak to us?" said
-the Inspirer, agitated, unable to conceal the wave of emotion surging
-in his soul like the troubled waters of a stormy sea.
-
-He looked at the singer, and beheld her as she had appeared during
-the pauses, when she stood amid the forest of instruments, white and
-inanimate as a statue.
-
-But the spirit of Beauty they had called up was to manifest itself
-through her.
-
-"Ariadne!" Stelio murmured, as if to awaken her from a dream.
-
-She arose without speaking, reached the door, and entered the adjoining
-room. The light sweep of her skirts and her soft footfall were audible;
-then they heard the sound of the piano being opened. All were silent
-and expectant. A musical silence filled the vacant place in the
-supper-room. A sudden gust of wind shook the flames of the candles
-and swayed the flowers. Then all became motionless in the anxiety of
-anticipation.
-
- _Lasciatemi morire!_
-
-Suddenly their souls were ravished by a power comparable to the
-strength of the eagle which, in Dante's dream, bore the poet to the
-region of flame. They burned together in eternal truth; they heard the
-melody of the world pass through their luminous ecstasy:
-
- _Lasciatemi morire!_
-
-Was it Ariadne, still Ariadne, weeping in some new grief, still rising
-to higher martyrdom?
-
- _E che volete
- Che mi conforte
- In cosa dure sorte,
- In cosi gran martire?
- Lasciatemi morire!_
-
-The voice ceased; the singer did not reappear. The aria of Claudio
-Monteverde composed itself in the auditors' memories like an immutable
-lineament.
-
-"Is there any Greek marble that has a perfection of style more sure
-and simple?" said Daniele Glauro softly, as if he feared to break the
-musical silence.
-
-"But what sorrow on earth ever has wept like that?" stammered Lady
-Myrta, her eyes full of tears, that ran down her poor, pale cheeks,
-which she wiped with her trembling hands, misshaped by gout.
-
-The austere intellect of the ascetic and the sweet, sensitive soul shut
-within the old, infirm body bore witness to the same power. In the same
-way, nearly three centuries before, at Mantua, in the famous theater,
-six thousand spectators had been unable to repress their sobs; and the
-poets had believed in the living presence of Apollo on the new stage.
-
-"See, Baldassare," said Stelio, "here is an artist of our own race
-who by the simplest means succeeded in attaining the highest degree
-of that beauty which the German but rarely approached in his confused
-aspirations toward the land of Sophocles."
-
-"Do you know the lament of the ailing king?" asked the young man with
-the sunny locks, which he wore long as a heritage from the Venetian
-Sappho, the "high Gaspara," unfortunate friend of Collalto.
-
-"All the agony of Amfortas is contained in a _mottetto_ that I know:
-_Peccantem me quotidie_, but with what lyric impetus, what powerful
-simplicity! All the forces of tragedy are there, sublimated, so to
-speak, like the instincts of a multitude in a heroic heart. The
-language of Palestrina, much more ancient, appears to me still purer
-and more virile.
-
-"But the contrast between Kundry and Parsifal, in the second act, the
-Herzeleide _motif_, the impetuous figure, that figure of pain drawn
-from the word of the sacred feast, the _motif_ of Kundry's aspiration,
-the prophetic theme of the promise, the kiss on the lips of the 'pure
-fool,' all that rending and intoxicating contrast of desire and
-horror.... 'The wound, the wound! Now it burns, now it bleeds within
-me!' And above the despairing frenzy of the temptress, the melody of
-submission: 'Let me weep on thy breast! Let me unite myself with thee
-for one hour; then, even if God repel me, through thee I shall be
-redeemed and saved.' And Parsifal's response, in which the _motif_
-of the 'pure fool,' now transfigured into the promised Hero, returns
-with lofty solemnity: 'Hell would be our fate for all eternity if for
-one single hour I should permit thee to clasp me in thy arms.' Then
-the wild ecstasy of Kundry: 'Since my kiss has made thee a prophet,
-embrace me wholly, and my love will render thee divine! One hour, one
-single hour with thee, and I shall be saved!' And the last effort of
-her demoniac will, the last gesture of enticement, the entreaty and the
-furious words: 'Only thy love can save me! Oh, let me love thee! Mine
-for a single hour! Thine for a single hour!'"
-
-Perdita and Stelio, entranced, gazed into each other's eyes; for an
-instant their spirits rushed together and mingled, in all the joy of an
-actual embrace.
-
-La Marangona, the largest bell of San Marco, sounded midnight, and,
-as at the eventide, the two enamored ones felt the reverberation of
-the bronze bell in the roots of their hair, almost like a quiver of
-their own flesh. Once more they felt, hovering over them, the whirlwind
-of sound, in the midst of which, in the twilight, they had suddenly
-become aware of the rising apparition of consoling Beauty, evoked
-by unanimous prayer. All the beauty of the waters, the timidity of
-concealed longing, the anxiety, the promise, the parting, the festival,
-the formidable, many-headed monster, the great, starry sphere, the
-clamor, the music, the song, and the wonders of the miraculous Flame,
-the return through the echoing canal, the song of brief youth, the
-mental struggle and silent agitation in the gondola, the sudden shadow
-over their three destinies, the banquet illumined by beautiful thought,
-the presentiments, hopes, pride, all the strongest pulsations of life
-were renewed between those two, quickened, became a thousand, and again
-one. They felt that in that one moment they had lived beyond all human
-limits, and that before them was opening a vast unknown, which they
-might absorb as the ocean absorbs, for, though they had lived so much,
-they felt their hearts were empty; though they had drunk so deep, they
-were still athirst. An overmastering illusion seized upon these rich
-natures, and each seemed to grow immeasurably more desirable in the
-other's eyes. The young girl had disappeared. The expression of the
-despairing, nomadic actress seemed to repeat: "Embrace me wholly, and
-my love will render thee divine! One hour, one single hour with thee,
-and I shall be saved! Mine for a single hour! Thine for a single hour!"
-
-The eloquent commentary of the enthusiast still dwelt upon the sacred
-tragedy. Kundry, the mad temptress, the slave of desire, the Rose of
-Hell, the original perdition, the accursed, now reappeared in the
-spring dawn; she reappeared humble and pale in her messenger's attire,
-her head bent, her eyes cast down; and her harsh, broken voice spoke
-only the single phrase: "Let me serve! Let me serve!"
-
-The melodies of solitude, of submission, of purification prepared
-around her humility the enchantment of Good Friday. And behold
-Parsifal, in black armor and closed helmet, his spear lowered, lost
-in an infinite dream: "I have come by perilous paths, but perhaps
-this day I shall be saved, since I hear the murmur of the sacred
-forest." ... Hope, pain, remorse, memory, the promise, faith panting
-for the soul's health, and the sacred, mysterious melodies wove the
-ideal mantle that should cover the Simple One, the Pure, the promised
-Hero sent to heal the incurable wound. "Wilt thou take me to Amfortas
-to-day?" He languished and fainted in the old man's arms. "Let me
-serve! Let me serve!" The melody of submission rose again from the
-orchestra, drowning the original impetuous _motif_. "Let me serve!" The
-faithful woman brings water, kneels humbly and eagerly, and washes the
-feet of her beloved. The faithful one drew from her bosom a vase of
-balm, anointed the beloved feet, and wiped them with her flowing hair.
-"Let me serve!" The Pure One bent over the sinner, sprinkling water on
-her wild head: "Thus I accomplish my first office; receive this baptism
-and believe in the Redeemer!" Kundry burst into tears, and knelt with
-her brow in the dust, freed from impurity, freed from the curse. And
-then, from the profound final harmonies of the prayer to the Redeemer,
-rose and spread with superhuman sweetness the melody of the flowery
-fields: "How beautiful to-day is the meadow! Once I was entwined with
-marvelous flowers; but never before were the grass and wild blossoms so
-fragrant!" In ecstasy, Parsifal contemplated the fields and forests,
-dewy and smiling in the light of morn.
-
-"Ah! who could forget that sublime moment?" cried the fair-haired
-enthusiast, whose thin face seemed to reflect the light of that joy.
-"All, in the darkness of the theater, remained motionless, like one
-solid, compact mass. One would have said that, in order to listen to
-that marvelous music, the blood had ceased to flow in our veins. From
-the Mystic Gulf, the symphony rose like a shaft of light, the notes
-transformed into rays of sunshine, born with the same joy as the blade
-of grass that pierces the earth, the opening flower, the budding
-branch, the insect unfolding its wings. And all the innocence of
-new-born things entered into us, and our souls lived over again I know
-not what dream of our far-away childhood.... INFANTIA, the device of
-Carpaccio! Ah, Stelio! how well you brought it back to our riper age!
-How well you knew how to inspire us with regret for all that we have
-lost, and with hope of recovering it by means of an art that shall be
-indissolubly reunited to life!"
-
-Stelio Effrena was silent, oppressed by the thought of the gigantic
-work accomplished by the barbaric creator, which the enthusiasm of
-Baldassare Stampa had evoked as a contrast to the fervid poet of
-_Orpheus_ and of _Ariadne_. A kind of instinctive rancor, an obscure
-hostility that did not spring from the intellect, sustained him against
-the tenacious German who had succeeded, by his own unaided effort,
-in inflaming the world. To achieve his victory over men and things,
-he, too, had exalted his own image and magnified his own dreams of
-dominating beauty. He, too, had approached the multitude as if it were
-his chosen prey; he, too, had imposed upon himself, as if it were a
-discipline, an unceasing effort to surpass himself. And now he had the
-temple of his creed on the Bavarian hill.
-
-"Art alone can lead men back to unity," said Daniele Glauro. "Let us
-honor the nobler master that has proclaimed this dogma for all time.
-His Festival Theater, though built of bricks and wood, though narrow
-and imperfect, has none the less a sublime significance, for within it
-Art appears as a religion in a living form; the drama there becomes a
-rite."
-
-"Yes, let us honor Richard Wagner," said Antimo della Bella, "but, if
-this hour is to be memorable by an announcement and a promise from
-him who this night has shown the mysterious ship to the people, let
-us invoke once more the heroic soul that has spoken to us through
-the voice of Donatella Arvale. In laying the corner-stone of his
-Festival Theater, the poet of _Siegfried_ consecrated it to the hopes
-and victories of Germany. The Apollo Theater, which is now rising
-rapidly on the Janiculum, where eagles once descended, bearing their
-prophecies, must be the monumental revelation of the idea toward which
-our race is led by its genius. Let us reaffirm the privilege with which
-nature has ennobled our Latin blood."
-
-Still Stelio remained silent, deeply stirred by turbulent forces that
-worked within his soul with a sort of blind fury, like the subterranean
-energies that swell, rend, and transform volcanic regions for the
-creation of new mountains and new chasms. All the elements of his inner
-life, assailed by this violence, seemed to dissolve and multiply at
-the same time. Images of grandeur and of terror passed through this
-tumult, accompanied by strange harmonies. Swift concentrations and
-dispersions of thought succeeded one another, like electric flashes
-in a tempest. At certain moments, it seemed to him that he could hear
-songs and wild clamors through a doorway that was opened and closed
-incessantly; sounds as if a tempestuous wind bore to his ears the
-alternate cries of a massacre and an apotheosis.
-
-Suddenly, with the intensity of a feverish vision, he saw the scorched
-and fatal spot of earth whereon he wished to create the souls of his
-great tragedy; he felt all its parching thirst within himself. He saw
-the mythical fountain which alone could quench the burning aridity; and
-in the bubbling of its springs the purity of the maiden that must die
-there. He saw on Perdita's face the mask of the heroine, quiescent in
-the beauty of an extraordinarily calm sorrow. Then the ancient dryness
-of the plain of Argos converted itself into flames; the fountain of
-Perseia flowed with the swiftness of a stream. The fire and the water,
-the two primitive elements, rushed over all things, effaced all other
-traces, spread and wandered, struggled, triumphed, acquired a word,
-a language wherewith to unveil their inner essence and to reveal the
-innumerable myths born of their eternity. The symphony expressed the
-drama of the two elementary Souls on the stage of the Universe, the
-pathetic struggle of two great living and moving Beings, two cosmic
-Wills, such as the shepherd Arya fancied it when he contemplated the
-spectacle from the high plateau with his pure eyes. And, of a sudden,
-from the very center of the musical mystery, from the depths of
-the symphonic Ocean, arose the Ode, brought by the human voice, and
-attaining the loftiest heights.
-
-The miracle of Beethoven renewed itself. The winged Ode, the Hymn,
-sprang from the midst of the orchestra to proclaim, in phrases absolute
-and imperious, the joy and the sorrow of Man. It was not the Chorus,
-as in the Ninth Symphony, but the Voice, alone and dominating, the
-interpreter, the messenger to the multitude. "Her voice! her voice!
-She has disappeared. Her song seemed to move the heart of the world,
-and she was beyond the veil," said the Animator, who in mental vision
-saw again the crystal statue within which he had watched the mounting
-wave of melody. "I will seek thee, I shall find thee again; I will
-possess myself of thy secret. Thou shalt sing my hymns, towering at
-the summit of my music!" Freed now from all earthly desire, he thought
-of that maiden form as the receptacle of a divine gift. He heard the
-disembodied voice surge from the depths of the orchestra to reveal the
-part of eternal truth that exists in ephemeral fact. The Ode crowned
-the episode with light. Then, as if to lead back to the play of
-imagery his ravished spirit from "beyond the veil," a dancing figure
-stood out against the rhythm of the dying Ode. Between the lines of a
-parallelogram drawn beneath the arch of the stage, as within the limits
-of a strophe, the mute dancer, with her body seemingly free for a
-moment from the sad laws of gravity, imitated the fire, the whirlwind,
-the revolutions of the stars. "La Tanagra, flower of Syracuse, made
-of wings, as a flower is made of petals!" Thus he invoked the image
-of the already famous Sicilian who had re-discovered the ancient
-orchestic art as it had been in the days when Phrynichus boasted that
-he had within himself as many figures of the dance as there were
-waves on the ocean on a stormy winter night. The actress, the singer,
-the dancer--the three Dionysian women--appeared to him like perfect
-and almost divine instruments of his creations. With an incredible
-rapidity, in word, song, gesture and symphony, his work should
-crystallize itself and live an all-powerful life before the conquered
-multitude.
-
-He was still silent, lost in an ideal world, waiting to measure the
-effort necessary to manifest it. The voices surrounding him seemed to
-come from a long distance.
-
-"Wagner declares that the only creator of a work of art is the people,"
-said Baldassare Stampa, "and that the sole function of the artist is to
-gather and express the creation of the unconscious multitude."
-
-The extraordinary emotion that had stirred Stelio when, from the throne
-of the Doges, he had spoken to the throng seized on him once more. In
-that communion between his soul and the soul of the people an almost
-divine mystery had existed; something greater and more exalted was
-added to the habitual feeling he had for his own person; he had felt
-that an unknown power converged within him, abolishing the limits of
-his earthly being and conferring upon his solitary voice the full
-harmony of a chorus.
-
-There was, then, in the multitude a secret beauty, in which only the
-poet and the hero could kindle a spark. Whenever that beauty revealed
-itself by the sudden outburst from a theater, a public square, or
-an entrenchment, a torrent of joy must swell the heart of him who
-had known how to inspire it by his verse, his harangue, or a signal
-from his sword. Thus, the word of the poet, when communicated to the
-people, was an act comparable to the deed of a hero--an act that
-brought to birth in the great composite soul of the multitude a sudden
-comprehension of beauty, as a master sculptor, from the mere touch of
-his plastic thumb upon a mass of clay, creates a divine statue. Then
-the silence that had spread like a sacred veil over the completed poem
-would cease. The material part of life would no longer be typified by
-immaterial symbols: life itself would be manifested in its perfection
-by the poet; the word would become flesh, rhythm would quicken in
-breathing, palpitating form, the idea would be embodied with all the
-fulness of its force and freedom.
-
-"But," said Fabio Molza, "Richard Wagner believes that the real heart
-of the people is composed only of those that experience grief in
-common--you understand, grief in common."
-
-"Toward Joy--still toward eternal Joy," Stelio reflected. "The real
-heart of the people is composed of those that feel vaguely the
-necessity of raising themselves, by means of Fiction, Poetry, the
-Ideal, out of the daily prison in which they serve and suffer."
-
-In his waking dream he beheld the disappearance of the small theaters
-of the city, where, amid suffocating air heavy with impurities, before
-a crowd of rakes and courtesans, the actors make public prostitution
-of their talents. And then, on the steps of the new theater, his mental
-vision beheld the true people, the great, unanimous multitude, whose
-human odor he had inhaled, whose clamor he had listened to in the great
-marble shell, under the stars. By the mysterious power of rhythm, his
-art, imperfectly understood though it was, had stirred the rude and
-ignorant ones with a profound emotion, penetrating as that felt by a
-prisoner about to be released from his chains. Little by little, the
-sensation of joy at their deliverance had crept over the most abject;
-the deep-lined brows cleared; lips accustomed to brutal vociferation
-had parted in amazement; and, above all, the hands--the rough hands
-enslaved by instruments of toil--had stretched out in one unanimous
-gesture of adoration toward the heroine who in their presence had
-wafted toward the stars the spirit of immortal sorrow.
-
-"In the life of a people like ours," said Daniele Glauro, "a great
-manifestation of art has much more weight than a treaty of alliance
-or a tributary law. That which never dies is more prized than that
-which is ephemeral. The astuteness and audacity of a Malatesta are
-crystallized for all time in a medal of Pisanello's. Of Machiavelli's
-politics nothing survives but the power of his prose."
-
-"That is true, most true!" thought Stelio; "the fortunes of Italy are
-inseparable from the fate of the Beauty of which she is the Mother."
-This sovereign truth now appeared to him the rising sun of that divine,
-ideal land through which wandered the great Dante. "Italy! Italy!"
-Throughout his being, like a call to arms, seemed to thrill that name,
-that name which intoxicates the world. From its ruins, bathed in so
-much heroic blood, should not the new art, robust in root and branch,
-arise and flourish? Should it not become a determining and constructive
-force in the third Rome, reawakening all the latent power possessed by
-the hereditary substance of the nation, indicating to her statesmen
-the primitive truths that are the necessary bases of new institutions?
-Faithful to the oldest instincts of his race, Richard Wagner had
-foreseen, and had fostered by his own efforts, the aspiration of the
-German States to the heroic grandeur of the Empire. He had evoked the
-noble figure of Henry the Fowler, standing erect beneath the ancient
-oak: "Let warriors arise from every German land!" And at Sadowa and
-at Sedan these warriors had won. With the same impulse, the same
-tenacity, people and artist had achieved their glorious aim. The same
-degree of victory had crowned the work of the sword and the work of
-melody. Like the hero, the poet had accomplished an act of deliverance.
-Like the will of the Iron Chancelor, like the blood of his soldiers,
-the Master's musical numbers had contributed toward the exalting and
-perpetuating of the soul of his race.
-
-"He has been here only a few days, at the Palazzo Vendramin-Calergi,"
-said Prince Hoditz.
-
-And suddenly the image of the barbaric creator seemed to Stelio to
-approach him; the lines of his face became visible, the blue eyes
-gleamed under the wide brow, the lips closed tight above the powerful
-chin, armed with sensuousness, pride, and disdain. The slight body,
-bent with the weight of age and glory, straightened itself, appeared
-almost as gigantic as his work, took on the aspect of a god. The blood
-coursed like a swift mountain torrent, its breath sighed like a forest
-breeze. Suddenly the youth of Siegfried filled the figure and permeated
-it, radiant as the dawn shining through a cloud. "To follow the impulse
-of my heart, to obey my instinct, to listen to the voice of Nature
-within myself--that is my supreme law!" The heroic, resounding words,
-springing from the depths, expressed the young and healthy will that
-had triumphed over all obstacles and all evil, always in accord with
-the law of the Universe. And the flames, called forth from the rock by
-the wand of Wotan, arose in the magic circle: "On the flaming sea a way
-has opened! To plunge into that fire, oh, ineffable joy! To find my
-bride within that flaming circle!" All the phantoms of the myth seemed
-to blaze anew and then vanish.
-
-Then the winged helmet of Brunehilde gleamed in the sunlight: "Glory
-to the sun! Glory to the light! Glory to the radiant day! My sleep
-was long. Who has awakened me?" The phantoms fled in tumult, and
-dispersed. Then arose from the dark shadows the maiden of the song,
-Donatella Arvale, as she had appeared to him amid the purple and gold
-of the immense hall in a commanding attitude and holding a fiery
-flower in her hand: "Dost thou not see me, then? Do not my burning
-gaze and ardent blood make thee tremble. Dost thou not feel this wild
-ardor?" Though she was absent, she seemed to resume her power over his
-dream. Infinite music seemed to rise from the silent, empty place in
-the supper-room. Her Hermes-like face seemed to retain an inviolable
-secret: "Do not touch me; do not trouble my repose, and I will reflect
-forever thy luminous image. Love only thyself and renounce all thought
-of me!" And again, as on the feverish water, a passionate impatience
-tortured the Animator, and again he fancied the absent one like a
-beautiful bow to be drawn by a strong hand that would know how to use
-it as an instrument to achieve some great conquest: "Awake, virgin,
-awake! Live and laugh! Be mine!"
-
-Stelio's spirit was drawn violently into the orbit of the magic world
-created by the German god; its visions and harmonies overwhelmed him;
-the figures of the Northern myth towered above those of his own art
-and passion, obscuring them. His own desire and his own hope spoke the
-language of the barbarian: "I must love thee, blindly, and laughing:
-and, laughing, we must unite and lose ourselves, each in the other. O
-radiant Love! O smiling Death!" The joyousness of the warrior-virgin
-on the flame-circled summit reached the loftiest height; her cry of
-love and liberty mounted to the heart of the sun. Ah, what heights and
-what depths had he not touched, that formidable Master of human souls!
-What effort could ever equal his? What eagle could ever hope to soar
-higher? His gigantic work was there, finished, amidst men. Throughout
-the world swelled the last mighty chorus of the Grail, the canticle of
-thanksgiving: "Glory to the Miracle! Redemption to the Redeemer!"
-
-"He is tired," said Prince Hoditz, "very tired and feeble. That is
-the reason why we did not see him at the Doge's Palace. His heart is
-affected." ...
-
-Once more the giant became a man: the slight body, bent with age and
-glory, consumed by passion, slowly dying. And Stelio heard again in
-his heart Perdita's words, which had called up the image of another
-stricken artist--the father of Donatella Arvale. "The name of the bow
-is BIOS ("life"), and its work is death!"
-
-The young man saw his pathway blazed before him by victory--the long
-art, the short life. "Forward, still forward! Higher, ever higher!"
-Every hour, every second, he must strive, struggle, fortify himself
-against destruction, diminution, oppression, contagion. Every hour,
-every second, his eye must be fixed on his aim, concentrating and
-directing all his energies, without truce, without relaxation. He felt
-that victory was as necessary to his soul as air to his lungs. At the
-contact with the German barbarian, a furious thirst for conflict awoke
-in his Latin blood. "To you now belongs the will to do!" Wagner had
-declared, on the day of the opening of the new theater: "In the work
-of art of the future, the source of invention will never run dry." Art
-was infinite, like the beauty of the world. There are no limits to
-courage or to power. Man must seek and find, further and still further.
-"Forward, still forward!"
-
-Then a single wave, vast and shapeless, embodying all the aspirations
-and all the agitations of that delirium, whirling itself into a
-maelstrom, seemed to take on the qualities of plastic matter, obeying
-the same inexhaustible energy that forms all animals and all things
-under the sun. An extraordinary image, beautiful and pure, was born
-of this travail, lived and glowed with unbearable intensity. The poet
-saw it, absorbed it with a pure gaze, felt that it took root in the
-very depths of his being. "Ah, to express it, to manifest it to the
-world, to fix it in perfection for all eternity!" Sublime moment that
-never would return! All visions vanished. Around him flowed the current
-of daily life; fleeting words sounded; expectation palpitated, desire
-still lived.
-
-He looked at the woman. The stars sparkled; the trees waved, and the
-dark garden spread out behind Perdita, and her eyes still said: "Let me
-serve! Let me serve!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- THE PROMISE
-
-
-Descending the terrace to the garden, the guests had dispersed among
-the shady paths and under the vine-covered trellises. The night breeze
-was damp and warm, touching the long lashes on delicate eyelids like
-lips brushing them in a caress. The invisible stars of the jasmine
-perfumed the darkness; the rich fragrance of fruit, too, was even
-stronger than in the island gardens. A vivid power of fertility
-emanated from this narrow trace of cultivated earth, which appeared
-like a place of exile, surrounded by a girdle of water, and, like an
-exiled soul, all the more intense.
-
-"Do you wish me to remain here? Shall I return after the others have
-gone? Say quickly! It is late!"
-
-"No, no, Stelio, I beg of you! It is late--it is too late! You yourself
-say it is."
-
-La Fosacarina's voice was full of mortal terror. Her white arms and
-shoulders trembled in the shadows. She wished at once to refuse and to
-yield; she wished to die, yet she wished to feel his strong embrace.
-She trembled more and more; her teeth chattered slightly, for a glacial
-stream seemed to submerge her, chilling her from head to foot. The
-strange emotion caused a fancy that her very limbs were ready to break,
-and she was conscious that the stiffness of her set features had even
-changed the sound of her voice. And still she longed at once to die
-and to be loved; still, over her terror, her chill, her body no longer
-young, hung the terrible sentence the beloved had pronounced, which she
-herself had repeated: "It is late--it is too late!"
-
-"Your promise, your promise, Perdita! I will not be put off!"
-
-The tide, swelling like a full, fair throat, the estuary, lost in
-darkness and death, the City, when illumined by the twilight fire, the
-water flowing in the invisible clepsydra, the bronze bells with their
-vibrations reaching to the sky, the eager wish, the contracted lips,
-lowered eyelids, feverish hands, all recurred with the memory of the
-silent promise. With wild ardor he longed to clasp that being, whose
-knowledge of all things was immeasurably deep and rich.
-
-"No, I will not be put off!"
-
-His ardor had come to him from far-distant ages, from the most ancient
-origins, the primitive simplicity of sudden unions, the antique mystery
-of sacred furies. Like the horde that was possessed by the enchantment
-of the gods, and descended the mountain side, tearing up trees, rushing
-on with blind fury, momentarily increasing, its numbers swelled by
-other madmen, spreading madness in its way, and finally becoming one
-vast bestial yet human multitude, impelled by a monstrous will, so the
-crudest of instincts urged him on, confusing all his ideas in a dizzy
-whirl. And what most attracted him in that wandering and despairing
-woman, whose knowledge was deep and rich, was the consciousness that
-she was a being oppressed by the eternal servitude of her nature,
-destined to succumb to the sudden convulsions of her sex; a being who
-soothed the fever of stage life in sensuous repose, the fiery actress,
-who passed from the frenzied plaudits of the multitude to the embrace
-of a lover; the Dionysian creature who chose to crown her mysterious
-rites as they were crowned in the ancient orgies.
-
-His amorous madness was now immeasurable, and was a mingling of
-cruelty, jealousy, poetry and pride. He regretted that he never had
-sought her after some dramatic triumph, warm from the breath of the
-people, breathless and disheveled, showing the traces of the tragic
-soul that had wept and cried in her, with the tears of that alien
-spirit still damp on her agitated face. As by a flash of light, he had
-a sudden vision of her reclining, at rest, yet full of the power that
-had drawn forth a howl from the monster, panting like a Mænad after the
-dance, athirst and weary.
-
-"Ah, do not be cruel!" entreated the woman, who felt in the voice of
-the beloved, and read in his eyes, the madness that possessed him. From
-the burning gaze of the young man she shrank with pathetic modesty. His
-insistence hurt the sensitive delicacy of her spirit. She recognized
-in it all that there was of mere selfish impulse; she well knew that
-he thought of her as something poisonous and corrupt, with memories of
-many loves, a wandering, implacable temptress. She divined the sudden
-grudgingness, jealousy and feverish resentment that had blazed up in
-the long-beloved friend, to whom she had consecrated all of herself
-that was most precious and most sincere, preserving the perfection of
-that sentiment by her steadfast refusal to break down all barriers.
-Now, all was lost; all was suddenly devastated, like a fair domain
-at the mercy of rebellious and vindictive slaves. Then, almost as if
-she were passing through the last agonies of death, her whole bitter
-and stormy past rose before her: that life of struggle and pain,
-bewilderment, effort, passion, and triumph. She felt all its heavy
-burden weighing on her, and recalled the ineffable joy, the feeling
-of mingled terror and freedom, with which, in her far-distant youth,
-she had given her first, fresh love to the man who had deceived her.
-And through her mind passed the image of herself, that maiden who had
-disappeared, who perhaps was still dreaming in some solitary place,
-or weeping, or promising herself future happiness. "Too late--it is
-too late!" The irrevocable word rang continually in her ears like the
-reverberation of the bronze bells.
-
-"Do not be cruel, Stelio!" she repeated, white and delicate as the
-swansdown that encircled her shoulders. She seemed suddenly to have
-shorn herself of her power, to have become slight and weak, to have
-assumed a secret, tender personality, easy to kill, to destroy, to
-immolate as a bloodless sacrifice.
-
-"No, Perdita, I will not be cruel," he stammered, suddenly discomposed
-by her face and voice, his heart stirred with human pity, arising from
-the same depths that had harbored his wilder instincts. "Pardon me!
-Forgive!"
-
-He would have liked to take her in his arms that moment, to nurse her,
-console her, let her weep on his breast, and to dry her tears. He felt
-that he no longer recognized her, that some unknown creature stood
-before him, infinitely humble and sad, deprived of all strength. His
-pity and remorse were like the emotion we feel if we unwillingly hurt
-or offend an invalid or a child--some lonely and inoffensive little
-being.
-
-"Pardon me!"
-
-He would have liked to kneel, to kiss her feet in the grass, to murmur
-little fond phrases in her ear. He bent toward her and touched her
-hand. She started violently, opened wide her large eyes upon him; then
-lowered her eyelids and stood motionless. Shadows seemed to gather
-under her arched brows, throwing into relief the curve of her cheeks.
-Again the glacial wave submerged her.
-
-Voices arose from the guests dispersed about the garden, then a long
-silence followed.
-
-Presently a crunching of gravel, as if trodden by a heavy foot, was
-heard, followed by another long silence. Soon a confused clamor was
-heard coming from the canals; the jasmine's fragrance was heavier than
-before, as a heart in suspense quickens in movement. The night seemed
-fraught with miracles, and eternal forces worked harmoniously between
-the earth and the stars.
-
-"Pardon me! If my love oppresses you, I will continue to stifle it; I
-will even renounce it forever, and obey you. Perdita! Perdita! I will
-forget all that your eyes said to me a little while ago, in the midst
-of the idle talk. What embrace, what caress could more wholly unite our
-souls? All the passion of the night threw us together. I received your
-soul like a wave. And now it seems that never again can I separate my
-heart from yours, nor can you separate yours from mine. Together we
-must go forward to meet I know not what mysterious dawn...."
-
-He spoke in a low tone, with absolute abandon, having become for the
-moment a vibrating substance that responded to every change in the
-nocturnal spirit that bewitched him. That which he saw before him was
-no longer a corporeal form, an impenetrable prison of flesh; it was a
-soul unveiled by a succession of appearances not less expressive than
-melody itself, an infinite sensibility, delicate and powerful, which,
-in that slight frame, created in turn the fragility of the flower, the
-vigor of marble, the flash of the flame, all shadows and all light.
-
-"Stelio!"
-
-She hardly breathed that name aloud; yet in the sigh that died on her
-soft lips was as thrilling a note of wonder and exultation as would
-have been revealed in the most piercing cry. In the accent of the
-man she had recognized love: love, real love! She, who had so often
-listened to beautiful and perfect words pronounced by that clear voice,
-and who had suffered under them as from a torture or a heartless jest,
-now saw her own life and all the world suddenly transformed at this
-new accent. Her very soul seemed changed; that which had encumbered
-it fell away into dim, far-off obscurity, while to the surface rose
-something free and immaculate, that dilated and curved over her like
-the sky; and, as the wave of light mounts from the horizon to the
-zenith with mute harmony, the illusion of happiness mounted to her
-lips. A smile softly spread over her lips, which quivered like leaves
-in the breeze, showing a glimpse as pearly as the jasmine's starry
-flowers.
-
-"All is abolished--all is vanished. I never have lived, I never have
-loved, I never have suffered. I am renewed. I never have known any love
-but this. My heart is pure. I should wish to die in the joy of your
-love. Years and experience have passed over me without reaching that
-part of my soul which I have kept for you, that secret heaven which has
-suddenly opened to the unforeseen, has triumphed over all my sadness,
-and has remained alone to cherish the strength and the sweetness of
-your name. Your love will save me; the fulness of my love will render
-you divine!"
-
-Words of wildest transport sprang from her liberated heart, though
-her lips dared not speak them. But she smiled--smiled her infinite,
-mysterious, silent smile!
-
-"Is it not true? Speak--answer me, Perdita! Do you not feel too our
-need of each other--all the stronger from our long renunciation, from
-the patience with which we have awaited this hour? Ah, it seems to me
-that all my presentiments and all my hopes would count as nothing, if
-it were fated that this hour should not come to pass. Say that without
-me you could not have waited, after life's darkness, for the glorious
-dawn, as I could not wait without you!"
-
-"Yes, yes!"
-
-In that stifled syllable, she was lost irrevocably. The smile faded,
-the lines of the mouth became heavy, causing it to appear in sharply
-drawn relief against the pallor of her face; the lips seemed athirst,
-strong to attract, to cling, insatiable. And her whole body, which just
-before had seemed to shrink in sensitiveness and apprehension, now drew
-itself up again, as if formed anew, recovering all its physical power,
-and inundated by an impetuous wave of emotion.
-
-"Let us have no more uncertainty. It is late."
-
-He could not disguise his impatience of the social restraints that must
-be observed on account of the other guests.
-
-"Yes!" La Foscarina repeated, but in a new accent, her eyes dwelling
-upon his, commanding, imperious, as if she felt certain now of
-possessing a philter that should bind him to her forever.
-
-Stelio felt his heart-throbs quicken still more at the thought of the
-love this mysterious being must be able to give. He gazed deep into her
-eyes, and saw that she was as pale as if all her blood had been sapped
-by the earth to nourish the rich fruits of the garden; and it seemed to
-him that the present was part of a dream-life, wherein he and she lived
-alone in all the world.
-
- [Illustration: _HE GAZED DEEP INTO HER EYES AND SAW THAT SHE WAS AS
-PALE AS IF HER BLOOD HAD BEEN SAPPED TO NOURISH THE RICH FRUITS OF THE
- GARDEN_]
-
- _From an Original Drawing by Arthur H. Ewer_
-
-
-La Foscarina was standing under a shrub laden with fruit. The sudden
-beauty that had illumined her in the supper-room, made up of a thousand
-ideal forces, reappeared in her face with still greater intensity,
-kindled now from the flame that never dies, the fervor that never
-languishes. The magnificent fruits hung over her head, bearing the
-crown of a royal donor. The myth of the pomegranate was revivified in
-the mystery of midnight, as it had been at the passing of the boat in
-the mystic twilight. Who was this woman? Was she Persephone herself,
-Queen of Shades? Had she dwelt in that unknown region where all human
-agitations seem as trifling as idle winds on a dusty, interminable
-road? Had she contemplated the springs of the world, sunk deep in the
-earth? Had she counted the roots of the flowers, immobile as the veins
-in a petrified body? Was she weary or intoxicated with human tears,
-laughter, and sensuousness, and with having touched, one after another,
-all things mortal, to make them bloom only to see them perish? Who was
-she? Had she struck upon cities like a scourge, silenced forever with
-her kiss all lips that sang, stopped the pulsation of tyrannous hearts?
-Who was she--who? What secret past made her so pale, so passionate,
-so perilous? Had she already divulged all her secrets and given all
-her gifts, or could she still, by new arts, enchant her new lover, for
-whom life, love, and victory were one and the same thing? All this,
-and more, was suggested to him by the little veins in her temples, the
-curve of her cheeks, the lithe strength of her body.
-
-"All evil, all good, that which I know and do not know, that which you
-know, as well as that which you are ignorant of--all this had to be, to
-prepare the fulness of this night." Life and the dream had become one.
-Thought and sense were as wines poured into the same cup. Even their
-garments, their faces, their hopes, their glances, were like the plants
-of the garden, like the air, the stars, the silence.
-
-Sublime moment, never to return! Before he realized it, his hands
-involuntarily reached out to draw her to himself. The woman's head
-fell backward, as if she were about to faint; between her half-closed
-eyelids and her parted lips her eyes and her teeth gleamed as things
-gleam for the last time. Then swiftly she raised her head again and
-recovered herself; her lips sought the lips that sought hers.
-
-After a moment they saw each other again in a lucid way. The voices of
-the guests in the garden were wafted to their ears, and an indistinct
-clamor from the far-off canal rose from time to time.
-
-"Well?" demanded the young man feverishly, after that burning kiss of
-body and soul.
-
-The lady bent to lift a fallen pomegranate from the grass. The fruit
-was ripe; it had burst open in its fall and now poured out its blood
-from the wound it had received. With the vision of the fruit-laden
-boat, the pale islet, and the field of asphodels, to the impassioned
-woman's mind returned the words of the Inspirer: "This is my body....
-Take, eat!"
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Yes!"
-
-With a mechanical movement she crushed the fruit in her hand, as if she
-wished to expel all its juice, which trickled in a stream over her
-wrist. She trembled, as the glacial wave rushed over her anew.
-
-"Go away when the others go, but then--return! I will wait for you at
-the gate of the Gradenigo garden."
-
-She trembled still, partly from terror, a prey to an invincible power.
-As by a flash of light, again he saw her reclining, at rest, panting
-like a Mænad after the dance. They gazed at each other, but could not
-bear the fierce light of each other's eyes. They parted.
-
-She went in the direction of the voices of the poets who had exalted
-her ideal power.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- "TO CREATE WITH JOY!"
-
-
-Lost! Lost! Now she was lost! She still lived--vanquished, humiliated,
-as if some one had trampled pitilessly upon her; she still lived, and
-dawn was breaking, the days were beginning again, the fresh tide was
-flowing once more into the City Beautiful, and Donatella was still
-sleeping upon her pure pillow. Into an infinite distance had faded the
-hour, in reality so short a time before, when she had waited at the
-gate for her beloved, recognized his step in the funereal silence of
-the deserted path, and felt her knees weaken as if from a blow, while
-a strange reverberation rang in her ears. How far-away now seemed that
-hour! yet the little incidents of her vigil returned to her mind with
-intensity: the cold iron rail against which she had leaned her head,
-the sharp, acrid odor that rose from the grass as from a retting-vat,
-the moist tongue of Lady Myrta's greyhounds that came noiselessly and
-licked her hands.
-
-"Good-by! Good-by!"
-
-She was lost! He had left her as he would have left some light love,
-almost with the manner of a stranger, almost impatient even, drawn by
-the freshness of the dawn, by the freedom of the morning.
-
-"Good-by!"
-
-From her window she perceived Stelio on the bank of the canal; he was
-inhaling deep breaths of the fresh morning air; then in the perfect
-calm that reigned over all things, she heard his clear, confident voice
-calling the gondolier:
-
-"Zorzi!"
-
-The man was asleep in the bottom of his gondola, and his human slumber
-resembled that of the curved boat that obeyed his movements. Stelio
-touched him lightly with his foot, and instantly he sprang up, jumped
-to his place and seized the oar. Man and boat awoke at the same time,
-as if they had but one body, ready to glide over the water.
-
-"Your servant, Signor!" said Zorzi with a smile, glancing up at the
-brightening sky. "Sit down, Signor, and I will row."
-
-Opposite the palace, the door of a large workshop was thrown open. It
-was a stonecutter's shop, where steps were fashioned from the stone of
-Val-di-Sole.
-
-"To ascend!" thought Stelio, and his superstitious soul rejoiced at
-the good omen. On the sign, the name of the quarry seemed radiant with
-promise--the Valley of the Sun. He had already seen, a short time
-before, the image of a stairway, on a coat-of-arms in the Gradenigo
-garden--a symbol of his own ascension. "Higher, always higher!" Joy
-came bubbling up from the depths of his being. The morning awakened all
-manly energies.
-
-"And Perdita? And Ariadne?" He saw them again, as they descended the
-marble stairway, in the light of the smoking torches. "And La Tanagra?"
-The Syracusan appeared to his vision, with her long, goat-like eyes,
-reposing gracefully upon her mother earth, motionless as a bas-relief
-on the marble in which it is carved. "The Dionysian Trinity!" He
-fancied them as exempt from all passion, immune from all evil, like
-creations of art. The surface of his soul seemed covered with swift and
-splendid images, like sails scattered over a swelling sea. His heart
-beat calmly, and with the approaching sunrise he felt a renewal of his
-life-forces, as if he were born anew with the morning.
-
-"We do not need this light any longer," murmured the gondolier slyly,
-extinguishing the lantern of the gondola.
-
-"To the Grand Canal, by San Giovanni Decollato!" cried Stelio, seating
-himself.
-
-As the dentellated prow swung into the Canal of San Giacomo dall'Orio,
-he turned to look once more at the palace, of a leaden hue in the early
-dawn. One lighted window grew dark at that moment, like an eye suddenly
-blinded. "Good-by! Good-by!" The woman no longer young was up there
-alone, sad with the sadness of death; the Song-Maiden was preparing to
-return to the place of her long sacrifice. He knew not how to pity,
-he could only promise. From the abundance of his strength, he drew an
-illusion that he might change those two destinies for his own joy.
-
-"Stop before the Palazzo Vendramin-Calergi!" he ordered the gondolier.
-
-The canal, ancient stream of silence and of poetry, was deserted. The
-pale green sky was reflected in it with its last fading stars. At
-first glance, the palace had an aerial appearance, like an artificial
-cloud hung over the water. The shadows in which it was still wrapped
-suggested the quality of velvet, the beauty of something soft and
-magnificent. And, just as in studying a deep-piled velvet, the pattern
-gradually becomes discernible, the architectural lines revealed
-themselves in the three Corinthian columns that rose with rhythmic
-grace and strength to the point where the emblems of nobility, the
-eagles, the horses, and the amphora, were mingled with the roses of
-Loredan. NON NOBIS, DOMINE, NON NOBIS.
-
-Within that palace throbbed the great ailing heart. Stelio saw again
-the image of the barbaric creator: the blue eyes gleaming under the
-broad brow, the lips compressed above the powerful chin, armed with
-sensuousness, pride, and disdain. Was he sleeping? Could he sleep,
-or was he lying sleepless with his glory? The young man recalled
-strange things that were told of Wagner. Was it true that he could
-not sleep unless his head rested on his wife's bosom, and that,
-despite advancing years, he clung to her as a lover to his mistress?
-He remembered a story told him by Lady Myrta, who, while she was in
-Palermo, had visited the Villa d'Angri, where the very closets in the
-room occupied by the master had remained impregnated with an essence
-of rose so strong that it made her ill. He fancied that slight, tired
-body, wrapped in sumptuous draperies, ornamented with jewels, perfumed
-like a corpse ready for the pyre. Was it not Venice that had given
-him, as long ago it had given Albert Dürer, a taste for luxury and
-magnificence? Yes, and it was in the silence of her canals that he
-had heard the passing of the most ardent breath of all his music--the
-deadly passion of Tristan and Isolde.
-
-And now, within that palace throbbed the great ailing heart, and there
-its formidable impetuosity was flagging. The patrician palace, with
-its eagles, its horses, amphora, and roses, was as tightly closed and
-silent as a great tomb. Above its marble towers the sunrise turned the
-pale green sky to rosy pink.
-
-"Hail to the Victorious One!" Stelio stood up and cast his flowers at
-the threshold of the palace door.
-
-"On! On!" he cried.
-
-Urged by this sudden impatience, the gondolier bent to his oar, and
-the light craft threaded its way along the stream. A brown sail
-passed silently. The sea, the rippling waves, the laughing cry of the
-sea-gulls, the sweeping breeze arose before his desire.
-
-"Row, Zorzi, row! To the Veneta Marina, by the Canal dall'Olio!" the
-young man cried.
-
-The canal seemed too narrow for the expanse of his soul. Victory was
-now as necessary to his spirit as air to his lungs. After the delirium
-of the night, he wished to prove the perfection of his physical nature
-by the light of day and in the sharp breeze of the sea. He did not wish
-to sleep. He felt a circle of freshness around his eyes, as if he had
-bathed them with dew. He had no desire for repose, and the thought of
-his bed in the hotel filled him with disgust. "The deck of a ship, the
-odor of pitch and of salt, the flutter of a red sail.... Row, Zorzi!"
-
-The gondolier redoubled his efforts. The Fondaco dei Turchi disappeared
-from their view, a vision of marvelously yellow old ivory, like the
-only remaining portico of some ruined mosque. They passed the Palazzo
-of the Cornaro and the Palazzo of the Pesaro, those two giants
-blackened by time as by smoke from a fire; they passed the Ca' d'Oro, a
-divine marvel of air and stone; and suddenly the Rialto bridge showed
-its ample back, laden with shops, already bustling with life, sending
-forth the odor of vegetables and fish, like a great horn of plenty
-pouring out upon the shores the fruits of earth and sea to feed the
-Queen of Cities.
-
-"I am hungry, Zorzi, I am very hungry!" said Stelio, laughing.
-
-"A good sign when a wakeful night makes one hungry; it makes only the
-old feel sleepy," said Zorzi.
-
-"Row to shore!"
-
-He bought at a stall some grapes of the Vignole and some figs from
-Malamocco, laid on a plate of vine-leaves.
-
-"Row, Zorzi!"
-
-The gondola turned, then sped under the Fondaco dei Tedeschi, making
-its way toward the Rio de Palazzo. The bells were now ringing joyously
-in the full daylight, drowning the noises of the market-place with
-their brazen tongues.
-
-"To the Ponte della Paglia!"
-
-A thought, spontaneous as an instinct, led him back to the glorious
-spot where it seemed some trace must remain of his lyric inspiration
-and of the great Dionysian chorus: _Viva il forte!_ The gondola
-grazed the side of the Palace of the Doge, massive as a monolith cut
-by chisels not less apt in finding melodies than the bows of the
-musicians. With all his new-born soul he embraced the mass; he heard
-once more the sound of his own voice and the bursts of applause. He
-said again to himself: "To create with joy! That is an attribute of
-Divinity! Impossible to imagine, in the highest flight of the spirit,
-a more triumphal act. Even the phrase itself has something of the
-splendor of the dawn."
-
-Again and again he repeated to the air, the waters, the stones, to the
-ancient city, to the young dawn: "To create with joy! To create with
-joy!"
-
-When the prow passed under the bridge and entered the mirror of light,
-a freer breath gave him fresh realization, with his hope and his
-courage, of the beauty and strength of the life of the past.
-
-"Find me a boat, Zorzi--a boat that will go out to sea."
-
-He longed for still wider space in which to breathe; he longed to feel
-a strong wind, salt air and dashing spray; to see the sails swell, and
-the bowsprit pointed toward a boundless horizon.
-
-"To the Veneta Marina! Find me a fishing-boat, a _bragozzo_ from
-Chioggia."
-
-He perceived a large red and black sail, just hoisted, and now flapping
-in the breeze, superb as an ancient banner of the Republic, with the
-device of the Lion and the Book.
-
-"That one there--that will do. Let us catch it, Zorzi."
-
-In his impatience he waved his hand, to sign to the boat to stop.
-
-"Call out to them to wait for me, Zorzi!"
-
-The gondolier, heated and dripping, cried out to the man at the sail.
-The gondola flew like a canoe in a regatta.
-
-"Bravo, Zorzi!"
-
-But Stelio was panting, too, as if he were in pursuit of fortune, some
-happy aim, or the certainty of a kingdom.
-
-"We have won the flag!" laughed the gondolier, rubbing his burning
-palms. "What foolishness!"
-
-The movement, the tone, the good-humor, the astonished faces of the
-fishermen leaning over the rail, the reflection of the red sail in the
-water, the cordial odor of fresh bread from a neighboring bake-shop,
-the smell of boiling pitch from a dock-yard, the voices of workmen
-entering the arsenal, the strong emanations from the quays, impregnated
-with the odor of the old rotten vessels of the Serene Republic, the
-resounding blows of the hammer on the vessels of the new Italy--all
-these rude and healthful things aroused a wonderful joyousness in the
-heart of the young man, who laughed aloud for very gladness.
-
-"What do you wish?" demanded the older of the fishermen, bending toward
-the ringing laughter his bearded bronzed face. "What can I do for you,
-Signor?"
-
-The mast creaked as if it were alive, swaying from top to bottom.
-
-"You can come on board, if you like," he said. "Is that all you want?"
-
-He brought a ladder and attached it to the stern. It was a simple
-affair of ropes and pegs, but to Stelio it seemed, like all else in the
-rough craft, to have a life of its own. As he stepped upon it he felt
-almost ashamed of his light, glossy shoes. The heavy, calloused hand of
-the sailor, covered with blue tattoo-marks, helped him to climb up and
-pulled him on board with a jerk.
-
-"The grapes and the figs, Zorzi!"
-
-From the gondola, Zorzi handed him the vine-leaf plate.
-
-"May it make new blood for you, Signor!"
-
-"And the bread?"
-
-"We have some warm bread," said one of the sailors, "just out of the
-oven."
-
-Hunger would certainly give that bread a delicious flavor, finding
-therein all the nourishment of the grain.
-
-"Your servant, Signor, and a fair wind to you!" said the gondolier,
-taking leave.
-
-"Starboard!"
-
-The lateen sail, with the Lion and the Book, swelled crimson. The craft
-turned toward the open sea, directing its course toward San Servolo.
-The shore seemed to assume a sharp curve, as if to repel it.
-
-"To the right!"
-
-The boat veered with great force. A miracle met it: the first rays of
-the sun pierced the fluttering sail and illumined the angels on the
-campaniles of San Marco and San Giorgio Maggiore, setting on fire the
-globe of the Fortuna and crowning the five miters of the Basilica with
-a diadem of light. Venice Anadyomene reigned over the waters, and from
-her beauty all her veils were ravished.
-
-"Glory to the Miracle!" An almost superhuman feeling of power and of
-freedom swelled the young man's heart as the wind had swollen the sail
-transfigured for him. In its crimson splendor, he saw himself as in the
-splendor of his own blood. It seemed to him that all the mystery of
-this beauty demanded of him a triumphal act. He felt confident that he
-was able to accomplish it. "To create with joy!"
-
-And the world was his!
-
-
-
-
- BOOK II
-
- THE EMPIRE OF SILENCE
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- "IN TIME!"
-
-
-"In time!" In a room of the Academy, La Foscarina had stopped before
-_La Vecchia_, by Francesco Torbido--that wrinkled, toothless, flaccid,
-yellow old woman, who could no longer either smile or weep, that human
-ruin worse than decay, that species of earthly Parca, who, instead of
-spindle, thread, or scissors, held in her hand a card bearing that
-significant warning.
-
-"In time!" she said again, when she and her companion were once more in
-the open air. She said it to break the pensive silence, during which
-she had felt her heart sink, like a stone cast into dark waters. She
-spoke again suddenly:
-
-"Stelio, do you know that closed house in the Calle Gambara?"
-
-"No--which house?"
-
-"The house of the Countess of Glanegg."
-
-"No, I don't know it."
-
-"Do you not know the story of the beautiful Austrian?"
-
-"No, Fosca. Tell it to me."
-
-"Will you go with me as far as the Calle Gambara; it is only a short
-distance?"
-
-"Yes, I will go."
-
-They walked along, side by side, toward the closed mansion. Stelio
-fell back a step, that he might observe the actress, that he might
-behold her grace as she walked in that warm, dead air. With his ardent
-gaze he seemed to embrace her whole person: the line of her shoulders
-sloping with noble grace, the free and pliant waist on the strong
-hips, the knees that moved lightly among the folds of her robe, and
-that pale, passionate face, those eloquent lips, that brow, lofty
-and beautiful as that of a man, the fringe of dark lashes over the
-elongated eyes, that sometimes were clouded over, as if tears rose to
-them and remained unshed--the whole passionate face full of lights and
-shadows, love and sadness, feverish force and quivering life.
-
-"I love you! I love you! You alone please me! Everything about you
-pleases me!" he said to her suddenly, whispering the words close to
-her cheek. He was now walking so close as almost to press against her,
-as he accommodated his step to hers, his arm passed under her arm. He
-could not bear to know that she was seized with startled anguish at
-those terrible warning words.
-
-She trembled, stopped; her eyelids drooped, her cheeks turned pale.
-
-"My friend!" she said, in a tone so faint that the two words seemed
-modulated less by her lips than by the rare smile of her spirit.
-
-Her sudden sadness melted away, changed into a wave of tenderness that
-poured in a lavish flood over her friend. Her unbounded gratitude
-inspired her with an eager desire to find some great gift for him.
-
-"Tell me, Stelio, what can I do for thee?"
-
-She imagined some marvelous test, some unheard-of proof of love. "Let
-me serve! Let me serve!" cried her heart. She yearned to own the whole
-earth, that she might offer it to him.
-
-"What dost thou wish? Tell me--what can I do for thee?"
-
-"Love me--only love me!"
-
-"Poor friend, my love is sad."
-
-"It is perfect; it crowns my life."
-
-"But you are young."
-
-"I love you!"
-
-"You should possess one with strength equal to your own."
-
-"But it is you, and only you, that each day increases my strength and
-exalts my hope. My blood runs quicker when I am near you in your mystic
-silence. At those times things are born in my brain that in time you
-will marvel to see. You are necessary to me."
-
-"Do not say that!"
-
-"Each day you confirm me in the assurance that all promises made to me
-will be kept."
-
-"Yes, you will have your own beautiful destiny. For you I have no fear;
-you are sure of yourself. No peril can surprise you, no obstacle can
-impede your progress. Oh, to be able to love without fear! One always
-fears when one loves. It is not for you that I fear. You seem to me
-invincible. I thank you for that also."
-
-She showed him her faith, deep as her passion, lucid and unlimited. For
-a long time, even in the heat of her own struggles and the vicissitudes
-of her wandering life, she had kept her eyes fixed on this young,
-victorious existence, as on an ideal form born of the purification of
-her own desire. More than once, in the sadness of vain loves and the
-nobility of the prohibition imposed between them, she had thought: "Ah,
-if, some day, from all my courage, hardened in many storms, from all
-the strong, clear things that grief and revolt have revealed in the
-depths of my soul, from the best of myself, I could fashion for thee
-the wings that shall bear thee upward in thy last supreme flight!" More
-than once, her melancholy had been dissipated in a heroic presentiment.
-And then she had subjected her soul to restraint, had raised it to the
-highest plane of moral beauty that she could, had guided it in paths of
-purity, solely to merit that for which she hoped and feared at once--to
-be worthy of offering her servitude to him who was so impatient to
-conquer the world.
-
-And now a sudden violent shock of Fate had thrown her before him in
-the guise of a mere weak woman, overcome by earthly passion. She had
-united herself to him by the closest tie; she had watched him at dawn,
-sleeping; she had had sudden awakenings, alarmed by cruel fear, and had
-found it impossible to close her tired eyes again, lest he should gaze
-on her while she slept, and see in her face the lines of care and years.
-
-"Nothing is worth the inspiration you give me," said Stelio, pressing
-her arm close and seeking her soft wrist under her glove, urged by a
-longing to feel the pulsation of that devoted life. "Nothing is worth
-the assurance that nevermore until death shall I be alone."
-
-"Ah, you too feel that, do you--that it is forever?" she cried in a
-transport of joy at seeing the triumph of her love. "Yes, forever,
-Stelio--whatever happens, wherever your destiny may lead you, in
-whatever way you wish me to serve you, either near you or afar...."
-
-In the misty air rose a confused and monotonous sound, which La
-Foscarina recognized as the chorus of sparrows gathered among the dying
-trees in the garden of the Countess of Glanegg. The words died on her
-lips; she made an instinctive movement as if to turn back and to draw
-her companion with her.
-
-"Where are we going?" Stelio asked, surprised at her sudden movement,
-and at the unforeseen interruption, that came like a burst of magic
-music.
-
-She stopped, smiling her faint smile that showed her heart was aching.
-("IN TIME!")
-
-"I wished to escape," she replied, "but I cannot."
-
-She looked like a pale flame, as she stood there.
-
-"I had forgotten, Stelio, that I was to take you to the closed house."
-
-Like one lost in a desert, she stood there, helpless, under the gray
-sky.
-
-"It seemed to me that we were to go somewhere else. But we are already
-here. 'In time'!"
-
-She appeared to him now as she had in that memorable night, when she
-had said "Do not be cruel, Stelio!" Clothed in her sweet, tender
-soul she stood there, so easy to kill, to destroy, to immolate in a
-bloodless sacrifice.
-
-"Come away--let us go," he said, trying to lead her with him. "Let us
-go somewhere else."
-
-"I cannot."
-
-"Let us go home--let us go to your house; we will light a fire, the
-first fire of October. Let me pass this evening with you, Foscarina. It
-will rain soon. It would be so sweet to sit in your room and talk, or
-be silent, hand-in-hand. Come! Let us go."
-
-He would have liked to take her in his arms, to nurse her, soothe
-her, charm away her sadness. The sweetness of his own words augmented
-his tenderness. Of all her lovable person, he loved most fondly the
-delicate little lines that radiated from the corners of her eyes to
-her temples, the little purple veins that made her eyelids look like
-violets, the curve of her cheeks, the pointed chin, and all that seemed
-touched by the finger of Autumn, every shadow that overspread that
-passionate face.
-
-"Foscarina! Foscarina!"
-
-Whenever he called her by her real name, his heart beat faster, as if
-something more deeply human had entered into his love, as if suddenly
-her whole past had seized once more the figure he was pleased to
-isolate in his dream, and as if innumerable threads formed a bond
-uniting it more closely than ever to implacable life.
-
-"Come! Let us go!"
-
-She smiled pensively.
-
-"But why? The house is very near. Let us pass it by the Calle Gambara.
-Do you not wish to know the story of the Countess of Glanegg? Look! One
-would think it a convent."
-
-The street was deserted as the path leading to a hermitage; it was
-gray, damp, strewn with dead leaves. The east wind had brought a light,
-warm mist that softened all sounds.
-
-"Behind those walls, a desolate soul survives the beauty of its body,"
-said La Foscarina softly. "Look! The windows are closed, the blinds
-are nailed, the doors are sealed. Only one door is still open for the
-servants, and through it they carry the dead woman her nourishment,
-though she is walled up as if in an Egyptian tomb. The servants feed a
-body that no longer has the spirit of life."
-
-The naked trees, which rose to the top of the cloister-like enclosure,
-looked almost smoky in the mist; the sparrows, more numerous than the
-leaves, twittered incessantly.
-
-"Guess the Countess's name, Stelio. It is beautiful and rare--as
-beautiful as if you had originated it."
-
-"I do not know."
-
-"Radiana! The prisoner is called Radiana."
-
-"But whose prisoner is she?"
-
-"The prisoner of Time, Stelio. Time stands on guard at her door, with
-his scythe and hour-glass, as she is shown in old prints."
-
-"Are you trying to describe an allegory?"
-
-A boy passed, whistling. When he saw the two strangers looking at
-the closed windows, he stopped to gaze too, his large eyes full of
-curiosity and astonishment. They were silent. Presently the little boy
-grew tired of staring; nothing interesting could be seen; the windows
-were not opened; everything was motionless, so he ran away. They heard
-the flight of his little bare feet on the wet stones and rotting leaves.
-
-"Well," said Stelio, "and what did Radiana do? You have not yet told
-me who is this woman, nor the reason why she is a recluse. Tell me her
-story. I have already been thinking of Soranza Soranzo."
-
-"The Countess Glanegg is one of the greatest ladies of the aristocratic
-Viennese world, and perhaps the most beautiful I ever have seen.
-Franz Lenbach has painted her in the armor of the Valkyries, with the
-four-winged helmet. Have you ever visited his red studio in the Palazzo
-Borghese?"
-
-"No, never."
-
-"Go there some day, and ask him to show you that portrait. You will
-see it unchanged, as I see it now through all those walls. She has
-wished to remain like that in the memory of those that saw her in the
-splendor of her beauty. One day, when the sun shone too bright, she saw
-that the time had come for that beauty to fade, and she resolved to
-take leave of the world in such a way that men should not be witnesses
-of the decay and destruction of her famous beauty. Perhaps it was her
-sympathy with things that disintegrate and fall in ruins that has kept
-her in Venice. She gave a magnificent farewell banquet, where she
-appeared, still sovereignly beautiful; then she withdrew forever from
-the world to this house that you see, in this walled garden, where,
-alone with her servants, she awaits the end. She has become a legendary
-figure. They say that there are no mirrors in her house, and that she
-has forgotten her own face. She has forbidden even her most devoted
-friends and her nearest relatives to visit her. How does she live? What
-are her thoughts? By what means does she wile away the time of waiting?
-Is her soul in a state of grace?"
-
-Every pause in that veiled voice questioning the mystery was filled
-with deepest melancholy.
-
-"Does she pray? Does she contemplate? Does she weep? Or, perhaps, has
-she become inert, and suffers no more than a withered apple in the back
-of some old closet."
-
-"What if she should suddenly show herself at that window?" said Stelio,
-feeling something like a real sensation, as he fancied he heard a
-creaking hinge.
-
-Both looked closely at the nailed blinds.
-
-"Perhaps she is sitting behind them, looking at us," he added, in a
-half whisper.
-
-This thought made them both shudder.
-
-They were leaning against a wall facing the house, and did not wish to
-move a step. The encircling inertia affected them, the smoke-like mist
-enveloped them more and more thickly; the chatter of the birds lulled
-their senses as a drug given to feverish patients. The siren whistles
-pierced the air from afar. The brown leaves dropped from the trees. How
-long it took for a floating leaf to reach the earth! All around them
-was mist, heaviness, slow consumption, ashes.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- AFTER THE STORM
-
-
-"I must die, my dear--I must die!" said La Foscarina, in a
-heart-rending voice, after a long silence, raising her face from the
-cushions where she had buried it, after a stormy scene of passion, in
-which the ardent words of her beloved had given her as much pain as
-pleasure.
-
-She looked at Stelio, who had thrown himself, half reclining, on a
-divan near the balcony, and now lay silent, his eyes half-closed, his
-disordered hair touched with a ray of gold from the setting sun. She
-realized that she was possessed by an incurable madness, spreading
-throughout her declining body. Lost! Lost! She was irrevocably lost!
-
-"Die?" said her beloved, in a dreamy voice, without moving or opening
-his eyes, as if he were wrapped in a melancholy trance.
-
-"Yes--die--before you hate me!"
-
-Stelio opened his eyes quickly, raised himself erect and held up one
-hand, as if to prevent her from saying more.
-
-"Ah, why do you torment yourself in this way?" he said.
-
-He saw that she was ivory pale; her hair fell in wandering wavy locks
-over her cheeks; she seemed consumed by some corrosive poison; her
-face was full of terror and misery.
-
-"What are you doing with me? What are we both doing?" she exclaimed in
-anguish.
-
-"I love you!"
-
-"Not as I wish, not as I have dreamed; I do not wish to be loved thus."
-
-"But you set my heart on fire, and then madness seizes me."
-
-"It is like the madness of hatred."
-
-"No, no; do not say that!"
-
-"Your fierceness makes me feel that you hate me--that you even wish to
-kill me."
-
-"But you make me blind, I tell you, and then I know not what I say or
-do."
-
-"What is it that maddens you so? What do you see in me?"
-
-"Ah, I know not--I cannot tell!"
-
-"But I know very well what it is!"
-
-"Why do you torment yourself, I say? I love you! This is the love...."
-
-"That condemns me! I must die of it! Call me once more by the name you
-gave me long ago."
-
-"You are mine! You belong to me, and I will not lose you."
-
-"Yes, you will lose me."
-
-"But why? I do not understand. What wild fancy is this of yours? Does
-my love offend you? Do you not love me in the same way?"
-
-His irritation and misunderstanding only aggravated her suffering. She
-covered her face with her hands. Her heart throbbed with hammer-like
-beating in her rigid breast, seeming to echo in her brain.
-
-Presently she raised her head and looked at him with painful effort.
-
-"I have a heart, Stelio," she said, with trembling lips, as if she were
-struggling with a sort of fierce timidity in order to force herself
-to speak those words. "I suffer from a heart, too keenly alive--oh,
-Stelio, alive and eager and anguished as you never will know...."
-
-She smiled the sweet, faint smile with which she sought to disguise her
-suffering; hesitated a moment, then reached toward a bunch of violets,
-which she took and pressed close to her lips. Her eyelids drooped,
-her classic brow, between her dark hair and the flowers, showed its
-ivory-like beauty.
-
-"You wound my heart sometimes, Stelio," she said softly, her lips still
-caressing the violets. "Sometimes you are cruel to it."
-
-It seemed as if those fragrant, humble blossoms helped her to confess
-her sadness, to veil still more the timid reproach she had made to her
-beloved. She was silent; Stelio bowed his head. The logs on the hearth
-crackled; the autumn rain fell monotonously in the fading garden.
-
-"I long for kindness, with a thirst that you never will understand. For
-that deep, true kindness, dear friend, which does not speak but which
-comprehends, which knows how to give all in a single look or a single
-movement; which is strong, sure, always armed against the evil impulse
-that tempts us. Do you know the sort of kindness I mean?"
-
-Her voice, alternately strong and wavering, was so warm with inner
-light, was so full of revelation of a soul, that it passed through the
-young man's blood more like a spiritual essence than a sound.
-
-"In you, yes, Foscarina, I know it."
-
-He took in his own hands the slender hands that lay filled with
-violets on her lap; he bowed his head low over them and kissed them
-submissively. Then he knelt at her feet, in the same submission. The
-delicate perfume seemed to arouse his tenderness. During the long pause
-the fire and the rain continued their murmured speech.
-
-Suddenly she asked in a clear voice:
-
-"Do you think that I believe myself sure of you?"
-
-"Have you not watched over my slumbers?" he replied, but in an altered
-tone, for he was suddenly seized by a new emotion: with her query he
-had seen rise before him her naked soul; and he felt that that soul had
-penetrated his own, and recognized his secret yearning for the belief
-and confidence of others in himself.
-
-"Yes, but what does that prove?" was her reply. "Youth sleeps quietly
-on any pillow. You are young"--
-
-"I love you and I have faith in you! I give myself entirely to you. You
-are my life's companion, and your hand is strong."
-
-He saw the well known sadness in the lines of that loved face, and his
-voice trembled with tenderness.
-
-"Kindness!" said she, caressing with light touch the hair on his
-temples. "You know how to be kind--you even feel a need to comfort at
-times. But a fault has been committed, and it calls for expiation.
-Once it seemed to me that for you I could do the humblest as well as
-the highest things; but now I feel that I can do only one thing--to go
-away, disappear, and leave you free with your destiny."
-
-He interrupted her by springing to his feet and taking the loved face
-between his hands.
-
-"I can do this, which love alone could not do," she said softly,
-turning pale, and looking at him with an expression he never had seen
-before.
-
-Stelio felt that he held her soul in his hands--a living spring,
-infinitely beautiful and precious.
-
-"Foscarina, Foscarina! my soul, my life! Yes, you can give me more than
-love--I know it well, and nothing is worth to me that which you give
-me; no other offer could console me for not having you beside me on my
-way. Believe me, believe! I have said this to you so often--don't you
-remember?--even before you became all my own, when the compact still
-held between us"--
-
-Still holding her face between his palms, he leaned over and kissed her
-passionately on her lips.
-
-This time she shivered; the glacial flood she felt at times seemed
-passing over her.
-
-"No! no!" she pleaded, turning away from the young man. Dreamily she
-bent to gather up the scattered violets.
-
-"The compact!" she said, after an interval of silence. "Why have we
-violated it?"
-
-Stelio's eyes were fixed on the changeful splendor of the fire on the
-hearth, but in his open hands lingered the strange sensation, the trace
-of a miracle--that human face over which, through its sad pallor, had
-passed a wave of sublime beauty.
-
-"Why?" the woman repeated sadly. "Ah, confess--confess that you, too,
-before we were seized with the blind madness of that night, felt that
-the higher life was about to be devastated and lost; that we must not
-yield if we wished to save the good that remained in us--that powerful,
-intoxicating thing which seemed to be the only treasure left in my
-life. Confess, Stelio! speak the truth! I can almost name the exact
-moment when the better voice spoke to you in warning. Was it not on the
-water, on the way home, when we had with us--Donatella?"
-
-Before pronouncing that name she had hesitated a second, then she felt
-an almost physical bitterness--a bitterness that descended from her
-lips to the depths of her soul, as if the syllables held poison for
-her. She awaited his reply with suffering. "I do not know how to think
-about the past, Fosca," the young man replied; "moreover, I do not
-wish to think about it. I have lost no good attribute that belonged to
-me. It pleases me that your soul springs to your ripe lips, heavy with
-sweetness, and that your fair cheek pales when I embrace you."
-
-"Hush, hush!" she begged. "Do not speak like that! Do not prevent me
-from saying what it is that troubles me! Why do you not help me?"
-
-She shrank back among the cushions, and looked fixedly at the fire, to
-avoid meeting the eyes of her beloved.
-
-"More than once I have seen a look in your eyes that has filled me with
-horror," she said at last, with a touch of hoarseness in her effort to
-speak.
-
-Stelio started, but dared not contradict her.
-
-"Yes, with horror," she repeated, in a clearer tone, implacable against
-herself, having already triumphed over her fear and regained her
-courage.
-
-Both were now face to face with the truth.
-
-She continued without faltering.
-
-"The first time I saw it was out there in the garden--that night--you
-know! I understood then what it was you saw in me; all the mire over
-which I have walked, all the infamy that clung to my feet, all the
-impurity for which I have so much disgust! Ah, you could not have
-acknowledged the visions that kindled your thoughts that night! Your
-eyes were cruel and your mouth was convulsed. When you felt that you
-wounded my sensitiveness, you took pity on me. But then--but since
-then"--
-
-Her face was covered with blushes; her voice had grown impetuous, and
-her eyes were brilliant.
-
-"To have nourished for years, with all the best that was in me, a
-sentiment of devotion and unbounded admiration, near you or from afar,
-in joy and in sadness; to have accepted in the purest spirit all the
-consolation offered by you to mankind through your poetry, and to have
-awaited eagerly other gifts, even higher and more consoling; to have
-believed in the great force of your genius since its dawn, and never
-to have relaxed my watch over your ascent, and to have accompanied
-it with a wish that has been my morning and evening prayer all these
-years; to have continued, with silent fervor, the effort to give some
-beauty and harmony to my own spirit, that it might be more worthy to
-approach yours; so many times, on the stage, before an ardent audience,
-to have pronounced with a thrill some immortal phrase, thinking of
-those which perhaps one day you would communicate to mankind through
-my lips; to have worked without respite, to have tried always to rise
-to a higher and simpler form in my art, to have aspired unceasingly to
-perfection, fearing that nothing less would please you, that otherwise
-I should seem inferior to your dream; to have loved my fleeting glory
-only because some day it might serve yours; to have hastened, with the
-fervent confidence of faith, the latest of your revelations, that I
-might offer myself to you as the instrument of your victory before my
-own decay; against all and everything, to have defended this secret
-ideal in my soul, against all and against myself as much as against
-others; to have made of you my melancholy, my steadfast hope, my heroic
-test, the symbol of all things good, strong, and free--ah, Stelio!
-Stelio!"--
-
-She paused an instant, overcome by that memory as by a new shame.
-
-"And then to have reached that dawn--to have seen you leaving my house
-in that way on that horrible morning--Do you remember?"
-
-"I was happy--happy!" cried the young man, in a stifled voice, pale and
-agitated.
-
-"No, no! Do you remember? You left me as you would have left some light
-love, some passing fancy, after a few hours of idle pastime."
-
-"You deceive yourself!"
-
-"Confess! Come, speak the truth. Only through truth can we now hope to
-save ourselves."
-
-"I was happy, I tell you; my whole heart expanded with joy; I dreamed,
-I hoped, I felt as if I were born anew."
-
-"Yes, yes!--happy to breathe freely, to feel your youth in the breeze
-and the fresh air. What did you see in her who in her renunciation had
-so many times suffered keenly--yes, you know it well!--rather than
-break the vow that she had taken and borne with her in her wanderings
-over the earth? Tell me! what did you see in me, if you did not believe
-me a corrupt creature, the heroine of chance amours, the vagabond
-actress who in her own life, as on the stage, may belong to any man and
-every man?"
-
-"Foscarina! Foscarina!"
-
-Stelio leaned over her and closed her lips with a trembling hand.
-
-"No, no, do not say that! You are mad! Hush! hush!"
-
-"It is horrible!" murmured the woman, sinking back on the cushions,
-unnerved by her agitation, submerged in the bitter wave that had
-flooded her heart.
-
-But her eyes remained wide open, fixed as two crystal orbs, hard as
-if they had no lashes, fastened on Stelio. They prevented him from
-speaking, from denying or softening the truth they had discovered. In a
-moment or two he found that gaze intolerable, and gently pressed the
-lids down with the tips of his fingers, as one closes the eyes of the
-dead. She noted the movement, which was full of infinite melancholy;
-she felt that only tender love and pity were in that touch. Her
-bitterness passed away, her eyes grew moist. She extended her arms,
-clasped them around his neck, and raised herself a little. She seemed
-to be shutting her soul within herself, and became once more gentle and
-weak, full of silent pleading.
-
-"And so I must go," she sighed at last. "Is there no help for it? Is
-there no pardon?"
-
-"I love you!" her lover repeated.
-
-She disengaged one arm, and held her open hand toward the fire, as
-if to conjure fate. Then once more she clasped her lover in a close
-embrace.
-
-"Yes, still a little while! Let me remain with you a little longer.
-Then I will go away; I will go somewhere, far-away, and die on a stone
-under a tree. But let me stay with you a little longer."
-
-"I love you!"
-
-The blind and indomitable forces of life were whirling over them in
-that embrace. And because they realized this with terror their clasp
-grew closer; and from that embrace sprang an impulse, both good and
-evil, that stirred them to the soul. In the silent room, the voices
-of the elements spoke their obscure language, which was like an
-uncomprehended reply to their mute questioning. The fire, near them,
-and the rain, from without, discoursed, replied, narrated. Little by
-little, these voices reached the spirit of the Animator, enticed it,
-charmed it, drew it into the world of innumerable myths, born of their
-eternity. His keener spiritual senses heard the deep resonance of the
-two melodies expressing the intimate essence of the two elementary
-wills--the two marvelous melodies that he had found, to weave them
-into the symphonic web of the new tragedy. Of a sudden, all sadness
-and anxiety left him as in a happy truce, an interval of enchantment.
-And the woman's clasp relaxed, as if in obedience to some command of
-liberation.
-
-"There is no help for it!" she repeated to herself, seeming to repeat
-a formula of condemnation heard by her in the same mysterious way that
-Stelio had heard the wonderful melodies.
-
-She leaned forward, resting her chin in her hand and her elbow on her
-knee; and in this attitude she gazed a long time into the fire, with a
-slight frown on her brow.
-
-As Stelio looked at her, his soul was troubled. He yearned to find some
-way of breaking the iron band that oppressed her, of dissipating that
-mist of sadness, of leading his beloved back to joy.
-
-The fire in its sudden burst of flame illumined her face and hair; her
-forehead was as beautiful as a noble manly brow; something natural and
-untamed was suggested in the rippling waves and changeful hue of her
-thick hair.
-
-"What are you looking at so intently?" she said at last, feeling his
-fixed gaze. "Have you found a gray hair?"
-
-He knelt before his love again, flexible and tender.
-
-"I see only your beauty. In you I always find something that delights
-me. I was looking then at the strange wave of your hair here--a wave
-not made by the comb, but by the storm!"
-
-He slipped his fingers through the thick tresses. She closed her eyes,
-feeling again the spell of his terrible power over her.
-
-"I see only your beauty. When you close your eyes thus, I feel that you
-are mine to the depth of your heart--lost in me, as the soul is one
-with the body: a single life, mine and thine."
-
-She listened in the half light, and his voice seemed to come from a
-long distance, and to be speaking not to her but to another woman;
-she felt as if she were overhearing a lover's protestations to his
-mistress, and suddenly fancied herself mad with jealousy, possessed
-by a desire to kill, filled with a spirit of revenge; but that body
-must remain motionless, her hands hanging at her sides, nerveless and
-powerless.
-
-"You are my delight and my inspiration. You have a stimulating power
-of which you are unconscious. Your simplest act suffices to reveal to
-me some truth of which I was ignorant. And love is like the intellect:
-it shines in the measure of the truth it discovers. Why, why do you
-grieve yourself? Nothing is destroyed, nothing is lost. It was intended
-that we should be united, so that together we might rise to joy and
-triumph. It was necessary that I should be free and happy in your
-true and perfect love in order to create the work of beauty that so
-many men expect of me. I need your faith; I need to pass through joy
-and to create. Your presence alone suffices to inspire my mind with
-incalculable fruitfulness. Just now, when your arms held me close, I
-heard a sudden torrent of music, a flood of melody, passing through the
-silence."
-
-To whom was he speaking? Whom did he ask for joy? Was not his imperious
-demand for music a yearning toward her that sang, transfiguring the
-universe with her song? Of whom, if not of fresh youth and maidenhood,
-could he ask joy and creation? While she had held him in her embrace,
-it was the other woman who had sung and spoken within him! And now,
-now--to whom was he speaking, if not to that other woman? She alone
-could give him what was necessary for his art and his life. The
-maiden was a new force, a closed beauty, an unused weapon, keen and
-magnificent for the intoxication of war. Malediction! Malediction!
-
-Mingled sorrow and anger stirred her heart, in that vibrating darkness
-which she dared not leave. She suffered the torments of a nightmare; as
-if she were rolling toward a precipice with the indestructible burden
-of her vanished years--years of misery and of triumph--her fading
-face with its thousand masks, her despairing soul, and the thousand
-other souls that had inhabited her mortal body. This grand passion of
-her life, which was to have saved her, seemed now to be pushing her
-relentlessly toward ruin and death. In order to reach her, and through
-her to attain to his highest joy, the passion of her beloved was
-compelled to make its way through what he believed to be a multitude
-of unknown loves; it would contaminate, corrupt and embitter itself,
-perhaps even change by slow degrees to disgust. Always that shadowy
-multitude must keep alive in him that instinct of brutal ferocity which
-lurked in his strong nature. Ah, what had she done? She herself had
-armed a furious devastator, and had put him between her friend and
-herself. No escape was possible. She herself, on that night of the
-flame, had led before him the fresh and beautiful prey, of whom he had
-taken possession by one of those looks that are a choice and a promise.
-To whom was he speaking now, if not to that other woman. Of whom did he
-ask joy?
-
-"Do not be sad! do not be sad!"
-
-But now she heard his words only confusedly, more faint than before, as
-if her soul had sunk into a chasm; but she felt his impatient hands as
-they touched her caressingly. And, in that red darkness, wherein, as it
-seemed to her, all madnesses and folly were born, she felt a surging
-revolt in her veins.
-
-"Do you wish me to take you to her? Do you wish me to call her to you?"
-cried the unhappy woman, suddenly opening her eyes with an expression
-that astonished Stelio; she seized his wrists and shook him with a
-grasp so tight that he felt her nails in his flesh. "Go! go! She awaits
-you! Why do you remain here? Go, run! She awaits you!"
-
-She sprang up, raising him at the same time, and tried to push him
-toward the door. She was no longer recognizable, transfigured by fury
-into a dangerous, threatening creature. The strength of her hands was
-incredible, like the energy of evil intent in her whole being.
-
-"Who awaits me? What did you say? What is the matter with you? Come
-back to your senses, Foscarina!"
-
-He stammered his appeal, he trembled, fancying he saw madness in that
-distorted face. But she was like one distraught and heard him not.
-
-"Foscarina!" He called her with all his soul, white with terror, as if
-to stop with his cry her escaping reason.
-
-She gave a great start, opened her hands, and gazed around as if just
-roused from a long sleep, of which she remembered nothing.
-
-"Come, sit down."
-
-He led her back to the cushions, and gently made her settle herself
-among them. She allowed herself to be soothed by his solicitous
-tenderness. Presently she moaned:
-
-"Who has beaten me?"
-
-She felt of her bruised arms, and touched her face lightly, trembling
-as if she were cold.
-
-"Come; lie down! Put your head here."
-
-He made her lie on the couch; disposed her head comfortably, put a
-light cushion over her feet, softly and carefully, leaning over her as
-over a dear invalid, giving up to her all his heart still throbbing
-with fear.
-
-"Yes, yes," she repeated, in a voice no louder than a sigh, at each
-movement he made, as if she would prolong the sweetness of these cares.
-
-"Are you cold?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Shall I cover you with something?" Stelio inquired.
-
-"Yes."
-
-He sought for some wrap, and found on a table a piece of antique
-velvet, which he spread over her. She smiled faintly.
-
-"Are you comfortable like that?"
-
-She made an affirmative sign by simply closing her eyelids.
-
-Stelio gathered up the violets, now warm and languid, and laid them on
-the pillow near her head.
-
-"So?"
-
-Her eyelids drooped even more slightly than before. He kissed her
-forehead, amid the perfume of the violets; then he turned to stir the
-fire, putting on more wood and raising a fine blaze.
-
-"Do you feel the heat? Are you getting warm?" he asked softly.
-
-He approached and bent over the poor soul. She slept; the contraction
-of her face had relaxed, and the lines of her mouth were composed in
-the equal rhythm of sleep; a calm like that of death spread over her
-pale face. "Sleep! Sleep!" He was so moved by love and pity that he
-would have liked to transfuse into that slumber an infinite virtue of
-consolation and forgetfulness.
-
-He remained standing on the rug, watching her, counting her
-respirations. Those lips had said: "I can do one thing that love alone
-cannot do." Those lips had said: "Do you wish me to take you to her? Do
-you wish me to call her to you?" He neither judged nor resolved, but
-let his thoughts scatter. Once again he felt the blind, indomitable
-forces of life whirling over his head, over that sleeping form, and
-also his terrible desire to cling to life. "The bow is named BIOS, and
-its work is death."
-
-In the silence, the fire and the rain continued to talk. The voice
-of the elements, the woman sleeping in her sadness, the imminence of
-fate, the immensity of the future, remembrance and presentiment, all
-these things created in his mind a state of musical mystery wherein
-the yet unwritten work surged anew and illumined his thought. He
-listened to his melodies developing themselves indefinitely, and heard
-a personage in the drama say: "This alone quenches our thirst, and all
-the thirst in us turns eagerly toward this freshness. If it did not
-exist, none could live here; we should all die of thirst." He saw a
-country furrowed by the dry, white bed of an ancient river, dotted with
-bonfires which lighted up the extraordinarily calm, pure evening. He
-saw a funereal gleam of gold, a tomb filled with corpses all covered
-with gold, and the crowned corpse of Cassandra among the sepulchral
-urns. A voice said: "How soft her ashes are! They run between the
-fingers like the sands of the sea." Another voice said: "She speaks of
-a shadow that passes over things, and of a damp sponge that effaces
-all traces." Then night fell; stars sparkled, the myrtles breathed
-perfume, and a voice said: "Ah! Behold the statue of Niobe! Before
-dying, Antigone sees a stone statue whence gushes an eternal fountain
-of tears." The error of the age had passed away; the remoteness of
-centuries was abolished.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- A FALLEN GIANT
-
-
-One afternoon in November, Stelio returned on the steamer from the
-Lido, accompanied by Daniele Glauro. They had left behind them the
-thunder of the greenish waves of the Adriatic, the trees of San Niccolò
-despoiled by a predaceous wind, whirlwinds of dead leaves, heroic
-phantoms of departures and arrivals, the memory of the archers playing
-to win the scarlet ensign, and the mad rides of Lord Byron, devoured by
-the desire to surpass his own destiny.
-
-"I too, to-day, would have given a kingdom for a horse," said Effrena,
-in self-ridicule, irritated by the mediocrity of life. "Not a cross-bow
-nor a horse in San Niccolò, not even the courage of an oarsman! _Perge
-andacter!_ So here we are, on this ignoble gray carcass that smokes and
-seethes like a kettle. Look at Venice, dancing down there!"
-
-The anger of the waves was extending to the lagoon. The waters were
-agitated by a violent wind, and the agitation seemed to reach to the
-foundations of the city, and the palaces, cupolas, and campaniles
-appeared to heave like vessels on the water. Clusters of floating
-seaweed showed their white roots; and flocks of sea-gulls circled in
-the wind, their strange, wild laughter echoing above the crested waves.
-
-"Wagner!" Daniele Glauro said suddenly, in a low tone, touched with
-emotion, as he pointed at an old man leaning against the railing of a
-prow. "There he is, with Franz Liszt and Donna Cosima. Do you see him?"
-
-Stelio's heart beat quicker; for him too all other surrounding figures
-disappeared; his bitter sense of ennui and inertia disappeared; and
-he felt remaining only the suggestion of superhuman power evoked by
-that name, and realized that the only reality hovering over all those
-indistinct phantoms was the ideal world conjured up by that name around
-the little old man leaning over the troubled waters.
-
-Victorious genius, fidelity of love, unchangeable friendship, the
-supreme apparitions of heroic nature, were reassembled in silent union
-beneath the tempestuous sky. The same dazzling whiteness crowned
-the three heads, whose hair had become blanched through sadness. A
-troubled sorrow was revealed in their faces and attitudes, as if the
-same undefined presentiment oppressed their blended spirits. The
-white face of the woman had a beautiful, strong mouth, with clear-cut
-lines, revealing a tenacious soul; and her light, steel-like eyes were
-fixed continually on him who had chosen her for the companion of his
-noble warfare, watching over him who, having vanquished all hostile
-forces, would be powerless to vanquish Death, whose menace perpetually
-pursued him. That feminine vigil, full of fear, opposed itself to the
-invisible gaze of the other Woman, and threw around the old man a
-vague, funereal shadow.
-
-"He seems to be suffering," said Daniele Glauro. "Do you not see? He
-seems almost on the point of swooning. Shall we go to them?"
-
-Effrena looked with inexpressible emotion at those white locks blown
-about by the sharp wind on the aged neck under the broad brim of the
-felt hat, and at the almost livid ear, with its swollen lobe. That
-body, which had withstood the keenest warfare by the proud instinct of
-its own domination, now looked as limp as some rag which the wind could
-bear away and destroy.
-
-"Ah, Daniele! what can we do for him?" said Stelio, yielding to an
-almost religious impulse to manifest in some way his reverence and pity
-for that great oppressed heart.
-
-"What can we do?" repeated Glauro, to whom that ardent desire to
-offer something of himself to the hero now suffering the human fate
-had immediately communicated itself. Their souls were blended in that
-impulse of fervor and gratitude, that sudden exaltation of their innate
-nobility; but they could give nothing more than that. Nothing could
-check the secret ravages of the fatal malady; and both were filled with
-profound sorrow as they saw the snowy hair tossed about on the old
-man's neck by the wind coming from afar, and bringing to the quivering
-lagoon the murmur and the foam of the open sea.
-
-"Ah, glorious sea, thou shalt hear me still! Never shall I find on the
-earth the health I seek. To thee, therefore, will I remain faithful,
-O waves of the boundless sea!" The impetuous harmonies of _The Flying
-Dutchman_ returned to Effrena's memory, with the despairing call that
-pierces through them from time to time; he fancied that in the rushing
-wind he could hear again the wild chant of the crew on the ship with
-the blood-red sails: _"Iohohé! Iohohé!_ come ashore, black Captain!
-Seven years have passed!" Again his imagination conjured up the figure
-of Richard Wagner in youth; he saw once more the lonely one wandering
-in the living horror of Paris, poor yet undaunted, devoured by the
-fever of genius, his eyes fixed on his star, and his mind resolved to
-force the world to recognize it. In the myth of the shadowy captain,
-the exiled one had seen the image of his own breathless race, his
-furious struggle, his supreme hope. "But some day the pale hero may be
-delivered, should he meet on earth a woman that will be faithful to him
-until death."
-
-The woman was there, beside the hero, an ever vigilant guardian. She
-too, like Senta, knew the sovereign law of fidelity; and death was soon
-to dissolve the sacred vow.
-
-"Do you think that, steeped as he is in poetic myths, he has dreamed of
-some extraordinary manner of dying, and that he now prays every day to
-Nature to conform his end to his dream?" said Glauro, thinking of the
-mysterious will that induced the eagle to mistake for a rock the brow
-of Æschylus, and led Petrarch to die alone over the pages of a book.
-"What would be an end worthy of him?"
-
-"A new melody of unheard-of power, which in his youth had been to him
-indistinct and impossible to fix, should suddenly rend his soul like a
-terrible sword."
-
-"True!" said Glauro.
-
-The wind-driven clouds were battling in phalanxes through space; the
-towers and cupolas seemed swaying in the background; the shadows
-of city and sky, equally vast and mobile on the troubled waters,
-alternately changed and blended, as if they had been produced by things
-equally near dissolution.
-
-"Look at the Magyar, Daniele; there is a generous soul! He has served
-the hero with boundless faith and devotion; and by this service, more
-than by his art, he has won glory. But see how this very feeling, so
-strong and so sincere, inspires him with almost theatrical affectation,
-because of his continual wish to impose upon his spectators a
-magnificent image of himself, which shall delude them."
-
-The Abbé Liszt straightened his thin and bony frame, which seemed
-encased by a coat of mail, and drawing himself to his full height
-he bared his head to pray, addressing a mute prayer to the God of
-Tempests. The wind stirred his thick white hair, that leonine mane that
-at times seemed to emit electric currents which affected his listeners,
-and many women. His magnetic eyes were raised to heaven, while the
-words of his inaudible prayer moved his thin lips, lending a mystic air
-to that face so deeply furrowed with wrinkles.
-
-"What matters it?" said Glauro. "He possesses the divine faculty of
-fervor and a taste for all-powerful strength and dominating passion.
-Does not his art aspire toward Prometheus, Orpheus, Dante, Tasso? He
-was attracted by Richard Wagner as by some great force of nature;
-perhaps he heard in him the theme he has attempted to express in his
-symphonic poem: 'That which is heard on the Mountain'."
-
-"That may be," said Effrena.
-
-But both started on seeing the old man turn suddenly, with the gesture
-of one groping in darkness, and clutch convulsively at his companion,
-who uttered a cry. They ran toward the group. Everyone on the boat
-crowded around them, struck by that cry of anguish. A look from the
-woman prevented the curious from venturing too close to the apparently
-lifeless body. She herself supported him, laid him on a bench, felt
-his pulse, and bent over to listen to his heart-beats. Her love and
-her grief traced an inviolable circle around the stricken one. The
-bystanders stepped back and waited in silence, anxiously looking on
-that livid face for signs of either life or death.
-
-The face was still and pale, as it lay on the woman's knees. Two
-deep furrows descended along the cheeks toward the half-open mouth,
-deepening near the imperious nose. Puffs of wind ruffled the thin,
-fine hair on the full forehead, and the white collar of beard below
-the square chin where the vigor of the jawbone was visible through the
-wrinkled skin. The temples were covered with perspiration, and one of
-the feet twitched slightly. The smallest detail of that fallen figure
-impressed itself forever on the minds of the two young men.
-
-How long did his suffering endure? The shadows continued to float over
-the dark water, broken at intervals by long shafts of sun-rays that
-appeared to pierce the air and bury themselves like arrows in the dark
-waves. The regular cadence of the engine beat upon the air; and now
-arose the wild laughter of the sea-gulls, and a sort of dull, prolonged
-moan from the tempest-stricken city.
-
-"We must carry him," said Stelio in his friend's ear; he was
-intoxicated by the sadness of the situation and by the solemnity of his
-own visions.
-
-The motionless face gave a slight sign of returning life.
-
-"Yes, let us offer our services," said Glauro, whose face was pale.
-
-They looked at the woman with the snow-white cheeks; then they advanced
-and offered their arms.
-
-How long did that terrible removal last? The distance from the boat to
-the shore was not great, but those few steps seemed a long journey. The
-waves dashed against the posts of the pier; the distant moan came to
-them from the Grand Canal as if from the winding paths of a cavern; the
-bells of San Marco rang for vespers; but this confusion of sounds had
-lost all immediate reality, and seemed infinitely profound and distant,
-like a lament of the ocean itself.
-
-In their arms they bore the Hero's body--the unconscious form of
-him who had inundated the world with the flood of melody from his
-oceanic soul, the mortal being of the Revealer who had translated into
-infinite song the essence of the Universe for man's adoration. With an
-ineffable thrill of terror and joy, such as would stir a man who should
-see a mighty river dashing itself over vast rocks, a volcano bursting
-into flame, a conflagration devouring a forest, a dazzling meteor
-obscuring the light of the stars, Effrena felt beneath the hand that
-he had slipped under the shoulder to sustain the body--and he paused
-an instant to gather his strength, which was failing him, and gazed at
-that white head against his breast--he felt the renewed beating of that
-sacred heart.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- THE MASTER'S VISION
-
-
-"You were strong, Daniele--you who can hardly break a twig! And he was
-heavy, that old barbarian; his body seemed built over a framework of
-bronze: well constructed, firm, able to stand on a deck that might rise
-and fall--the body of a man that nature destined for the sea. Whence
-came your strength, Daniele? I almost feared for you, but you did not
-even stagger. Do you realize that we have borne a hero in our arms?
-This is a day we ought to distinguish and celebrate in some way. His
-eyes opened again and looked into mine; his pulse revived under my
-hand. We were worthy to carry him, Daniele, because of our fervor."
-
-"You are worthy not only to carry him, but of gathering and preserving
-some of the most beautiful promises offered by his art to men who still
-have hope."
-
-"Ah, if only I am not overwhelmed by my own abundance, and if I can
-master the anxiety that suffocates me, Daniele!"
-
-The two friends walked on and on, side by side, in exalted and
-confident mood, as if their friendship had taken on an added nobility.
-
-"It seems as if the Adriatic had overthrown the Murazzi, in this
-tempest," said Daniele, pausing to look at the waves that had mounted
-even to the Piazza. "We must return."
-
-"No, let us cross the ferry. Here is a boat. Look at the reflection of
-San Marco on the water!"
-
-The boatman rowed them to the Torre dell' Orologio. The rising
-tide soon overflowed the Piazza, looking like a lake surrounded by
-porticoes, reflecting the greenish-yellow twilight sky.
-
-"EN VERUS FORTIS QUI FREGIT VINCULA MORTIS," read Stelio on the curve
-of an arch, below a mosaic of the Resurrection. "Did you know that
-Richard Wagner held his first colloquy with Death in Venice, exactly
-twenty years ago, at the time he produced Tristan? Consumed by a
-hopeless passion, he came here to die in silence, and here he composed
-that wild second act, which is a hymn to eternal night. And now fate
-has led him back to the lagoons. Fate, it seems, has decreed that here
-he shall breathe his last, like Claudio Monteverde. Is not Venice full
-of musical desire, immense and indefinable? Every sound transforms
-itself into an expressive voice. Listen!"
-
-The city of stone and water seemed indeed to have become as sonorous as
-a great organ. The hissing and moaning had changed to a sort of choral
-supplication, rising and falling in regular rhythm.
-
-"Do you not hear the theme of a melody in that chorus of moans? Listen!"
-
-They had debarked from the little boat, and had resumed their walk
-through the narrow streets.
-
-"Listen!" Stelio repeated. "I can detect a melodic theme, which swells
-and decreases without power to develop itself. Do you hear it?"
-
-"It is not given to me to hear what you hear," replied the sterile
-ascetic to the genius. "I will await the time when you can repeat to me
-the word that Nature speaks to you."
-
-"Ah!" Stelio resumed, "to be able to restore to melody its natural
-simplicity, its ingenuous perfection, its divine innocence; to draw
-it, living, from its eternal source, from the true mystery of nature,
-the inmost soul of the Universe! Have you ever reflected upon the myth
-connected with the infancy of Cassandra? She had been left one night
-in the temple of Apollo; and in the morning she was found lying on the
-marble floor, wrapped in the coils of a serpent that licked her ears.
-And from that day she understood all the voices of Nature in the air,
-all the melodies of the world. The power of the great seeress was only
-a high musical power; and a part of that Apollonian virtue entered
-the souls of the poets that coöperated in the creation of the tragic
-Chorus. One of those poets boasted of understanding the voices of
-all birds; another was able to hold converse with the winds; another
-comprehended perfectly the language of the sea. More than once I have
-dreamed that I too was lying on the marble floor, folded in the coils
-of that serpent. The magic of that old myth must be renewed, Daniele,
-in order that we may create the new art.
-
-"Have you ever thought what might be the music of that species of
-pastoral ode sung by the Chorus in _Å’dipus Tyrannus_, Å’when Jocasta
-flees, horror-struck, and the son of Laïus still cherishes the illusion
-of a last hope? Do you recall it? Try to imagine the strophes as if
-they were a frame, within which an expressive dance-figure is animated
-by the perfect life of melody. The spirit of Earth would rise before
-you: the consoling apparition of the great common Mother at the
-unhappiness of her stricken, trembling children--a celebration, as it
-were, of all that is divine and eternal above Man, who is dragged to
-madness and death by blind and cruel Destiny. Try now to conceive how
-this song has helped me in the writing of my great tragedy to find the
-means of the highest and at the same time the simplest expression."
-
-"Do you purpose, then, to reëstablish the ancient Chorus on the stage?"
-
-"Oh, no! I shall not revive any ancient form; I intend to create a
-new form, obeying only my instinct and the genius of my own race, as
-did the Greeks when they created that marvelous structure of beauty,
-forever inimitable--the Greek drama. For a very long time, the three
-practicable arts of music, poetry, and dancing have been separated; the
-first two have developed toward a superior form of expression, but the
-third is in its decadence, and I think that now it is impossible to
-combine them in a single rhythmical structure without taking from one
-or another its own dominant character, which has already been acquired.
-If they are to blend in one common effect, each must renounce its own
-particular effect--in other words, become diminished. Among the things
-most susceptible of rhythm, Language is the foundation of every art
-that aspires to perfection. Do you think that language is given its
-full value in the Wagnerian drama? Do you not think that the musical
-conception itself often loses some of its primitive purity by being
-made to depend on matters outside the realm of music? Wagner himself
-certainly realizes this weakness, and shows it when he approaches
-a friend in Bayreuth, covering his eyes with his hand, that he may
-abandon his sense of hearing entirely to the virtue of the pure sound
-of the voice."
-
-"This is all new to me," said Glauro, "yet it rejoices and intoxicates
-me as we rejoice when we hear something that has been long foreseen and
-felt by presentiment. Then, as I understand, you will not superpose
-the three rhythmic arts, but will present them each in its single
-manifestation, yet all linked by a sovereign idea, and raised to the
-supreme degree by their own significant energy?"
-
-"Ah, Daniele! how can I give you any idea of the work that lives within
-me?" Stelio exclaimed. "The words you use in trying to formulate my
-meaning are hard and mechanical."
-
-They stood at the foot of the Rialto steps. The gale swept over them;
-the Grand Canal, dark in the shadow of the palaces, seemed to bend like
-a river hastening to a cataract.
-
-"We cannot remain here," said Glauro, leaning against a door; "the wind
-will blow us down."
-
-"Go on; I will overtake you. Only a moment," cried the master,
-covering his eyes with his hand, and concentrating his soul upon sound
-alone.
-
-Formidable was the voice of the tempest, in the midst of the immobility
-of centuries, turned to stone. Its unaccompanied song, its hopeless,
-wailing lamentation, was raised in memory of the multitudes that
-had become ashes, the scattered pageants, the fallen grandeur, the
-innumerable days of birth and of death--things of an age without name
-or form. All the melancholy of the world rushed in the wind over that
-eager, listening soul.
-
-"Ah! I have seized you!" Stelio cried suddenly, with triumphant joy.
-
-The complete and perfect line of the melody had been revealed to him,
-now belonged to him, and would become immortal in his spirit and in the
-world.
-
-"Daniele! I have found it!"
-
-He raised his eyes, and saw the first stars in the adamantine sky.
-He feared to lose the precious treasure he had found. Near, a column
-he now saw a man with a flickering light at the end of a long pole,
-and heard the slight sound of the lighting of a lantern. Swiftly and
-eagerly he jotted down in his notebook, under the lamplight, the notes
-of the melodic theme, compressing into five lines the message of the
-elements.
-
-"O day of marvels!" said Daniele Glauro, on seeing Stelio on the
-steps, as light and agile as if he had robbed the air of some of its
-elasticity. "May Nature cherish you forever, my brother!"
-
-"Come, come!" said Stelio, taking him by the arm and urging him on with
-boyish gayety. "I must run!"
-
-He drew him through the narrow streets leading to San Giovanni
-Elemosinario.
-
-"What you told me one day, Daniele, is quite true. I mean that the
-voice of things is essentially different from their sound," said
-Stelio. "The sound of the wind may represent the moans of a frightened
-throng, the howling of wild animals, the falling of cataracts, the
-rustle of waving banners, or mockery, threats, and despair. But the
-voice of the wind is the synthesis of all these sounds: that is the
-voice which sings and tells of the terrible travail of time, the
-cruelty of human destiny, the eternal warfare for an illusion eternally
-born anew."
-
-"And have you never thought that the essence of music does not lie in
-the sounds alone?" asked the mystic doctor. "It often dwells in the
-silence that precedes and follows sound. Rhythm makes itself felt in
-these intervals of silence. Rhythm is the very heart of music, but its
-pulsation is inaudible except during the intervals between sounds."
-
-This metaphysical law confirmed Stelio in his belief of the justness of
-his own intuition.
-
-"Imagine," said he, "an interval between two scenic symphonies wherein
-all the _motifs_ concur in expressing the inmost essence of the
-characters that are struggling in the drama as well as in revealing
-the inmost depths of the action, as, for instance, in Beethoven's
-great prelude in _Leonora_, or the prelude to _Coriolanus_. That
-musical silence, pulsating with rhythm, is like the mysterious living
-atmosphere where alone can appear words of pure poetry. Thus the
-personages seem to emerge from the symphonic sea as if from the
-hidden truth that works within them; their spoken words will possess
-an extraordinary resonance in that rhythmic silence, will reach the
-farthest limit of verbal power, because it will be animated by a
-continuous aspiration to song that cannot be appeased except by the
-melody which must rise again from the orchestra, at the close of the
-tragic episode. Do you understand me?"
-
-"Then you place the episode between two symphonies, which prepare it
-and also terminate it, because music is the beginning and the end of
-human utterance."
-
-"Thus I bring nearer to the spectator the personages of the drama.
-Do you recall the figure employed by Schiller in the ode he wrote in
-honor of Goethe's translation of _Mahomet_, to signify that, on the
-stage, only the ideal world seems real. The chariot of Thespis, like
-the barque of Acheron, is so slight that it can carry only shadows or
-the images of human beings. On the stage commonly known, these images
-are so unreal that any contact with them seems as impossible as would
-be contact with mental forms. They are distant and strange, but in
-making them appear in the rhythmic silence, accompanied by music to
-the threshold of the visible world, I shall be able to bring them
-marvelously close, because I shall illumine the most secret depths
-of the will that produces them. I shall reveal, in short, the images
-painted on the veil and that which happens beyond the veil. Do you
-understand?"
-
-They were now entering the Campo di San Cassiano lonely and deserted
-on the banks of the gray stream; their voices and their footsteps
-echoed there as if in an amphitheater of stone, distinct above the
-sound of the Grand Canal, which made a rushing noise like that of
-a river. A purple mist rose from the fever-laden waters, spreading
-like a poisonous breath. Death seemed to have reigned there a long
-time. The shutter of a high window beat in the wind against the wall,
-grinding on its hinges, a sign of abandonment and ruin. But, in the
-mind of the Inspirer, all these appearances produced extraordinary
-transfigurations. He saw again the wild and solitary spot near the
-tomb of Mycenæ. Myrtles flourished between the rugged rocks and the
-cyclopic ruins. Beside a rock lay the rigid, pure body of the Victim.
-In the death-like silence he could hear the murmuring water and the
-intermittent breath of the breeze among the myrtles.
-
-"It was in an august place," said he, "that I had the first vision of
-my new work--at Mycenæ, under the gateway of the Lions, while I was
-re-reading _Orestes_. Land of fire, country of thirst and delirium,
-birthplace of Clytemnestra and of the Hydra, earth forever sterile by
-the horror of the most tragic destiny that ever has overtaken a human
-race. Have you ever thought about that barbarian explorer who, after
-passing the greater part of his existence among his drugs behind a
-counter, undertook to find the tombs of the Atridæ among the ruins
-of Mycenæ, and who one day (the sixth anniversary of the event is of
-recent date) beheld the greatest and strangest vision ever offered to
-mortal eyes? Have you ever pictured to yourself that fat Schliemann at
-the moment when he discovered the most dazzling treasure ever held by
-Death in the dark obscurity of the earth for centuries--for thousands
-of years? Have you ever fancied that this superhuman and terrible
-spectacle might have been revealed to some one else--to a youthful and
-fervent spirit, to a poet, a life-giver, to you, to me, perhaps? Then
-the fever, the frenzy, the madness--Imagine!"
-
-He was on fire and vibrating, suddenly swept away by his own fancy as
-by a whirlwind. His seer's eyes sparkled with the gleam of the buried
-treasure. Creative force flowed to his brain as blood to his heart.
-He was an actor in his own drama, with accent and movement expressing
-transcendent beauty and passion, surpassing the power of the spoken
-word, the limit of the letter. And his brother spirit hung upon his
-speech, trembling before the sudden splendor that proved to him the
-truth of his own divinations.
-
-"Imagine! Imagine that the earth in which you explore is baleful--it
-must still exhale the miasma of monstrous wickedness. The curse upon
-the Atridæ was so terrific that some vestige of it must still have
-remained to be feared in the dust that they once trod upon. You are
-bewitched: the dead you seek and cannot find are reincarnated in you,
-and breathe in your body with the terrible breath with which Æschylus
-infused them, huge and sanguinary as they appear in the _Orestes_,
-pierced perpetually with the darts and flames of their destiny.
-Hereafter, all the ideal life with which you have nourished yourself
-must assume the form and impress of reality. And still you go on in
-this land of thirst, at the foot of the bare mountain, enclosed within
-the fascination of the dead city, always delving in the earth, with
-those terrifying phantoms ever before your eyes in the burning dust. At
-each thrust of the spade you tremble to the very marrow, eager to see
-the face of one of the Atridæ, still perfect, but with the signs still
-visible of the violence he suffered, the inhuman carnage. And behold
-it! the gold, the gold, the bodies, piles of gold, bodies covered with
-gold"--
-
-The Atridæ princes seemed to be lying there on the stones, a miracle
-evoked in the obscurity of the pathway. And the one who had evoked
-these images, as well as his listener, shuddered at the same instant.
-
-"A succession of tombs: fifteen bodies, intact, one lying beside
-another, on a golden bed, with masks of gold on their faces, their
-brows crowned with gold and breasts bound with gold; and covering
-them, on their forms, at their sides, at their feet, everywhere, a
-prodigality of golden things, countless as the leaves falling in a
-fairy forest. Do you see? Do you see?"
-
-"Yes, yes, I see! I see!"
-
-"For a second, that man's soul has traversed hundreds and thousands of
-years, has breathed the terrible legend, has palpitated in the horror
-of the ancient carnage. For a second, his soul has lived that antique
-life of violence. The slain ones were all there: Agamemnon, Eurymedon,
-Cassandra, and the royal escort, and for a moment they lay under
-his eyes, motionless. Then--they vanished into nothingness--do you
-see?--like a vapor exhaled, like scattered foam, like flying dust, like
-I know not what frail and fleeting thing--engulfed in the same fatal
-silence that surrounded their radiant immobility. And there was only
-a handful of dust and a mass of gold!" Daniele Glauro, deeply moved,
-seized his friend's hand; and the Inspirer read in his faithful eyes
-the mute flame of enthusiasm consecrated to the great work.
-
-They stopped near a door in the dark wall. A mysterious sense of
-distance possessed the mind of each, as if their souls were lost in the
-mists of time; and they fancied that behind that door an ancient people
-lived enthralled by a changeless Destiny. The sound of a rocking cradle
-came from the house, and the croon of a soft lullaby to a wailing
-child. The stars glowed in the narrow glimpse of sky; against the walls
-the sea was moaning. And in another spot a hero's heart suffered while
-waiting for death.
-
-"Life!" said Stelio, resuming his walk, and drawing Daniele with him.
-"Here, at this moment, all that trembles, weeps, hopes, breathes, and
-raves in the immensity of life, gathers itself in your mind, condensing
-itself there with a sublimation so rapid that you believe yourself able
-to express it all in a single word. But what word? What word? Do you
-know it? Who will ever know it well enough to speak it?"
-
-Again he was distressed at his inability to embrace all and express all.
-
-"Have you ever seen, at certain times, the whole universe standing
-before you, as distinct as a human head? I have, a thousand times. Ah,
-to cut it off, like him that cut off Medusa's head, at one stroke, and
-hold it up before the multitude so that it never should be forgotten!
-Have you ever thought that a great tragedy might resemble the attitude
-of Perseus? I tell you this: I should like to take the bronze of
-Benvenuto Cellini from the Loggia of Orcagna and place it in the
-_foyer_ of the new theater as an admonition. But who will give to a
-poet the sword of Hermes and the mirror of Athena?
-
-"Perseus!" continued the Inspirer. "In the ravine, below the citadel
-of Mycenæ, is a fountain called Perseia, and it is the only living
-thing in that place where all is parched and dead. Men are attracted
-toward it as to a spring of life in that region where the melancholy
-whiteness of the dried river-beds is visible late in the twilight. All
-human thirst ardently approaches that freshness. And throughout my
-work the music of that stream shall be heard--the water, the melody
-of the water. I have found it! In that, the pure element, shall be
-accomplished the pure Act which is the aim of the new tragedy. On its
-clear, cold waters shall sleep the virgin destined to die 'deprived
-of nuptials,' like Antigone. Do you understand? The pure Act marks
-the defeat of antique Destiny. The new soul suddenly breaks the iron
-band that held it, with a determination born of madness, of a lucid
-delirium that resembles ecstasy, or a deeper, clearer vision of Nature.
-In the orchestra, the final ode is of the salvation and liberation of
-man, obtained through pain and sacrifice. The monstrous Fate is there,
-vanquished, near the tombs of the Atridæ, before the very corpses of
-the victims. Do you understand? He that frees himself by means of the
-pure Act, the brother that kills his sister to save her soul from the
-horror that was about to seize her, has himself in reality seen the
-face of Agamemnon!"
-
-The fascination of the funereal gold had taken fresh hold upon his
-fancy; the evidence of his internal vision gave him a look as of one
-under a spell of hallucination.
-
-"One of the corpses surpasses all the others in height and in majesty:
-his brow is crowned with a golden diadem, and he wears a cuirass,
-shoulder-plates, and a girdle of gold, surrounded with swords, lances,
-daggers, cups, and countless golden discs scattered like petals over
-his body, more venerable than a demigod. The man bends over this body,
-while it is vanishing in the light before his very eyes, and lifts
-the heavy mask. Ah, does he not then see the face of Agamemnon? Is
-not this corpse perhaps the King of kings? The mouth and the eyes
-are open. Do you remember that passage of Homer's? 'As I lay dying,
-I raised my hands to my sword; but the woman with dog-like eyes went
-away, and would not close my eyes and my mouth, at the moment when I
-was about to descend to the abode of Hades.' Do you remember? Well,
-the mouth of this corpse is open, and its eyes are open. He has a high
-brow, ornamented with a single large golden leaf; the nose is long and
-straight, the chin oval"--
-
-The magician paused an instant, his eyes fixed and dilated. He was a
-seer. All about him disappeared, and his fiction remained the only
-reality. Daniele trembled, for he too was able to see through the eyes
-of the other.
-
-"Ah, the white spot on the shoulder, too! He has raised the armor. The
-spot, the spot! the hereditary mark of the race of Pelops 'of the ivory
-shoulder'! Is he not indeed the King of kings?"
-
-The rapid, half-broken utterances of the seer were like a succession of
-flashes whereby he himself was dazzled. He had astonished even himself
-by that sudden apparition, that unexpected discovery which illumined
-the shadows of his mind, because exterior reality, and almost tangible.
-How had he been able to discover that spot on Agamemnon's shoulder?
-From what abyss of his memory had suddenly surged up that detail so
-strange, yet precise and decisive as a mark that affords recognition of
-a body dead since the preceding day?
-
-"You were there!" exclaimed Daniele, intoxicated. "It was you yourself
-that lifted that armor and that mask! If you have really seen what you
-have just described, you are no longer a man!"
-
-"I have seen! I have seen!"
-
-Again he became an actor in his own drama, and it was with a violent
-palpitation that he heard, from the lips of a living person, the words
-of the drama--the very words that were to be spoken in the episode
-itself: "If you have really seen what you have described, you are no
-longer a man." From that instant, the explorer of sepulchers took on
-the aspect of a noble hero fighting against the ancient destiny that
-had risen from the ashes of the Atridæ to contaminate and overthrow him.
-
-"Not with impunity," he continued, "does a man open tombs and gaze
-upon the faces of the dead--and what dead! He lives alone with his
-sister, the sweetest creature that ever has breathed the air of
-earth--alone with her, in the dwelling full of light and silence, as in
-a prayer, a consecration. Now, imagine one that unconsciously drinks
-poison, a philter, I know not what impure thing, which poisons his
-blood and corrupts his thoughts--suddenly, while his soul is at peace.
-Imagine this terrible evil, this vengeance of the dead! He is suddenly
-seized by an unholy passion; he becomes the miserable, trembling prey
-of a monster; he fights a desperate, secret fight, without truce,
-without mercy, day and night, every hour, every moment--all the more
-atrocious the more the innocent pity of the poor creature inclines
-toward his evil. How can this man be freed? From the very beginning
-of the tragedy, as soon as the innocent one begins to speak, it is
-evident that she is destined to die. And all that is said and done in
-the episodes, all that is expressed by the music, and by the songs and
-dances of the interludes, serves to lead her slowly but inexorably
-toward death. She is the equal of Antigone. In her brief, tragic
-hour, she passes accompanied by the light of hope and the shadow of
-presentiment; she passes accompanied by songs and tears, by the noble
-love that offers joy, by the mad love that engenders mourning; and
-she never pauses except to fall asleep on the cold, clear waters of
-the fountain that called to her from the solitudes with its continual
-murmur. Hardly has her brother killed her when he receives from her,
-through death, the gift of his redemption. 'All stain,' he cries,
-'is effaced from my soul! I have become wholly pure! All the sanctity
-of my former love has reëntered my soul like a torrent of light. Were
-she here now, all my thoughts of her would be pure as lilies. Were she
-to rise again, she could walk over my heart as over immaculate snow.
-Now she is perfect; now she can be adored as a divinity. I will lay
-her in the deepest of my sepulchers, and around her I will lay all my
-treasures.' Thus, the act of death, into which he has been drawn by
-his lucid madness, becomes an act of purification and of liberation,
-marking the defeat of ancient Destiny. Emerging from the symphonic
-ocean, the ode shall sing of the victory of man, shall illumine the
-darkness of the catastrophe with an unknown light, and shall elevate to
-the summit of music the first word of the Drama renewed."
-
-"The gesture of Perseus!" exclaimed Daniele, still under the spell of
-exaltation. "At the end of the tragedy you cut off the head of the
-Moira, and show it to the multitude, ever young and ever-new, which
-shall bring the spectacle to a close amid great cries of enthusiasm."
-
-Both saw, as in a dream, the marble theater on the Janiculum, the
-multitude swayed by the idea of truth and of beauty, the illimitable
-starry Roman sky; they saw the frenzied multitude descending the slope
-of the hill, bearing in their rude hearts the confused revelation of
-poetry; they heard the clamor prolonging itself in the darkness of the
-immortal city.
-
-"And now good-by, Daniele," said the master, reminded of his need to
-hasten, as if some one waited for him or called him.
-
-The eyes of the Tragic Muse remained immovable in the depths of his
-dream, sightless, petrified in the divine blindness of statues.
-
-"Where are you going?"
-
-"To the Palazzo Capello."
-
-"Does La Foscarina know the thread of your work?"
-
-"Vaguely."
-
-"And what figure shall you give to her?"
-
-"She shall be blind, having already passed into another world, and gone
-beyond the life of this. She shall see that which others do not see.
-Her feet shall be in the shadows, but her head in the light of eternal
-truth. The contrasts of the tragic hour shall reverberate in the
-darkness of her soul, multiplying themselves there like thunder among
-the deep circles of solitary rocks. Like Tiresias, she shall comprehend
-everything, permitted or forbidden, celestial and terrestrial, and she
-shall know 'how hard it is to know when knowing is useless.' Ah, I
-shall put marvelous words into her mouth, and silences that shall give
-birth to infinite beauties."
-
-"On the stage," said Glauro, "whether she speaks or is silent, her
-power is almost more than human. She reveals to us the existence in
-our own hearts of the most secret evil and the most hidden hopes;
-by her enchantment, our past becomes present; and, by the virtue of
-her aspect, we recognize ourselves in the trials suffered by others
-throughout time, as if the soul she reveals to us were our own."
-
-They stopped on the Ponte Savio. Stelio was silent, under a flood of
-love and melancholy, which had suddenly come upon him.
-
-"I wish I had not to leave you to-night, Stelio," confessed the
-faithful brother, who was also invaded by a peculiar melancholy. "When
-I am with you, I breathe more freely, and live a swifter life."
-
-Stelio was silent. The wind had abated somewhat. The brown church and
-the square tower of naked brick seemed to be praying silently to the
-stars.
-
-"Do you know the green column that stands in San Giacomo dall' Orio?"
-Daniele resumed, intending to hold his friend a little longer, because
-he dreaded to say farewell. "What sublimity! It is like the fossilized
-condensation of an immense green forest. In following its innumerable
-veins, the eye travels in a dream through sylvan mysteries. When I look
-at it I fancy myself visiting Sila and Ercinna."
-
-Stelio knew the column. One day Perdita had leaned long against the
-precious shaft, contemplating the magic frieze of gold that curves
-above the canvas of Bassano, obscuring it.
-
-"To dream--always to dream," he sighed, with a return of that bitter
-impatience which had suggested sneering words to him when he had come
-on the boat from the Lido. "To live on relics! Think of Dandolo, who
-overthrew the column and an empire at the same time, and who preferred
-to remain doge when he might have become emperor. Perhaps he lived more
-than you, who wander in fancy through forests when you examine the
-marble he pillaged. Good-by, Daniele."
-
-"I shall stop at the Palazzo Vendramin for news," said the faithful
-brother.
-
-These words recalled afresh the thought of the great ailing heart, the
-weight of the hero in their arms, the terrible removal.
-
-"He has conquered--he can die," said Stelio.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- SOFIA
-
-
-Stelio entered La Foscarina's house like a spirit. His mental
-exaltation changed the aspect of things. The hall, lighted by a galley
-lamp, appeared immense to him. The detached cabin of a gondola standing
-on the pavement near the door, startled him as if he had suddenly seen
-a coffin.
-
-"Ah, Stelio!" exclaimed the actress, rising with a start and hastening
-toward him impetuously, with all the spring of her eagerness that had
-been repressed by expectation. "At last!"
-
-She stopped before him suddenly, without touching him. The swift
-impulse vibrated in her visibly. She was like a wind when it falls.
-"Who has detained you from me?" was her thought, while her heart was
-filled with doubt; for in one instant she had discerned something about
-the beloved one that rendered him intangible to her--something strange
-and far-away in his eyes.
-
-But he had found her most beautiful at the very moment when she
-sprang from the shadows, animated by a violence like that of the
-tempest sweeping the lagoons. The cry, the gesture, the sudden halt,
-the vibration of her body, the light in her countenance suddenly
-extinguished like a fire fallen to ashes, the intensity of her gaze,
-like the glow of battle, the breath that parted her lips as heat
-breaks open the lips of the earth--all these aspects of her real self
-showed a capability of pathos comparable only to the effervescence of
-natural energies, the power of cosmic force. The artist recognized in
-her the Dionysian creature, the living material, apt for receiving the
-rhythms of art, to be modeled according to poetic forms. And, because
-he saw her character as varying as the waves of the sea, he found
-inert the blind mask he thought to put on her face; the tragic fable
-through which she was to pass in sadness seemed narrow, and too limited
-was the order of sentiment whence she should draw her expressions,
-almost subterranean the soul she must reveal. His mental images were
-seized with a sort of panic, a fleeting terror. What could be that
-single work in the immensity of life? Æschylus composed more than a
-hundred tragedies, Sophocles still more. They had constructed a world
-with gigantic fragments lifted by their titanic arms. Their labor was
-as vast as a cosmogony. The Æschylian figures seemed still warm with
-ethereal life, shining with sidereal light, humid from the fertilizing
-cloud. The spirit of the Earth worked in the creators.
-
-"Hide me, hide me! Do not ask me anything, and let me be silent!"
-he implored, incapable of concealing his perturbation, powerless to
-control the tumult of his disordered thoughts.
-
-The woman's heart beat fast in the ignorance of fear.
-
-"Why? What have you done?"
-
-"I suffer."
-
-"From what?"
-
-"Anxiety, anxiety--from that trouble of mine which you know well."
-
-She clasped him in her arms. He felt that she was trembling in doubt.
-
-"Are you mine--are you still mine?" she asked, in a stifled voice, her
-lips pressed to his shoulder.
-
-"Yes--always yours."
-
-This woman always suffered a horrible fear every time she saw him
-depart from her, every time she saw him return. When he went, was it
-not toward the unknown betrothed? When he returned, was it not to bid
-her a last farewell?
-
-She clasped him in her arms with the fondness of a lover, a sister, a
-mother--with all human love.
-
-"What can I do for you? Tell me!"
-
-A continual need tormented her to offer, to serve, to obey a command
-that urged her toward peril, toward a struggle to seize some good that
-she might bring to him.
-
-"What can I give you?"
-
-He smiled wearily, overcome by sudden languor.
-
-"What do you wish? Ah, I know!"
-
-He smiled again, allowing himself to be caressed by that voice, by
-those adoring hands.
-
-"You wish for everything, do you not? You desire everything?"
-
-Still he smiled sadly, like an ailing child listening to descriptions
-of delightful games.
-
-"Ah, if I only could! But no one in the world can give you anything of
-any value, dearest friend. Your poetry and your music--they alone can
-demand everything. I remember that ode of yours beginning 'I was Pan.'"
-
-He leaned against the faithful heart his head now filled with the light
-of beautiful thoughts.
-
-"'I was Pan.'"
-
-Through his spirit passed the splendor of that lyrical moment, the
-delirium of that ode.
-
-"Have you seen your sea to-day? Did you see the storm?"
-
-He shook his head, without speaking.
-
-"Was it a great storm? One day you told me that you have many mariners
-among your forefathers. Have you been thinking to-day of your home on
-the dunes? Are you homesick for the sand? Do you wish to go back there?
-You have worked a great deal there, and have done great work. It is a
-consecrated house. Your mother was with you while you worked. You could
-hear her stepping softly in the next room. Sometimes she stopped to
-listen, did she not?"
-
-He embraced her silently. That voice penetrated his very soul, and
-refreshed it.
-
-"And your sister was with you, too? You told me her name once, and I
-have not forgotten it. She is called Sofia. I know that she is like
-you. I should like to hear her speak once, or to watch her walking
-along the road. Once you praised her hands. They are beautiful, are
-they not? You told me one day that when she is sad her hands hurt her,
-as if they were the roots of her soul. That is what you said--'the
-roots of her soul.'"
-
-He listened, almost happy. How had she discovered the secret of
-soothing him, the balm for his soul? From what hidden spring did she
-draw the fluid melody of those memories?
-
-"Sofia never will know the good she has done to the poor traveler. I
-know little of Sofia herself, but I know that she resembles you, and I
-have often pictured her to myself. I can see her at this moment. When
-I have been in distant countries, far-away among strangers, feeling
-almost lost, she has appeared to me often, and borne me company. She
-has appeared to me suddenly, when I had neither called nor expected
-her. Once I saw her at Mürren, where I had arrived after a long, weary
-journey, made in order to see a poor friend who was at the point of
-death. Day was breaking; the mountains had that cold, delicate color
-of beryl that is seen only among glaciers. Why did she come? We
-waited, together. The sun touched the summits of the mountains. Then a
-brilliant rainbow crowned them for a moment, then vanished. And Sofia
-vanished with the rainbow, with the miracle."
-
-He listened, almost happy. Were not all the beauty and all the truth
-that he himself would like to express contained in a stone, or in a
-flower of those mountains? The most tragic struggle of human passions
-was not worth the apparition of that mystic light upon the eternal
-snows.
-
-"And another time?" he asked softly, for the pause was long, and he
-feared that she would not continue. She smiled, then looked sad.
-
-"Another time I was at Alexandria in Egypt, in a time of confused
-horror, as if after a shipwreck. The city had an aspect of
-putrefaction, like a city in decay. I remember: a street full of
-muddy water; a white horse, thin as a skeleton, that splashed in the
-water, its mane and tail of an ochre color; the turrets of an Arabian
-cemetery, the far-away gleam of the marsh of Mareotis. What misery!
-What disgust!"
-
-"Oh, dear soul, never, never again shall you be left alone and
-despairing," said Stelio in his heart, now filled with fraternal
-tenderness for the nomad woman who recalled the sadness of her
-continual wanderings.
-
-"And another time?" he said aloud.
-
-"Another time it was in Vienna, in a museum. There was a great, empty
-hall, the rain whipped against the windows; innumerable precious relics
-were there in crystal cases; the signs of death were everywhere, exiled
-things no longer prayed to or adored. Together Sofia and I leaned over
-a case containing a collection of holy arms, with their metal hands
-fixed in an immovable gesture. There were martyr's hands sown with
-agates, amethysts, topaz, garnets, and pale turquoises. Through certain
-openings, splinters of bone were visible. One hand held a golden lily,
-another a miniature city, another clasped a column. One was smaller
-than the others; it had a ring on every finger, and held a vase full of
-ointment: the relics of Mary Magdalene. Exiled things, become profane,
-no longer prayed to or adored. Is Sofia devout? Has she the habit of
-prayer?"
-
-He did not reply. He felt that he should not speak, nor give any
-visible sign of his own life in the enchantment of that distant life.
-
-"Sometimes your sister used to enter your room while you were at work,
-and lay a blade of grass on the page newly begun."
-
-The enchantress trembled; a veiled image seemed to be suddenly
-revealing itself.--Do you know that I began to love her--the girl that
-sings, the girl whom you cannot have forgotten--because I thought of
-your sister? Yes--in order to pour into a pure soul the tenderness my
-soul wished to offer to your sister, from whom so many cruel things
-separated me! Do you know that?--
-
-Those words quivered with life, but they were not spoken; yet the voice
-trembled at their mute presence.
-
-"Then you would grant yourself a few moments of rest. You went to the
-window with her, and both gazed out upon the sea. A plowman drove his
-young oxen over the sand to teach them a straight furrow. When they
-were finally taught, they no longer plowed the sand, but went up on the
-hill. Who has told me these things?"
-
-He himself had told her once, almost in the same words, but now these
-memories came back like unexpected visions.
-
-"Then flocks of sheep passed along the shore; they came from the
-mountains, and were on the way to the plains of the Puglia. All was
-still; a golden silence covered the shore. Later, you went with
-your sister, and followed the tracks left by the sheep along the wet
-sand.... Who has told me all these things?"
-
-Stelio's fevered mind was calmed. A slow peace, like slumber, descended
-upon him.
-
-"Then sudden storms sprang up; the sea sometimes overflowed the dunes
-and the land, leaving foam on juniper and tamarisk trees, on myrtle and
-rosemary. Heaps of seaweed and jetsam would be thrown on the beach. A
-boat had been wrecked somewhere. The sea brought firewood to the poor,
-and mourning to heaven knows whom! The beach would be thronged with
-people, each trying to collect the largest bundle of wood. Then your
-sister would bring other aid--bread, wine, vegetables, linen. Blessings
-would rise louder than the noise of the waves. You looked out of the
-window, and thought that none of your beautiful images was worth the
-odor of warm bread. You left the half-finished page, and hurried to
-help Sofia, speaking to the women, the children and the old men.... Who
-has told me all these things?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- A BROTHER TO ORPHEUS
-
-
-From that first evening, Stelio had preferred to go to the house of
-his beloved through the gate of the Gradenigo garden, making his way
-through trees and shrubs that had become wild again. The actress had
-received permission to open a communication between her own garden
-and that of the long-abandoned palace by means of an opening in the
-dividing wall. But soon afterward, the Lady Myrta had come to live in
-the great silent rooms wherein the last guest had been the son of the
-Empress Josephine, the Viceroy of Italy. The apartments were ornamented
-with old, stringless musical instruments, and the garden was peopled by
-graceful hounds, that lacked any prey.
-
-To Stelio, nothing seemed sweeter or more sad than that walk toward
-the woman that waited for him while counting the hours--so slow, yet
-so swift in their flight. In the afternoon, the path of San Simeone
-Piccolo turned a pale golden hue, like a bank of the finest alabaster.
-The reflected rays of sunlight danced on the iron prows that stood in
-a row by the pier. A few decaying gondola cabins lay in the shadow of
-the pavements, with their curtains and cushions stained and spoiled by
-rain, as if they were catafalques worn out by continual use in funeral
-ceremonies, grown old on the way to the churchyard. The garden gate
-opened at the end of the Campiello della Comare, green and mossy like a
-country cemetery; it spread out between two columns, topped by broken
-statues, on the limbs of which the dry branches of ivy were outlined
-like veins.
-
-"Helion! Sirius! Altair! Donovan! Ali-Nour! Nerissa! Piuchebella!"
-
-Seated on a bench near a rose-covered wall, Lady Myrta was calling
-her dogs. La Foscarina stood near her, in a fawn-colored costume, the
-material of which resembled that superb textile called _rovana_, used
-in ancient times in Venice. The sunlight bathed the women and the roses
-in the same soft warmth.
-
-"You are dressed like Donovan to-day," said Lady Myrta to the actress,
-with a smile. "Did you know that Stelio prefers Donovan to all the
-others?"
-
-A slight blush rose to La Foscarina's cheeks; she looked at the
-fawn-colored greyhound.
-
-"He is the strongest and the most beautiful," she replied.
-
-"I believe that Stelio would like to have him," added the old lady,
-with a sweet, indulgent smile.
-
-"What is there that he would not like to have?"
-
-Lady Myrta noted the tinge of melancholy in the tone of the woman in
-love. She remained silent.
-
-The dogs lay near them, serious and sad, sleepy and dreamy, far from
-plains, steppes, and deserts, stretched out in the clover, where also
-grew the gourds, with their greenish-yellow fruit.
-
-"Does your lover grieve you?" the elder woman would have liked to ask
-of the woman in love, for the silence weighed on her, and she felt her
-own heart revivified by the fire within that sorrowful soul. But she
-dared not. She only sighed. Her heart, ever young, still throbbed at
-the sight of despairing passion and beauty menaced.
-
-"Ah, you are still beautiful, and your lips still attract kisses, and
-the man that loves you can still be intoxicated with your sweet pallor
-and your eyes," she thought, as she looked at the pensive actress,
-toward whom the November roses leaned. "But I am a specter."
-
-She lowered her eyes, gazed upon her own deformed hands lying on her
-lap, and wondered that those hands were hers, they were so dead and
-distorted, lamentable monsters that could no longer touch anyone
-without exciting disgust, that had nothing to caress any more except
-the dogs. She felt the wrinkles in her face, the false teeth against
-her gums, the false hair on her head, all the ruin of her poor body,
-which once was obedient to the graceful will of her delicate spirit;
-and she wondered at her own persistence in struggling against the
-outrages of Time, in deceiving herself, in recomposing every morning
-that ridiculous illusion with essences, oils, unguents, rouge and
-powder. But, in the perpetual springtime of her dreams, was she not
-ever youthful? Was it not yesterday, only yesterday, that she had
-caressed a loved face with her perfect fingers, hunted the fox and the
-deer in the northern counties, danced with her betrothed in the park
-to an air of John Dowland's?--There are no mirrors in the house of the
-Countess Glanegg; there are too many in Lady Myrta's house--was La
-Foscarina's thought.--One has hidden her decline from herself and from
-everyone else; the other sees herself growing older day by day. She
-counts her wrinkles one by one, gathers up her dead hair in her comb,
-feels her teeth rattling against her pale gums, and tries to repair
-the damage by artificial devices. Poor tender soul, who wishes still
-to be smiling and charming! But we must die, disappear, descend into
-the earth!--She observed the little cluster of violets that Lady Myrta
-had pinned to her skirt. In all seasons fresh flowers were fastened
-there, barely visible, hidden among the folds, a sign of her daily
-illusion of springtime, of the ever-new enchantment she wove about
-herself by the aid of memory, music, poetry, and all the arts of dreams
-against old age, infirmity, and solitude.--We should live one supreme,
-flaming hour, then disappear forever in the earth before all charm has
-vanished, before all grace is dead!--
-
-She felt the beauty of her own eyes, the careless strength of her
-hair, blown back by the wind, all the power of rhythm and transport
-that slumbered in her muscles and her bones. She heard again in fancy
-the words of her lover, saw him again in his tender transport of love,
-in the sweetness of languor, the moments of profound oblivion.--Still
-a little while, still a few days longer I shall please him, and
-seem beautiful to him, and put fire in his blood. A little while
-longer!--With her feet in the deep grass, her brow raised to the
-sunlight, amid the fragrance of fading roses, in the fawn-colored robe
-that made her seem like the magnificent beast of prey, she glowed with
-passionate joy of life and hope, a sudden quickening of the blood, as
-if that future which she had renounced by her resolution to die were
-flowing back into the present.--Come! come!--Within herself she called
-to her beloved with a sort of intoxication, sure that he would come,
-because she already felt that he would, and never had she been deceived
-by her presentiment.
-
-"Ah, here is Stelio!" said Lady Myrta at that instant, seeing the young
-man advancing among the laurels.
-
-La Foscarina turned swiftly, with a blush. The greyhounds rose,
-pricking up their slender ears. The meeting glance of those lovers
-had something in it like an electric flash. Again, as always, in the
-presence of that wonderful creature, her lover had the divine sensation
-of suddenly being enfolded in a cloud of flaming ether, in a vibrant
-wave that seemed to isolate him from ordinary atmosphere and almost to
-ravish his senses.
-
-"You were awaited here by all that dwell in this seclusion," said Lady
-Myrta, with a smile that hid the emotion that stirred the youthful
-heart in the infirm and aged body at the sight of love and longing. "In
-coming here, you have responded to a call."
-
-"That is true," said the young man, holding the collar of Donovan,
-which, remembering his caresses, had run to meet him. "The fact is, I
-have come a long distance. Guess from where?"
-
-"From the country of Giorgione!"
-
-"No, from the cloister of Santa Apollonia. Do you know that place?"
-
-"Is that one of your inventions to-day?"
-
-"Invention? It is a cloister of stone, a real cloister, with a well and
-with little columns."
-
-"It may be so, but everything that you have once looked at, Stelio,
-becomes your invention."
-
-"Ah, Lady Myrta, I should like to offer you that gem of a cloister. I
-wish I might move it here, into your garden. Imagine a small, secret
-cloister, opening on a sequence of slender columns, set in pairs like
-nuns when they walk, fasting, in the sun; very delicate, neither white,
-gray nor black, but that most mysterious tint ever given to stone by
-the great master colorist--Time. In the midst of these is a well,
-and on the curb, which is worn by the rope, hangs a pail without a
-bottom. The nuns have disappeared, but I believe that the shades of the
-Danaïdes frequent the place."
-
-He stopped speaking suddenly, seeing himself surrounded by the
-greyhounds, and began to imitate the guttural sounds the kennel-men
-make to gather the dogs. The animals became excited; their wistful eyes
-brightened.
-
-"Ali-Nour! Crissa! Nerissa! Clarissa! Altair! Helion! Hardicanute!
-Veronese! Hierro!"
-
-He knew them all by name, and when he called them they seemed to
-recognize him for their master. There was the Scottish hound, native of
-the highlands, with thick, rough coat; the Irish wolf-hound, ruddy and
-strong, with brown irises showing clearly in their whites; the Tartary
-hound, spotted with black and yellow, a native of vast Asiatic steppes,
-where at night he had guarded a tent against hyenas and leopards;
-the Persian dog, light-colored and small, with ears covered with long
-silky hair, a fluffy tail, of lighter tint on the sides and legs, more
-graceful than the antelopes he had killed; there was also the Spanish
-_galgo_ that had migrated with the Moors, that magnificent animal held
-in leash by a pompous dwarf in the painting by Velásquez, instructed
-to course and to force on the naked plains of the Mancha; the Arabian
-_sloughi_, illustrious depredator of the desert, with black tongue and
-palate, a noble animal, all pride, courage, and elegance, accustomed
-to sleep on rich rugs and to lap pure milk from a pure vase. Assembled
-in a pack, they quivered around him who knew how to reawaken in their
-torpid blood their primitive instincts of pursuit and carnage.
-
-"Which among you was Gog's best friend?" he asked, looking from one to
-another of the pairs of beautiful, eager eyes fixed upon him. "You,
-Hierro? You, Altair?"
-
-His peculiar accent animated the sensitive creatures, which listened
-with suppressed and intermittent growls.
-
-"Well, I must tell you all something that I have kept secret till
-to-day. Gog--do you hear?--who could crush a hare with one snap of his
-jaws--Gog is crippled."
-
-"Oh, indeed!" exclaimed Lady Myrta, concerned. "Is it possible, Stelio?
-And Magog--how is he?"
-
-"Magog is safe and well."
-
-These were the names of a pair of greyhounds that Lady Myrta had given
-to the young man.
-
-"How did it happen?"
-
-"Alas, poor Gog! He had already killed thirty-seven hares. He
-possessed all the virtues of his fine breed: swiftness, resistance,
-incredible rapidity in turning, and the constant desire to kill his
-prey, besides the classical manner of running straight and seizing his
-prey from behind almost at the same instant. Have you ever watched a
-greyhound in coursing, Foscarina?"
-
-"Never."
-
-"Then you never have seen one of the rarest spectacles of daring,
-vehemence, and grace in the world. Look!"
-
-He drew Donovan toward him, knelt beside him, and began feeling the
-animal with his expert hands.
-
-"No machine in nature exists that is more exactly and powerfully
-adapted to its purpose. The muzzle is sharp in order to penetrate the
-air; it is long, so that the jaws can crush the prey at the first snap.
-The skull is wide between the ears in order to contain the greatest
-courage and skill. The jowls are dry and muscular, and the lips so
-short they hardly cover the teeth."
-
-With sure and easy touch, he opened the mouth of the dog, which offered
-no resistance.
-
-"Look at those white teeth! See how long the eyeteeth are, with a
-little curve at the top, the better to hold his prey. No other species
-of dog has a mouth so well constructed for biting."
-
-His hands lingered over the examination, and his admiration for the
-superb specimen was unbounded. He was kneeling in the clover, and
-received in his face the breath of the dog, which quietly permitted
-him to examine it, as if it comprehended and enjoyed the praise of the
-connoisseur.
-
-"See what elegance in his ribs, arranged with the symmetry of a fine
-keel, and in that line curved inward toward the abdomen, which is
-hidden. All point to one aim. The tail, thick at the root and slender
-at the tip--look! almost like that of a rat--serves as a sort of
-rudder, necessary to enable him to turn swiftly when the hare doubles.
-Let us see, Donovan, whether you are perfect also in this respect."
-
-He took the tip of the tail, passed it under the leg, and drew it
-toward the haunch-bone, where it exactly touched the projecting part.
-
-"Yes, perfect! Once I saw an Arab of the tribe of Arbâa measuring his
-_sloughi_ in that way. Ali-Nour, did you tremble when you discovered
-the herd of gazelles? Imagine, Foscarina--the _sloughi_ trembles when
-he discovers his prey, quivers like a willow, and turns his soft,
-pleading eyes toward his master, begging to be released. I do not know
-the reason why this pleases me and stirs me so much. His desire to kill
-is terrible; his whole body is ready to stretch itself like a bow,
-yet he trembles! Not with fear, nor with uncertainty, but with sheer
-desire. Ah, Foscarina! if you could see a _sloughi_ at that moment, you
-would not fail to learn from him his manner of quivering, and you would
-render the manner human by the power of your tragic art, and would
-give mankind a new sensation. Up, Ali-Nour! swift desert arrow! Do you
-remember? But now you tremble only when you are cold."
-
-Blithe and graceful, he had let Donovan go, and had taken between his
-hands the serpentine head of the slayer of gazelles; he gazed into
-those deep eyes, wherein lurked nostalgia for the silent, tropical
-land; for tents unfolded after a march toward some deceiving mirage;
-for fires kindled for the evening meal under stars that seemed to throb
-in the waves of the wind just above the summits of the palm-trees.
-
-La Foscarina had entered into that physical enchantment of love whereby
-the limits of one's being seem to dilate and be fused in the air, so
-that every word and movement of the beloved object brings a feeling
-of happiness sweeter than any caress. Her lover had taken between his
-hands the head of Ali-Nour, but she felt the touch of those hands upon
-her own brow. He was gazing into Ali-Nour's eyes, but she could feel
-that gaze deep in her own soul.
-
-Had he not touched the obscurest mystery of her being? Did he not
-compel her to feel within herself the animal depths whence had sprung
-the unexpected revelation of her tragic genius, moving and maddening
-the multitude as would a splendid spectacle of sea and sky, a gorgeous
-sunrise, a tremendous tempest. When he had spoken of the trembling
-_sloughi_, had he not divined the natural analogies whence she drew the
-power of expression that amazed peoples and poets? It was because she
-had re-discovered the Dionysian sense of Nature as a naturalizer, the
-antique fervor of instinctive and creative energies, the enthusiasm of
-the multiform god emerging from the fermentation of all sap, that she
-appeared so new and so great on the stage. Sometimes she felt within
-herself something like an immanence of the miracle which in the mystic
-past swelled with divine milk the breasts of the Mænads at the approach
-of the hungry young panthers.
-
-Stelio began again to imitate the guttural call of the kennel-keeper.
-The dogs grew more excited; their eyes brightened again; the tense
-muscles swelled under the coats--tawny, black, white, gray, spotted;
-the long haunches were curved like bows ready to hurl into space those
-bodies dry and slender, like a quiver-full of arrows.
-
-"There, Donovan, there!"
-
-Stelio pointed to a reddish-gray object in the grass at the end of
-the garden; it looked somewhat like a crouching hare with flattened
-ears. The imperious voice deceived the hesitating hounds, and it was
-beautiful to see the slender, vigorous bodies quivering in the sunlight.
-
-"There, Donovan!"
-
-The great tawny dog looked him deep in the eyes, gave a formidable
-bound toward the imaginary prey, with all the vehemence of his
-reawakened instinct. He reached the spot in an instant, then stopped,
-disappointed, followed by the whole pack.
-
-"A gourd! a gourd!" cried the deceiver, with shouts of laughter. "Not
-even a rabbit. Poor Donovan! He bit only a gourd! Poor Donovan! what
-humiliation! Take care, Lady Myrta, lest he drown himself in the canal
-for very shame!"
-
-From the contagion of her lover's gayety, La Foscarina laughed too. Her
-fawn-tinted gown and the tan coats of the hounds shone in the sunlight
-against the green clover. Her white teeth, revealed by rippling
-laughter, graced her mouth with a renewal of youth.
-
-"Would you like to own Donovan?" said Lady Myrta, with a touch of
-graceful, malicious significance. "I know your arts!"
-
-Stelio ceased laughing, and blushed like a boy.
-
-A wave of tenderness filled La Foscarina's heart as she saw the boyish
-blush. She fairly sparkled with love; she felt a wild wish to clasp him
-in her arms at that very moment.
-
-Before thanking Lady Myrta, Stelio looked again at the dog, admiring
-him as he was, strong, splendid, perfect, with the mark of style on his
-limbs as if Pisanello had drawn him for the reverse of a medal. Then he
-looked at La Foscarina, who had turned to the group of animals, moving
-over the grass with a swift undulation, like the movement called the
-greyhound step by the ancient Venetians. She advanced, with Donovan,
-holding him by the collar. The chill of evening began to be felt, the
-shadow of the bronze cupola grew longer on the grass; a purple mist, in
-which the last flecks of golden sunlight swam, began to spread over the
-branches that swayed in the breeze.
-
---See, we are yours!--the woman seemed to be saying mutely, while the
-animal, beginning to shiver, pressed close against her.--We are yours
-forever. We are here to serve you!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- ONLY ONE CONDITION
-
-
-Heartrending was the sweetness of that November, smiling like a sick
-person who fancies himself to have reached a state of convalescence and
-feels an unusual sense of relief and well-being, knowing not that his
-hour of agony draws near.
-
-"What is the matter with you to-day, Fosca? What has happened to you?
-Why are you so distant to me? Speak! Tell me!"
-
-Stelio had entered San Marco by chance, and had seen her there, leaning
-against the chapel-door that leads to the baptistry. She was alone,
-motionless, her face devoured by fever and by shadows, with terrified
-eyes fixed on the fearful figures of the mosaics that flamed in a
-yellow fire.
-
-"Leave me here alone, I entreat you--I beg of you! I must be alone! I
-implore you!"
-
-She turned as if to flee, but he detained her.
-
-"But tell me! Speak at least one word that I may understand."
-
-Still she sought to escape, and her movement expressed unspeakable
-anguish.
-
-"I implore you! If you pity me, the only thing you can do for me now is
-to let me go."
-
-"But one word--at least one word, so that I shall understand."
-
-A flash of fury passed over the agitated face.
-
-"No! I wish to be alone!"
-
-Her voice was as hard as her glance. She turned, taking a step or two
-like a person overcome by dizziness seeking some support.
-
-"Foscarina!"
-
-But he dared not detain her longer. He saw the despairing one walk
-through the zone of sunlight that invaded the basilica like a rushing
-torrent entering through a door opened by an unknown hand. Behind her
-the deep golden cavern, with its apostles, martyrs, and sacred beasts,
-glittered as if the thousand torches of the daylight were pouring in on
-it.
-
-"I am lost in the depths of sadness.... This violent impulse to revolt
-against fate, to rush away in search of adventure--to seek.--Who will
-save my hope? Whence will come a ray of light?... To sing, to sing! But
-I would sing a song of life at last.... Can you tell me where the Lord
-of the Flame is at present?"
-
-These words, in a letter from Donatella Arvale, were branded on her
-eyes and on her soul, with all the characteristics of handwriting, as
-much alive as the hand that traced them, as throbbing as that impatient
-pulse. She saw them graved on the stones, outlined on the clouds,
-reflected in the water, indelible and inevitable as the decrees of Fate.
-
---Where shall I go? Where shall I go?--Through all her agitation and
-despair, she had still a sense of the sweetness of things, the warmth
-of the gilded marbles, the perfume of the quiet air, the languor of
-human leisure.
-
-She turned with a start, fearing yet hoping to be followed by her
-lover. She could not see him. She would have fled had she seen him,
-but her heart ached as if he had sent her to death without a word of
-recall.--All is over!--
-
-She entered the Porta della Carta, having crossed the threshold. The
-intoxication of her sorrow led her to the spot where, on a night of
-glory, the three destinies had come together. She went to the well,
-the point of that rendezvous. Around that bronze curb the whole life
-of those few seconds rose again with the distinct outline of reality.
-There she had said, addressing her companion with a smile: "Donatella,
-this is the Lord of the Flame!" Then the immense cry of the multitude
-had drowned her voice, and above their head rose a flight of fiery
-pigeons against the dark sky.
-
-She approached the well, and gazed into it. She leaned over the curb,
-saw her own face in the deep mirror, saw in it terror and perdition,
-saw the motionless Medusa she carried in the depth of her soul. Without
-realizing it, she repeated the action of him she loved. She saw his
-face, too, and Donatella's, as she had seen them illumined for an
-instant that night, close together, lighted by the radiance in the sky.
-
---Love, love each other! I will go away, I shall disappear! Good-by!--
-
-She closed her eyes at the thought of death, and in that darkness
-she saw the kind, strong eyes of her mother, infinite as a horizon of
-peace.--You are at peace, and you await me--you whose life and death
-were of passion.--
-
-She stood erect, then departed by the Molo, stepped into a gondola, and
-ordered it to be rowed to the Giudecca. The buildings and the water
-formed a miracle of gold and opal. The image of dead Summer flashed
-across her memory--dead Summer dressed in gold and shut in a coffin
-of opalescent glass. She imagined herself submerged in the lagoon,
-sleeping on a bed of seaweed; but the memory of the promise made on
-that water, and kept in the delirium of that night, pierced her heart
-like a knife, and threw her into a convulsion.
-
---Never more, then? Never more!--
-
-She reached the Rio della Croce. The gondola stopped before a closed
-door. She landed, took out a small key, opened the door, and entered
-the garden.
-
-This was her refuge, the secret place for her solitude, defended by the
-fidelity of her melancholy as by silent guardians.
-
-"Never more?" She walked under the trellises, approached the water,
-stopped a moment, felt weary, and at last sat down on a stone, held her
-temples between her hands, and made an effort to concentrate her mind,
-to recover her self-possession. "He is still here, near me. I can see
-him again. Perhaps I shall find him standing on the steps of my house.
-He will take me in his arms, kiss my lips and eyes, tell me again
-that he loves me, that everything about me pleases him. He does not
-know--he does not understand. Nothing irreparable has happened. What is
-it, then, that has so upset and disturbed me? I have received a letter
-written by a girl who is far-away, imprisoned in a lonely villa near
-her demented father, who complains of her lot and seeks to change it.
-That is all. There is no more to say. And here is the letter."
-
-Her fingers trembled, and she fancied she could detect Donatella's
-favorite perfume, as if the young girl were sitting beside her.
-
---Is she beautiful? Really beautiful? How does she look?--
-
-The lines of the image were indistinct at first. She tried to seize
-them, but they eluded her. One particular above all others fixed itself
-in her mind--the large, massive hand.--Did he see her hand that night?
-He is very susceptible to the beauty of hands. When he meets a woman,
-he always looks at her hands. And he adores Sofia's hands.--She allowed
-herself to dwell on these childish considerations, then she smiled
-bitterly. And suddenly the image became perfect, lived, glowing with
-youth and power, overwhelmed and dazzled her.--Yes, she is beautiful!
-And hers is the beauty he desires.--
-
-She kept her eyes fixed on the silent splendor of the waters, with
-the letter on her lap; she was nailed there by the inflexible truth.
-And involuntary thoughts of destruction flashed upon her inert
-discouragement; the face of Donatella burned by fire, her body crippled
-by a fall, her voice ruined by an illness! Then she had a horror of
-herself, followed by pity for herself and the other woman.--Has she
-not too the right to live? Let her live, let her love, let her have
-her joy.--She imagined for the young girl some magnificent adventure,
-a happy love, an adorable betrothed, prosperity, luxury, pleasure.--Is
-there only one man on this earth, then, that she can love? Is it
-impossible that to-morrow she might meet some one who would win her
-heart? Is it impossible that her fate should suddenly turn her in
-another direction, take her far from here, lead her through unknown
-paths, separate her from us forever? Is it necessary that she should be
-loved by the man I love? Perhaps they never will meet again.--She tried
-thus to escape her presentiment. But a contrary thought whispered:
-"They have met once; they will seek each other, they will meet again.
-Her soul is not obscure--not one that can be lost in the multitude. She
-possesses a gift that shines like a star, and it will always be easily
-recognizable even from afar--her song. The marvel of her voice will
-serve her as a signal. She will surely avail herself of this power; she
-too will pass among mankind leaving a wake of admiration behind her.
-She will have glory as she has beauty--two attributes that will easily
-attract Stelio. They have met once; they will meet again."
-
-The sorrowing woman bent as if under a yoke. A clear, pearly light
-bathed the lagoon in radiance. The islands of La Follia, San Clemente,
-and San Servilio were enveloped in a light mist. From a distance came
-at intervals a faint cry, as of shipwrecked sailors becalmed, answered
-by the harsh voice of a siren whistle or by the raucous call of the
-sea-gulls. At first the silence seemed terrible, then it grew sweet.
-
-The woman, little by little, recovered her deep goodness of heart,
-felt again her old tenderness for the beautiful creature in whose
-personality she had once deceived her desire to love the good sister,
-Sofia. She thought again of the hours passed in the lonely villa on
-that hill of Settignano, where Lorenzo Arvale created his statues in
-the fulness of his strength and fervor, ignorant of the blow that was
-about to fall. She lived again in those days, saw again those places;
-she sat once more in memory for the famous sculptor who modeled her
-in clay, while Donatella sang some quaint old song; and the spirit of
-melody animated at once the model and the effigy, and her thoughts and
-that pure voice and the mystery of Art composed an appearance of a life
-almost divine in that great studio open on all sides to the light of
-heaven, whence Florence and its river was visible in the springtime
-valley.
-
-In addition to fancying the girl a reflection of Sofia, had she not
-been attracted otherwise to her--the sweet Donatella, who never had
-known a mother's caress since her birth? She saw her again, grave and
-calm beside her father, the comfort for his hard work, guardian of the
-sacred flame, and also of a resolve of her own--a secret resolve, which
-preserved itself as bright and keen as a sword in its sheath.
-
---She is sure of herself; she is mistress of her own power. When at
-last she knows she is free, she will reveal herself as one made to
-rule. Yes, she is made to subjugate men, to excite their curiosity and
-their dreams. Even now, her instinct, bold and prudent as experience
-itself, directs her.--La Foscarina remembered Donatella's attitude
-toward Stelio on that night; her almost disdainful silence, her brief,
-dry words, her manner of leaving the table, her disappearance, leaving
-the image of herself framed within the circle of an unforgettable
-melody. Ah, she knows the art of stirring the soul of a dreamer.
-Certainly he cannot have forgotten her. And just as certainly he
-awaits the hour when it shall be given him to meet her again--not less
-impatiently than she, who asks me where he is.--
-
-Again she lifted the letter and ran her eyes over it, but her memory
-traveled faster than her eyes. The enigmatic query was at the foot
-of the page, like a half-veiled postscript. Looking at the written
-words, she felt again the same sharp pang as when she read them the
-first time, and once more her heart was shaken as if the danger were
-imminent, as if her passion and her hope were already lost beyond
-recall.--What is she about to do? Of what is she thinking? Did she
-expect him to search for her without delay, and, disappointed in that,
-does she now wish to tempt him? What does she intend to do?--She
-struggled against that uncertainty as against an iron door which
-she must force in order to find again behind it the light of her
-life.--Shall I answer her? Suppose I reply in such a way as to make
-her understand the truth, would my love necessarily be a prohibition
-of hers?--But here her soul rose with a mingled feeling of repugnance,
-modesty, and pride.--No, never! Never shall she learn of my wound from
-me--never, not even should she question me!--And she realized all the
-horror of an open rivalry between a woman no longer young and a girl
-strong in her maiden youth. She felt the humiliation and cruelty of
-such an unequal struggle. "But if not Donatella, would it not be some
-one else," again whispered the contrary spirit "Do you believe you can
-bind a man of his nature to your melancholy passion? The only condition
-under which you should have allowed yourself to love him, and to offer
-him a love faithful unto death, was in keeping the compact that you
-have broken."
-
-"True, true!" she murmured, as if answering a distinct voice, in formal
-judgment, pronounced in the silence by invisible Fate.
-
-"The only condition on which he can now accept your love, and recognize
-it, demands that you leave him free, that you give up all claim on him,
-that you renounce all, forever, and ask for nothing--the condition of
-being heroic. Do you understand?"
-
-"True, true!" she repeated aloud, raising her head.
-
-But the poison bit her. She remembered all the sweetness of
-caresses--the lips, the eyes, the strength and ardor of the lover had
-re-animated all her being.
-
-A far-away monotonous sound of song floated in the air--a song of
-women's voices, that seemed to rise from bosoms oppressed, from throats
-as slender as reeds, like the sound evoked from the broken wires of
-old spinets at a touch on the worn keys; a shrill, unequal tone, in
-a lively and vulgar rhythm, which sounded sadder in that light and
-silence than the saddest things of life.
-
-"Who is singing?"
-
-With obscure emotion she arose, approached the shore, and listened.
-
-"The madwomen of San Clemente!"
-
-From the isle of La Follia, from the barred windows of the light,
-lonely hospital, came the lively yet melancholy chorus. It trembled,
-hesitated in the immensity of space, grew fainter and almost died away,
-then rose again and swelled to a piercing shriek, diminished once more,
-and finally sank to silence.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- ILLUSIONS
-
-
-Yes, heart-rending was the sweetness of that November, smiling like
-a sick person who has become free from suffering, knowing it is the
-last, and tasting again the sweetness of life, which reveals to him new
-charms when just about to leave him.
-
-"Look at the Euganean hills below us, Foscarina; if the wind should
-come they will rise and float in the air like gauzy veils, and pass
-over our heads. I never have seen them so transparent. Some day I
-should like to go with you to Arquà; the villages there are as pink as
-the shells we find in myriads in the earth. When we arrive there, the
-first drops of a sudden shower will be robbing the peach-blossoms of
-their petals. We will wait under one of the arches of the Palladio to
-avoid getting wet. Then, without inquiring the way of anyone, we will
-look for the fountain of Petrarch. We will carry with us his poems in
-the small edition of Misserini's, that little book you keep beside your
-bed and cannot close any more because it is so full of pressed leaves
-and grasses. Would you like to go to Arquà some spring day?"
-
-She did not reply, but gazed silently at the lips that said these
-graceful things; and, without hope, she simply took a fugitive
-pleasure in their movement and accent. For her there was in his image
-of the Spring the same enchantment as in a stanza of Petrarch's; but
-she could lay a bookmark in the one and find it again, while the poetic
-fancies must be lost with the passing hour.
-
-She wished to say: "I will not drink at that fountain," but kept
-silence, that she might still enjoy the caress.--Oh, yes, intoxicate me
-with illusions! Play your own game; do with me as you will.--
-
-"Here we are at San Giorgio in Alga. We shall reach Fusina in a few
-minutes."
-
-The little walled islet passed before them, with its marble Madonna,
-perpetually admiring her reflection in the water, like a nymph.
-
-"Why are you so sweet, my beloved? I never have seen you like this
-before. I know not where I am with you to-day. I cannot find words to
-tell you with what a sense of melody your presence inspires me. You
-are here beside me, I can hold your hand, yet you are diffused in the
-horizon, you yourself are the horizon, blended with the waters, with
-the islands, with the hills. When I was speaking just now, it seemed
-that each syllable created in you infinitely dilating circles, like
-those round that leaf just fallen from the gold-leaved tree. Is it
-true? Tell me that it is. Oh, look at me!"
-
-He felt himself enveloped in this woman's love as by the air and the
-light; he breathed in that soul as in a distinct element, receiving
-from it an ineffable fulness of life as if a stream of mysterious
-things were flowing from her and from the glory of the daylight at the
-same time, and pouring itself into his heart. The desire to make some
-return for the happiness she gave him lifted him to an almost religious
-height of gratitude, and suggested to him words of thanks and of praise
-which he would have spoken had he been kneeling before her in the
-shadows. But the splendor of sky and sea around them was so great that
-he could only be as silent as she. And for both this was a moment of
-marvelous communion in the light; it was a journey brief yet immense,
-in which both traversed the dizzy distances they had within themselves.
-
-The boat reached the shore of Fusina. They roused themselves, and gazed
-at each other with dazzled eyes.
-
---Does he love me, then?--
-
-Hope and pain revived in the woman's heart. She did not doubt the
-sincerity of her beloved, nor that his words expressed the ardor of
-his heart. She knew how absolutely he abandoned himself to every wave
-of emotion, how incapable he was of deception or of falsehood. More
-than once she had heard him utter cruel truths with the same feline,
-flexible grace that some men adopt when they wish to appear charming.
-She knew well the direct, limpid gaze which sometimes became hard and
-icy, but which never was otherwise than straight; but she knew also the
-rapidity and marvelous diversity of emotion and thought that rendered
-his spirit unseizable. There was always in him something flexible and
-vigorous that suggested to the actress the double and diverse image
-of flame and of water. And it was this man she wished to fix, to
-captivate, to possess! There was always in him an unlimited ardor of
-life, a sense of _euphoria_, or joy in existence, as if every second
-were the supreme instant, and he were about to tear himself from the
-pleasure and pain of living, as from the tears and embraces of a last
-farewell. And it was for this insatiable avidity that she wished to
-remain the only nourishment!
-
-What was she to him, if not an aspect of that "life of the thousand
-and thousand faces," toward which the poet's desire, according to one
-of his own images, continually shook all its thyrsi? For him she was
-a theme for visions and inventions, like the hills, the woods, the
-storms. He absorbed mystery and beauty from her as from all forms of
-the universe. Even now he had withdrawn his thoughts from her, and was
-occupied with a new quest; his changeful, ingenuous eyes sought for
-some miracle to marvel at and adore.
-
-She looked at him, but he did not turn his face toward her; he was
-studying the damp, foggy region through which they were driving slowly.
-She sat beside him, feeling herself deprived of her strength, no longer
-capable of living in and for herself, of breathing with her own breath,
-of following a thought that was unknown to her beloved, hesitating even
-in her enjoyment of natural objects that he had not pointed out.
-
-Her life seemed to be alternately dissolving and condensing itself. An
-instant of intensity would pass, and then she waited for the next, and
-between them she was conscious of nothing save that time was flying,
-the lamp was flickering, the body was fading, and that all things were
-perishing, dying.
-
-"My dear, my friend," said Stelio, suddenly turning and taking her
-hand, impelled by an emotion that had overcome him, "why did we come to
-these places? They seem very sweet, but they are full of terror."
-
-He looked at her keenly.
-
-"You suffer," he said, with a depth of pity in his tone that made the
-woman turn pale. "Do you too feel this terror?"
-
-She looked around with the anxiety of one pursued, and fancied she saw
-a thousand ominous phantoms rising from the earth.
-
-"Those statues!" said Stelio, in a tone that changed them in her eyes
-into witnesses of her own wasting life.
-
-The country around them was as deserted and silent as if its former
-inhabitants had been gone for centuries, or were sleeping in graves
-new-made the day before.
-
-"Do you wish to return? The boat is still there."
-
-She seemed not to hear.
-
-"Speak, Foscarina!"
-
-"Let us go--let us go on," she replied. "Wherever we may go our fate
-will not change."
-
-Her body swayed to the slow, lulling roll of the wheels, and she
-feared to interrupt it; she shrank from the least effort, the smallest
-fatigue, overcome by heavy inertia. Her face was like the delicate veil
-of ash that covers a live coal, hiding its consumption.
-
-"Dear, dear soul!" said Stelio, leaning toward her and lightly
-touching the pale cheek with his lips. "Lean on me; give yourself
-entirely to me; have confidence in me. Never will I fail you, never
-will you fail me. We shall find it--we shall find the true secret on
-which our love can rest forever, immovable. Do not be reserved with me.
-Do not suffer alone, nor hide your sorrows from me. When your heart
-swells with grief, speak to me. Let me believe that I can comfort you.
-Let us not hide anything from each other. I shall venture to recall to
-you a condition that you yourself made. Speak to me, and I will always
-answer you truthfully. Let me help you--me, who have received from you
-so much of good. Tell me that you do not fear to suffer. I believe your
-soul capable of supporting all the sadness of the world. Do not let me
-lose faith in that force of passion, whereby more than once you have
-seemed to me divine. Tell me you do not fear suffering.... I don't
-know.... I may be mistaken. But I have felt a shadow around you, like
-a desperate wish to withdraw yourself, to leave me, to find some end.
-Why? Why? And, just now, looking at all this terrible desolation that
-smiles at us, a great fear suddenly filled my heart--I thought that
-perhaps even your love might change like all things, and pass away into
-nothingness. 'You will lose me.' Ah, those words were yours, Foscarina!
-They fell from your own lips."
-
-She did not answer. For the first time since she had loved him, his
-words seemed vain, useless sounds, moving powerless through the air.
-For the first time, he seemed to her a weak and anxious creature, bound
-by inexorable laws. She pitied him as well as herself. He asked her to
-be heroic, a compact of grief and of violence. At the moment when he
-attempted to console and comfort her, he predicted a difficult test,
-prepared her for torture. But what was courage worth, of what use was
-any effort? What were all miserable human agitations worth, and why
-think of the future, even of the uncertain morrow?
-
-The Past reigned supreme around them, and they themselves were nothing,
-and everything was nothing.--We are dying; both of us are dying. We
-dream, and then we die.--
-
-"Hush! Hush!" was all she said, softly, as if they were in a cemetery.
-A slight smile touched her lips, and rested there as fixedly as the
-smile on the lips of a portrait.
-
-The wheels rolled on over the white road, along the shores of the
-Brenta. The stream, sung and praised in the sonnets of the gallant
-abbés in the days when gondolas laden with music and pleasure had
-glided down its current, had now the humble aspect of a canal, where
-the iris-necked ducks splashed in flocks. On the damp, low plain the
-fields smoked, the bare trees showed plainly, their leaves rotting on
-the damp earth. A slow, golden mist floated above an immense vegetable
-decay that seemed to encroach even upon the walls, the stones, the
-houses, seeking to destroy them like the leaves. The patrician
-villas--where a pale life, delicately poisoned by cosmetics and
-perfumes, had burned itself out in languid pastimes--were now in ruins,
-silent and abandoned. Some had an aspect like a human ruin, with
-empty spaces that suggested hollow orbits and toothless mouths; others
-were crumbling, and looked as if ready to fall in powder, like a dead
-woman's hair when her tomb is opened; and here, there, everywhere, rose
-the still surviving statues. They seemed innumerable, like a scattered
-people. Some were still white, others were gray or yellow with lichens,
-or green and spotted with moss. They stood in all sorts of attitudes:
-goddesses, heroes, nymphs, seasons, hours, with their bows and arrows,
-their wreaths, cornucopias, and torches, with all the emblems of power,
-riches and pleasure, exiled now from fountains, grottoes, labyrinths,
-arbors, and porticoes: friends of the greenwood and the myrtle,
-protectors of fleeting loves, witnesses of eternal vows, figures of a
-dream far more ancient than the hands that had carved them, and the
-eyes that had contemplated them in the ruined gardens. And, in the
-sweet sunlight of the dying season, their shadows were like the shadows
-of the irrevocable Past--all, all that loves no longer, laughs and
-weeps no more, never will live, never will return. And the unspoken
-word on their marble lips was the same that was expressed in the fixed
-smile on the lips of the world-weary woman--NOTHING!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- THE LABYRINTH
-
-
-But that day they were to pass through other shadows, to know other
-fears.
-
-Henceforth the tragic meaning of life filled both their minds, and
-they tried in vain to banish the physical sadness which from moment to
-moment made their spirits more clear yet more disturbed. They clasped
-each other's hand, as if they were groping in dark, dangerous places.
-They spoke little, but often they gazed into each other's eyes, and
-the look of the one poured into that of the other a wave of confused
-emotion, the mingling of their love and horror. But it did not calm
-their hearts.
-
-"Shall we go farther?"
-
-"Yes, let us go on."
-
-Still they clasped each other's hand closely, as if they were about to
-go through some strange test, and were resolved to experiment as to
-what depths could be reached by the combined force of their melancholy.
-At the Dolo, the wheels made the chestnut-leaves rustle and crackle
-beneath them, and the tall changing trees flamed over their heads like
-crimson draperies on fire. At a distance was the Villa Barbariga,
-silent, deserted, of a reddish hue in its denuded garden, showing
-vestiges of old paintings in the cracks of its façade, like streaks of
-rouge on the wrinkled cheeks of an old woman. And, at every glance, the
-distances of the landscape seemed fainter and bluer, like things slowly
-submerged.
-
-"Here is Strà."
-
-They alighted before the Villa Pisani, and, accompanied by its
-guardian, they visited the deserted apartments. They heard the sound
-of their own footsteps on the marble that reflected them, the echoes
-in the historic arches, the creaking of the doors, the tiresome voice
-of the keeper awakening the memories of the place. The rooms were
-vast, hung with faded draperies and furnished in the style of the
-Empire, with Napoleonic emblems. The walls of one room were covered
-with portraits of the Pisani, procurators of San Marco; of another,
-with marble medallions of all the Doges; of a third, with a series of
-flowers painted in water-colors and mounted in delicate frames, pale as
-the dry flowers that are laid under glass, in memory of love or death.
-
-As La Foscarina entered one room, she said:
-
-"_In time!_ Here, too!"
-
-There, on a bracket, stood a transformation into marble of _La Vecchia_
-by Francesco Torbido, made even more repulsive by the relief, by the
-subtle skill of the sculptor, to bring out with his chisel each tendon,
-wrinkle, and hollow place in the old woman's face. And at the doors of
-this room seemed to appear the ghosts of the crowned women that had
-hidden their unhappiness and their decay in that vast dwelling, at once
-like a palace and a monastery.
-
-"Maria Luisa di Parma, in eighteen hundred and seventeen," continued
-the monotonous voice.
-
-"Ah, the Queen of Spain, wife of Charles the Fourth, and mistress of
-Manuel Godoï," said Stelio. "She attracts me more than all the others.
-She came here when they were in exile. Do you know whether she stayed
-here with the King and the favorite!"
-
-But the guardian knew only that name and the date.
-
-"Why does she attract you?" La Foscarina asked. "I know nothing of her
-history."
-
-"Her end, the last years of her life of exile, after so much struggle
-and passion, are extraordinarily full of poetry."
-
-And he described that violent and tenacious character, the weak,
-credulous King, the handsome adventurer who had enjoyed the smiles of
-the Queen, and had been dragged through the streets by the infuriated
-mob; the agitations of the three lives bound together by Fate, and
-swept before Napoleon's will like leaves in a whirlwind; the tumult at
-Aranjuez, the abdication, the exile.
-
-"And Godoï--the Prince of Peace, as the King called him--faithfully
-followed the sovereigns into exile; he remained faithful to his royal
-mistress, and she to him. They all lived together under the same roof
-thenceforth, and Charles never doubted the virtue of Maria Luisa.
-Even to the day of his death, he lavished all manner of kindness on
-the two lovers. Imagine their life in this place; imagine here such a
-love coming safely through a storm so terrible. All was broken down,
-overthrown, reduced to powder by the destroyer. Bonaparte had passed
-that way, but had not smothered that love, already old, beneath the
-ruins. The faithfulness of those two violent natures moves my heart not
-less than the credulity of the kindly King. Thus they grew old. Imagine
-it! The Queen died first, then the King; and the favorite, who was
-younger than they, lived a wandering life a few years more."
-
-"This is the Emperor's room," said the guardian solemnly, flinging open
-a door.
-
-The great shade seemed omnipresent in the villa of the Doge Alvise. The
-imperial eagle, symbol of his power, dominated all the faded relics.
-But in the yellow room, the shade seemed to occupy the vast bed, to
-rest under the canopy, surrounded by the four bedposts ornamented at
-the top with golden flames. The formidable sigla inscribed within the
-laurel crown shone upon the polished side of the bed. And this species
-of funereal couch seemed to be prolonged in the dim mirror hanging
-between the two figures of Victory that supported the candelabra.
-
-"Did the Emperor sleep in this bed?" inquired the young man of the
-custodian, who pointed out to him on the wall the portrait of the great
-_condottiere_ mantled in ermine, wearing a crown of laurel and holding
-a scepter, as he appeared at the coronation blessed by Pius VII. "Is it
-certain?"
-
-He was surprised at himself at not feeling the emotion experienced by
-ambitious spirits at the sight of the traces of heroes--that strong
-throb he knew so well.
-
-He lifted the edge of the yellow counterpane, and let it fall as
-suddenly as if the pillow under it had been full of vermin.
-
-"Let us go away from this place; let us go!" said La Foscarina, who had
-been looking through the windows at the park, where the golden bars of
-the setting sun alternated with bluish-green zones of shade. "We cannot
-breathe here," she added.
-
-The air, in truth, was like that of a vault.
-
-"Now we pass into the room of Maximilian of Austria," said the droning
-voice, "he took the dressing-room of Amélie de Beauharnais for his
-bedroom."
-
-They crossed this apartment in a flood of crimson light. The sunlight
-struck on a crimson couch, flashed rainbows from a frail chandelier
-with crystal drops that hung from the ceiling and kindled perpendicular
-red lines on the wall. Stelio stopped on the threshold, evoking in his
-fancy as he did so, the pensive figure of the young Archduke, with blue
-eyes, that fair flower of Hapsburg fallen in a barbaric land one summer
-morning!
-
-"Let us go!" begged La Foscarina again, seeing him still delay.
-
-She hastened through the immense salon, painted in fresco by Tiepolo;
-the Corinthian bronze gate closing behind her gave forth a clang as
-resonant as the stroke of a bell, sending prolonged vibrations through
-space. She flew along, terrified, as if the whole palace were about
-to crumble and fall, and the light to fail, and she dreaded lest she
-should find herself alone among the shadows with these phantoms of
-unhappiness and death. As Stelio followed, through the space wherein
-the air was moved by her flight, between those walls enclosing
-relics, behind the famous actress who had simulated the fury of deadly
-passions, the desperate efforts of will and of desire, and the violent
-conflict of splendid destines on the stage of all lands, the warm blood
-in his veins grew chill, as if he were passing through a freezing
-atmosphere; he felt his heart grow cold, his courage flag; his reason
-for being lost its hold on his mind, and the magnificent illusions
-with which he had fed his soul, that it might surpass itself and his
-destiny, wavered and were dispersed.
-
-"Are we still living?" he asked, when they found themselves in the air
-without, in the park, far from the unwholesome odor.
-
-He took La Foscarina's hand, shook her gently, gazed into her eyes and
-tried to smile; then he drew her into the sunlight in the middle of the
-green meadow.
-
-"What heat! Do you feel it? How sweet the grass is!"
-
-He half-closed his eyes, that he might feel the sun's rays on his
-eyelids, and was once more filled with the joy of living. The woman
-imitated him, calmed by the pleasure her beloved showed; and she looked
-from under her half-closed eyelids at his fresh, sensuous mouth. They
-sat thus for some time, hand-in-hand, their feet resting on the warm
-grass. Her thoughts turned back to the Eugenean hills, which he had
-described, to the villages pink as the buried shells, to the first
-drops of rain on the tender leaves, Petrarch's fountain, to all things
-fair and pleasant.
-
-"Life might still be sweet!" she sighed, in a voice wherein was the
-miracle of hope born anew.
-
-The heart of her beloved became like a fruit suddenly ripened by a
-miraculous ray. Joy, delight, and tenderness spread through his whole
-being. Once more he reveled in the joy of the moment, as if it were the
-last of life. Love was exalted above Destiny.
-
-"Do you love me? Tell me?"
-
-She made no answer, but she opened wide her eyes, and the vastness of
-the universe was within the circle of those pupils. Never was boundless
-love more powerfully signified by mortal woman.
-
-"Ah, life with thee is sweet, sweet--yesterday as well as to-morrow!"
-
-He seemed intoxicated with her, with the sunlight, the grass, the
-divine sky, as with something never before seen or possessed. The
-prisoner leaving his stifling cell, the convalescent who beholds the
-sea after looking death in the face, are not more intoxicated.
-
-"Would you like to go now? Shall we leave our melancholy behind us?
-Would you like to go to a country where there is no autumn?"
-
---The autumn is in myself, and I carry it everywhere--she thought; but
-she smiled the slight smile with which she veiled her sadness.--It is
-I--it is I that must go away alone; I will disappear; I will go
-far-away and die, my love, O my love!--
-
-During this moment of respite, she had not succeeded either in
-conquering her sadness or reviving her hope; but her anguish was
-softened, and she had lost all bitterness and rancor.
-
-"Do you wish to go away?"
-
---To go away, always to be going away, to wander throughout the world,
-to go long distances!--thought the nomad woman.--Never to stop, never
-to rest! The anxiety of the journey is not over yet, but already the
-truce has expired. You wish to comfort me, my friend, and, to console
-me, you propose that I should go far-away once more, although I
-returned to my home, as it were, but yesterday.--
-
-Suddenly her eyes looked like two sparkling springs.
-
-"Leave me in my home a little while longer. And remain here, too, if
-that is possible. Later, you will be free, you will be happy. You
-have so long a time before you! You are young. You will win what you
-deserve. They will not lose you, even if they must wait for you."
-
-Her eyes had two crystal masks before them; they glittered in the
-sunshine, and seemed almost fixed in her fevered face.
-
-"Ah, always the same shadow!" Stelio exclaimed, with an impatience he
-could not conceal. "But what are you thinking of? What do you fear? Why
-not tell me what it is that troubles you? Explain yourself. Who is it
-that must wait for me?"
-
-She trembled with terror at that question, which seemed new and
-unexpected, although he only repeated her own last words. She trembled
-to find herself so near danger, as if, in walking across this fair
-meadow, a precipice had suddenly opened under her feet.
-
-And suddenly, in that unfamiliar place, on that beautiful grass, at the
-end of the day, after all those specters, sanguinary or bloodless, rose
-a living image of will and desire, which filled her with far greater
-terror. Suddenly, above all the figures of the Past, arose the figure
-of the Future, and again the aspect of her life was changed; and the
-sweetness of the respite was already lost, and the fair meadow with its
-sweet grass was worth nothing.
-
-"Yes, let us talk, if you wish."
-
-But she was obliged to lift her face a little to keep her tears from
-falling.
-
-"Do not be sad!" pleaded the young man, whose soul was suspended on
-those eyelids, whence the tears would not fall. "You hold my heart
-in your hand. I never will fail you. Then why torment yourself? I am
-wholly yours."
-
-For him, too, the image of Donatella was there, with her rounded
-figure, her body as robust and agile as a wingless Victory, armed with
-the glory of maidenhood, attractive yet hostile, ready to struggle, and
-then to yield. But his soul was suspended from the eyelids of the other
-woman, like the tears that veiled the eyes in which he had seen the
-vastness of the universe, the infinity of love.
-
-"Foscarina!"
-
-At last the warm tears fell, but she did not let them course down
-her cheeks. With one of those movements that sometimes sprang from
-her sadness with the swift grace of a freed wing, she checked them,
-moistened her finger-tips with them, and touched her temples without
-drying them. And, while she still kept her tears upon herself, she
-tried to smile.
-
-"Forgive me, Stelio. I am so weak!"
-
-"Ah, dear fingers--beautiful as Sofia's! Let me kiss them as they are,
-still wet."
-
-Within his caressing arm, he drew her across the field to a zone of
-golden green. Lightly, with his arm supporting hers, he kissed her
-finger-tips, one after another, more delicate than the buds of the
-tuberose. She startled, and he felt her tremble at each touch of his
-lips.
-
-"They are salt!"
-
-"Take care, Stelio! Some one may see us."
-
-"No one is here."
-
-"Perhaps down there, in the hothouses."
-
-"There is not a sound. Hark!"
-
-"What a strange silence! It is ecstasy."
-
-"We might hear the falling of a leaf."
-
-"And the keeper?"
-
-"He has gone to meet some other visitor."
-
-"Does anyone ever come here?"
-
-"The other day Richard Wagner came here with Daniela von Bülow."
-
-"Ah, yes, the niece of the Countess Agoult, of 'Daniel Stern.'"
-
-"And, among all those phantoms, with which did that great stricken
-heart converse?"
-
-"Who can tell?"
-
-"Only with himself, perhaps."
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Look at the glass windows and walls of the conservatories--how they
-sparkle! They appear iridescent. Rain, sunshine and time have painted
-it in that way. Does it not seem to reflect a distant twilight? Perhaps
-you have sometimes stopped on the Pesaro quay, to look at the beautiful
-pentafore window of the Evangelists. If you raised your eyes, you could
-see the windows of the palace marvelously painted by the changes of
-weather."
-
-"You know all the secrets of Venice!"
-
-"Not all yet."
-
-"How warm it is here! See how tall those cedars are. There is a
-swallow's nest hanging on that limb."
-
-"The swallows went away very late this year."
-
-"Will you really take me to the Euganean hills in the spring?"
-
-"Yes, Foscarina, I should like to do so."
-
-"Spring is so far-away!"
-
-"Life can still be sweet."
-
-"We are living in a dream."
-
-"Look at Orpheus with his lyre, all dressed in lichens."
-
-"Ah, what a land of dreams! No one comes here any more. Grass, grass
-everywhere! There is not a single human footstep."
-
-"Deucalion with his stones, Ganymede with his eagle, Diana with her
-stag--all the gods of mythology."
-
-"How many statues! But these, at least, are not in exile. The ancient
-hornbeams still protect them."
-
-"Here strolled Maria Luisa di Parma, between the King and the favorite.
-From time to time she would pause to listen to the click of the
-blades that cut the hornbeams to form arches. She would let fall her
-handkerchief, perfumed with jessamine, and Don Manuel Godoï would pick
-it up with a graceful gesture, hiding the pain he suffered when he
-stooped--a souvenir of the outrages he had endured at the hands of the
-mob in the streets of Aranjuez. How warm the sun was, and how excellent
-the snuff in its enameled box, when the King said with a smile:
-'Certainly, our dear Bonaparte is not so well off at Saint Helena as
-we are here.' But the demon of power, of struggle, and of passion was
-still alive in the Queen's heart. Look at those red roses!"
-
-"They fairly burn. One would think each had a live coal at its heart.
-Yes, they seem actually to burn."
-
-"The sun is growing red. This is the hour for the Chioggia sails on the
-lagoon."
-
-"Gather a rose for me."
-
-"Here is one."
-
-"Oh, but its leaves are falling."
-
-"Well, here is another."
-
-"These leaves are falling too."
-
-"They are all at the point of death. Perhaps this one is not."
-
-"Do not break it off."
-
-"Look! These seem to be redder still. Bonifazio's velvet--do you
-remember it? It has the same strength."
-
-"'The inmost flower of the flame.'"
-
-"What a memory!"
-
-"Listen! They are closing the doors of the conservatories."
-
-"It is time to go," said Stelio, abruptly yet gently.
-
-"The air is beginning to be cooler."
-
-"Do you feel cold?"
-
-"No, not yet."
-
-"Did you leave your cloak in the carriage?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"We will wait at Dolo for the train, and return to Venice by the
-railway."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"We still have time to spare."
-
-"What is this? Look!"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"What a bitter odor! It is a sort of shrubbery of box and hornbeams."
-
-"Ah, it is the labyrinth!"
-
-A rusty iron gate barred the entrance to the labyrinth between two
-columns that bore two Cupids riding on stone dolphins. Nothing was to
-be seen on the other side of the gate, except the beginning of the
-path, and a kind of solidly built and intricate thicket, dark and
-mysterious. In the center of the maze rose a tower, at the summit of
-which stood the statue of a warrior, as if reconnoitering from that
-point.
-
-"Have you ever been in a labyrinth?" Stelio inquired.
-
-"No, never," she replied.
-
-They lingered to examine the entrance to the deceptive playground,
-composed by an ingenious gardener for the amusement of ladies and
-their cavaliers in the days of hoops and flowered waistcoats. But age
-and neglect had rendered it mournful and wild, had deprived it of
-all appearance of grace and regularity, and had changed it into thick
-yellowish-brown woodland, full of inextricable turns through which the
-slanting rays of the setting sun shone so red that some of the shrubs
-looked like smokeless fire.
-
-"It is open," said Stelio, feeling the gate yield as he leaned on it.
-"Do you see?"
-
-He pushed back the rusty iron gate, took a step forward, and crossed
-the threshold.
-
-"Where are you going?" asked his companion, with instinctive fear,
-putting out a hand to detain him.
-
-"Do you not wish to go in?"
-
-She was perplexed. But the labyrinth attracted them with its mystery,
-illumined by deep flames.
-
-"Suppose we should lose ourselves?"
-
-"You can see for yourself that it is very small. We can easily find the
-gate again."
-
-"And suppose we don't find it?"
-
-He laughed at this childish fear.
-
-"We might remain in there through all eternity!" he said.
-
-"No, no! No one is anywhere near. Let us go away."
-
-She tried to draw him back, but he defended himself, stepping backward
-toward the path. Suddenly he disappeared, laughing.
-
-"Stelio! Stelio!"
-
-She could see him no longer, but she heard his ringing laughter in the
-midst of the wild thicket.
-
-"Come back! come back!"
-
-"No, no! Come in and find me."
-
-"Stelio, come back! You will be lost," she called.
-
-"I shall find Ariadne."
-
-At that name, she felt her heart throb suddenly, then contract, then
-palpitate confusedly. Was not that the name he had called Donatella,
-that first night? Had he not called her Ariadne down there, in the
-gondola, while seated at the young girl's feet? She even remembered his
-words: "Ariadne possesses a divine gift, whereby her power transcends
-all limits." She recalled his accent, his attitude, his look.
-
-Tumultuous anguish seized upon her, obscured her reason, prevented
-her from realizing the spontaneity of the happening, and the simple
-careless jest in her friend's speech. The terror that lay hidden in
-the depths of her love rose in rebellion, mastered her, blinded her
-with misery. The trifling little accident assumed an appearance of
-cruelty and derision. She could still hear that laugh ringing from the
-melancholy maze.
-
-"Stelio!"
-
-In her frantic hallucination, she cried out as if she had seen him
-embraced by the other woman, torn from her arms forever.
-
-"Stelio!"
-
-"Come and find me!" he answered laughing, still invisible.
-
-She rushed into the labyrinth to find him, and advanced straight toward
-the voice and the laugh, guided by her impulse. But the path turned;
-a wall of bushes rose before her, impenetrable, and stopped her.
-She followed the winding, deceiving path; but one turning followed
-another, and all looked alike, and the circle seemed to have no end.
-
-"Look for me!" cried the voice from a distance, through the living
-hedges.
-
-"Where are you? Where are you? Can you see me?"
-
-She looked about for some opening in the hedge through which she might
-see. But all she saw was thick, interlacing branches, and the redness
-of the setting sun which lighted them on one side, while shadows
-darkened them on the other. The box-bushes and the hornbeams were so
-closely mingled that they increased momentarily the bewilderment of the
-breathless woman.
-
-"I am losing myself! Come and meet me!"
-
-Again that boyish laugh came from the maze.
-
-"Ariadne, Ariadne! the thread!"
-
-Now the words came from the opposite side, striking her heart as if
-with a blow.
-
-"Ariadne!"
-
-She turned back, ran, turned again, tried to break through the hedge,
-to see through the undergrowth, to break the branches. She saw nothing
-but the maze, always the same in every direction. At last she heard a
-step, so close that she thought it must be just behind her, and she
-started. But she was deceived. Again she explored her green prison; she
-listened, waited; she could hear no sound but her own breathing and the
-beating of her heart. The silence had become absolute. She gazed at
-the clear sky, curving in its immensity over the two green walls that
-held her prisoner. She felt that that immensity and narrowness were
-the only things in the world. And she could not succeed in separating
-in her thoughts the reality of that place from the image of her mental
-torture, the natural aspect of things from that kind of living allegory
-created by her own anguish.
-
-"Stelio, where are you?"
-
-No reply. She listened and waited in vain. The seconds seemed like
-hours.
-
-"Where are you? I am afraid!"
-
-No reply. But where was he, then? Had he found the way out? Had he left
-her there all alone? Would he continue to play this cruel game?
-
-A mad desire to scream, to sob, to throw herself on the ground, to hurt
-herself, to make herself ill, to die, assailed the distracted woman.
-Again she raised her eyes to the silent sky. The tops of the tall
-hornbeams were reddened, like logs when they have ceased to blaze and
-are about to fall in ashes.
-
-"I can see you!" suddenly said a laughing voice, in the deep shadows,
-very near her.
-
-"Where are you?"
-
-He laughed among the leaves, but without revealing himself, like a
-faun in hiding. This game excited him; his body grew warm and supple
-by this exercise of his agility; and the wild mystery, the contact
-with the earth, the odor of autumn, the strangeness of this unexpected
-adventure, the woman's bewilderment, even the presence of the marble
-deities mingled with his physical pleasure an illusion of antique
-poetry and grace.
-
-"Where are you? Oh, do not play any more! Do not laugh in that way!
-Enough!"
-
-He had crept, bareheaded, into the bushes on his hands and knees. He
-felt the dead leaves, the soft moss. And as he breathed among the
-branches, and felt his heart throb with the strange delight of the
-situation, with the communion between his own life and the vegetable
-life around him, the spell of his fancy renewed among those winding
-ways the industry of the first maker of wings, the myth of the monster
-that was born of Pasiphaë and the Bull, the Attic legend of Theseus
-in Crete. All that ancient world became real to him. In that glowing
-autumn evening, he was transfigured, according to the instincts of his
-blood and the recollections of his mind, into one of those ambiguous
-forms, half animal and half divine, one of those glittering genii whose
-throats were swollen with the same gland that hangs from the neck of
-the goat. A joyous voluptuousness suggested strange surprises to him,
-suggested the swiftness of pursuit, of flight, capture, and a fleeting
-embrace in the shadows of the wood. Then he desired some one like
-himself, fresh youthfulness that could share his laughter, two light
-feet to fly before him, two arms to resist him, a prize to capture at
-last. Donatella with her curved figure recurred to his mental vision.
-
-"Enough, Stelio! I cannot run any more. I shall fall."
-
-La Foscarina uttered a scream on feeling her skirt pulled by a hand
-that had reached through the shrubbery. She bent down, and saw in the
-shadows the face of a laughing faun. The laughter struck her ear
-without calming her distress, without breaking the sense of suffering
-that overpowered her. As she looked at his boyish face, she saw at
-the same instant the face of the singer, who seemed to be stooping
-with her, imitating her movement as if she were a shadow. Her mind
-became more confused, and she could not distinguish between illusion
-and reality. The other woman seemed to overthrow her, oppress her,
-suffocate her.
-
-"Leave me! Leave me! It is not I whom you seek!"
-
-Her voice was so changed that Stelio broke off his laughter and his
-sport, withdrew his arm, and rose to his feet. She could not see him;
-the leafy, impenetrable wall was between them again.
-
-"Take me away from this place. I cannot bear any more. My strength is
-gone. I suffer."
-
-He could find no words to comfort her. The simultaneous coincidence
-of his recent thought of Donatella, and her sudden divination of it,
-impressed him deeply.
-
-"Wait a little! I will try to find the way out. I will call some one."
-
-"Are you going away?"
-
-"Don't be afraid! There is no danger."
-
-But while he spoke thus to reassure her, he felt the inaneness of his
-words--the incongruity between that laughable adventure and the obscure
-emotion born of a far different cause. And now he too felt the strange
-ambiguity whereby the trifling event appeared in two confusing aspects:
-a suppressed desire to laugh persisted under his concern for her, so
-that his perturbation was new to him, like wild agitations born of
-extravagant dreams.
-
-"Do not go away!" she implored, a prey to her hallucinations. "Perhaps
-we can meet there at the next turning. Let us try. Take my hands."
-
-Through an opening, he took her hands; he started on touching them;
-they were icy cold.
-
-"Foscarina, what is the matter? Are you really ill? Wait! I will try to
-break through."
-
-He attempted to break down the hedge, and snapped off a few twigs, but
-its thickness resisted him, and he scratched his hands uselessly.
-
-"No, it is impossible."
-
-"Cry out! Call some one."
-
-He cried aloud in the silence.
-
-The top of the hedge had lost its deep color, but a red light now
-spread over the sky above them. A triangle of wild ducks passed in
-sweeping flight.
-
-"Let me go, Foscarina. I shall find the tower easily, and will call
-from there. Some one will be sure to hear me."
-
-"No! No!"
-
-But she heard him move away, followed the sound of his steps, and
-was once more bewildered by the maze, once more alone and lost. She
-stopped, waited, listened, and looked at the sky. She lost all sense of
-time; the seconds seemed hours.
-
-"Stelio! Stelio!"
-
-She was no longer capable of an effort to control her disordered and
-exasperated mind. She felt the approach of a crisis of mad fear,
-as one feels the approach of a whirlwind.
-
- [Illustration: _HE WATCHED THE WOMAN TURNING AND RUNNING LIKE A MAD
- CREATURE ALONG THE DARK, DELUSIVE PATHS_]
-
- _From an Original Drawing by Arthur H. Ewer_
-
-
-"Stelio!"
-
-He heard that cry full of anguish, and hastened his search along the
-winding paths that first seemed to lead him toward the tower and then
-away from it. The laughter had frozen in his heart. His whole soul
-shook to its foundation every time his name reached him, uttered by
-that invisible agony. And the gradual lessening of the light brought up
-an image of blood that is flowing away, of slowly fading life.
-
-"I am here! I am here!"
-
-One of the paths brought him at last to the open space where the tower
-stood. He ran furiously up the winding stairs, felt dizzy when he
-reached the top, closed his eyes while grasping the railing, opened
-them again, and saw a long zone of fire on the horizon, the disk
-of the rayless moon, the gray plain, and the labyrinth below him,
-black and spotted with box-bush and horn-beam, narrow in its endless
-convolutions, looking like a dismantled edifice covered with wild vines.
-
-"Stop! Stop! Do not run like that! Some one has heard me. A man is
-coming. I can see him coming. Wait! Stop!"
-
-He watched the woman turning and running like a mad creature along the
-dark, delusive paths, like something condemned to vain torture, to some
-useless but eternal fatigue, like a sister of the fabulous martyrs.
-
-"Stop!"
-
-It seemed that she did not hear him, or that she could not control
-her fatal agitation, and that he could not rescue her, but must always
-remain there, a witness of that terrible chastisement.
-
-"Here he is!"
-
-One of the keepers had heard their cries, had approached them, and
-now entered by the gateway. Stelio met him at the foot of the tower,
-and together they hastened to find the lost woman. The man knew the
-secret of the labyrinth, and Stelio prevented any chatter and jests by
-surprising him with his generosity.
-
-"Has she lost consciousness--has she fallen?" The darkness and the
-silence were sinister, and he felt alarmed. She did not answer when
-he called her, and he could not hear her footsteps. Night had already
-fallen on the place, and a damp veil was descending from the purple sky.
-
-"Shall I find her in a swoon upon the ground," he thought.
-
-He started at seeing a mysterious figure appear at a turning, with a
-pale face that attracted all the last rays of daylight, white as a
-pearl, with large, fixed eyes, and lips closely compressed.
-
-They turned back toward the Dolo, taking the same route beside the
-Brenta. She never spoke, never opened her lips, never answered, as if
-she could not unclose her teeth. She lay in the bottom of the carriage,
-wrapped in her cloak, and now and then she shook with a deep shudder,
-as one attacked by malarial fever. Her friend tried to take her hands
-in his to warm them, but in vain--they were inert and lifeless. And as
-they drove along, the statues passed and passed beside them.
-
-The river flowed black between its banks, under the purple and silver
-sky; the moon was rising. A black boat came down the stream, towed by
-two gray horses with heavy hoofs, led by a man who whistled cheerfully,
-and the funnel smoked on the deck like a chimney on a hut. The yellow
-light of a lantern flashed, and the odor of supper floated on the air;
-and here and there, as they drove along, the statues passed and passed
-beside them.
-
-It was like a Stygian landscape, like a vision of Hades, a region of
-shadows, mist, and water. Everything grew misty and vanished like
-spirits. The moon enchanted and attracted the plain, as it enchants
-and attracts the water, absorbing the vapors of earth with insatiable,
-silent thirst. Solitary pools shone everywhere; small, silvery canals
-were visible, glittering at uncertain distances. Earth seemed to be
-gradually losing its solidity, and the sky seemed to regard its own
-melancholy reflected in innumerable placid mirrors.
-
-And here and there, along the banks of the stream, like the ghosts of a
-people disappeared, the statues passed and passed!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- THE POWER OF THE FLAME
-
-
-"Do you think often of Donatella, Stelio?" La Foscarina inquired
-suddenly, after a long silence, during which neither had heard anything
-but the sound of their own footsteps along the canal path of the
-Vetrai, illumined by the multi-colored lights from the fragile objects
-that filled the windows of the neighboring shops.
-
-Her voice sounded harsh and strained. Stelio stopped suddenly, as one
-who finds himself confronted by an unexpected difficulty. His spirit
-had been roaming over the red and green isle of Murano, begemmed
-with flowers in her present desolate poverty, which seemed to blot
-out the memory of the joyous time when poets had sung her praises
-as "a sojourn for nymphs and demigods." He had been thinking of the
-famous gardens where Andrea Navagero, Cardinal Bembo, Aretino, Aldo,
-and their learned followers, rivaled one another in the elegance of
-their Platonic dialogues, _lauri sub umbra_. He had been thinking of
-convents, luxurious as boudoirs, inhabited by little nuns dressed
-in white camelot and laces, with curls on their temples, and necks
-uncovered, after the fashion of the ancient honored courtesans, given
-to secret loves, much sought after by wealthy patricians, with such
-euphonious names as Ancilla Soranzo, Cipriana Morosini, Zanetta Balbi,
-Beatrice Falier, Eugenia Muschiera, pious instructors in the ways of
-love. His changeful dreams were accompanied by a plaintive little air,
-a forgotten dance measure, in which the faint soul of Murano tinkled
-and whispered.
-
-At this abrupt question, the air fled from his memory, all imaginings
-were dispersed, the enchantment of the old life vanished. His wandering
-mind was called back, and came with reluctance. He felt beside him the
-throbbing of a living heart, which he must inevitably wound. He looked
-at his friend.
-
-She was walking beside the canal, calm, with no sign of agitation,
-between the green water and the iridescence of the rows of delicate
-vases. Only her slender chin trembled slightly, between her short veil
-and fur collar.
-
-"Yes, sometimes," he replied, after an instant of hesitation, recoiling
-from falsehood, and feeling the necessity to elevate their love above
-ordinary deceptions and pretensions, so that it should remain for him a
-cause of strength, not of weakness, a free agreement, not a heavy chain.
-
-She pursued her way without wavering, but she had lost all
-consciousness of movement in the terrible throbbing of her heart, which
-shook her from head to foot. She saw nothing more: all she was aware of
-was the nearness of the fascinating water.
-
-"Her voice is unforgettable," Stelio went on, after a pause, having
-found his courage. "Its power is amazing. From that first evening,
-I have thought that that singer might be the marvelous instrument
-for my great work. I wish she would consent to sing the lyric parts
-of my tragedy, the odes that arise from the symphonies and resolve
-themselves into figures of the dance at the end, between episodes. La
-Tanagra has consented to dance. I have confidence in your good offices,
-dear friend, to obtain also the consent of Donatella Arvale. Thus the
-Dionysiac trinity would be reëstablished in a perfect manner on the new
-stage, for the joy of mankind."
-
-Even while he spoke he realized that his words had a false ring, that
-his unconscious air contrasted too crudely with the dark shadow on
-the woman's face. In spite of himself, he had exaggerated his frank
-tone in speaking of Donatella merely as an instrument of art, a purely
-ideal force to be drawn into the circle of his magnificent enterprise.
-In spite of himself, disturbed by the anxiety in that soul so near
-his own, he had leaned slightly toward deception. Certainly what he
-had said was the exact truth, but his friend had demanded from him
-another truth. He broke off suddenly, unable to endure the sound of
-his own words. He felt that at that hour, between the actress and
-himself, art had no meaning, no vital value. Another force dominated
-them, more imperious, more disquieting. The world created by intellect
-seemed inert as the ancient stones on which they trod. The only real
-and formidable power was the poison running in their human blood. The
-will of the one said: "It is my will that you shall love and serve me,
-wholly, mine alone, body and soul." The will of the other said: "It is
-my will that you shall love and serve me, but while I live I shall
-renounce nothing that may appeal to my wish and fancy." The struggle
-was bitter and unequal.
-
-As she remained silent, unconsciously hastening her steps, he prepared
-himself to face the other truth.
-
-"I understand, of course, that that was not what you wished to know."
-
-"You are right: it was not that. Well?"
-
-She turned to him with a sort of convulsive violence that reminded him
-of her fury one far-off evening, when she had cried madly: "Go! Run!
-She awaits you!"
-
-At this moment a workman met them, and offered to show them over the
-neighboring glass factory.
-
-"Yes, let us go in there," said La Foscarina, hurriedly following the
-workman. Presently they reached the furnace room, and were enveloped in
-its fiery breath, as they gazed at an incandescent altar, the glow from
-which dazzled their eyes with a painful glare.
-
---To disappear, to be swallowed up, to leave no sign!--cried the
-woman's heart, intoxicated with the thought of destruction.--In
-one second that fire could devour me like a dry stick, a bundle of
-straw.--And she went nearer to the open mouths in which she could see
-the molten flame, more resplendent than a midsummer sun, rolling around
-the earthen pots in which the shapeless mass was melting; the workmen,
-standing around, awaited the right moment to approach with iron tubes
-to shape that mass with the breath from their lips and the instruments
-of their art.
-
---O virtue of Fire!--thought the Inspirer, turned from his anxiety
-by the miraculous beauty of the element that had become to him as
-familiar as a brother, since the day he had found the revealing
-melody.--Ah, that I might give to the life of the creatures that love
-me the perfection of the forms to which I aspire! That I might fuse
-all their weaknesses in some white heat, and make of the product
-obedient matter in which to impress the commandments of my heroic will
-and the images of my pure poetry! Why, my friend, why will you not be
-the divine living statue molded by my spirit, the work of faith and
-sorrow whereby our lives might surpass even our art? Why are we so near
-resembling ordinary lovers, who lament and curse? When I heard from
-your lips those admirable words: 'I can do one thing that love alone
-cannot do,' I believed indeed that you could give me more than love.
-You must be able always to do those things that love can do, besides
-those it cannot do, in order to meet my insatiable nature.--
-
-Meanwhile, work was going on about the furnace. At the end of the
-blow pipes the molten glass swelled, twisted, became silvery as a
-little cloud, shone like the moon, cracked, divided into a thousand
-infinitesimal fragments, glittering and thin as the threads we see at
-daybreak stretching from tree to tree. The glass-blowers were making
-harmonious vases. The apprentices placed a small, pear-shaped mass
-of burning paste on the spot chosen by the master-workmen; and the
-pear lengthened, twisted, transformed itself into a handle, a rim, a
-spout, a foot, or a stem. The glowing heat slowly died out under the
-instruments, and the half-formed cup was again exposed to the heat,
-then drawn from it docile, ductile, sensitive to the lightest touches
-that ornamented and refined it, conforming it to the model handed down
-by their ancestors, or to the free invention of a new creator.
-
-Extraordinarily light and agile were the human gestures that produced
-these elegant creatures of the fire, of breath and iron; they were like
-the movements of a silent dance. The figure of La Tanagra appeared
-to the Inspirer among the perpetual undulations of the flame, like a
-salamander. Donatella's voice seemed to sing to him the powerful melody.
-
---To-day, again, I myself have given you the thought of her for a
-companion--thought La Foscarina--I myself have called her up between
-us, and evoked her shadow when perhaps your thoughts were elsewhere; I
-have suddenly led her to you, as on that night of delirium.--
-
-It was true, it was true! From the instant when the singer's name had
-been spoken on the water by Foscarina, she herself had unconsciously
-exalted the new image in the poet's mind, had nourished it with her
-jealousy and fear, had strengthened and increased it day by day,
-and had at last illumined it with certainty. More than once she had
-said to the young man, who perhaps had forgotten: "She awaits you!"
-More than once she had presented to his imagination that distant,
-mysterious figure of expectancy. As on that Dionysian night, when the
-conflagration of Venice had lighted up the two youthful faces with the
-same reflection, it was now her own passion that illumined them, and
-they glowed only because she herself had made them.--Certainly, he now
-possesses that image, and it possesses him. My anguish only augments
-his ardor. It is a joy to him to love her before my despairing eyes!--
-
-"As soon as the vase is shaped, we put it in the furnace room to be
-tempered," replied one of the men to a query from Stelio. "If it were
-exposed to the air immediately it would crack in a thousand pieces."
-
-They could see the radiant vases, still slaves of the fire, still under
-its empire, gathered in a receptacle joined to the furnace in which
-they had been fused.
-
-"They have been there ten hours," said the workman, pointing to
-his graceful family. "Is this our great Foscarina?" he added in an
-undertone to Stelio. He had recognized her when she had lifted her
-veil, suffocating with the heat.
-
-Revealing ingenuous emotion, the master workman took a step toward her
-and bowed respectfully.
-
-"One evening, my lady, you made me tremble and weep like a child. Will
-you allow me, in memory of that evening, which I never shall forget, to
-offer you a little work from the hands of the poor Seguso?"
-
-"A Seguso, are you?" said the poet, leaning toward the little man, to
-look at him closer; "are you of the great family of glass-blowers, one
-of the genuine race?"
-
-"At your service, master."
-
-"A prince, then."
-
-"Yes, a harlequin playing the prince."
-
-"You know all the secrets of the art, eh?"
-
-The Muranese made a mysterious gesture which seemed to call up all the
-deep ancestral knowledge of which he affirmed himself the last heir.
-
-"Then, mistress, will you deign to accept it?"
-
-La Foscarina had not spoken, fearing to trust her voice, but now all
-her affable grace rose above her sadness and accepted the gift while
-compensating the giver.
-
-The vase held by the little bent man that had created it was like
-a miraculous flower blooming on a twisted shrub. It was a thing of
-beauty, mysterious as natural things are mysterious; it held the life
-of a human breath in its hollow; its transparence equaled that of sky
-and water; its purple rim was like a floating seaweed; no one could
-have told the reason why it was so beautiful; and its value was either
-slight or beyond price, according to the eyes that looked at it.
-
-La Foscarina chose to take it with her, without having it packed, as
-one carries a flower.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- REMINISCENCE
-
-
-They left the factory, and walked along a road that was enclosed
-between the walls of silent gardens. The bronze-like laurels were
-touched with gold at the tops by the setting sun. The air was filled
-with sparkling gold-dust.
-
-"How sweet and terrible was the fate of Gaspara Stampa," said Stelio.
-"Do you know her _Sonnets_? Yes, I saw them one day on your table. She
-was a strange mingling of ice and fire. Sometimes her mortal passion,
-above the Petrarchism of Aretino, lifted a glorious cry. I remember a
-magnificent verse of hers:
-
- _Vivere ardendo e non sentire il male!_"
-
-"Do you remember, Stelio," said La Foscarina, with that peculiar slight
-smile of hers which gave her face the look of one walking in her sleep,
-"do you remember the sonnet that begins:
-
- _Signore, io so che in me non son più viva,
- E veggo omai ch'ancor in voi son morta?_"
-
-"I don't remember, Fosca."
-
-"Do you remember your beautiful fancy about the dead Summer? Summer
-was lying on a funeral barge, dressed in gold like a dogaressa, and
-the procession was bearing her toward the Island of Murano, where a
-master of the flame was to enclose her in a shroud of opalescent glass,
-so that when she should be submerged in the depths of the lagoon, she
-could at least watch the waving seaweed. Do you remember?"
-
-"It was an evening in September."
-
-"The last night of September, the night of the Allegory. There was a
-great light on the water. You were in an exalted mood, and talked and
-talked. What things you said! You had come from solitude, and your
-overcharged soul broke forth. You poured a sparkling wave of poetry
-over your companion. A bark passed, laden with pomegranates. I called
-myself Perdita. Do you remember?"
-
-As she walked she felt the extreme lightness of her step and felt that
-something in her was vanishing, as if her body were on the point of
-being changed to an empty chrysalis.
-
-"My name was still Perdita. Stelio, do you recall another sonnet of
-Gaspara's beginning:
-
- _Io vorrei pur che Amor dicesse come
- Debbo seguirlo...._
-
-And the madrigal beginning:
-
- _Se tu credi piacere al mio signore?_"
-
-"I did not know you were so familiar with the unhappy Anasilla, my
-dear."
-
-"Ah, I will tell you. I was hardly fourteen years old when I played in
-an old romantic tragedy called _Gaspara Stampa_. I played the leading
-part. It was at Dolo, where we passed the other day on our way to
-Strà. We played in a small rustic theater--a kind of tent. It was the
-year before my mother died. I remember it very well. I can remember
-the sound of my own voice, which was weak then, when I forced it in
-the tirades because some one in the wings kept whispering to me to
-speak louder, louder!... Well, Gaspara was despairing; she wept and
-raved for her cruel Count. There were many things about it all that my
-small, profaned soul did not know or understand, and I know not what
-instinct and comprehension of sorrow led me to find the accent and
-the cries that could stir the miserable crowd from which we expected
-to gain our daily bread. Ten hungry persons used me as a breadwinner;
-brutal necessity cut and tore away from me all the dream-flowers
-born of my trembling precocity. Oh, it was a time of weeping and
-suffocation, of terror, of unthinking weariness, of mute horror. Those
-that martyrized me knew not what they were doing, poor creatures, made
-stupid by poverty and work. God pardon them and give them peace! Only
-my mother--she, too, who 'for having loved too well and been too little
-loved, unhappy lived and died'--only my mother had pity on my pain, and
-knew how to take me in her arms, how to calm my horrible trembling, to
-weep when I wept, to console me. My blessed mother!"
-
-Her voice changed. Her mother's eyes once again looked upon her, kind
-and firm and infinite as a peaceful horizon.--Tell me, tell me what I
-must do! Guide me, teach me, you who know!--Her heart felt again the
-clasp of those arms, and from the distance of years the old pain came
-back, but not harshly; it was almost sweet. The memory of her struggles
-and her sufferings seemed to bathe her soul in a warm wave, to sustain
-and comfort it. The test had been hard and the victory difficult,
-obtained at the price of persistent labor, against brutal and hostile
-forces. She had witnessed the deepest misery and ruin, she had known
-heroic efforts, pity, horror, and the face of Death.
-
-"I know what hunger is, Stelio, and what the approach of night seems
-like when a place of rest is uncertain," she said softly.
-
-She stopped between the high walls, and lifted her little veil, looking
-deep into her friend's eyes. He grew pale under that look, so sudden
-was his emotion and surprise at her words. He felt confused, as if in
-the incoherence of a dream, incapable of applying the true significance
-of those words to the woman who was smiling at him, holding the
-delicate glass in her ungloved hand. Yet he had heard what she said,
-and she stood there before him in her rich fur cape, looking at him
-with beautiful soft eyes, misty with unshed tears.
-
-"And I have known other things."
-
-It relieved her heart to speak like this; his humility gave her
-strength, as if she had accomplished some proud and daring deed. She
-never had felt conscious of her power and worldly glory in the presence
-of her beloved, but now the memory of her obscure martyrdom, her
-poverty and hunger, created in her heart a feeling of real superiority
-over him she believed invincible.
-
-"But I have no fear of suffering," she said, remembering the words he
-had spoken once: "Tell me you do not fear to suffer.... I believe your
-soul capable of bearing all the sorrow of the world." And her hand
-stole up to his cheek and caressed it, and he understood that she had
-answered those words spoken long ago.
-
-He was silent, as intoxicated as if she had presented to his lips the
-very essence of her heart pressed out into that crystal cup like the
-blood of the grape. He waited for her to go on.
-
-They reached a crossroads where stood a miserable hut, falling into
-ruin. La Foscarina stopped to look at it. The rude, unhinged windows
-were held open by a stick laid across them. The low sun struck the
-smoked walls within, and revealed the furniture--a table, a bench, a
-cradle.
-
-"Do you remember, Stelio," said La Foscarina, "that inn at Dolo where
-we waited for the train. Vampa's inn, I mean. A great fire burned
-on the hearth, the dishes glittered on the shelves, and slices of
-_polenta_ were toasting on the gridiron. Twenty years ago everything
-was exactly the same--the same fire, the same dishes, the same
-_polenta_. My mother and I used to go in there after the performance,
-and sit on the bench before a table. I had wept, cried, raved, and
-had died of poison or by the sword, on the stage. I still heard in
-my ears the resonance of the verses I had uttered, in a voice that
-was not my own, and a strange will still possessed my soul, and I
-could not shake it off--it was as if another person, struggling with
-my inertness, persisted in performing over again those movements and
-actions. The simulation of an outside life remained in the muscles of
-my face, and some evenings I could not calm them. Already, even then,
-the mask, the sensation of the living mask, was beginning to grow. My
-eyes would remain fixed, and a chill crept at the roots of my hair.
-I had difficulty in recovering full consciousness of myself and my
-surroundings.
-
-"The odors from the kitchen sickened me; the food on our plates seemed
-too coarse, heavy as a stone, impossible to swallow. My disgust at
-everything sprang from something indescribably delicate and precious,
-of which I was conscious under all my weariness--a vague feeling
-of nobility beneath my humiliation. I hardly know how to express
-it. Perhaps it was the obscure presence of that power which later
-developed in me, of that election, of that difference wherewith Nature
-has marked me. Sometimes the consciousness of that difference from
-others became so strong that it almost raised a barrier between my
-mother and myself--God forgive me!--almost separated me from her. A
-great loneliness possessed me; nothing around me had power to touch
-me any more. I was alone with my destiny. My mother, even though she
-was with me, gradually receded into an infinite distance. Ah, she was
-to die soon, and was already preparing to leave me, and perhaps this
-withdrawal was the forerunner. She used to urge me to eat, with the
-words only she knew how to say. I answered: 'Wait! Wait!' I could only
-drink; I had a great craving for cold water. At times, when I was more
-tired and trembling than usual, I smiled a long-continued smile. And
-even that dear woman herself, with her deep heart, could not understand
-whence came my smile!
-
-"Incomparable hours, wherein it seemed that the bodily prison was being
-broken through by the soul that wandered to the extremest limits of
-life! What must your youth have been, Stelio! Who can imagine it? We
-have all felt the weight of sleep that descends upon us after fatigue
-or intoxication, heavy and sudden as a stroke from a hammer, and it
-seems to annihilate us. But the power of dreams sometimes seizes upon
-us in waking hours with the same force; it holds us and we cannot
-resist it, though the whole thread of our existence seems on the point
-of being destroyed. Ah, some of the beautiful things you said that
-night in Venice come back to my mind, when you spoke of her marvelous
-hands weaving her own lights and shadows in a continuous work of
-beauty. You alone know how to describe the indescribable.
-
-"Well, ... on that bench, in front of that rustic table, in Vampa's
-inn at Dolo, where destiny led me again with you, I had the most
-extraordinary visions that dreams ever have called up in my brain.
-I saw that which is unforgettable; I saw the real forms around me
-obliterated by the dream-figures born of my instinct and my thoughts.
-Under my fixed eyes, dazzled and scorched by the smoky petroleum lamps
-of the improvised stage, the world of my expression began to throb
-with life. The first lines of my art were developed in that state of
-anguish, of weariness, fever, disgust, in which my sensibility became,
-so to speak, plastic, after the manner of the incandescent material we
-saw the workmen holding at the end of the tube. In it was a natural
-aspiration to be modeled, to receive breath, to fill a mold. On certain
-evenings, in that wall covered with copper utensils, I could see myself
-reflected as in a mirror, in attitudes of grief or rage; with an
-unrecognizable face; and, in order to escape from this hallucination,
-to break the fixity of my gaze, I opened and shut my eyes rapidly. My
-mother would say, over and over: 'Eat, my daughter, at least eat this.'
-But what were bread, wine, meat, fruits, all those heavy things, in
-comparison with what I had within me? I said to her: 'Wait!' and when
-we rose to go, I used to take only a large piece of bread with me.
-I liked to eat it in the country the next morning, under a tree, or
-sitting on the bank of the Brenta.... Oh, those statues! They did not
-recognize me the other day, Stelio, but I recognized them!
-
-"It was in the month of March, I remember. I went out into the country
-very early with my bread. I walked at random, though I meant to go to
-the statues. I went from one to another, and stopped before every one,
-as if I were paying a visit. Some appeared very beautiful to me, and I
-tried to imitate their poses. But I remained longer with the mutilated
-ones, as if to console them. In the evening, on the stage, I remembered
-some of them while I was acting, and with so deep a feeling of their
-distance and their solitude that I felt as if I could not speak any
-more. The audience would grow impatient at these pauses too prolonged.
-At times, when I had to wait for my companion in the scene to finish
-his tirade, I used to stand in the attitude of one of those statues,
-and remain as motionless as if I had been made of stone. I was already
-beginning to carve my own destiny.
-
-"I loved one of them tenderly; it had lost its arms, which once
-balanced a basket of fruit on its head. But the hands still remained
-attached to the basket, and the sight of them always aroused my pity.
-This statue stood on its pedestal in a flax-field; a little canal of
-stagnant water was near it, in which the reflected sky repeated the
-tender blue of the flowers. And always, since that time, in my most
-glowing moments on the stage, visions of some landscape rise in my
-memory, particularly when by the mere force of silence I succeed in
-producing a thrill in the listening throng."
-
-Her cheeks had flushed a little, and as the sun wrapped her in a
-radiant garment, drawing sparkles from her furs and from the crystal
-cup, her animation seemed like an increase of light.
-
-"What a spring that was! In one of my wandering journeys I saw a
-great river for the first time. It appeared to me suddenly, swollen,
-and flowing rapidly between two wild banks. I felt then how much of
-divinity there is in a great stream running through the earth. It was
-the Adige, flowing down from Verona, from the city of Juliet."
-
-An ambiguous emotion filled her heart while she recalled the poverty
-and poetry of her youth. She was impelled to continue, though she
-did not know how she had arrived at these confidences, when she had
-intended to speak to her friend of another young life, not belonging
-to the past, but to the present. By what surprise of love had she been
-turned from an effort of her will, from her firm decision to face the
-painful truth, from the concentration of her slumbering energy to
-linger in the memory of the past, and to cover with the image of her
-own lost virgin self that other image which was so different?
-
-"We reached Verona one evening in May. I was devoured by anxiety. I
-clasped close to my heart the book in which I had copied the lines
-of Juliet, and continually repeated to myself the words of my first
-entrance: 'How now? Who calls? I am here. What is your will?' My
-imagination was excited by a strange coincidence: on that very day I
-was fourteen years old--the age of Juliet. The Nurse's gossip sounded
-in my ears; and, little by little, my own destiny seemed mingled with
-that of the Veronese. At the corner of every street I thought I could
-see a throng approaching me, accompanying a coffin covered with white
-roses. When I saw the Arche degli Scaligeri behind its iron bars, I
-cried to my mother, 'Here is Juliet's tomb!' And I burst into sobs,
-and had a desperate desire to love and to die. 'O thou too early seen
-unknown, and known too late!'"
-
-Her voice, repeating the immortal words, penetrated the heart of her
-lover like a heart-rending melody. She paused a moment, then repeated:
-
-"Too late!"
-
-They were the ominous words spoken by her lover, which she herself had
-repeated in the garden, when both were on the brink of being swept
-away on the flood of their passion: "It is late; too late!" The woman
-that was no longer young now faced the former image of herself, in her
-maidenhood, throbbing in the form of Juliet before her first dream of
-love. Having reached the limit of experience, had she not at the same
-time preserved the dream intact--but to what purpose? If to-day she
-looked at the image of her far-distant youth, it was only to trample
-upon it in leading her beloved to the other woman, to her who lived and
-waited.
-
-With her smile of inimitable sadness, she said:
-
-"I _was_ Juliet! One Sunday in May, in the immense arena in the
-amphitheater under the open sky, before an audience that had breathed
-in the legend of love and death, I was Juliet herself. No thrill from
-the most responsive audience, no applause, no triumph, ever has had
-from me the fulness and intoxication of that unique hour. Actually,
-when I heard Romeo say: 'O, she doth teach the torches to burn bright,'
-my whole being kindled. With great economy, I had managed to buy a
-large bunch of roses, and these were my only ornament. I mingled the
-roses with my words, my gestures, with every attitude. I dropped one
-at Romeo's feet when we first met; I strewed the petals of another on
-his head, as I stood on the balcony; and I covered his body with them
-as he lay in the tomb. The words came with the strangest ease, almost
-involuntarily, as in delirium, and I could feel the throbbing in my
-veins accompanying them.
-
-"I could see the great amphitheater, half in sunlight, half in
-shadow, and in the lighter part a sparkling from thousands of eyes.
-The day was as calm as this. Not a breath of air disturbed the folds
-of my robes, or the hair that floated on my uncovered neck. I felt
-my strength and animation momentarily increasing. How I spoke of the
-lark and the nightingale! I had heard them both a thousand times in
-the country. I knew all their songs of the woods, the meadows, and
-the sky. Every word, as it left my lips, seemed to have been steeped
-in the warmth of my blood. There was no fiber in me that did not give
-forth harmonious sound. Ah, the grace, the state of grace! Every time
-it is given to me to rise to the highest summit of my art I live again
-in that indescribable _abandon_. Yes, I was Juliet! I cried out in
-terror at the approach of dawn. The breeze stirred my hair. I could
-feel the extraordinary silence on which my lamentation fell. The
-multitude seemed to have sunk into the ground. I spoke of the terror
-of the coming day, but already I felt in reality 'the mask of night
-upon my face.' Romeo had descended. We were already dead; already
-both had entered the vale of shadows. Do you remember? My eyes sought
-the fading light of the sky. The people were noisy in the arena; they
-were impatient for the death scene; they would listen no more to
-the mother, the nurse, or the friar. The quiver of that impatience
-quickened my throbbing heart. The tragedy swept on. I recall the odor
-of the pitch from the funeral torches, and of the roses that covered
-me, and I remember the sound of far-off bells, and of the sky that was
-losing its light, little by little, as Juliet was losing her life, and
-a star, the first star, that swam in my eyes with my tears. When I
-fell dead on Romeo's body, the cry of the multitude in the shadows was
-so violent that I was frightened. Some one lifted me and dragged me
-toward that cry. Some one held the torch close to my tear-stained face,
-which must have been the color of death.... And thus, Stelio, one night
-in May, Juliet came to life again, and appeared before the people of
-Verona."
-
-Again she paused, and closed her eyes as if she were dizzy, but her
-sorrowful lips still smiled at her friend.
-
-"And then? Then came the need to move, to go no matter where, to
-traverse space, to breathe in the wind. My mother followed me in
-silence. We crossed a bridge, walked beside the Adige, and went on and
-on. My mother asked at times where we were going. I wished to find the
-Franciscan convent where Juliet's tomb was hidden, since, to my great
-regret, she was not buried in one of those beautiful tombs behind the
-great iron gates. But I did not wish to say so, and I could not speak.
-My voice seemed to have been lost with the last word of the dying
-Juliet. 'Where are we going?' again asked that indefatigable kindness.
-Ah, then the last word of Juliet came to me in reply. We were again
-near the Adige, beside a bridge. I think I began to run, because soon
-afterward I felt myself seized by my mother's arms, and I stood leaning
-against the parapet, choking with sobs. 'There let me die!' I wished
-to say, but could not. The river carried with it the night and all its
-stars. I felt that the desire to die was not mine alone. Ah, blessed
-mother!"
-
-She became very pale; her whole heart felt once more the embrace of
-those arms, the kiss of those lips, those tender tears, the depth of
-that suffering.
-
-With a mingled feeling of surprise and alarm, Stelio watched the great
-waves of life that passed over her, the extraordinary expressions,
-the alternating lights and shadows; but he dared not speak, dared not
-break in upon the occult workings of that great, unhappy soul. He could
-only feel confusedly in her words the beauty and sadness of things
-unexpressed.
-
-"Speak to me still," he said. "Draw nearer to me, sweet soul! No moment
-since I first loved you has been worth the steps that we have taken
-together to-day."
-
-Again her first sudden question returned to her mind: "Do you think
-often of Donatella?"
-
-A short path led to the Fondamenta degli Angeli, whence the lagoon
-could be seen, smooth and luminous.
-
-"How beautiful that light is!" she said. "It is like that night when my
-name was still Perdita, Stelio."
-
-She now touched a note that she had touched in an interrupted prelude.
-
-"The last night of September," she added. "Do you remember?"
-
-Her heart was filled with exaltation to such a degree that she almost
-feared it would fail her. But she resolved that her voice should utter
-firmly the name that must break the silence between her friend and
-herself.
-
-"Do you remember the ship anchored before the gardens? A salute greeted
-the flag as it slid down the mast. Our gondola touched the ship as we
-passed under its shadow."
-
-A moment's pause. Her pallor was animated by a wonderful vitality.
-
-"Then, in that shadow, you first spoke Donatella's name."
-
-She made a new effort, as a swimmer, submerged by a wave, rises again
-and shakes his head free of the foam.
-
-"She began then to be yours!"
-
-She felt as if she were growing rigid from head to foot. Her eyes
-stared fixedly at the glittering water.
-
-"She must be yours," she said at last, with the sternness of necessity
-in her voice, as if to repel with a second shock the terrible things
-that were ready to surge up from her fiery heart.
-
-Seized by sudden anguish, incapable of interrupting by a word the
-lightning-like apparitions of her tragic soul, Stelio halted, and laid
-his hand on his companion's arm to make her stop also.
-
-"Is it not true?" she asked with a sweetness almost calm, as if her
-tension had suddenly relaxed, and her passion had quietly accepted the
-yoke laid upon it by her will. "Speak! I do not fear to suffer. Let us
-sit down here. I am a little tired."
-
-They sat down on a low wall, facing the water.
-
-"What can I say to you?" said the young man in a stifled voice, after
-a pause, unable to overcome the agitation arising from the certainty
-of his present love and the consciousness of his desires, inexorable
-as fate. "Perhaps what you have imagined is true; perhaps it is only
-a fancy of your own mind. I am certain to-day of only one thing, and
-that is that I love you and recognize in you all that is noble. I know
-one other thing that is noble--that I have a work to do and a life to
-live according to the dictates of Nature. You, too, must remember. On
-that September evening I spoke to you a long time of my life and of the
-genii that are leading it to its final destiny. You know that I can
-renounce nothing."
-
-He trembled as if he held in his hand a sharp weapon, with which, as he
-was compelled to move it, he could not avoid wounding the defenseless
-woman.
-
-"No, nothing; and especially your love, which ceaselessly exalts my
-strength and my hope. But did you not promise me more than love? Can
-you not do for me things that love alone cannot do? Do you not desire
-to be the constant inspiration of my life and my work?"
-
-She listened motionless, with fixed eyes.
-
-"It is true," he continued, after an anxious pause, recovering his
-courage, and feeling that on the sincerity of this moment depended
-the fate of that free alliance whereby he had hoped to be broadened,
-not confined. "It is true; that evening, when I saw you descend the
-stairs in the midst of the throng in company with her who had sung, I
-believed that a secret thought guided you from the moment that you did
-not come alone to meet me."
-
-The woman felt a chill run through the roots of her hair. Her fingers
-trembled round the crystal cup, wherein the colors of sky and water
-were blended.
-
-"I believed that you yourself had chosen her. Your look was that of one
-who knows and foresees. I was struck by it."
-
-By her keen torture, the woman realized how sweet a falsehood would
-have been. She wished that he would either lie or be silent. She
-measured the distance that lay between her and the canal--the water
-that swallows and lulls to sleep.
-
-"There was something about her that was hostile to me. She remained
-to me obscure, incomprehensible. Do you remember the way she
-disappeared? Her image faded, and only the desire of her song remained.
-You yourself, who led her to me, have more than once revived the
-remembrance of her. You have seen her shadow even where she was not."
-
-She saw Death itself. No other wound had gone deeper, had hurt her
-so cruelly.--I alone! I alone have brought it on myself!--And she
-remembered the cry that had brought this misery: "Go! She awaits you!"
-Suddenly the internal tempest seemed to become a mere hallucination.
-She thought herself non-existent, and wondered to see the glass shining
-in her hand; she lost all corporeal sense. All that had happened was
-only a trick of the imagination. Her name was Perdita. The dead Summer
-was lying in the depths of the lagoon. Words were words, that was all.
-
-"Could I love her? Were I to see her again, should I desire to turn her
-destiny toward mine? Perhaps. But of what use would that be? And of
-what use would all the vicissitudes and necessities of life be against
-the faith that links us? Could you and I resemble commonplace lovers
-who pass their days in quarreling, weeping, and cursing?"
-
-The woman gnashed her teeth. She had a wild instinct to defend herself,
-and to hurt him as in a hopeless struggle. A murderous desire flashed
-across her maddened brain.
-
---No, you shall not have her!--And the brutality of her tyrant seemed
-monstrous to her. Under the measured and repeated blows, she felt that
-she was like a man she had once seen on the dusty road of a mining
-town, prostrated by repeated blows on his head from a mallet in his
-enemy's hand. That hideous memory mingled with her mental torture. She
-sprang up, impelled by the savage force that filled her being. The
-glass broke in her convulsed hand, cut her, fell in a sparkling shower
-at her feet.
-
-Stelio startled. The woman's motionless silence had deceived him, but
-now he looked at her and saw her at last; and once more he saw, as on
-that night in her room when the logs had crackled on the hearth, the
-expression of madness on her agitated face. He stammered some words of
-regret, but impatience boiled under his concern.
-
-"Ah," said La Foscarina, mastering her agony with a bitterness that
-convulsed her mouth, "how strong I am! Another time have a care that
-your wounds are not made so slowly, since my resistance is so slight,
-my friend."
-
-She saw that blood was dripping from her fingers; she wrapped them in
-her handkerchief. She looked at the sparkling fragments on the grass.
-
-"The cup is broken! You had praised it too highly. Shall we raise a
-mausoleum for it here?"
-
-She was very bitter, almost mocking, her lips opening slightly to utter
-a mirthless laugh. Stelio stood silent, chagrined, his heart full of
-rancor at beholding the destruction of so beautiful an effort as that
-perfect cup.
-
-"Let us imitate Nero, since we have already imitated Xerxes!"
-
-She felt even more keenly than he the harshness of her sarcasm, the
-insincerity of her voice, the malignity of the laugh that was like a
-muscular spasm. But she was unable to conquer her soul at that moment.
-She felt a bitter, irresistible necessity to scorn, to devastate,
-to trample under foot, invaded by a sort of perfidious demon. Every
-vestige of tenderness and benevolence had vanished, every hope, every
-illusion. The bitter hatred that lurks under the love of ardent natures
-was dominant. On the man's face she could discern the same shadow that
-darkened her own.
-
-"Do I irritate you? Do you wish to return to Venice alone? Would you
-like to leave the dying season behind you? The tide is falling, but
-there is always enough water for one who has no intention of returning.
-Would it suit you to have me try it? Am I not as docile as you could
-wish?"
-
-She said these insensate things in a hissing tone, and became almost
-livid, as if suddenly burned by some corroding poison. And Stelio
-remembered having seen the same mask on her face on a distant day of
-love, madness and sadness. His heart contracted, then softened.
-
-"Ah, if I have hurt you, I ask for pardon," he said, trying to take her
-hand and soothe her by a gentle act. "But did we not begin together to
-approach this matter? Was it not you that"--
-
-She interrupted him, exasperated by his gentleness.
-
-"Hurt me? And what does that matter? Have no pity, no pity! Do not weep
-over the beautiful eyes of the wounded hare!"
-
-The words broke between her teeth. Her contracted lips opened in a
-convulsion of wild laughter that was like heart-rending sobs. Her
-companion shuddered, spoke to her in a low tone, aware of the curious
-eyes of the women who sat at the thresholds of their cabins.
-
-"Calm yourself! Calm yourself! Oh, Foscarina, I beg of you! Do not act
-so, I entreat! We shall soon be at the quay, and then we shall go home.
-I will tell you--You will understand me then. Come, now we are in the
-street. Do you hear me?"
-
-He feared she would fall in her hysterical convulsion, and stood ready
-to support her. But she only walked faster, unable to speak, smothering
-that wild laughter with her bandaged hand.
-
-"What ails you? What do you see?" Stelio inquired anxiously.
-
-Never could he forget the change in those eyes. They were dull,
-staring, sightless, yet they seemed to see something that was not
-there; they were filled with an unknown vision, occupied by some
-monstrous image which without doubt had generated that mad and
-anguished laughter.
-
-"Shall we stop here a little while? Would you like some water?"
-
-They found themselves now on the Fondamenta dei Vetrai. How long was it
-since they had walked beside the stagnant canal? How much of their life
-had vanished in the interval? What profound shadow were they leaving
-behind them?
-
-Having descended into the gondola, and wrapped herself in her cloak,
-La Foscarina tried to control her hysteria, holding her face with both
-hands, but from time to time the terrible laugh would escape; then
-she pressed her hands closer to her mouth, as if she were trying to
-suffocate herself.
-
-The lagoon and the deep twilight obliterated all forms and colors; only
-the rows of posts, like a file of monks on a path of ashes, showed
-against the dark background. When the bells began their clamor, her
-soul remembered, her tears gushed forth; the horror was vanquished.
-
-She took her hands from her face, leaned toward her friend's shoulder,
-and found again her voice in saying:
-
-"Forgive me!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- CASSANDRA'S REINCARNATION
-
-
-She humbled herself with shame. From that day every action of her
-silently begged for pardon and oblivion.
-
-A new grace seemed born within her. She became more cheerful, spoke
-more gently, walked softly about the house dressed in quiet colors,
-veiling her beautiful eyes with the deep shadow of her lashes,
-because she dared not look at her friend. The fear of tiring him, of
-displeasing or boring him, gave her the wings of divination. Her ever
-watchful sensibility listened at the inaccessible door of his dreams.
-
-Her spirit, determined to create a new feeling capable of conquering
-the violence of instinct, revealed in her face with marvelous signs
-the difficulty of her task. Never before had her supreme art found
-expressions so singular. Looking at her one day, Stelio spoke to her of
-the infinite power concentrated in the shadow produced by the helmet on
-the face of _Il Pensieroso_.
-
-"Michelangelo," he said, "has, in a small cavity in the marble,
-concentrated all the effort of human meditation. Just as the stream
-fills a hollowed palm, so the eternal mystery that surrounds us fills
-the small space made by the Titan's chisel in the material from the
-mountains; and there it has remained, growing denser through all the
-centuries. I know only the mobile shadow of your face, Fosca, that
-equals that shadow in intensity, and sometimes even surpasses it."
-
-Eager for poetry and knowledge, she yearned for the Inspirer's
-presence. She became for him the ideal figure of one that listens and
-understands. The strange, unique arrangement of her hair suggested
-fluttering, impatient wings round her pure forehead.
-
-She read aloud to him pages from the sovereign poets. The august form
-of the Book seemed magnified by the attitude she assumed in holding it,
-by her way of turning the pages, by her religious gravity of attention,
-and the harmony of the voice that changed the printed symbols into
-vocal cadences. While reading Dante, she was as severe and noble as the
-sibyls in the dome of the Sistine Chapel, sustaining the weight of the
-sacred volumes with all the heroism of their bodies moved by the breath
-of prophecy.
-
-When the last syllable had been spoken, she saw Stelio rise
-impetuously, feverishly, and roam about the rooms, stirred by the dart
-of the god, panting in the excitement roused by the confused tumult
-of his own creative force. Sometimes he approached her with glowing
-eyes transfigured by a sudden beatitude, kindled by an inner flame,
-as if an immortal truth had just been revealed. With a shudder that
-drove away from her heart the memory of every caress, she saw him lay
-his head upon her knees, overwhelmed by the tremendous struggle he
-carried on within himself, by the shock that accompanied some hidden
-metamorphosis. She suffered, yet she was happy, though she knew not
-whether he too suffered or was happy; her heart was filled with pity,
-fear, and reverence to feel that vigorous form laboring thus in the
-genesis of the idea. She kept silence; she waited, adoring that head
-that lay upon her knees, filled with thoughts unrevealed.
-
-But she comprehended his great emotion better when one day, after she
-had been reading to him, he spoke of the exile of Dante.
-
-"Imagine, Fosca, if you can without bewilderment, the transport and
-ardor of that great soul, when uniting itself with elementary energies
-in order to conceive his words! Imagine Alighieri, his mind already
-filled with his incomparable vision, on the way to exile, an implacable
-pilgrim, driven by his passion and his poverty from country to country,
-from refuge to refuge, across plains, over mountains, beside rivers and
-seas, in all seasons, suffocated by the sweetness of spring, shivering
-under the harshness of winter, always alert, attentive, with wide,
-voracious eyes, anxious with the inner travail whereby his gigantic
-work was formed. Imagine the fulness of that soul in the contrast
-between common necessities and the flaming apparitions that rose
-suddenly before him at a turn in the road, on the bank of a stream,
-from a hollow in the rocks, on the slope of a hill, in the depths of
-the forest, or in a meadow where the larks were singing. By means
-of his senses, life multiform and multiplex poured into his spirit,
-transfiguring into living images the abstract ideas that filled his
-brain. The sound, the appearance, and the essence of the very elements
-themselves entered into his occult labor, developing it with voices,
-lines, color, movement, and with innumerable mysteries. Fire, air,
-earth, and water worked in collaboration at the sacred poem, penetrated
-the sum of its doctrine, warmed it, aërated it, watered it, covered it
-with leaves and flowers. Open this Christian book, and imagine at the
-same time the face of a Greek god. Do you not see, springing from both,
-shadows and light, the flashes or the wind from the heavens?"
-
-She began to feel that her own life was becoming one with the
-all-absorbing work, that her own personal self was entering, drop by
-drop, into the personage of the drama, that her look, her poses, her
-gestures and voice were going to the composing of the figure of the
-heroine "living beyond life." She fancied that she was dissolving into
-her elements in the fire of that other intellect, only to be re-formed
-by the necessity of a heroism that should dominate Fate.
-
-Sometimes it seemed to her that she was losing her human sincerity,
-and that she would always remain in the state of fictitious excitement
-into which she threw herself while studying a tragic rôle she was to
-create. Thus she experienced a new torment. She tried to shut and
-contract her soul under his keen glance, as if to prevent his intellect
-from penetrating her mind and robbing her of her secret life. She grew
-afraid of the seer.--He will read in my soul the silent words that he
-will put in the mouth of his creation, and I shall only speak them on
-the stage, under my mask.--Sometimes she felt a sudden need to break
-the spell, to withdraw from the image that was to be like her, to spoil
-those lines of beauty, which forced her to a determined sacrifice. Was
-there not also in the tragedy a maiden thirsting for love and eager for
-joy, a maiden in whom a great mind recognized the living incarnation
-of his most exquisite dream, the Victory that was to crown his life?
-And was there not also an impassioned woman no longer young, who had
-one foot already in the dark shadow, and who had but a few steps more
-to take in order to disappear? More than once she was tempted to
-contradict her seeming resignation by some violent act. Then, like a
-penitent, she redoubled her fervor to ward off the peril, hardened
-herself to discipline, sharpened her vigilance, repeating with a sort
-of intoxication the act of supreme renunciation that had risen from the
-depths of her sadness at the aspect of the purifying flame.--You must
-have all; I shall be content with seeing you live, seeing your joy. And
-do with me as you will!--
-
-Then Stelio loved her for the unexpected visions she brought him. He
-trembled and turned pale one day when she entered the room with her
-soft step, her face fixed in calm sorrow, as if she were emerging from
-depths of wisdom whence all human agitations seem but a puff of wind on
-a dusty road.
-
-"Ah, at last! I have created you! I have created you!" he cried,
-thinking he saw his heroine herself standing on a threshold of the
-distant chamber filled with treasure taken from the tombs of the
-Atrides. "Stand still a moment! Do not move your eyelids--keep your
-eyes motionless, as if they were petrified! Now you are blind. But
-you can see things that others do not see, and nothing can be hidden
-from you. Here in this place the man you love has declared his love
-to another, who trembles at the revelation. They are still here, they
-have just let go each other's hands, and their love quivers in the air.
-The room is full of funeral treasure, and on two tables are laid out
-the riches that covered the bodies of Agamemnon and Cassandra. There
-are the coffers filled with necklaces, and there are the urns full
-of ashes. The balcony looks out upon the plain of Argos and on the
-distant mountains. It is twilight, and all that terrible gold glitters
-in the creeping shadows. Do you understand? And you are there, on the
-threshold, led by the nurse. You are blind, yet nothing is hidden from
-you. Stop a moment!"
-
-He spoke in the sudden fever of invention. The scene appeared before
-him, then disappeared, submerged in a flood of poetry.
-
-"What shall you do? What shall you say?"
-
-The actress felt a chill at the roots of her hair. Her very soul
-vibrated. She became blind and prophetic. The cloud of Tragedy
-descended and hung over her head.
-
-"What shall you say? You will call them. You will call both of them by
-name in that silence where the great royal spoils repose."
-
-The actress felt the coursing of her blood; her voice was to resound
-through the silence of thousands of years, to revive the ancient
-suffering of men and heroes.
-
-"You will take their hands; you will feel their two lives stretching
-toward each other."
-
-The blindness of the immortal statues was in her eyes. She could see
-herself sculptured in the great silence, and feel the thrill of the
-mute throng, seized with awe at the sublime power of her attitude.
-
-"And then? And then?"
-
-The Inspirer rushed impetuously toward the actress, as if he wished to
-strike her in order to draw sparks from her.
-
-"You must awake Cassandra from her sleep; you must feel her ashes
-revive in your hands; she must be present in your mental vision. Will
-you? Do you understand? Your living soul must touch her ancient soul,
-and blend into one soul and one grief, so that the flight of time
-seems annihilated. Cassandra is in you, and you are in her. Have you
-not loved her, and do you not love Priam's daughter also? Who that
-once shall hear it can ever forget, who can ever forget the deep notes
-of your voice and the convulsion of your lips at the first cry of
-fatalistic fury: 'O Earth! O Apollo!' I see you once more, deaf and
-dumb, on your chariot with the look of a wild beast just captured. But
-among so many terrible cries, some were infinitely sweet and sad. The
-old men compared you to the nightingale. What were the words you used
-when you spoke of your beautiful river? And when the old men questioned
-you about the love of the god--do you remember your answer?"
-
-The Tragic Muse palpitated as if the breath of the god again invaded
-her. She had become ardent, ductile material, subject to all the
-inspirations of the poet.
-
-"Do you remember your answer?"
-
-"O espousals, espousals of Paris, fatal to the beloved! O you, paternal
-waters of the Scamandros! Once, on your shores, my youth was nourished
-by you!"
-
-"Ah, divine woman, your melody does not make one regret the syllables
-of Æschylus! I remember. The soul of the multitude, seized by the
-lamentation 'of discordant sounds,' relaxed and was soothed by that
-melodious sigh, and each of us received the vision of years long past
-and our innocent happiness. You can say: 'I was Cassandra.' In speaking
-of her, you will remember a former life. Her mask of gold will be in
-your hands."
-
-He seized both her hands; both were intent on the flashes generated by
-their blended forces; the same electric spark ran through their nerves.
-
-"You are there, near the spoil of the slave-princess, and you feel the
-mask. What shall you say?"
-
-In the pause that followed, both seemed to be waiting for a flash.
-The actress's eyes again became fixed and blind, her face became like
-marble. The Inspirer let go her hands, and they made the gesture
-of feeling the sepulchral golden mask. In a voice that created the
-tangible form, she said:
-
-"How large her mouth is!"
-
-"You see her, then?"
-
-"Yes, I too can see her. The mouth is large; the terrible effort of
-prophecy dilated it; she cried aloud, cursed, and lamented without
-ceasing. Can you imagine her mouth in silence?"
-
-Still in the same attitude, as if in ecstasy, she said slowly:
-
-"What profundity in her wonderful silence!"
-
-She seemed to be repeating words suggested to her by mysterious genii,
-and, while the poet listened to her, he fancied that he himself had
-been about to speak them. A profound tremor shook him, as if he were
-witnessing a miracle.
-
-"And her eyes?" he demanded, agitated. "Of what color were her eyes?"
-
-She made no reply.
-
-The marble lines of her face changed slightly, as if under a wave of
-suffering. A furrow appeared between her eyes.
-
-"Her eyes," continued the revealer, "were as sweet and sad as two
-violets."
-
-She paused again, panting, as one who suffers in a dream. Her lips were
-dry, her temples moist.
-
-"Thus they were before they closed forever!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sometimes Stelio came to his friend's house breathless and excited, as
-if pursued by an Erinni. La Foscarina never questioned him, but her
-personality soothed that restless spirit.
-
-"Sometimes I am afraid of the vastness of my conceptions," he said.
-"I am afraid of being suffocated by them. You believe me to be a
-little mad, do you not? Do you remember that stormy evening when I
-returned from the Lido? How sweet you were that evening! A short time
-before that, standing on the Bridge of the Rialto, I found a Motive.
-I had translated the words of the Elements into notes. Do you know
-what a Motive is? It is a small spring, from which may be born many
-other springs, a tiny seed that may give birth to a crown of forests;
-a little spark that may kindle an endless chain of conflagration--a
-nucleus that produces infinite force. A few days ago I began to develop
-the Motive of that stormy evening, which I shall call the Pipes of
-Æolus. Listen to it."
-
-He went to the piano, and struck a few notes with one hand.
-
-"It contains no more than that, but you cannot imagine the generating
-force of those few notes. A tempest, a whirlwind of music has been
-born of them, but I have not yet been able to master it. I am almost
-vanquished, suffocated, constrained to fly."
-
-He laughed a little; but his soul was swaying like the sea.
-
-"The Pipes of Prince Æolus, opened by the companions of Ulysses. Do you
-remember it? The imprisoned winds arise and push back their vessel, and
-the men tremble with terror."
-
-His spirit could not rest long, and nothing could divert him from his
-mental work. He kissed his friend's hand, paced to and fro, stopping
-before the piano that Donatella had played when she sang Claudio's
-melody. He wandered to the window, and gazed upon the leafless garden.
-His aspiration reached out toward the musical creature, toward her that
-must chant his hymns at the summit of his tragic symphonies.
-
-In a low, clear voice the woman said:
-
-"If Donatella were here with us!"
-
-He turned, approached her, and gazed at her fixedly, silently. She
-smiled her slight, mask-like smile at seeing him so near her, yet so
-far removed. She felt that he loved no one at that moment--not herself,
-not Donatella, but that he regarded both simply as instruments of
-his art, forces to employ, bows to bend. He was on fire with poetry,
-and she, with her poor wounded heart, her secret torture, her mute
-plea--she was there, intent on nothing but her sacrifice, ready to pass
-beyond love and life, as the heroine of the future drama. Meanwhile,
-each day must make its mark on her face, discolor her lips, fade her
-hair; each day, in the service of old age, would hasten the work of
-destruction in her miserable flesh. And then?
-
-She recognized that it was love, after all, unquenchable passion, that
-created all the illusions and all the hopes which seemed to aid her in
-accomplishing "what love alone cannot do."
-
-She realized that the torturing restraint of those days had not
-succeeded in creating in her even a symptom of the new feeling whereby
-love was to be made sublime. Her secret task, therefore, meant simply
-continual dissimulation. Was it worth while to live for this?
-
-If once the young man's madness and ardor had caused her to suffer, she
-now suffered far more in seeing that that ardor had grown calm, and
-that a sort of reserve had taken its place--a reserve that sometimes
-repelled the gentlest caress. She felt shame at her regret, knowing
-that he was possessed by his great idea, and was concentrating all his
-energies upon it. But a dark rancor often mastered her in the evening,
-after he had departed, and blind suspicions nightly tortured her
-sleepless soul.
-
---To go away!--The necessity to do this came suddenly, urgently. She
-had said to her beloved once, on a memorable day: "There is only one
-thing I can do--go away, and leave you free with your fate. This thing
-I can do, which love alone could not do." Henceforth, delay was no
-longer possible; she must break off with all hesitation, and emerge
-finally from that kind of fatal suspension of movement, in which she
-had lived so long in agitation.
-
-Since that October dawn, their outward life had been unchanged.
-Nevertheless, she felt that it was impossible for her to continue to
-live in that way any longer. She felt a consciousness of something
-fully accomplished, as in the tree that has yielded all its fruit, as
-in the river that has reached the sea.
-
-Her courage revived; her soul grew stronger, her energies awoke once
-more, and the virile qualities of the leader again came to life. In
-a few days she had arranged her professional route, reassembled her
-dramatic company, and fixed the date of departure.--You must go and
-work over there among the barbarians across the ocean. You must wander
-still from town to town, from hotel to hotel, from theater to theater,
-and every night you will draw howls from the crowd that pays you. You
-will gain much money; you will return laden with gold and with wisdom,
-unless it happens that you are crushed by a wheel some misty day on a
-crowded street. Who knows? From whom have you received the order to
-depart? From some one within yourself--deep, deep within you--who sees
-that which you cannot see, like the blind woman in the tragedy. Who
-knows whether over there, on one of those wide, peaceful rivers, your
-soul will not find its harmony and your lips will not learn that smile
-they have attempted so many times in vain! Perhaps you will discover a
-few white hairs and that smile in your mirror at the same time!--
-
-And she went on preparing for her journey.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- THE STORY OF THE ARCHORGAN
-
-
-From time to time a breath of Spring passed across the February sky.
-
-"Do you feel the Spring?" said Stelio to his friend, inhaling deep
-breaths of the new air.
-
-La Foscarina fell behind him a step or two, because her resolute heart
-was weakening; she lifted her face to the sky, now flecked with white
-clouds like floating plumes. The raucous shriek of a siren whistle
-prolonged itself in the estuary, becoming fainter by degrees until
-the sound was as soft as the note of a flute. It seemed to the woman
-that something rose from the depths of her heart and escaped with that
-prolonged note, as a poignant grief gradually changes into a tender
-memory.
-
-"Yes, Spring has already arrived at the Tre Porti."
-
-Once more they floated aimlessly along the lagoon, that water as
-familiar to their thoughts as is the web to the weaver.
-
-"Did you say at the Tre Porti?" the young man cried, enthusiastically,
-as if his soul were reawakened. "It is there, near the lower bank, at
-the setting of the moon, that the sailors take the Wind prisoner, and
-bring it, chained, to Dardi Seguso. Some day I will tell you the story
-of the Archorgan."
-
-His air of mystery in describing the action of the sailors made La
-Foscarina smile.
-
-"What story?" she asked, enticed by his significant tone. "And what
-does Seguso do here? Has the story anything to do with the master
-glassblower?"
-
-"Yes, but a master of a former day, who knew Latin and Greek, music and
-architecture, who was admitted to the Academy of the Pellegrini, whose
-gardens are at Murano; he was often invited to sup with Titian in his
-house in the Contrada dei Biri; was a friend of Bernardo Cappello, of
-Jacopo Zane, and other ancient Petrarchists. At Caterino Zeno's house
-he saw the famous organ built for Matthias Corvinus, King of Hungary,
-and his magnificent idea came to him in the course of a discussion
-with that Agostino Amadi who succeeded in adding to his collection of
-instruments a true Grecian lyre, a great Lesbian heptachord, rich with
-gold and ivory. Ah, imagine it, that relic of the school of Mitylene,
-brought to Venice by a galley which, in passing through the waters of
-Santa Maura, caught and dragged the body of Sappho as far as Malamocco,
-like an armful of dead grass! But that, too, is another tale."
-
-Again the nomad woman recovered her youthful spirits enough to smile,
-pleased as a child to whom one shows a picture-book. How many marvelous
-stories, how many delightful fancies had not the Visionary conjured
-up for her on those waters, during the long hours of the afternoon?
-How many enchantments had he not known how to weave for her, to the
-rhythm of the oar, in words that made all things seem reality? How
-many times, seated beside her beloved in the light boat, had she not
-enjoyed that sort of waking dream in which all cares were banished,
-carried away on waves of poetry?
-
-"Tell it to me," she begged.
-
-She wished to add:--This story will be the last.--But she restrained
-herself, because up to this time she had not spoken to him of her fixed
-resolution.
-
-He laughed.
-
-"You are as eager for stories as Sofia."
-
-At that name, as when she heard the name of Spring, she felt her
-resolution weaken; the cruelty of her fate pierced her heart, and her
-whole being turned with yearning toward her escaping happiness.
-
-"Look!" he said, pointing to the mirror-like lagoon, rippled here and
-there by a light breeze. "Do not those infinite lines of silence aspire
-to become music?"
-
-Silvery-white in the calm afternoon, the estuary seemed to bear the
-islets on its breast as lightly as the softest clouds hung from the sky.
-
-"Well, the master glassblower heard at Zeno's house praises of the
-famous organ of the King of Hungary, and cried: '_Corpo di Bacco!_
-You shall see what an organ I will build, with my stick, _liquida
-musa canente!_ I will make the god of organs! _Dant sonitum glaucæ
-per stagna loquacia cannæ._ The waters of the lagoon shall give it
-its tone, and in it the stones, the buoys, and the fish also shall
-sing. _Multisonum silentium._ You shall see, by the body of Diana!'
-All his hearers laughed, save Giulia da Ponte--because she had black
-teeth! And the Sansovino gave a dissertation on hydraulic organs.
-But the boaster, before taking his leave, invited the company to
-hear his new music on the day of the Sensa, and promised that the
-Doge on his Bucentaur should halt in the middle of the lagoon to
-listen. That evening the news that Dardi Seguso had lost his senses
-spread to Venice, and the Council, which had a tender regard for its
-famous workmen, sent a messenger to Murano to learn the truth about
-the report. The messenger found the artisan with his sweetheart,
-Perdilanza, who was very loving to him because she was anxious,
-and feared that Dardi was insane. The master, after looking at the
-messenger with fiery eyes, burst into a hearty laugh, which reassured
-her as to his state of mind; then, quite calm again, Seguso ordered
-the messenger to report to the Council that, on the day of the Sensa,
-Venice, San Marco, the Grand Canal, and the Palace of the Doges
-should possess yet another miracle. On the following day, he made a
-formal request for the possession of one of the five little islets
-that circled Murano like the satellites of a planet, but have now
-disappeared, or have dwindled to mere sandbanks. After exploring the
-waters around Temòdia, Trencòre, Galbaia, Mortesina, and La Folèga, he
-chose Temòdia as one chooses a bride, and Perdilanza entered the shadow
-of affliction. Look, Fosca; perhaps even now we are passing over the
-memory of Temòdia. The organ-pipes are sunk deep in the mud, but they
-never will decay. There are seven thousand of them. We are passing over
-the ruins of a forest of melodious glass. How delicate the seaweed is
-here!"
-
-"Tell me the reason why Perdilanza entered the shadow of affliction,"
-said La Foscarina, as both leaned over and looked deep into the
-beautiful clear waters.
-
-"Because her name had been driven from the lips and the heart of her
-lover by the name of Temòdia, which he constantly uttered with vehement
-ardor, and because the island was the only place to which she might
-not follow him. There he had constructed his new work-rooms, and there
-he stayed the greater part of the day, and almost all night, assisted
-by his workmen, whom he had bound to silence by a solemn oath before
-the altar. The Council, in ordering that the master should be provided
-with everything necessary for his tremendous task, had decreed that he
-should lose his head should his work prove inferior to his proud boast.
-Then Dardi tied a scarlet thread around his bare neck."
-
-La Foscarina felt as if she were in a dream. Stelio seemed to have been
-speaking of himself in those strange figures of speech, as on that last
-night of September when he had explained the myth of the pomegranate,
-and the name of the imaginary woman began with the first two syllables
-of the name he had given her in those days! Was any personal
-significance veiled behind this story? Why had he, deliberately, in
-the vicinity of the place where she had been seized with that terrible
-laughter, called up, by that fanciful tale, the memory of the broken
-vase? In trying to understand, she made for herself an instrument
-of torture, with the dream-fancies of Stelio's brain. She did not
-remember that as yet he was ignorant of her approaching departure.
-Instinctively she said within herself:--I am going far-away; do not
-wound me.--
-
-She wished to hear the remainder of the story, however, for she longed
-to understand him fully.
-
-"Well, what happened then to the man with the scarlet thread?" she
-inquired.
-
-"More than once he felt his head was insecure on his shoulders," Stelio
-replied laughingly. "He had to blow pipes as large as the trunk of a
-tree, and he had to do it with his own mouth, unaided by bellows. He
-blew and blew with all his might, without ceasing. Fancy it! The lungs
-of a Cyclops would hardly be strong enough for that. Ah, some day I
-shall describe the fever of that existence hanging between the ax and
-the production of a miracle, in colloquy with the elements. He had
-Fire, Water, and Earth, but lacked Air--the movement of the Air. But
-every day the Council of Ten sent to him a red-haired man to wish him
-good morning--you know, that red-haired man, with a cap over his eyes,
-who embraces the column in the _Adoration of the Magi_ of the second
-Bonifazio. After colossal labors, Seguso had a brilliant idea. He found
-a magician, who was said to have power over the Wind in favor of long
-navigations. He said to the wizard: 'I need a little wind, not too
-light nor too strong, but steady and gentle, which I could manage as I
-wish: only a little breeze with which to blow some glass that I have in
-my head. _Lenius aspirans aura secunda venit._ Do you understand, old
-man?'"
-
-The story-teller burst into a ringing laugh, for he could fancy the
-scene with all its details in a house on the Calle della Testa, at San
-Zanepolo, where the Schiavone lived with his daughter.
-
-La Foscarina tried to join in his gayety; but his boyish laughter
-pained her as it had once before when she was lost in the labyrinth.
-
-"It is a long story," Stelio went on. "Some day I shall use it, but
-I am keeping it for a time when I have more leisure. Now fancy! The
-magician works the spell. Every night Dardi sent his sailors to the Tre
-Porti to spread a snare for the little Wind. At last, one night, or
-rather just before dawn, when the moon was about to set, they caught it
-asleep on a sandy bank in the midst of a flock of tired swallows it had
-borne thither.
-
-"There it lay, on its back, breathing as lightly as a child in the
-salty aroma of the waters, almost covered by innumerable little
-forked tails. The rising tide rocked it in its slumber, and the
-black-and-white travelers fluttered about it, weary with their long
-flight."
-
-"What a charming fancy!" exclaimed La Foscarina at this fresh picture.
-"Where have you seen that?"
-
-"Here begins the real charm of the story," he answered. "They seize the
-sleeping Wind, bind it with osier withes, carry it aboard their boat,
-and set sail for Temòdia. The bark is invaded by the flock of swallows,
-which will not abandon the leader of their flight."
-
-Stelio paused, because the details of the fantasy crowded his
-imagination to such a degree that he knew not which to choose to
-relate.
-
-"And then?" urged his companion, with interest.
-
-"I can tell no more now, Fosca. I know too many things.... Well,
-imagine that Dardi falls in love with his prisoner. It is called
-Ornitio, because it leads flights of migrating birds. A continual
-twittering of swallows surrounds Temòdia; nests hang from the posts and
-the scaffolding that surround the great structure; wings are singed
-in the flames of the furnace, when Ornitio blows through the tube to
-create a light and luminous column with that ball of burning paste. But
-before he had tamed it and taught it what to do, he had much trouble
-with it. The Master of the Flame began by speaking Latin to it, and
-reciting lines of Virgil to it, believing it would understand. But the
-azure-haired Ornitio spoke Greek, naturally, with a slightly sibilant
-accent. It knew Sappho's odes by heart, and while it breathed through
-the unequal tubes, it remembered the pipes of Pan."
-
-"And what did it eat?"
-
-"Pollen and salt."
-
-"Who gave it the food?"
-
-"No one. It was sufficient to inhale the pollen and salt scattered on
-the breeze."
-
-"And did it never try to escape?"
-
-"Always. But Seguso took infinite precautions, like the lover he was."
-
-"And did Ornitio return his love?"
-
-"Yes, it began to love him after a time, particularly because of the
-scarlet thread that the master wore continually around his bare neck."
-
-"And Perdilanza?"
-
-"She was left alone, and languished in her grief. I will tell you more
-of her some day. Some day I shall go to the seashore of Palestrina, and
-I will write this fable for you in the golden sand."
-
-"But how does the story end?"
-
-"The miracle is accomplished. The Archorgan is raised at Temòdia with
-its seven thousand glass pipes, resembling one of those frozen forests
-which Ornitio--who was a little inclined to boast of the wonders it had
-met in its travels--declared it had seen in the land of the Iporborrei.
-At last comes the day of the Sensa. The _Serenissimo_, between the
-Patriarch and the Archbishop of Spalatro, goes out of the harbor of San
-Marco on the _Bucentaur_. So great is the pomp that Ornitio believes
-it must be the triumphal return of the son of Chronos. The fountains
-are set playing all around Temòdia; and animated by the eternal silence
-of the lagoon, the gigantic organ peals forth, under the magic fingers
-of the new musicians, a wave of harmony so vast that it reaches as
-far as the mainland and even to the Adriatic. The _Bucentaur_ stops,
-because its forty oars have suddenly fallen at its sides, abandoned
-by the astonished crew. But suddenly the wave of harmony breaks into
-discordant sounds, and at last it dies away in a faint murmur. Dardi
-feels the instrument becoming dumb under his fingers, as if his own
-soul had failed. What has happened? The master hears only great shouts
-of jeers and scorn that come to him through the silent pipes--the sound
-of firing and the uproar of the populace. A group embarks from the
-_Bucentaur_, bringing the red-haired man, who bears a block and an ax.
-The blow is aimed exactly at the scarlet thread; the head falls, and is
-thrown into the water, where it floats like the head of Orpheus."
-
-"But what had happened?"
-
-"Perdilanza had thrown herself into the cataract! The water dragged her
-into the machinery of the organ. Her body, with its famous hair, lay
-across the great delicate instrument, and silenced its musical heart."
-
-"But Ornitio?"
-
-"Ornitio rescued the head from the water and flew away with it toward
-the sea. The swallows heard of its flight and followed it, and very
-soon a cloud of black wings and white surrounds the fugitive. All the
-nests in Venice remain empty after this sudden flight."
-
-"And Dardi's head?"
-
-"Where it is, no one knows," concluded the story-teller, laughing.
-
-The woman bent her head in thoughtful silence.
-
-"Perhaps there is a hidden meaning in your tale," she said, after a
-pause. "Perhaps I have understood."
-
-"Alas, yes! if there were any resemblance between my audacity and that
-of the master workman. Perhaps I too should wear a scarlet thread
-around my neck, as a sort of warning."
-
-"You will have your great destiny. I have no fear for you."
-
-He ceased to laugh.
-
-"Yes, my friend, I must conquer. And you shall help me. Every morning
-I too receive my menacing visitor--the expectation of those that love
-me and those that hate me. Expectation should wear the dress of the
-executioner, for nothing on earth is so pitiless."
-
-"But it is the measure of your power."
-
-He felt the vulture's beak in his breast. Instinctively he straightened
-himself up, seized with an impatience of even their slow idling on the
-water. Why did he live in such idleness? Every hour and every minute he
-ought to be trying, struggling, fortifying himself against destruction,
-diminution, violation, contagion. Every hour and every minute his eyes
-should be fixed on his aim, and all his energies should be concentrated
-upon it.
-
-"Do you know this saying of the great Herodotus: 'The name of the bow
-is Bios, and its work is death'? This saying is one that excites our
-spirits even before communicating to it its exact meaning. I heard
-it continually within myself, that evening last autumn, when I was
-sitting at your table--the night of the Epiphany of the Flame. That
-night I had an hour of true Dionysian life, an hour of secret though
-terrible delight, as if I held in my breast the burning mountain where
-the Tiades howl and shriek. Sometimes I could really hear songs and
-clamor, and the cries of distant battle. It astonished me that I could
-remain motionless, and the sense of my bodily immobility increased my
-mental frenzy. I could see only your face, which suddenly appeared
-extraordinarily beautiful, revealing all the strength of your soul;
-and behind it I could see other countries and other peoples. If I
-could only tell you how I saw you! In the tumult, at the passage of
-marvelous images, accompanied by floods of music, I called to you as
-in the thick of battle; I made appeals which perhaps you heard--not
-for love alone, but for glory; not for one thirst, but for two, and
-I know not which was the more ardent. And the face of my great work
-appeared to me then the same as your face. I saw it, I tell you! And
-with incredible rapidity my work took form in words, song, movement,
-and symphony, and was so real that if I succeed in infusing a part of
-it into that which I wish to express, I shall surely inflame the world.
-
-"To express oneself! That is the necessity. The greatest vision has
-no value if it is not manifested and condensed in vital forms. And
-I have everything to create. I am not pouring my substance into
-hereditary molds. My work is entirely my own invention. I must not,
-and I will not, obey anything but my instinct and the genius of my
-race. Nevertheless, like Dardi, who saw the famous organ at the house
-of Caterino Zeno, I too have another work before my mind--a work
-accomplished by a formidable creator, a gigantic work in the eyes of
-man."
-
-The image of the barbaric creator reappeared to him: the blue eyes
-gleamed under the vast forehead, and he saw once more the white
-hair tossed by the wind about that aged neck. He remembered his own
-indescribable thrill of joy and fear when he had so unexpectedly felt
-beneath his hand the throbbing of that sacred heart.
-
-"I should say not before but around my spirit. Sometimes it is like
-a stormy sea trying to draw me down and swallow me. My Temòdia is a
-granite rock in the open sea, and I am like an artisan trying to erect
-upon it a pure Doric temple. Compelled to defend the order of his
-columns from the violence of the waves, his spirit is always strained
-in order never to cease to hear, in the midst of the clamor, the secret
-rhythm which alone must regulate the intervals between lines and
-spaces. And in this sense too my tragedy is a battle."
-
-He took one of his friend's hands.
-
-"Do you hear the song?" he asked.
-
-"Where is it?" she said, raising her face to the sky. "Is it in heaven
-or on the earth?"
-
-An infinite melody seemed to be flowing through the peaceful, silvery
-atmosphere.
-
-She felt Stelio's hand quiver.
-
-"When Alessandro enters the illuminated chamber where the virgin has
-been reading the lament of Antigone," he said, "he tells how he has
-come on horseback across the plain of Argos, where the song of the
-larks fills the sky. He says that one lark fell at his horse's feet,
-like a stone, and lay there silent, overcome by its own frenzy of joy
-in its song. He picked it up. 'Here it is.' Then you hold your hand
-toward him, you take the bird, and murmur: 'Ah, it is still warm!' And
-while you speak the virgin trembles. You can feel her quivering."
-
-The actress felt the mystic chill steal over her once more, as if the
-soul of the blind woman reëntered her own soul.
-
-"At the end of the Prelude, the impetuosity of the chromatic
-progressions expresses this growing joy, this fever of delight....
-Listen, listen!... Ah, what a miracle! This morning, Fosca, this
-morning I was at work upon my melody, and now it is developing itself
-in the air! Are we not in a state of grace?"
-
-A spirit of life seemed indeed running throughout the solitude; a
-vehement inspiration filled the silence with emotion. La Foscarina gave
-up her whole soul to it, as a leaf yields itself to the whirlwind,
-ravished to the very summit of love and faith.
-
-But a feverish impatience to act, to work, to accomplish seized the
-young man. His capacity for work seemed multiplied. He thought of the
-plenitude of the hours to come; he saw his work in concrete form--the
-pages, the scores, the variety of needs, the richness of material
-adaptable to rhythm.
-
-"In a week, Fosca, if grace assists me, my Prelude will be finished,
-and I should like to try it immediately with an orchestra. Perhaps I
-shall go to Rome to do this. Antimo della Bella is even more impatient
-than I; I receive a letter from him almost every day. I believe that
-my presence in Rome is necessary for a few days in order to prevent
-certain errors that may arise in the building of the theater. Antimo
-writes about the possibility of tearing down the old stone stairs
-leading from the Corsini Garden to the Janiculum. The street that will
-lead to the theater, after one passes the Arch of Septimius, will
-continue beside the Palazzo Corsini, cross the garden, and extend
-to the foot of the hill. The hill is green and mossy, covered with
-cypress, laurel, and flags. The Paulina fountain rises at the left.
-A flight of stone steps leads to a terrace from which open two paths
-bordered by Apollo-like laurels, and worthy of leading the people
-toward Poetry. Can anyone imagine a nobler entrance? Centuries have
-wrapped it in mystery; no sound is heard but the song of birds, the
-tinkling of fountains, the whisper of the forest. And I believe
-that poets and innocents can even hear there the fluttering of the
-Hamadryads and the breath of Pan!"
-
-The ugly shores, crumbling stones, decaying roots, traces of ruined
-buildings, the odor of dissolution, the funereal cypresses, the black
-crosses, in vain recalled to him the words the statues beside the
-Brenta had spoken with their marble lips. Only the great song of
-victory and liberty, stronger than all other signs, now touched the
-heart of him who was to create with joy. "On! on! Higher! ever higher!"
-
-And the heart of Perdita, purified from all cowardice, ready for any
-test, betrothed itself once more to Life! As in that distant hour of
-the delirious night, she repeated: "Let me serve! Let me serve!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- THE WORLD'S BEREAVEMENT
-
-
-The gondola entered a canal enclosed between two green shores, which
-reached the line of vision so precisely that the numerous reeds were
-perceptible, the newer ones discernible by their paler tint.
-
-From the fulness of her soul, and the abundance of her nature, La
-Foscarina sought everywhere for living things to love; her glance
-became child-like once more, and all things were reflected in it as in
-the peaceful water, and some seemed to reappear from the distant past,
-like apparitions.
-
-When the gondola touched the shore, she was surprised at having arrived.
-
-"Do you wish to land, or do you prefer to go back?" asked Stelio,
-coming out of his reverie.
-
-For a moment she hesitated, because her hand lay in his, and to move
-would have meant a lessening of sweetness.
-
-"Yes," at last she said, with a smile. "Let us walk on this grass a
-little while."
-
-They landed on the Island of San Francesco. A few slender young cypress
-shrubs greeted them timidly. Not a human face was to be seen. The
-invisible myriad filled the desert with their canticle of praise. The
-mists rose in clouds near the sunset hour.
-
-"How many times we have walked together on the grass, have we not,
-Stelio?"
-
-"But now comes the steep rock," he replied.
-
-"Let the rock come, no matter how steep and rough it may be," said La
-Foscarina.
-
-Stelio was surprised at the unusual gayety in his companion's voice. He
-looked at her, and saw a sort of intoxicated joy deep in her beautiful
-eyes.
-
-"Why do we feel so joyous and free on this lonely island?"
-
-"And do you know the reason why?"
-
-"To others, this is a melancholy pilgrimage. Most persons, when they
-come to this place, leave it with the taste of death on their lips."
-
-"But we are in a state of grace," said La Foscarina.
-
-"The more we hope, the more we live," was the reply.
-
-"And the more we love, the more we hope."
-
-The rhythm of the aerial song continued, drawing from them their ideal
-essences.
-
-"How beautiful you are!" said Stelio.
-
-A sudden flush flowed over that impassioned face. She was silent, but
-her breath came quick, and she half-closed her eyes.
-
-"A warm current of air is passing," she said in a half whisper. "Did
-you not feel on the water an occasional breath of warmer air?"
-
-She drew deep breaths.
-
-"There is an odor like that of new-mown hay. Don't you detect it?"
-
-"That is the odor that comes from the banks of seaweed that are
-beginning to be uncovered."
-
-"See how beautiful the country is!"
-
-"That is Le Vignole. Down there is the Lido. And over there is the
-Island of Sant' Erasmo."
-
-The sun had now thrown aside its veil and was showering gold upon the
-estuary. The damp banks emerging from the fog suggested the opening of
-flowers. The shadows of the slender cypresses began to grow longer and
-of a deeper blue.
-
-"I am certain," said La Foscarina, "that almond trees are in blossom
-somewhere near. Let us go on the dyke."
-
-She shook her head, tossing back her hair with one of those instinctive
-movements that seemed to break a bond or to free her of some fetter.
-
-"Wait!"
-
-And quickly withdrawing from her hat two large pins that held it in
-place, she uncovered her head. She turned back to the landing and
-tossed the sparkling hat into the gondola; then she rejoined her
-friend, running her fingers lightly through the waves of her hair,
-through which the air passed, while the sun shone on it warmly. She
-seemed to feel relieved, as if she breathed more freely.
-
-"Did the wings hurt?" Stelio asked with a laugh.
-
-And he regarded the ripples, roughened not by the comb but by the wind.
-
-"Yes, the least weight annoys me. If I should not appear eccentric,
-I should always go without a hat. But when I see the trees I cannot
-resist my impulses. My hair remembers that it was born wild and free,
-and it wishes to breathe in its natural way--in the desert, at least."
-
-Frank and gay in her manner, she glided over the grass with her
-graceful, swaying movement. And Stelio recalled the day when, in the
-Gradenigo garden, she had appeared to his eyes like the beautiful tawny
-greyhound.
-
-"Oh, here comes a Capuchin!"
-
-The friar-guardian approached them, and greeted them with affability.
-He offered to conduct Stelio within the walls of the monastery, but
-said that the rules forbade the admission of his companion.
-
-"Shall I go in?" said Stelio, with a look at La Foscarina, who was
-smiling.
-
-"Yes, go."
-
-"But you will be all alone."
-
-"Never mind; I will stay here alone."
-
-"I will bring you a bit from the sacred pine."
-
-He followed the friar under the portico with a raftered roof, whence
-hung the empty swallows' nests. Before he crossed the threshold, he
-turned once more to wave his hand at his friend. Then the door closed
-after him.
-
- O BEATA SOLITUDO!
- O SOLA BEATITUDO!
-
-Then, as a change in the stops of an organ changes its whole tone, the
-woman's thoughts were suddenly transfigured. The horror of absence,
-to her the worst of all evils, bore down upon her loving soul. Her
-beloved was no longer there; she no longer heard his voice, felt his
-breath, touched his firm and gentle hand. She no longer saw him live;
-she could no longer realize that the air, the lights and shadows, all
-the life of the world, harmonized itself with his life!--Suppose that
-door never should open again--that he never should return to me!--No,
-that could not be. He would surely cross that threshold again in a few
-minutes, and once more she would receive him into her eyes and into her
-very soul. But alas! in a few days, would he not thus disappear again,
-as he had disappeared now? And first the field, then the mountain,
-then other fields and mountains and rivers, then the strait and the
-ocean, the infinite space that neither tears nor cries can cross, would
-they not come between her and that brow, those eyes, those lips? The
-image of the far-off brutal city black with coal and bristling with
-arms, filled the peaceful island; the crash of hammers, the grinding
-of wheels, the puffing of engines, the immense groaning of iron,
-drowned the melody of the springtime. And with each of these simple
-things--with the grass, the sands, the brooks, the seaweed, that soft
-feather floating downward, perhaps from the breast of a songbird--was
-contrasted the vision of streets overflowing with the human torrent,
-houses with thousands of deformed eyes, full of fevers that are enemies
-to sleep, theaters filled with the restlessness or the stupor of men
-who yield one hour to relaxation from the ferocious battle for lucre.
-And still, as in a vision, she saw again her own face and her name
-on walls contaminated by the leprosy of posters, on boards carried
-by stupid bearers, on gigantic bridges of factories, on the doors of
-public vehicles, here, there, and everywhere.
-
-"Look! Look at this! A branch of flowering almond! There is an almond
-tree in bloom in the monastery garden, in the second cloister, near the
-sacred pine! And you could detect the odor!"
-
-Stelio ran toward her, joyous as a child, followed by the Capuchin, who
-bore a bouquet of fragrant thyme.
-
-"Look! Take it. See what a wonderful thing it is!"
-
-She took the branch, trembling, and her eyes were bright with tears.
-
-"And you knew it was blooming!" said Stelio.
-
-He perceived the glittering silvery drops in her eyes, which made them
-look like the petals of a flower. And at that instant, of all her
-adored person, he loved most blindly the delicate lines that went from
-the corners of her eyes to her temples, the tiny veins that made her
-eyelids look like violets, the sweet curve of her cheek, the tapering
-chin, and all that never would bloom again, all the shadows of that
-impassioned face.
-
-"Ah, Father," said she, with a bright glance, repressing her sadness,
-"will not Christ's Poor Man weep again in heaven for this broken
-branch?"
-
-The friar smiled with playful indulgence.
-
-"When this good gentleman saw our tree," he replied, "he gave me no
-time to speak, but had the branch in his hand in a moment, and I could
-only say Amen. But the almond tree is rich."
-
-He was placid and affable, with a crown of hair still nearly black,
-with a refined, olive-skinned face, and great tawny eyes, as clear as a
-topaz.
-
-"Here is some savory thyme," he added, offering the herbs to La
-Foscarina.
-
-They could hear a choir of youthful voices singing a Response.
-
-"Those are our novices; we have fifteen with us."
-
-He accompanied the visitors to the meadow behind the convent. Standing
-on a bank, at the foot of a blasted cypress, the good monk pointed to
-the fertile isles, praised their abundance, mentioned their varieties
-of fruit, lauded the more delightful according to the seasons, and
-directed their attention toward the boats sailing toward the Rialto
-with their new harvest.
-
-"Praise to Thee, O Lord, for our Mother Earth!" said the woman with the
-flowering branch.
-
-The Franciscan was susceptible to the beauty of that feminine voice,
-and was silent.
-
-Lofty cypresses encircled the pious field; four of them showed the
-marks of lightning strokes. Their tops were motionless, and were the
-only sharp outlines in the level of the meadows, and waters that
-blended with the horizon. Not the slightest breeze now stirred the
-infinite mirror. A profound enchantment like an ecstasy filled the
-lovely place with rapture. The melody of the winged creatures still
-continued to float from invisible regions, but it, too, seemed to begin
-to flag and soften in this silent sanctuary.
-
-"At this hour, on the hills of Umbria," said he that had despoiled the
-flowering almond of the cloister, "every olive-tree has at its base,
-like a covering that is shed, a heap of its cut branches; and the tree
-seems more beautiful because the heap of branches hides its rugged
-roots. Saint Francis passes in the air, and with his finger he heals
-the pain of the wounds made by the pruning-knife."
-
-The Capuchin made the sign of the cross, and took his leave.
-
-"Praise be to Jesus Christ!"
-
-The visitors watched him as he moved away under the deep shadows cast
-by the cypresses.
-
-"He has found peace," said La Foscarina. "Does it not seem so to you,
-Stelio? There is great peace in his face and his voice. Look at his
-gait, too."
-
-Alternately a ray of light and a bar of shadow fell across his tonsure
-and his tunic.
-
-"He gave me a piece of the sacred pine," said Stelio. "I will send it
-to Sofia, who is devoted to the seraphic saint. Here it is. It has no
-resinous odor now. Smell it!"
-
-For Sofia's sake she kissed the relic. The lips of the good sister
-would touch the spot where she had pressed her own.
-
-"Yes--send it."
-
-Silently they strolled along, their heads bent, in the footsteps of the
-man of peace, approaching the landing between the rows of cypress trees.
-
-"Do you not sometimes wish to see her again?" asked La Foscarina, with
-a touch of shyness.
-
-"Yes, very much," was Stelio's soft-spoken answer.
-
-"And your mother?"
-
-"Yes, my heart yearns for her--for that mother who looks for me each
-day."
-
-"And would you not like to go back there?"
-
-"Yes, I shall return, perhaps."
-
-"When?"
-
-"I do not know yet. But I do wish to see once more my mother and Sofia.
-I long to see them very much, Foscarina."
-
-"And why do you not go to them, then? What holds you here?"
-
-He took the hand that hung idly at her side, and they continued to walk
-thus. As the oblique rays of the sun lighted the right cheek of each,
-they saw their united shadows preceding them on the grass.
-
-"When you were speaking of the hills of Umbria just now," said La
-Foscarina, "perhaps you were thinking of the hills of your own part of
-the country. That figure of the pruned olive tree was not new to me.
-I remember you speaking to me once before of the pruning of trees. In
-no other form of his labor can the farmer gain a deeper sense of the
-mute life that is in a tree. When he stands before a pear, an apple,
-or a peach tree with the pruning-knife and shears that may increase
-their fertility and strength, but which could nevertheless as easily
-cause their death, the spirit of divination surges within him, from
-the wisdom he has acquired from his long communings with the earth and
-the sky. The tree is at its most delicate moment, when its senses are
-awakened, and the sap is flowing to the buds that swell and swell, and
-are just ready to open. And man, with his pitiless knife, must regulate
-the mysterious movement of the sap. The tree is there intact, ignorant
-of Hesiod and of Virgil, in labor with its flowering and its fruit; and
-every branch in the air is as full of life as is the arm of the man
-that wields the knife. Which is the branch that must be cut off? Will
-the sap heal the cut? You told me about your orchard once--I remember
-it. You said that all the cuts should be turned toward the north, so
-then the sun should not see them."
-
-She spoke as she had spoken in that far-off evening in November, when
-the young man had arrived at her house, breathless from the tempest of
-wind, after he had borne the hero in his arms.
-
-He smiled, and let himself be led by that dear hand. He inhaled
-the fragrance of that flowery branch in which was a suggestion of
-bitterness.
-
-"It is true," he said. "And Laimo would prepare the ointment of Saint
-Fiacre in the mortar, and Sofia would bring him the strong linen to
-bandage the larger wounds, after they had been cleansed."
-
-In fancy he could see the kneeling peasant, pounding cow-dung, clay,
-and barley-husks in a stone mortar, according to an ancient recipe.
-
-"In ten days," he continued, "the whole hill, seen from the seas, will
-be like a great pink cloud. Sofia wrote to remind me of it. Has she
-ever reappeared to you?"
-
-"She is with us now."
-
-"She is now standing at the window, looking out at the purpling sea;
-and our mother, leaning on the window-ledge with her, says to her: 'Who
-knows whether Stelio may not be on that sail boat which I see waiting
-at the mouth of the river for the wind? He promised me he would return
-unexpectedly by sea, in a small boat.'--And then her heart aches."
-
-"Ah, why do you disappoint her?"
-
-"Yes, Fosca, you are right. But I can live far-away from her for months
-and months, yet feel that my life is full. Then--an hour comes when
-nothing in the world appears to me so sweet as her dear eyes and there
-is a part of myself that remains inconsolable. I have heard the sailors
-of the Tyrrhenean Sea call the Adriatic the Gulf of Venice. To-night
-I remember that my house is on the Gulf, and that seems to bring it
-nearer to me."
-
-They had reached the gondola once more, but turned to look back at the
-isle of prayer, where grew the tall cypresses with their imploring arms.
-
-"Over yonder is the canal of the Tre Porti that leads to the open sea,"
-said the homesick one, fancying that he could see himself standing on
-the deck of the little brig, in sight of his tamarisks and myrtles.
-
-They reëmbarked, and floated away, silent for a long time. The aerial
-melody still fell softly on the archipelago.
-
-"Now that the plan of your work is finished," said La Foscarina,
-beginning again her gentle persuasion, though her heart trembled in her
-breast, "you will need peace and quiet for your labor upon it. Have
-you not always worked best at your home? In no other place will you be
-able to soothe the restless anxiety that possesses you. I know it well."
-
-"That is true," he replied. "When the yearning for glory seizes us,
-we believe that the conquest of art must be like the siege of a
-fortification, and that trumpets and shouts accompany the courageous
-assault; while in reality the only work that is of real value is that
-which has been developed in austere silence--work performed with slow,
-indomitable perseverance, in hard, pure solitude. Nothing is of any
-value save the complete abandonment of soul and body to the Idea which
-we desire to establish among men as a permanent and dominating force."
-
-"Ah, you know it, too!"
-
-The woman's eyes were filled with tears again, at the sound of those
-inexorable words, in which was expressed the depth of virile passion,
-the heroic necessity of mental domination, the firm determination to
-surpass himself and to force his destiny without flinching.
-
-"Yes, you know it well!"
-
-And she was thrilled, as one that beholds a noble spectacle; and,
-contemplating that embodied force of will, all else appeared vain to
-her. The tears she had felt in her eyes when he had brought her the
-flowering branch now seemed mean and weakly effeminate in comparison
-with those that in this moment welled up and were alone worthy to be
-kissed away by her friend.
-
-"Ah, well, then--go back to your sea, to your own countryside, to your
-own home. Light your lamp once more with the oil of your own olives."
-
-Stelio's lips were closely compressed, and a deep frown wrinkled his
-brow.
-
-"The dear sister will come to your side again to lay a blade of grass
-on the difficult page."
-
-He bent his brow, which was clouded with a thought.
-
-"You will rest in talking with Sofia by the window; and perhaps you
-will see again the flocks of sheep on their way from the plain to the
-mountains."
-
-The sunlight was approaching the gigantic acropolis of the Dolomites.
-The phalanx of clouds was disordered as if in battle, pierced by
-innumerable darts of light, and steeped in a marvelous blood-like
-crimson.
-
-Slowly, after a long silence, Stelio spoke:
-
-"And if she should ask me about the fate of the virgin who reads the
-lament of Antigone?"
-
-La Foscarina started.
-
-"And suppose she asks me about the love of the brother who searches
-through the tombs?"
-
-The woman felt a dread of this phantom.
-
-"And suppose the page on which she lays the blade of grass were the
-page wherein that trembling soul tells of its secret and terrible
-battle against the horrible evil?"
-
-In her sudden terror, the woman could find no words. Both relapsed into
-silence, looking long at the sharp peaks of the distant mountains,
-which glowed as if just emerging from primordial fire. The spectacle
-of this eternally desolate grandeur awakened in them a sense of
-mysterious fatality and a certain confused terror which they could
-neither conquer nor comprehend.
-
-"And you?" said Stelio suddenly, after a long silence.
-
-La Foscarina made no reply.
-
-The bells of San Marco sounded the signal for the Angelus, and their
-tremendous clamor swelled in ever-widening waves over the still crimson
-lagoon which they were leaving to the memories of shadows and death.
-From San Giorgio Maggiore and San Giorgio dei Greci, from San Giorgio
-degli Schiavoni and San Giovanni in Bragora, from San Moisé, from the
-Salute, the Redentore, and, from one place to another, throughout the
-whole domain of the Evangelists, even to the distant towers of the
-Madonna dell' Orto, of San Giobbe and Sant' Andrea, the bronze voices
-answered, mingling in one great chorus floating over the silent stones
-and waters, a veritable dome of sound, invisible, yet the vibrations of
-which seemed to communicate with the scintillation of the first stars.
-And the reverberation above the heads of the two in the gondola was so
-great that they seemed to feel it in the roots of their hair and in the
-cool shiver of their flesh.
-
-"Oh, is that you, Daniele?"
-
-Stelio had recognized at the door of his own house, on the Fondamenta
-Samedo, the figure of Daniele Glauro.
-
-"Ah, Stelio, I have been waiting for you!" cried Daniele breathlessly,
-striving to make himself heard above the pealing of bells. "Richard
-Wagner is dead!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- THE LAST FAREWELL
-
-
-All the world seemed to have diminished in value.
-
-The nomad woman had armed herself anew with courage, and planned the
-route of her next professional tour. From the thought of the hero
-lying in his coffin, a lofty inspiration came to all noble hearts. La
-Foscarina knew how to receive it and to convert it to the thoughts and
-actions of daily life.
-
-It happened that her beloved surprised her at the time she was packing
-her familiar books, the little cherished treasures from which she never
-parted--things that for her possessed the power of imparting dreams or
-consolation.
-
-"What are you doing?" Stelio asked.
-
-"I am making ready to leave the country."
-
-She saw a change pass over his face, but she did not waver.
-
-"And where are you going?"
-
-"A long distance from here--I shall cross the Atlantic."
-
-Stelio became slightly paler. But suddenly he was seized with doubt; he
-thought she was not speaking the truth; that she wished only to prove
-him; that her decision was not absolutely fixed, and that she expected
-to be persuaded to remain. The unlooked-for disillusion on the banks of
-Murano had left its mark on his heart.
-
-"Have you really decided on this, then, so suddenly?"
-
-She was simple, sure of herself, and prompt in her reply.
-
-"My decision is not exactly sudden. My idleness has lasted too long,
-and I have the responsibility of all my company on my shoulders. While
-I am waiting for the Theater of Apollo to be opened, and for _The
-Victory of Man_ to be finished, I shall go once more to bid farewell
-to the Barbarians. I must work for your beautiful enterprise. We
-shall need a great deal of gold to restore the treasures of Mycenæ.
-And all that is connected with your work must appear with unrivaled
-magnificence. I do not wish Cassandra's mask to be of some base metal.
-But, above all, I wish to satisfy your desire that for the first three
-days the populace shall have free admission to the theater, and after
-that on one day of every week. My faith aids me to leave you. Time
-flies. It is necessary that each person should be in his own place,
-ready and full of strength, when the great day comes. I shall not fail
-you. I hope that you will be satisfied with your friend. I am going
-away to work, and certainly the task will be more difficult than I ever
-have found it before. But you, my poor boy, what a burden you have to
-bear! What an effort we demand from you! What great things we expect
-from you! Ah, you know it!"
-
-She had begun courageously, in a tone that was almost blithe, trying
-to seem what above all she must be--a good and faithful instrument at
-the service of a powerful genius, a strong and willing companion. But
-a wave of repressed emotion would rise in her throat and stop her
-speech. Her pauses grew longer, and her hand wandered uncertainly among
-her books and treasures.
-
-"May everything be ever propitious to your work! That is the only thing
-that really matters--all else is nothing. Let us lift our hearts!"
-
-She shook her head, with its two wild wings, and held out both hands
-to her beloved. He, pale and grave, clasped them close. In her dear
-eyes, that were like sparkling springs of water, he saw a flash of the
-same beauty that had dazzled him one evening in the room where the fire
-had roared, and he had listened to the development of the two great
-melodies.
-
-"I love you and I have faith in you," he said; "I will not fail you and
-you will not fail me. Something springs from us that shall be stronger
-than life itself."
-
-"A great melancholy," she answered.
-
-Before her, on a table, lay the familiar book, with pages turned
-down and margins full of scribbled notes; here and there a petal, a
-flower, a blade of grass lay between the leaves--signs of the sorrow
-that had asked and obtained from them the consolation of relief or of
-forgetfulness. Before her were strewn all the little cherished objects
-dear to her, strange, varied; nearly all were things of no value: a
-doll's foot, a silver heart, an ivory compass, a watch without a dial,
-a small iron lantern, a single earring, a flint, a key, a seal, and
-other trifles; but all were consecrated by some memory, animated by
-some superstitious belief, touched by the finger of love or of death,
-relics that could speak only to one of war and of truce, of hope
-and of sadness. Among these objects were figures to which artists
-had entrusted their secret confession, signs and enigmas, profound
-allegories, hiding truths that, like the sun, could not be gazed at by
-mortal eyes.
-
-The young man put his arm around his friend's waist, and silently
-they went to the window. They saw the far-distant sky, the trees, the
-towers, the end of the lagoon over which Twilight was bending her face,
-while the Euganean hills were as quiet and blue as if they were the
-wings of earth folded in the peacefulness of eventide.
-
-They turned toward each other, looking into the depths of each other's
-eyes. Then they embraced, as if to seal a silent compact.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Yes, all the world seemed to have diminished in value.
-
-Stelio Effrena had asked of the widow of Richard Wagner that the two
-young Italian men that had carried the unconscious hero from the vessel
-to the shore that night in November, with four of their friends,
-might have granted to them the honor of bearing the coffin from the
-death-chamber to the boat and from the boat to the hearse. This request
-was granted.
-
-It was the sixteenth of February, at one o'clock in the afternoon.
-Stelio Effrena, Daniele Glauro, Francesco de Lizo, Baldassare Stampa,
-Fabio Molza, and Antimo della Bella waited in the hall of the palace.
-The latter had come from Rome, bringing with him the artisans engaged
-in the building of the Theater of Apollo, that they might bear at the
-funeral ceremony bunches of laurel gathered on the Janiculum.
-
-They waited in silence, without even looking at one another, each
-overcome by the throbbing of his own heart. Nothing was heard save a
-faint dropping of water on the steps before the great door, where, on
-the candelabra at the doorposts appeared the two words: DOMUS PACIS.
-
-The boatman, who had been dear to the hero, came to call them. In that
-rough yet faithful face, the eyes showed that the lids were burned by
-weeping.
-
-Stelio Effrena advanced first, followed by his companions. After
-ascending the stairs, they entered a low-studded, darkened room, filled
-with the melancholy odor of flowers and fluids. They paused there a few
-minutes. A door opened. They passed through the doorway one by one into
-the next room. Each turned pale as he entered.
-
-The body was there, enclosed in its crystal coffin, and beside it stood
-the woman with the face of snowy pallor. The second coffin, of polished
-metal, stood shining on the floor.
-
-The six bearers ranged themselves about the coffin, awaiting a sign.
-The silence was profound, and no one moved; but an impetuous sadness
-shook each soul like a tempest of wind.
-
-Each gazed on the elect of Life and of Death. An infinite smile
-illumined the face of the hero lying there--infinite and distant as the
-glint of a glacier, as the sparkle of the sea, as the halo of the star.
-Their eyes could not bear to look long at it, but their hearts, with
-an awe-struck fear that made them religious, felt as if they had the
-revelation of a divine secret.
-
-The woman with the snow-white face made a slight movement, yet
-preserved the same attitude, rigid as a statue.
-
-Then the six friends approached the body, extended their arms, summoned
-up their strength. Stelio Effrena took his place at the head and
-Daniele Glauro took his at the feet, as on that day in November. The
-young men lifted their burden with one movement, at a low-spoken word
-from the leader. The eyes of each were dazzled, as if a sudden ray of
-sunlight had pierced the crystal. Baldassare Stampa broke into sobs.
-The same knot was in each throat. The coffin swayed, then it was
-lowered into its metal covering, which enveloped it like a suit of
-armor.
-
-The six friends remained overcome with grief. They hesitated to put the
-cover in its place, fascinated by that infinite smile. Stelio Effrena
-heard a light rustling, and looked up. He saw the white face bending
-over the body, a superhuman apparition of love and grief. That instant
-was like eternity. The woman disappeared.
-
-When the coffin was closed, they lifted their burden a second
-time--heavier now. Out of the room and down the stairs they bore
-it slowly. Rapt in a kind of sublime anguish, they could see their
-fraternal faces reflected in the polished metal.
-
-The funeral barge awaited them at the entrance. The pall was laid
-over the coffin. The six friends waited, with heads uncovered, for the
-family to descend. They came, all together. The widow passed them,
-veiled. But the splendor of her face would remain in their memories
-forever.
-
-The procession was short; the funeral barge went first, followed by the
-widow with her relatives; then came the young men. The sky was cloudy
-above the broad road of stone and water. The deep silence was worthy of
-Him who transformed the forces of the universe for man's worship into
-infinite song.
-
-A flock of doves, flying from the marbles of the Scalsi, winged their
-way with a flash of plumage above the bier and across the canal,
-circling the cupola of San Simeone.
-
-At the quay a silent gathering of faithful friends was waiting. The
-large wreaths perfumed the air. The water rippled softly under the
-prows of the boats. The six companions lifted the coffin from the boat
-and bore it on their shoulders to the railway and placed it in the
-proper compartment. No one spoke.
-
-Then the two artisans from Rome came forward, with the clusters of
-laurel gathered on the Janiculum. They were tall, powerful men,
-chosen among the strongest and finest, and seemed cast in the mold
-of the ancient Roman race. They were calm and serious, with all the
-wild freedom of the Agro in their eyes. Their bold outlines, narrow
-foreheads, short curling hair, solid jaws and bull-necks, recalled
-the profiles of ancient consuls. Their bearing, free from any servile
-obsequiousness, showed them to be worthy of their function.
-
-The six young men, rendered equal in their fervor, took the branches of
-laurel and strewed them over the hero's coffin.
-
-Noble were those Latin laurels, cut on the hill where, in a time long
-past, the eagles descended bearing prophecies; where, in more recent
-though still fabulous times, a river of blood has been shed for the
-beauty of Italy by the legions of the Liberator. The branches were
-straight, dark, and strong; the leaves were firm, deeply veined, with
-sharp edges, green as the bronze of fountains, rich with triumphal
-aroma.
-
-And they journeyed toward the Bavarian hill still sleeping beneath its
-frost and ice, while their trunks were already budding anew in the
-light of Rome, to the murmur of invisible waters.
-
- _Settignano di Desiderio:
- February 13, 1900._
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Flame, by Gabriele D'Annunzio
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FLAME ***
-
-***** This file should be named 60601-0.txt or 60601-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/6/0/6/0/60601/
-
-Produced by Andrés V. Galia, Sherry Kaufman and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law 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. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/old/60601-0.zip b/old/old/60601-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 4932a4a..0000000
--- a/old/old/60601-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/60601-h.zip b/old/old/60601-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 710b5e5..0000000
--- a/old/old/60601-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/60601-h/60601-h.htm b/old/old/60601-h/60601-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index f38b8be..0000000
--- a/old/old/60601-h/60601-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,12926 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
- <title>
- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Flame, by Gabrielle D'Annunzio.
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css">
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
- h1,h2 {
- text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
- clear: both;
-}
-
-h2 {font-weight: normal;}
-h1 {margin-top: 4em; }
-h2 {margin-top: 4em; }
-
-.half-title
-{
- margin-top: 6em;
- text-align: center;
- font-size: 140%;
- margin-bottom: 6em;
-}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
-}
-
-.top1 {margin-top: 2em;}
-.p2 {margin-top: 2em; font-size: 130%; margin-bottom: 2em; }
-.p4 {margin-top: 4em; font-size: 120%; }
-.p6 {margin-top: 6em;}
-
-.center1 {font-size: 140%; text-align: center;}
-
- div.chapter {page-break-before: always; }
-
-
-hr.tb {width: 45%; margin-left: 27.5%; margin-right: 27.5%; }
-
-div.chapter {page-break-before: always; }
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
-}
-
-.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
- visibility: hidden;
- position: absolute;
- left: 92%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
-} /* page numbers */
-
-.blockquot {
- margin-left: 20%;
- margin-top: 2em;
-}
-
-
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.right {text-align: right;}
-
-
-.caption {font-weight: normal; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em; }
-
-/* Images */
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;
-}
-
-.box {
- border: 2px solid; margin: 5%; font-size: 1.1em;
- margin-top: 4em;
- width: 30%;
- padding: 2%;
- margin-right: 15%;
- margin-left: 30%;
-}
-
-@media handheld {
- .box {margin: 0; width: auto; font-size: 0.95em; }
-}
-
-/* Poetry */
-
-.poetry-container {text-align: center;}
-
-.poetry {display: inline-block; text-align: left;
- font-size: 0.85em;
- margin-top: 1em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;}
-
-.verse
- {padding-left: 4em; text-indent: -4em; }
-
-.ileft2 {text-indent: -3em; }
-
-
-
-.indent {padding-left: 4em; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;}
-
-.indentp {padding-left: 30%; }
-.indentq {padding-left: 15%; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 2em;}
-.indent1 {padding-left: 1em; }
-
-@media handheld {
-
-.poetry {
- display: block;
- text-align: left;
- margin-left: 2.5em;}
-}
-
-
-/* Transcriber's notes */
-.tnote
- {border: dashed 1px; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;
- padding-bottom: .5em; padding-top: .5em; padding-left: .5em;
- padding-right: .5em;}
-
- </style>
- </head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Flame, by Gabriele D'Annunzio
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Flame
-
-Author: Gabriele D'Annunzio
-
-Translator: Dora Ranous
-
-Release Date: October 31, 2019 [EBook #60601]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FLAME ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Andrés V. Galia, Sherry Kaufman and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 536px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="536" height="800" alt="cover" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="tnote">
-
-<p class="p2 center">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>A number of words in this book have both hyphenated and
-non-hyphenated variants. For the words with both variants present the
-one more used has been kept.</p>
-
-<p>Obvious punctuation and other printing errors have been
-corrected.</p>
-
-<p>The book cover was modified by the Transcriber and has
-been put in the public domain.</p>
-
-<p>The Transcriber would like to point out to what are considered a
-couple of translation inaccuracies from the original Italian language
-version.</p>
-
-<p>In page <a href="#id59">59</a> the text reads:</p>
-
-<p>"I know of no marsh capable of provoking in human pulses a fever more
-violent that that which at times steals up to us from the shadows of a
-silent canal."</p>
-
-<p>While in the Italian edition (Publisher: Milano Fratelli Treves; year:
-1900), the text reads:</p>
-
-<p>"Io non conosco palude capace di provocare in polsi umani una febbre
-più violenta di quella che sentimmo talvolta venire verso di noi
-all'improvviso dall'ombra di un canale taciturno."</p>
-
-<p>The Transcriber thinks a more adequate translation would be:</p>
-
-<p>"I know of no marsh capable of causing a fever in human pulses more
-violent than the one we sometimes hear coming towards us suddenly from
-the shadow of a taciturn channel."</p>
-
-<p>In page <a href="#id195">195</a> the text reads:</p>
-
-<p>"He had astonished even himself by that sudden apparition, that
-unexpected discovery which illumined the shadows of his mind, because
-exterior reality, and almost tangible."</p>
-
-<p>While in the Italian edition the text reads:</p>
-
-<p>"Si stupiva egli medessimo di quell'apparizione subitanea, di quella
-improvvisa scoperta che, illuminandosi nell buio del suo spirito si
-esternava e quasi diveniva tangibile."</p>
-
-<p>The Transcriber thinks a more adequate translation would be:</p>
-
-<p>"He was surprised himself by that sudden appearance, of that sudden
-discovery that, illuminating itself in the darkness of his spirit, it
-became external and almost became tangible."</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="tb" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="box">
-<p class="p2 center">THE LITERATURE OF ITALY</p>
-
-<p>consists of sixteen volumes, of which
-this one forms a part. For full particulars
-of the edition see the Official
-Certificate bound in the volume entitled</p>
-
-<p class="center" style="margin-top: 1em; ">"A HISTORY OF ITALIAN<br />
-LITERATURE."</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 436px;" id="estatua">
-<img src="images/ilo1.jpg" width="436" height="700" alt="statue" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 376px;">
-<img src="images/ilo2.jpg" width="376" height="600" alt="ilobox" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="indentp">
-<p>Literature<br />
-of Italy<br />
-1265 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Edited by Rossiter Johnson and<br />
-Dora Knowlton Ranous</p>
-
-<p>With a General Introduction by William<br />
-Michael Rossetti and Special Introductions<br />
-by James, Cardinal Gibbons,<br />
-Charles Eliot Norton, S. G. W. Benjamin,<br />
-William S, Walsh, Maurice<br />
-Francis Egan, and others<br />
-New translations, and former renderings<br />
-compared and revised</p>
-
-<p>Translators: James C. Brogan, Lord Charlemont,<br />
-Geoffrey Chaucer, Hartley Coleridge,<br />
-Florence Kendrick Cooper, Lady Dacre,<br />
-Theodore Dwight, Edward Fairfax, Ugo<br />
-Foscolo, G. A. Greene, Sir Thomas Hoby,<br />
-William Dean Howells, Luigi Monti, Evangeline<br />
-M. O'Connor, Thomas Okey, Dora<br />
-Knowlton Ranous, Thomas Roscoe, William<br />
-Stewart Rose, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William<br />
-Michael Rossetti, John Addington<br />
-Symonds, William S. Walsh, William<br />
-Wordsworth, Sir Thomas Wyatt</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 460px;" id="frontis">
-<img src="images/ilo3.jpg" width="460" height="700" alt="ilofronti" />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1>THE FLAME</h1>
-
-
-<p class="center">(<em>IL FUOCO</em>)</p>
-
-<p class="center" style="margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em; "><big>BY</big></p>
-
-<p class="center1">GABRIELE D'ANNUNZIO</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">TRANSLATED BY DORA KNOWLTON RANOUS</p>
-
-<p class="right" style="margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em; padding-right: 40%;" >
-.... <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">fa come natura face in foco</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="right" style="padding-right: 35%;" >&mdash;<em>DANTE</em></p>
-
-<p class="p6 center">THE NATIONAL ALUMNI</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">C<small>OPYRIGHT</small>, 1907, <small>BY</small><br />
-T<small>HE</small> N<small>ATIONAL</small> A<small>LUMNI</small></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="p4 center">CONTENTS</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
-<td align="right">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">INTRODUCTION</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_ix">ix</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="center">BOOK I<br />
-THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER I&mdash;The Bells of San Marco</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER II&mdash;The Face of Truth</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_30">30</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER III&mdash;The Nuptials of Autumn and Venice</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_40">40</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER IV&mdash;The Spirit of Melody</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_67">67</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER V&mdash;The Epiphany of the Flame</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_77">77</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VI&mdash;The Poet's Dream</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_95">95</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VII&mdash;The Promise</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_123">123</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VIII&mdash;"To Create with Joy!"</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_134">134</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="center">BOOK II<br />
-THE EMPIRE OF SILENCE.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER I&mdash;"In Time!"</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_147">147</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER II&mdash;After the Storm</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_156">156</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER III&mdash;A Fallen Giant</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_173">173</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER IV&mdash;The Master's Vision</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_181">181</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER V&mdash;Sofia</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_201">201</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VI&mdash;A Brother to Orpheus</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_209">209</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VII&mdash;Only One Condition</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_221">221</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER VIII&mdash;Illusions</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_231">231</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER IX&mdash;The Labyrinth</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_239">239</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER X&mdash;The Power of the Flame</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_262">262</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER XI&mdash;Reminiscence</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_270">270</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER XII&mdash;Cassandra's Reincarnation</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_291">291</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER XIII&mdash;The Story of the Archorgan</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_304">304</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER XIV&mdash;The World's Bereavement</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_319">319</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">CHAPTER XV&mdash;The Last Farewell</td>
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_333">333</a> </td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p4 center">ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="ilust">
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
-<td align="center">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">"O espousals of Paris, fatal to the beloved!"&mdash;(Page 298)</td>
-
-<td align="right"><a href="#frontis">Frontispiece</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">He gazed deep into her eyes, and saw that she was as pale<br />
-as if her blood had been sapped to nourish the rich<br />
-fruits of the garden</td>
-
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1.5em;">&nbsp;<br />
-&nbsp;<br />
-<a href="#ilop130">130</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">He watched the woman turning and running like a mad<br />
-creature along the dark, delusive paths</td>
-
-<td align="right" style="padding-right: 1.5em;">&nbsp;<br />
-<a href="#ilop259">259</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>INTRODUCTION</h2>
-
-
-<p>Gabriele D'Annunzio, poet, novelist, and
-dramatist, was born in 1864, on the yacht <em>Irene</em>
-near Pescara in the Abruzzi, his mother being
-the Duchess Maria Galesse of Rome. His education
-was begun in the College of Prato, in Tuscany,
-and finished in the University of Rome. His mind early
-showed signs of extraordinary power and brilliant versatility;
-he studied art and produced very creditable work
-while a mere lad, and at the age of sixteen he published
-his first poem, <cite>Primo Vere</cite>, which attracted flattering attention
-and caused him to be hailed as an infant prodigy.
-In 1880 he went to Rome and became a contributor to
-the <cite>Cronaca Bizantina</cite>, a magazine of art and literature.
-He remained in Rome three years, producing in that time
-<cite>Terra vergine</cite> ("Virgin Soil"), <cite>Canto novo</cite> ("New Song"),
-and <cite>Intermezzo di rime</cite> ("Intervals of Rhyme"), all of
-which were received with admiration and amazement,
-and with not a little criticism for their unconventional
-boldness of expression.</p>
-
-<p>D'Annunzio left Rome in 1884 and returned to his native
-hills, where he wrote <cite>Il libro delle vergine</cite> ("The
-Book of the Virgins") in 1884; <cite>San Pantaleone</cite> (1886),
-and <cite>Isottèo Guttadauro</cite>. Then, abandoning his revolutionary
-and realistic though splendid and intoxicating poetry
-for prose, the young genius next surprised his public
-with a novel, <cite>Giovanni Episcopo</cite>, followed by <cite>Il Piacere</cite>
-("The Child of Pleasure"), in 1889. The former is a
-strong yet repelling story of crude brutalism, told by a
-victim of relentless fate; the latter is a kind of poem in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span>
-prose, in which there is something above mere facility of
-literary touch; he shows the power of the master poet
-or painter to see the world at a glance, and with a dextrous
-hand to draw for eyes less keen that world in all
-its changeful aspects.</p>
-
-<p>His next important novel, <cite>Il trionfo della morte</cite> ("The
-Triumph of Death") was produced in 1896. This brought
-upon him a storm of mingled applause and criticism&mdash;admiration
-for its marvelous beauty of literary expression,
-condemnation of the realistic study of a degenerate whose
-sins lead him to suicide. But, with a proud defiance of
-criticism, with eyes fixed only on his art, he dared after
-this achievement to write the self-revelatory novel that
-is known as his masterpiece&mdash;<cite>Il fuoco</cite> ("The Flame").
-In this great novel, which may fairly be called unique,
-we recognize the personification of a renascence of Latin
-genius. Under the thinnest veil of disguise, the author
-presents his own figure and that of one of the world's
-greatest tragic actresses, revealing the most intimate details
-of their well known friendship. On this picture
-of the most romantic of love-affairs, in Venice, the most
-romantic of cities, he has lavished his finest strokes of
-genius, writing of feminine nature with rare truth and
-skill, and an exquisite intuition as to the workings of
-a woman's mind and the throbbings of her heart.</p>
-
-<p>Besides his poems and novels, D'Annunzio has written
-several plays, the best known being <cite>La Gioconda</cite> ("Joy"),
-<cite>La Gloria</cite> ("Glory"), <cite>La morta città</cite> ("The City of the
-Dead"), and <cite>Francesca da Rimini</cite>. He is unquestionably
-the greatest Italian writer of to-day, and few works of
-Italian fiction appear that do not show something of his
-influence. A European critic of keen discernment says:
-"Read his works, all ye men and women for whom life
-has no secrets and truth has no terror."</p>
-
-<p class="right" style="padding-right: 1em; ">D. K. R.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="half-title">BOOK I<br />
-THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="p4 center"><big>TO TIME AND TO HOPE</big></p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p><em>Without hope, it is impossible to find<br />
-the unhoped-for.</em></p>
-
-<p class="indentq">&mdash;<em>HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS.</em></p>
-
-
-<p><em>He who sings to the god a song of<br />
-hope shall see his wish accomplished.</em></p>
-
-<p class="indentq">&mdash;<em>ÆSCHYLUS OF ELEUSIS.</em></p>
-
-<p><em>Time is the father of miracles.</em></p>
-
-<p class="indentq">&mdash;<em>HARIRI DI BASRA.</em></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I<br />
-<small>THE BELLS OF SAN MARCO</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>"Stelio, does not your heart quail a little,
-for the first time?" inquired La Foscarina,
-with a fleeting smile, as she touched the
-hand of the taciturn friend seated beside
-her. "I see that you are pale and thoughtful. Yet this
-is a beautiful evening for the triumph of a great poet."</p>
-
-<p>With an all-comprehensive glance, she looked around
-at all the beauty of this last twilight of September. In
-the dark wells of her eyes were reflected the circles of
-light made by the oar as it flashed in the water, which
-was illuminated by the glittering angels that shone from
-afar on the campaniles of San Marco and San Giorgio
-Maggiore.</p>
-
-<p>"As always," she went on, in her sweetest tones, "as
-always, everything is in your favor. On such an evening
-as this, what mortal could shut out from his mind the
-dreams that you may choose to evoke by the magic of
-your words? Do you not feel already that the multitude
-is well disposed to receive your revelation?"</p>
-
-<p>Thus, delicately, she flattered her friend; thus she
-pleased herself by exalting him with continual praise.</p>
-
-<p>"It is impossible to imagine a more magnificent and
-unique festival than this, to persuade so disdainful a
-poet as you to come forth from his ivory tower. For
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-you was reserved this rare joy; to communicate for the
-first time with the people in a sovereign place like the
-Hall of the Greater Council, from the platform where
-once the Doge harangued the assembled patricians, with
-the <cite>Paradiso</cite> of Tintoretto for a background, and overhead
-the <cite>Gloria</cite> of Veronese."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena looked long and searchingly into her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish to intoxicate me?" he said, with a
-sudden laugh. "Your words remind me of the soothing
-cup offered to a man on his way to the scaffold. Ah,
-well, my friend, it is true: I own that my heart quails
-a little."</p>
-
-<p>The sound of applause rose from the Traghetto di San
-Gregorio, echoed through the Grand Canal, reverberating
-among the porphyry and serpentine discs ornamenting
-the ancient mansion of the Dario, which now leaned
-over slightly, like a decrepit courtesan loaded with her
-jewels.</p>
-
-<p>The royal barge passed.</p>
-
-<p>"There is the one person among your audience
-whom etiquette demands that you shall crown with some
-of your flowers of oratory," pursued the charming flatterer,
-alluding to the Queen. "I believe that, in one of
-your earlier books, you own to a taste and respect for
-ceremonials. One of your most extraordinary flights of
-fancy is that description of a day of Charles the Second,
-King of Spain."</p>
-
-<p>When the royal barge passed the gondola, the man
-and the woman saluted it. The Queen, recognizing the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-poet, the author of <cite>Persephone</cite>, and the distinguished
-tragic actress, turned to gaze at them with a movement
-of instinctive curiosity. She was blonde and rosy, and
-her face was lighted by her ever-ready smile, as she
-looked out from the cloud of creamy Buranesi laces
-clinging around her shoulders. Beside her sat Andriana
-Duodo, the patroness of Burano, where, on that industrious
-little island, she cultivated flax, and raised the
-most marvelous old-fashioned flowers.</p>
-
-<p>"Does it not seem to you that the smiles of those two
-women are so similar as to be twin-like?" said La Foscarina,
-gazing at the silvery ripples in the wake of the
-barge, wherein the double light seemed to prolong its
-self.</p>
-
-<p>"The Countess has a magnificent and ingenuous soul&mdash;one
-of those rare Venetian spirits that preserve their
-warmth, as their ancient paintings retain their vivid
-color," said Stelio, earnestly, as if in gratitude. "I have
-an absolute devotion for her sensitive hands. They fairly
-quiver with pleasure when they touch rare lace or rich
-velvet, lingering over the texture with a grace that seems
-almost shy of betraying such voluptuous joy in mere
-touch. One day, when I had accompanied her to the
-gallery of the Academia, she stopped before the <cite>Massacre
-des Innocents</cite> by the first Bonifazio. You recollect, of
-course, the green robe of the prostrate woman that one
-of Herod's soldiers is about to kill&mdash;a thing impossible to
-forget! She paused long before it, seeming fairly to
-radiate from her own person the perfect joy that filled
-her senses; then she said to me, 'Let us leave this place
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-now, Effrena! Take me away, but I must leave my eyes
-on that robe&mdash;I cannot look at anything more!' Ah, do
-not smile at her, dear friend! She was perfectly simple
-and sincere in saying that: she really did leave her spiritual
-vision behind her on that bit of canvas which Art,
-with a touch of color, has made the center of an infinitely
-pleasurable mystery. Besides, it was really a blind
-woman that I accompanied there, but I was suddenly
-seized with reverence for the privileged soul for whom
-the magic of color had power to abolish for the moment
-all memory of commonplace life, and to cut off all other
-worldly communication. What should you call such a
-state of mind? A filling of life's goblet to the brim, it
-seems to me. It is exactly what I should like to do
-to-night, if I were not discouraged."</p>
-
-<p>A new clamor, louder and more prolonged, rose between
-the two guardian columns of granite, as the royal
-barge approached the bank of the Piazzetta, now black
-with the waiting throng. During the slight pause that
-followed, the movement of the crowd shifted, like the
-changing of eddies in a current, and all the galleries
-of the Palace of the Doges were filled with a confused
-buzzing, like the mysterious murmur within a sea-shell.
-Suddenly the buzz rose to a shout, rending the
-clear air and finally dying away in the gathering twilight.
-The multitude seemed to realize the divinity of that
-poetic hour, amid those incomparable surroundings; and
-perhaps, in its acclaim to youthful royalty and beauty,
-it expressed a vague longing to forget its prosaic existence,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-and to revel in the gift of eternal poetry with
-which its storied walls and waters were endowed.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know, Perdita," Stelio suddenly exclaimed,
-"of any other place in the world that possesses, like
-Venice, at certain times, the power to stimulate all the
-forces of human life by the exaltation of all desires to a
-feverish intensity? Do you know of any more irresistible
-temptress?"</p>
-
-<p>She whom he called Perdita did not reply; she bent her
-head as if from desire to concentrate her thoughts; but
-through all her being she felt the indefinable thrill always
-felt at the sound of the voice of her friend when it
-revealed the vehemence and passionate soul toward
-which this woman was drawn by a mingling of love
-and terror that had no limit.</p>
-
-<p>"Peace! Oblivion! Do you find them down there,
-at the end of that deserted canal, when you go home
-exhausted and fevered after inhaling the commingled
-breath of the crowd that you are able to rouse to wild
-enthusiasm by a single gesture? As for myself, when I
-float on these dead waters, I feel my vital powers increase
-with bewildering rapidity; at certain times my
-brain seems on fire, as if I were in delirium."</p>
-
-<p>"The flame and the power are within yourself, Stelio,"
-said La Foscarina almost humbly, without raising her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He was silent, absorbed. Poetic imagery and impetuous
-music took form within his brain, as if by virtue
-of some magic fecundation; and his spirit reveled in the
-unexpected delight of that flood of inspiration.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was still that hour which, in one of his books, he
-had called "Titian's hour," because all things glowed
-with a rich golden light, like the nude figures of that
-great painter, appearing almost to illumine the sky
-rather than to receive light from it.</p>
-
-<p>"Perdita," said the poet, who, at the sight of so many
-things multiplying their beauties around him, was conscious
-of a kind of intellectual ecstasy, "does it not seem
-to you that we are following the funeral train of the
-dead Summer? There she lies in her funereal barge,
-robed in golden draperies, like a Doge's wife, like a
-Loredana, a Morosina, or a Soranza of the golden age;
-and her cortège conducts her toward the Isle of Murano,
-where some lord of the flames will place her in a coffin
-of opaline crystal, so that, submerged in the waters
-of the lagoon, she can, at least, through her transparent
-eyelids, behold the supple movement of the seaweed,
-and thus fancy herself enwrapped in the undulating
-tresses of her own hair, while waiting for the sun of
-resurrection to dawn."</p>
-
-<p>A spontaneous smile spread over La Foscarina's face,
-born in her eyes, which glowed as if they really had beheld
-the vision of the beautiful dead.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know, Perdita," resumed Stelio, after a moment's
-pause, during which both gazed at a file of small
-boats filled with fruit, floating upon the water like great
-baskets, "do you know anything about a particularly
-pretty detail in the chronicles of the Doges? The Doge's
-wife, to meet the expenses of her robes of ceremony, enjoyed
-a certain percentage of the tax on fruit. Does not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-this seem delightfully appropriate? The fruits of these
-isles clothed her in gold and crowned her with pearls!
-Pomona paying tribute to Arachne! an allegory that Paolo
-Veronese might well have painted on the dome of the
-Vestiario. When I conjure up the figure of the noble
-lady, tall and erect in her high, jeweled buskins, it pleases
-me to think that something fresh and rustic is connected
-with the rich folds of her heavy brocade: the tribute of
-the fruits. What a savor this seems to add to her magnificence!
-Only fancy, my friend, that these figs and
-grapes of the new-come Autumn are the price of the
-golden robe that covers the dead Summer."</p>
-
-<p>"What delightful fancies, Stelio!" said La Foscarina,
-whose face became young again when she smiled, as a
-child to whom one shows a picture-book. "Who was it
-that once called you the Image-maker?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah&mdash;images!" said the poet, his fancy warming. "In
-Venice, just as one feels everything to a musical rhythm,
-so he thinks of everything in poetic imagery. They come
-to us from everywhere, innumerable, diverse, more real
-and living to our minds than the persons we elbow in
-these narrow streets. In studying them, we can lose
-ourselves in the depths of their haunting eyes, and divine,
-by the curve of their lips, what they would say to us.
-Some art tyrannical as imperious mistresses, and hold us
-long beneath the yoke of their power. Others are enfolded
-in a veil, like timid virgins, or are tightly swaddled,
-like infants; and only he that knows how to rend
-their veils can lead them to the perfect life. This morning,
-when I awakened, my soul was filled with images;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-it was like a beautiful tree with its branches laden with
-chrysalides."</p>
-
-<p>He paused, with a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>"If they come forth from their prison to-night," he
-added, "I am saved; if they do not, I am lost!"</p>
-
-<p>"Lost?" said La Foscarina, gazing earnestly at him,
-with eyes so full of confidence that his heart went out
-to her in gratitude. "No, Stelio, you will not lose yourself.
-You are always sure of yourself; you bear your
-own destiny in your hands. I think your mother never
-could have felt any apprehension on your account, even
-in the most serious circumstances. Is not that true?
-Pride is the only thing that makes your heart falter."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, sweet friend, how I love you&mdash;how I thank you
-for saying that!" said the poet frankly, taking her hand.
-"You continually foster my pride and encourage me to
-believe that I have already acquired those virtues to
-which I never cease to aspire. Sometimes you seem to
-have the power of conferring I know not what divine
-quality on the things that are born in my soul, and of
-making them appear adorable in my own eyes. Sometimes,
-too, you fill me with the awe-struck wonder of
-the sculptor who, having in the evening borne to the
-sacred temple the marble gods still warm from his hands&mdash;I
-might say still clinging to the fingers that moulded
-them&mdash;the next day beholds them standing on their
-pedestals, surrounded by clouds of incense, and seeming
-to exhale divinity from every pore of the insensate matter
-from which he fashioned them with his perishable hands.
-And so, each time that Fortune grants me the favor of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-being near you, I realize that you are necessary to my
-life, although, during our long separations, I can live
-without you, and you without me, despite the fact that
-both of us well know what splendors would be born
-of the perfect union of our lives. Thus, knowing the
-full value of that which you give me, and, still more,
-of that which you could give me, I think of you as lost to
-me; and, by that name which it pleases my fancy to
-call you, I try to express at the same time this consciousness
-and this regret."</p>
-
-<p>He interrupted himself, because he felt a quiver of the
-hand he clasped in his own.</p>
-
-<p>"When I call you 'Perdita,'" he resumed softly, after
-a pause, "I fancy that you can see my desire approaching
-you, with a deadly blade deep in its palpitating side.
-Even should it reach you, the chill of death has already
-touched its audacious hand."</p>
-
-<p>The woman experienced an oft-felt suffering as she
-listened to the poetic words that flowed from her friend's
-lips with a spontaneity that proved them sincere. Again
-she felt an agitation and a terror that she knew not how
-to define. She felt that she was slipping out of her own
-life, and was transported into a kind of fictitious life,
-intense and hallucinating, where even to breathe was
-difficult. Drawn into that atmosphere, as fiery as the
-glow surrounding a lighted forge, she felt that she should
-be capable of passing through any transfigurations that
-it might please the master of her spirit to work in her
-to satisfy his continual craving for poetry and beauty.
-She comprehended that, in his idealistic mind, her own
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-image resembled that of the dead Summer, wrapped in
-its opalescent cerements. She felt a childish desire to
-gaze into the poet's eyes as in a mirror, to contemplate
-the likeness of her real self.</p>
-
-<p>That which rendered her melancholy most painful,
-was the recognition of a vague resemblance between
-this agitation and the anxiety that always possessed her
-when she sank her own personality in that of some
-sublime creation of dramatic art. Was not this man
-drawing her, in fact, into a similar region of higher but
-artificial life; and, that she might figure there without
-remembrance of her everyday self, did he not seek to
-cover her with a splendid disguise? But, while she was
-unable to maintain so great a degree of intensity except
-by a painful effort, she knew that he dwelt within that
-state of exaltation with perfect ease, as if in his natural
-atmosphere, ceaselessly enjoying a marvelous world of
-fancy, which he could renew or change at his own
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>He had come to realize in himself the intimate union of
-art and of life, thus finding, in the depths of his own
-soul, a source of perpetual harmony. He had become
-able to maintain within himself, without lapse, the mysterious
-psychological condition that engenders works of
-beauty, and thus, at a single stroke, to crystallize into
-ideal types the fleeting figures of his varied existence.
-It was to celebrate this conquest over his own mental
-powers that he put the following words into the mouth
-of one of his heroes: "I witnessed within myself the
-continual genesis of a higher life, wherein all appearances
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-metamorphosed themselves as if reflected in a
-magic mirror." Endowed with an extraordinary linguistic
-facility, he could instantly translate into words the
-most complicated workings of his mind, with a precision
-so exact and vivid that sometimes, as soon as expressed,
-they seemed not to be his own, having been rendered
-objective by the isolating power of style. His clear and
-penetrating voice, which, so to speak, seemed to define
-each word as distinctly as if it were a note of music, enhanced
-still more this peculiar quality of his speech, so
-that those who heard him speak for the first time experienced
-an ambiguous feeling&mdash;a mingling of admiration
-and aversion, because he revealed his own personality
-in a manner so strongly marked that it seemed to denote
-an intention to demonstrate the existence of a profound
-and impassable difference between himself and
-his listeners. But as his sensibility equaled his intelligence,
-it was easy for those that knew him well and liked
-him to absorb, through his crystalline speech, the glow of
-his vehement and passionate soul. These knew how illimitable
-was his power to feel and to dream, and from
-what fiery source sprang the beautiful images into which
-he converted the substance of his inner life.</p>
-
-<p>She whom he called Perdita knew it well; and, as a
-pious soul awaits from God some supernatural help
-that shall work out its salvation, so she seemed to be
-waiting for him to put her into the state of grace necessary
-to enable her to elevate and maintain herself in those
-fiery regions toward which a mad desire to be consumed
-impelled her, despairing as she was at the thought of her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-vanished youth, and the fear of finding herself left alone
-at last in a desert of ashes.</p>
-
-<p>"It is you now, Stelio," she said, with the slight smile
-she used to hide her sadness, "who wish to intoxicate
-me." She gently drew her hand from his. Then, to break
-the spell, she pointed to a loaded barge that was slowly
-approaching them, and said:</p>
-
-<p>"Look! Look at your pomegranates!"</p>
-
-<p>But her voice shook a little.</p>
-
-<p>Then, in the dreamy twilight, on the water as silvery-green
-as the leaves of the willow, they watched the passing
-boat overflowing with that emblematic fruit which
-suggests things rich and hidden: caskets of red leather,
-surmounted by the crown of a royal donor; some closed,
-others half-open, revealing their close-packed gems.</p>
-
-<p>In a low tone, the tragic actress repeated the words
-addressed by Hades to Persephone in the sacred drama,
-at the moment when the daughter of Demeter tastes the
-fatal pomegranate:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Quando tu coglierai il colchico in fiore su'l molle<br />
-Prato terrestre, presso la madre dal cerulo peplo.</i></p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Perdita! how well you know how to throw a shadow
-into your voice!" interrupted the poet, feeling the
-harmony of the twilight that seemed to throw a mystic
-vagueness over the syllables of his lines. "How well you
-know how to become nocturnal, even before the evening
-is upon us! Do you recall the scene where Persephone
-is on the point of throwing herself into Erebus, to the
-wailing of the chorus of the Oceanides? Her face is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-like yours when a shadow passes over it. Her crowned
-head leans backward, as she stands rigidly erect in her
-saffron-colored peplum; and the very spirit of the night
-seems flowing into her bloodless flesh, deepening under
-her chin, in the hollows of her eyes and around her nostrils,
-giving her face the look of a tragic mask. It
-is your mask, Perdita! While I was composing my
-<cite>Mystery</cite>, the remembrance of you aided me in evoking her
-divine person. That little saffron-velvet ribbon you so
-often wear around your neck gave me the note for
-Persephone's peplum. And one evening at your house,
-when I was about to take leave of you at the threshold
-of a room where the lamps were not yet lighted&mdash;an agitated
-evening of last autumn, you remember?&mdash;you succeeded,
-with a single movement, in bringing to full light
-in my being the creature that had lain long there undeveloped;
-and then, without dreaming that you had
-brought about that sudden birth, you shut yourself
-again within the solitary obscurity of your own Erebus.
-Ah, I was certain that I could hear you sob, yet a torrent
-of uncontrollable joy ran through my veins. I never
-have spoken to you of this before, have I? I ought to
-have consecrated my work to you, as to an ideal Lucina."</p>
-
-<p>She shrank under the eyes of the master of her spirit;
-she suffered because of that mask which he admired
-on her face, and because of that strange joy that she was
-aware was continually up-springing within him, like a
-perpetually playing fountain. She felt oppressed by her
-own personality; troubled because of her too-expressive
-face, the muscles of which possessed a strange power
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-of mimicry; pained to think of that involuntary art which
-governed the significance of her gestures, and of
-that expressive shadow which sometimes on the
-stage, during a moment of anxious silence, she knew
-how to throw over her face like a veil of grief&mdash;that
-shadow which now threatened to remain among the lines
-traced by time on the face that was no longer young.
-She suffered cruelly by the hand she adored&mdash;that hand
-so delicate and noble which, even with a gift or a caress,
-had power to hurt her.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not believe, Perdita," Stelio continued after
-another pause, "in the occult beneficence of signs? I do
-not mean astral science or horoscopic signs. I mean
-that, like those that believe themselves under the influence
-of one planet or another, we can create an ideal
-correspondence between our own soul and some terrestrial
-object, in such a way that this object, becoming
-impregnated, little by little, with the essence of
-ourselves, and being magnified by our illusion,
-finally becomes for us the representative sign of our
-unknown destiny, and takes on an aspect of mystery
-when it appears to us in certain crises of our life.
-This is the secret whereby we may restore to our withering
-hearts something of their pristine freshness. I know
-by experience the beneficial effect we may derive from
-intense communion with some earthly object. From
-time to time it is necessary for our natures to become
-like a hamadryad, in order to feel within us the circulation
-of new energy drawn from the source of life. Of
-course you understand that I am thinking of your words
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-just now, when the boat passed. You expressed the same
-idea when you said 'Look at your pomegranates!' For
-you, and for everyone that loves me, the pomegranate
-never can be anything but <em>mine</em>. For you and for them,
-the idea of my personality is indissolubly linked to that
-fruit which I have chosen for an emblem, and which I
-have charged with significant ideals, more numerous
-than its seeds. Had I lived in the times when men excavated
-the Grecian marbles and found under the soil
-the still damp roots of ancient fables, no painter could
-have represented me on his canvas without putting in
-my hand the Punic apple. To sever from my person
-that symbol would have seemed to the ingenuous artist
-like the amputation of a living member, for, to his pagan
-imagination, the fruit would have seemed to grow to my
-hand as to its natural branch. In short, he would not
-have conceived me in any different way than he thought
-of Hyacinthus or Narcissus or Ciparissus, all three of
-whom would appear to him as youths symbolized by a
-plant. But, even in our day, a few lively and warm
-imaginations exist that comprehend all the meaning and
-enjoy all the savor of my invention.</p>
-
-<p>"You, yourself, Perdita, do you not delight in cultivating
-in your garden a pomegranate, the beautiful
-'Effrenian' tree, that you may every summer watch
-me blossom and bring forth fruit? In one of your letters,
-flying to me like a winged messenger, you described to
-me the graceful ceremony of decorating the tree with
-garlands the day you received the first copy of <cite>Persephone</cite>.
-So, for you, and for those that love me, I have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-in reality renewed an ancient myth when, in fancy, I
-have assimilated myself with a form of eternal Nature.
-And when I am dead (and may Nature grant that I am
-able to manifest my whole self in my work before I
-die!), my disciples will honor me under a symbol of that
-tree; and in the sharp outline of the leaf, in the flame
-of the flower, and in the hidden treasure of the ripe fruit,
-they will recognize certain qualities of my art. By
-that leaf, by that flower and fruit, as if by a posthumous
-teaching of the master, their minds will be formed to
-a similar sharpness, flame-like intensity, and treasured
-richness.</p>
-
-<p>"You will see now, Perdita, what is the real beneficence
-of symbols. By affinity, I am led to develop
-myself in accord with the magnificent genius of the plant
-which it pleases me to fancy as the symbol of my aspirations
-toward a full, rich life. This arboreous
-image of myself suffices to assure me that my powers
-should follow nature in order to attain naturally the end
-for which they were created. 'Nature has disposed me
-thus' is the epigraph of Leonardo da Vinci, which I
-placed on the title-page of my first book; and the pomegranate,
-as it continually blossoms and bears its fruit,
-repeats to me that simple phrase over and over again.
-We obey only the laws written in our own substance,
-and by reason of this we shall remain intact in the midst
-of dissolution, in the unity and plenitude that make our
-joy. No discord exists between my art and my life."</p>
-
-<p>He spoke with perfect freedom, as if the mind of the
-listening woman were a chalice into which he poured
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-his thoughts till it was full to the brim. An intellectual
-felicity filled him, blended with a vague consciousness
-of the mysterious action whereby his mind was preparing
-itself for the effort it was soon to make. From time
-to time, as if by a lightning flash, his mental vision beheld,
-as he bent toward his beloved friend and listened
-to the beat of the oar in the silence of the great estuary,
-the crowd, with its thousand faces, gathering in the vast
-hall; and he felt a rapid throbbing of his heart.</p>
-
-<p>"It is a very singular thing, Perdita," said he, gazing
-at the pale distance of the waters, "to observe how readily
-chance aids our imagination in ascribing an element
-of mystery to the conjunction of certain appearances with
-the aim we have fancied. I do not understand the reason
-why the poets of to-day are so indignant at the vulgarity
-of the present, and complain that they were born
-either too late or too early. I am convinced that to-day,
-as always, every man of intelligence has power to create
-for himself his own beautiful fable of life. We should
-study the confused whirl of life with the same lively
-imagination that Leonardo encouraged in his disciples
-when he advised them to study the stains on the wall,
-the ashes on the hearth, the clouds, even mud, and similar
-objects, in order to find there 'wonderful inventions'
-and 'infinite things.' In the same way, he declared, one
-can find in the sound of bells every name and every word
-that can be imagined. That great master knew well that
-chance&mdash;as the sponge of Apelles had already shown&mdash;is
-always the friend of the ingenious artist. For example,
-I never cease to be astonished at the ease and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-grace with which chance favors the harmonious development
-of my inventions. Do you not believe that the dark
-god Hades forced his bride to eat the seven seeds of the
-pomegranate in order to furnish me with the subject of
-a masterpiece?"</p>
-
-<p>He interrupted himself with one of the bursts of boyish
-laughter that revealed so clearly the persistence of
-natural joyousness in the depths of his heart.</p>
-
-<p>"See, Perdita," he continued, still laughing, "whether
-I am not right. Early in October last year I was invited
-to Burano by Donna Andriana Duodo. We passed
-the morning in her flax-fields, and in the afternoon we
-went to visit Torcello. At that time I was beginning
-to saturate myself with the mythical story of Persephone,
-and already my poem had begun to take shape in
-my brain, and it seemed to me that I was floating on
-the waters of the Styx, and that I should arrive at the
-abode of the Manes. Never had I experienced a purer
-and sweeter understanding of death, and this feeling
-seemed to render me so ethereal that I fancied I could
-tread the field of asphodel without leaving there the
-least trace of my footsteps. The air was damp, warm,
-the sky was gray; the canals wound between the banks
-covered with half-faded verdure. (You know Torcello
-only by sunlight, perhaps.) But all this time some one
-was talking, arguing, and declaiming in Charon's boat.
-The sound of praise roused me from my reverie. Francesco
-di Lizo was speaking of me, regretting that such
-an artist, so magnificently sensual&mdash;I quote his own
-words&mdash;should be obliged to live apart from the obtuse
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-and hostile throng, and to celebrate the feast of sound,
-color, and form in the solitary palace of his dream. He
-abandoned himself to a lyric impulse, recalling the joyous
-and splendid life of the Venetian painters, the popular
-favor that swept them, like a whirlwind, up to the
-heights of the glory, beauty, strength and joy which
-they multiplied around them in producing countless images
-on walls and domes.</p>
-
-<p>"Then Donna Andriana said: 'Well, I promise solemnly
-that Stelio Effrena shall have his triumphal feast
-in Venice.' The Dogaressa had spoken! At that moment
-I beheld, on the low, mossy bank, a pomegranate
-laden with fruit, which, like the hallucination of a vision,
-broke the infinite squalor of that place. Donna Orsetta
-Contarini, who was sitting beside me, uttered a cry of
-delight, and held out her hands, as impatient as her
-lips. Nothing pleases me so much as a frank, strong expression
-of desire. 'I adore pomegranates!' she cried,
-and she seemed fairly to be tasting its fine, sharp flavor.
-She was as childish as her name is archaic. Her cry
-moved me; but Andrea Contarini appeared severely to
-disapprove of his wife's vivacity. He seemed to me
-like a Hades that has little faith in the mnemonic virtue
-of the seven seeds as applied to legitimate marriage. But
-the boatmen, too, were stirred with sympathy, and rowed
-toward the shore, approaching it so close that I was
-able to jump out first, and I began at once to despoil
-the tree, my brother. It was another case, albeit from
-the lips of a pagan of the words of the Last Supper:
-'Take, eat, this is my body, which is given for you. Do
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-this in remembrance of me.' How does this seem to
-you, Perdita? Do not think that I am inventing this
-story. I assure you it is true."</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina allowed herself to be fascinated by the
-free and elegant fancy whereby he exercised the quickness
-of his wit and his facility of expression. In his
-words was something intoxicating, variable, and vigorous,
-which suggested to her mind the double and diverse
-image of water and of fire.</p>
-
-<p>"Now," he continued, "Donna Andriana has kept her
-promise. Guided by that hereditary taste for magnificence
-which she shows so plainly, she has prepared
-a truly ducal feast in the Palace of the Doges, in imitation
-of those that were held there toward the end of
-the sixteenth century. She conceived the idea of rescuing
-from oblivion the <cite>Ariadne</cite> of Benedetto Marcello,
-and of making her sigh in the same place where Tintoretto
-painted the daughter of Minos receiving the crown
-of stars from Aphrodite. Don't you recognize in the
-beauty of this idea the woman who wished to leave her
-dear eyes behind her on that ineffable green robe? Remember,
-too, that this <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">musicale</i> in the Hall of the Greater
-Council has a historic precedent. In fifteen hundred
-seventy-three, in this same Hall, was performed a
-mythological composition by Cornelio Frangipani, with
-music by Claudio Merulo, in honor of his most Christian
-Majesty Henry Third. Own, Perdita, that my erudition
-astonishes you. Ah, if you only knew all that I
-have learned on that subject! I will read you my lecture
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-on it, some day when you deserve a severe punishment!"</p>
-
-<p>"What! Are you not to read it to-night at the festival?"
-inquired La Foscarina in surprise, fearing that,
-with his well known heedlessness of engagements, Effrena
-had resolved to disappoint the expectant public.</p>
-
-<p>He understood her anxiety, and chose to amuse himself
-with it.</p>
-
-<p>"This evening," he replied, with tranquil assurance,
-"I shall take a sherbet in your garden, and delight my
-eyes with the sight of the pomegranate, with its jewels
-gleaming in the starlight."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Stelio! What do you mean?" she cried, half
-rising.</p>
-
-<p>In her words and movement was so keen a regret, and
-at the same time so strange an evocation of the expectant
-gathering, that his mind was troubled. The image
-of the formidable monster with innumerable human
-faces amid the gold and somber purple of the vast hall
-reappeared before his mental vision; in fancy he felt its
-fixed regard and hot breath. He realized also the peril
-he had resolved to face in trusting only to the inspiration
-of the moment, and felt a horror of a possible sudden
-mental obscurity, an unexpected confusion of his
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>"Reassure yourself," he said. "I was only jesting. I
-will go <em>ad bestias</em>, and I will go unarmed. Did you not
-see the sign reappear just now? Do you believe, after
-the miracle of Torcello, that it reappeared in vain? It
-has come to warn me again that the only attitude that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-suits me is the one to which Nature disposes me. Now,
-you well know, my friend, that I do not know how to
-speak of anything but myself. And so, from the throne
-of the Doges, I must speak to my listeners only of my
-own soul, under the veil of some seductive allegory,
-with the charm of flowing musical cadences. I purpose
-to do this extemporaneously, if the fiery spirit of Tintoretto
-will only inspire me, from the heights of his
-Paradise, with sufficient ardor and audacity. The risk
-tempts me. But into what a strange error I was about
-to fall, Perdita! When the Dogaressa announced the
-feast to me, and begged me to do the honors, I undertook
-to compose a dignified discourse, a really ceremonious
-effort in prose, ample and solemn as one of
-those great robes of state behind glass in the Correr
-Museum; not without making in the exordium a profound
-genuflexion to the Queen; nor omitting to weave an
-impressive garland for the head of the most serene Andriana
-Duodo! And for several days it has given me
-a curious pleasure to dwell in spiritual communion with
-a Venetian patrician of the sixteenth century, a master
-of letters like Cardinal Bembo, a member of the Academy
-Uracini or Adorni, a frequent visitor to the gardens
-of Murano and the hills of Asolo. Certain it is that I
-felt a marked resemblance between the turn of my periods
-and the massive gold frames that surround the paintings
-on the ceiling of the Hall of Council. But, alas!
-yesterday morning, when I arrived here, and, in passing
-along the Grand Canal, when I wished to steep my
-weariness in the damp, transparent shade where the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-marble still exhales the spirit of the night, I had a sudden
-impression that my papers were worth much less than
-the dead seaweed tossed by the tide, and they seemed
-as strange to me as the <cite>Trionfi</cite> of Celio Magno and the
-<cite>Favole Marittime</cite> of Anton Maria Consalvi, quoted and
-commented on in them by me. What should I do, then?"</p>
-
-<p>He threw around him an all-sweeping glance, as if exploring
-the waters and the sky in search of an invisible
-presence, or a newly arrived phantom. A yellowish light
-spread toward the solitary shores, which stood out in
-sharp lines like the dark veins in agate. Behind him,
-toward the Salute, the sky was scattered with light rosy
-and violet ribbon-like clouds, giving it the appearance of
-a glaucous sea, peopled with Medusas. From the gardens
-near the water descended the odor of foliage saturated
-with light and heat&mdash;an odor so heavy one might
-almost see it float on the waves like aromatic oil.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you feel the Autumn, Perdita?" Stelio asked his
-dreamy friend, in a penetrating voice.</p>
-
-<p>Again she had a vision of the dead Summer, enclosed
-within opalescent glass and sunk among the masses of
-seaweed.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I feel it&mdash;within myself!" she replied, with a
-melancholy smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Did you not see it last night, when it descended
-upon the city? Where were you last night, at sunset?"</p>
-
-<p>"In a garden of the Giudecca."</p>
-
-<p>"I was here, on the Riva. When human eyes have
-contemplated such a spectacle of joy and beauty, does
-it not seem to you that the eyelids should close and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-seal themselves forever? I should like to speak to-night,
-Perdita, of these hidden, secret matters. I should like to
-celebrate within myself the nuptials of Venice and Autumn,
-in almost the same tonality that Tintoretto used
-when he painted the nuptials of Ariadne and Bacchus
-for the hall of the Anticollegio&mdash;azure, purple and gold.
-Last night an old germ of poetry suddenly blossomed
-in my soul. I recalled a fragment of a forgotten poem
-that I wrote when I began to write in <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">nona rima</i>, one
-September in my early youth, when I had come by sea
-to Venice for the first time. The title of the poem was
-simply 'The Allegory of Autumn,' and the god was no
-longer represented as crowned with vine-leaves, but with
-jewels, like one of Paolo Veronese's princes, his being
-aglow with passion, about to approach the Anadyomenean
-City, with her arms of marble and her thousand
-green girdles. But the idea had not at that time reached
-the right degree of intensity to be admitted to the
-realm of Art, and instinctively I gave up the effort to
-manifest it in its entirety. But, in an active mind, as
-in a fertile soil, no seed is lost; and now this idea returns
-to me at an opportune moment and urgently demands
-expression. What a just and mysterious fatality
-governs the mental world! It was necessary that I
-should respect that first germ in order to feel its multiplied
-virtues develop in me to-day. That Vinci, who
-looked deep into all things profound, certainly meant
-something of this kind in his fable of the grain of millet
-that says to the ant: 'If you will be kind enough to
-let me satisfy my desire to be born again, I will render
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-myself to you again a hundredfold.' Admire the touch of
-grace in those fingers capable of breaking iron! Ah, he
-is always the incomparable master! How can I forget
-him for a time, that I may give myself to the Venetians?"</p>
-
-<p>The playful irony with which he had been speaking
-was suddenly extinguished in his last words, and again
-he seemed plunged in his own thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>"It is already late; the hour approaches; we must return,"
-he said presently, rousing himself as if from a
-troubled dream, for he had seen reappear that formidable
-monster with the thousand human faces filling the depth
-and width of the great hall. "I must go back to the
-hotel in time to dress."</p>
-
-<p>Then, with a return of his boyish vanity, he thought
-of the eyes of the unknown women who would see him
-that evening for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>"To the Hotel Danieli," La Foscarina said to the boatman.</p>
-
-<p>While the dentellated iron of the prow swung around
-on the water, with a slow, animal-like movement, each
-felt a sadness different but equally painful at leaving behind
-them the infinite silence of the estuary, already
-overcome by darkness and death, and being compelled to
-return toward the magnificent and tempting city, whose
-canals, like the veins of a full-blooded woman, began
-to burn with the fever of night.</p>
-
-<p>They were quiet for some time, absorbed by their interior
-agitation, which shook each heart to it depths.
-And all things around them exalted the power of life
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-in the man who wished to attract to himself the universe
-in order not to die, and in the woman, who would
-have thrown her oppressed soul to the flames in order
-to die pure.</p>
-
-<p>Both started at the unexpected sound of the salute at
-the lowering of the flag on board a man-of-war anchored
-before the gardens. At the summit of the black mass
-they saw the tricolored flag slide down the staff and fold
-itself up, like a heroic dream that suddenly vanishes.
-For a moment the silence seemed deeper, and the gondola
-glided into darker shadows, grazing the side of
-the armed colossus.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know that Donatella Arvale who is to sing
-in <cite>Ariadne</cite>?" said Stelio suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>"She is the daughter of the great sculptor, Lorenzo
-Arvale," La Foscarina replied, after an instant of hesitation.
-"I have no dearer friend than she&mdash;and in fact
-she is my guest at present. You will meet her at my
-house this evening, after the festival."</p>
-
-<p>"Donna Andriana spoke to me of her last night as
-a prodigy. She said that the idea of resurrecting <cite>Ariadne</cite>
-had come to her on hearing Donatella Arvale sing divinely
-the air: <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Come mai puoi&mdash;Vedermi piangere?</i> We
-shall have some divine music at your house, Perdita.
-Oh, how I long to hear it! Below there, in my solitude,
-for months and months, I hear only the music of the sea,
-which is too terrible, and my own music, which is too
-tumultuous."</p>
-
-<p>The bells of San Marco gave the signal for the Angelus,
-and their powerful notes spread in great waves of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-sound over the water, vibrating among the masts of the
-vessels, and creeping out upon the infinite reach of the
-lagoon. From San Giorgio Maggiore, San Giorgio dei
-Greci, San Giorgio degli Schiavoni, San Giovanni in Bragora,
-and San Moisé, from the Salute, the Redentore,
-and beyond, over the entire domain of the Evangelista,
-to the distant towers of the Madonna dell' Orto, San
-Giobbe and Sant' Andrea, tongues of bronze responded,
-mingling in one great chorus, seeming to extend over
-the silent stones and waters a single immense and invisible
-dome of metal, the vibration of which might almost
-reach the first sparkling stars. Those sacred voices
-seemed to lend to the City of Silence an ideal and infinite
-grandeur.</p>
-
-<p>"Can you still pray?" said Stelio in a softened voice,
-looking at the woman who, with eyes downcast, and
-hands clasped on her knees, seemed absorbed in a silent
-orison.</p>
-
-<p>She did not reply; she only pressed her lips together
-more closely.</p>
-
-<p>The minds of both were confused by the strange, the
-new image, and the new name, that had risen between
-them. Perturbation and passion seized them again, drew
-them near each other with such force that they dared
-not look into each other's eyes, for fear of what might
-be read there.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I see you again this evening, after the festival?"
-said La Foscarina, with a slight unsteadiness in her
-voice. "Are you free?"</p>
-
-<p>She was eager now to hold him, to make him her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-prisoner, as if she feared he would escape her, as if she
-had hoped to find this night some magic philter that
-would bind him to her forever. And, though she comprehended
-now that the gift of all she had to give had
-become necessary, she realized only too clearly, nevertheless,
-even through the intoxication that bewildered
-her, the poverty of the gift so long withheld. And a
-mournful modesty, a mingling of terror and pride, contracted
-her slender frame.</p>
-
-<p>"I am free&mdash;and I am yours!" the young man answered
-in a half whisper, without raising his eyes to
-hers. "You know that nothing is worth to me what you
-can give."</p>
-
-<p>His heart, too, was stirred to its depths, with the two
-aims before his ambition toward which, this night, all
-his energy bent, like a powerful bow: the city and the
-woman, both tempting and mysterious, weary with having
-lived too much, and oppressed with too many loves;
-both were too much magnified by his imagination, and
-both were destined to disappoint his hopes.</p>
-
-<p>In the moment that followed, a violent wave of mingled
-regret and desire swept over him. The pride and intoxication
-of his hard, persistent labor; his boundless ambition,
-which had been curbed within a sphere too narrow
-for it; his intolerance of mediocrity, his demand for
-the privileges of princes; his superb and empurpled
-dreams; his insatiable need of preëminence, glory, pleasure&mdash;surged
-in his soul with a confusing tumult, dazzling
-and suffocating him. And the craving of his sadness
-inclined him to win the final love of this solitary,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-nomadic woman, the very folds of whose garments
-seemed to suggest the frenzy of the far-off multitudes,
-whom she had so often thrilled and shaken with her
-art, by a cry of passion, a sob of grief, or a death-like
-silence. An irresistible impulse drew him toward this
-woman, in whom he fancied he saw the traces of all
-emotions and experiences, toward that being, no longer
-young, who had known so many caresses, yet was unknown
-by him.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it a promise?" he murmured, bowing his head
-lower to conceal his agitation. "Ah! at last!"</p>
-
-<p>She made no reply, but fixed on him a gaze of almost
-mad intensity, which he did not see.</p>
-
-<p>They relapsed into silence again, while the reverberation
-of the bells passing overhead was so penetrating
-that they felt it in the roots of the hair, as from a quiver
-of their own flesh.</p>
-
-<p>"Good-by," said La Foscarina, as they were landing.
-"When we leave the hall, let us meet in the courtyard,
-near the second well, the nearest to the Molo."</p>
-
-<p>"Good-by," he answered. "Take some place where I
-may see you, among the crowd, when I speak my first
-word."</p>
-
-<p>A confused clamor arose from San Marco, above the
-sound of the bells, spread over the Piazzetta, and died
-away toward the Fortuna.</p>
-
-<p>"May all light be on your brow, Stelio!" said La Foscarina,
-holding out her burning hands to him passionately.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II<br />
-<small>THE FACE OF TRUTH</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>When he entered the court by the south door,
-Stelio Effrena, seeing the black and white
-throng that swarmed up the Giants' Stairway,
-in the ruddy light of the torches
-fixed in the iron candelabra, felt a sudden sensation of
-repugnance, and paused at the entrance. He noted the
-contrast between this paltry crowd and the noble architecture
-which, magnified by the unusual nocturnal illumination,
-expressed, by their varied harmoniousness,
-the strength and the beauty of a day that was past.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, how miserable!" he exclaimed, turning to the
-friends that accompanied him. "In the Hall of the
-Greater Council, from the throne of the Doges, how is
-it possible to find metaphors that will move a thousand
-starched shirt-bosoms? Let us go back; let us inhale
-the odor of the real crowd, the true crowd. The Queen
-has not yet left the royal palace. We have time
-enough."</p>
-
-<p>"Until the moment that I see you on the platform, I
-shall not feel sure that you will really speak," said Francesco
-de Lizo, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>"I believe that Stelio would prefer the balcony to the
-platform," said Piero Martello, wishing to flatter the
-master's taste for sedition, and his factious spirit, which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-he himself affected, in imitation. "He would like to harangue,
-between the two red columns, the mutinous people
-who threatened to set fire to the new <cite>Procuratie</cite> and
-the old <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Libreria</i>."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, certainly," said Stelio, "if the harangue had
-power to prevent or to precipitate an irreparable act. I
-hold that we use the written word to create a pure form
-of beauty, which, even in an uncut book, is enclosed and
-shut in, as in a tabernacle that may be entered only by
-election, with the same premeditated will used in the
-breaking of a seal. But the spoken word, it seems to
-me, when it is addressed directly to a multitude, should
-have only action for its aim. On this condition alone
-can a proud spirit, without lessening itself in dignity,
-communicate with the masses by means of voice and
-gesture. Otherwise, his effort becomes merely histrionic.
-And so I repent bitterly of having accepted this function
-of an ornamental orator, who must not speak unless he
-speaks agreeably. Consider, I ask you, how humiliating
-for me is the honor that they think to do me, and consider
-also the uselessness of my speech. All these
-people, strangers here, have left their mediocre occupations,
-or their favorite amusements, to come and listen
-to me with the same vain and stupid curiosity that would
-lead them to listen to some new virtuoso. For the
-women that will listen to me, the art with which I have
-tied my cravat will be much more appreciated than the
-art with which I shall round my periods. And, after
-all, the only effect of my speech will be a clapping of
-hands, deadened by gloves, or a brief, discreet murmur,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-to which I shall reply with a gracious inclination of the
-head. Does it seem to you that I am about to attain
-the summit of my ambition?"</p>
-
-<p>"You are wrong," said Francesco de Lizo. "You
-should congratulate yourself for this happy occasion,
-which will allow you, for several hours, to impress the
-rhythm of art on the life of a forgetful city, and to make
-us dream of the splendors that might embellish our existence
-by a renewed union of Art with Life. If the
-man that built the Teatro di Festa were there, he would
-praise you for that harmony which he predicted. But
-the most wonderful thing about this affair is the fact
-that, notwithstanding your absence, and your ignorance
-of the project, the festival seems to have been prepared
-under the direct inspiration of your genius. This is the
-best proof that it is possible to restore and diffuse taste,
-even in the midst of the barbaric present. Your influence
-to-day is more powerful than you think. The lady
-who has desired to honor you&mdash;she that you call the
-Dogeressa&mdash;at every new idea that came to her, asked
-herself: 'Would it please Effrena?' If you only knew
-how many young and eager spirits put to themselves to-day
-the same question, when they consider the aspects
-of their inner life!"</p>
-
-<p>"And for whom should you speak, if not for them?"
-said Daniele Glauro, the fervent and sterile ascetic of
-Beauty, with that melodious voice which seemed to reflect
-the frank and inextinguishable ardor of the soul
-beloved by the master as one of the most faithful. "If,
-when you stand upon the platform, you will look about
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-you, you will easily recognize the expression in their
-eyes. There are many of them, and some have come a
-long distance; they await your words with an eagerness
-that you perhaps do not understand. They are those
-who have imbibed the spirit of your poetry, who have
-breathed the fiery ether of your dream, and felt the grip
-of your chimera; those to whom you have announced
-the transfiguration of the world by the miracle of a new
-art. The number that you have attracted as an apostle
-of hope and of joy is very great. They have heard that
-you are to speak in Venice, in the Ducal Palace&mdash;one
-of the most splendid and glorious places on earth. They
-will be able to see you and listen to you for the first
-time, surrounded by the magnificence that seems to them
-an appropriate frame to your personality. The old Palace
-of the Doges, which has so long been wrapped in
-nocturnal darkness, is suddenly illuminated and aroused
-this night for you, and, to their minds, it is you alone
-that have had the power to rekindle these long-extinguished
-torches. Do you understand now the eagerness
-of their expectation? Does it not seem to you that to
-them only you ought to speak? The condition you impose
-on the man that harangues a multitude may be fulfilled.
-You can awaken an emotion in their breasts that
-shall turn them forever toward the Ideal. For how
-many of them, Stelio, you might make this Venetian
-night an experience never to be forgotten!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio laid his hand on the prematurely bent shoulders
-of the mystic doctor, and, smiling, repeated Petrarch's
-words: "<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Non ego loquar omnibus, sed tibi, sed mihi, et his</i>."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He saw within himself the radiant eyes of his unknown
-disciples, and heard within his soul, in clear tones,
-the sound of his own exordium.</p>
-
-<p>"Nevertheless," he replied gayly, addressing Piero
-Martello, "it would be amusing to conjure up a tempest
-on this sea."</p>
-
-<p>They were standing under the arch, near a column,
-in contact with the noisy, unanimous crowd, which gathered
-in the Piazzetta, stretched out toward the Zecca,
-was swallowed up near the <em>Procuratie</em>, barred the Torre
-dell'Orologio, occupied every space like a wave without
-form, and communicated its living warmth to the marble
-columns and the walls, against which it surged in its
-violent movement. From time to time, a louder cry arose
-from the distance, at the farther end of the Piazza,
-swelling higher and stronger until it burst out near them
-like a clap of thunder, then diminishing until it died
-away in a murmur.</p>
-
-<p>"I should like to-night to find myself for the first
-time with a woman I loved, on a floating couch, over
-there, beyond the gardens, toward the Lido," said the
-romantic poet, Paris Eglano, a blond, beardless youth,
-whose handsome mouth, with its full red lips, contrasted
-with the almost angelic delicacy of his other features.
-"Within an hour, Venice will present to some Nero-like
-lover, hidden in a gondola, the spectacle of a city set on
-fire by its own delirium."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio smiled, noting to what extent his intimates had
-become imbued with his own spiritual essence, and how
-deep the seal of his own style had stamped itself on their
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-minds. Suddenly the image of La Foscarina flashed
-across his mental vision: La Foscarina, poisoned by too
-much art, remembering too many amatory experiences,
-with the stamp of maturity and of corruption on her
-eloquent mouth, the aridity of the vein fever that burned
-in those hands that pressed out the juices of deceitful
-fruits, and the marks of a hundred masks on that face
-which had simulated the fury of all mortal passions.
-Thus she appeared to his ardent thought of her, and his
-heart throbbed faster as he pictured her emerging soon
-from the multitude, as from some element that enslaved
-her, and thought that from her glance he should draw
-the necessary inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>"Come, let us go," said he resolutely to his friends.
-"It is the hour."</p>
-
-<p>The cannon announced that the Queen had left the
-royal palace. A prolonged quiver ran through the living
-human mass, like that which precedes a storm at sea.
-From the bank of San Giorgio Maggiore, a rocket rushed
-up with a long hiss, rising in the air like a fiery stem
-and bursting into a mass of pink splendor at the top;
-then it curved, grew fainter, and dissolved in trembling
-sparks, extinguished finally with a slight crackling in
-the water. And the joyous clamor that greeted the
-beautiful Queen, repeating her name&mdash;the name of the
-starry, white flower and of the pearl&mdash;evoked in Stelio's
-imagination the pomp of the ancient Promissione, the
-triumphal procession of the Arts escorting the new
-Dogaressa to the palace; the wave of joy on which Morosina
-Grimani mounted to her throne, shimmering with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-gold, while all the Arts bowed before her, laden with
-gifts as if they bore horns of plenty.</p>
-
-<p>"Certainly," said Francesco de Lizo, "if the Queen
-loves your books, she will wear all her pearls this evening.
-You will have before you a veritable labyrinth of
-jewels&mdash;all the hereditary gems of the Venetian patricians."</p>
-
-<p>"Look toward the foot of the stairway, Stelio," said
-Daniele Glauro. "A group of devotees is waiting for
-you to pass that way."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio stopped at the well indicated by La Foscarina.
-He leaned over the bronze edge, his knees touching the
-little carved caryatides, and saw in the dark water the
-reflection of the stars. For the moment his soul isolated
-itself, shut out the surrounding sounds, and withdrew
-into the shadowy disc, from which rose a slight dampness
-betokening the presence of water. His excited desire
-felt a need to attain even greater intoxication than
-this night promised him, and he felt that in the farthest
-depths of his being lay a secret soul, which, like this
-dark, watery mirror, remained immovable, strange, and
-intangible.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you see there?" inquired Piero Martello,
-also leaning over the rim, worn in places by the ropes
-of centuries.</p>
-
-<p>"The face of Truth!" the master answered.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the apartments contiguous to the Hall of the
-Greater Council, once occupied by the Doge, but now
-by the pagan statues that were seized as booty in ancient
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-wars, Stelio awaited the summons from the master
-of the ceremonies to mount to the platform. He was
-quite calm, and smiled on the friends that spoke to him,
-but their words reached his ear between pauses, like interrupted
-sounds borne from afar by the wind. From
-time to time, with an abrupt, involuntary movement, he
-drew near to one of the statues, and ran his hand nervously
-over it, as if seeking some weak spot, that he
-might break it; or he bent curiously over some rare
-medal, as if to read on it some indecipherable sign. But
-his eyes saw nothing of all this; they were turned within,
-where the multiplied power of his will evoked the
-silent forms that his voice would presently transform
-into the perfection of verbal music. His whole being
-contracted itself in an effort to raise to the highest degree
-of intensity the representation of the extraordinary
-feelings that possessed him. Since he could speak only
-of himself, and of his own universe, at least he would
-unite in one ideal figure the sovereign qualities of his
-art, and show to his disciples by his genius for imagery
-what an invincible force hastened him through this life.
-Once more he intended to show them that, in order to
-obtain the victory over men and circumstances, there is
-no other way than to persevere in exalting oneself and
-to magnify one's own dream of beauty or of power.</p>
-
-<p>He bent over a medallion by Pisanello, feeling at his
-temples the ardent, rapid pulsation of his thought.</p>
-
-<p>"See, Stelio," said Daniele Glauro to him, with that
-pious reverence which veiled his voice whenever he spoke
-of his religion, "see how the mysterious affinities of Art
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-work upon you, and how an infallible instinct leads you,
-amid so many forms, and at the very moment when
-your thought is about to reveal itself, toward the example
-of the most perfect expression, the highest model
-of style. At the very instant of coining your own idea,
-you are led to study one of Pisanello's medallions; you
-are attracted by the impression of one of the greatest
-stylists that ever have lived in the world, the most
-frankly Hellenic soul of the whole Renaissance. And
-suddenly your forehead is illumined by a ray of light."</p>
-
-<p>The pure bronze bore the effigy of a young man with
-beautiful, waving hair, an imperial profile and Apollo-like
-neck, and the head was so perfect a type of elegance
-and vigor that the imagination could not picture him in
-life except as free from all decadence and eternally unchangeable,
-as the artist had presented him in this
-circle of bronze.&mdash;<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Dux equitum præstans Malatesta Novellus
-Cesenæ dominus. Opus Pisani pictoris.</i>&mdash;And beside it was
-another medallion by the same artist, bearing the effigy
-of a virgin, with narrow chest, a swan-like throat, and
-hair drawn back in the shape of a heavy bag; the forehead,
-high and receding, seemed already to promise the
-aureole of the blessed, and she was like a vase of purity
-sealed forever, hard, precise, and limpid as a diamond,
-an adamantine pyx where the spirit, consecrated like the
-Host, rested as a sacrifice.&mdash;<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cicilia Virgo, filia Johannis
-Francesco primi Marchionis Mantuae.</i></p>
-
-<p>"Here comes La Foscarina, with Donatella Arvale,"
-announced Francesco de Lizo, who had been watching
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-the crowd that climbed the Censors' Stairway and
-pressed into the vast hall.</p>
-
-<p>Again Stelio Effrena felt a wave of agitation sweep
-over him. The murmur of the throng seemed to come
-from afar and mingle in his ears with the throbbing of
-his arteries, and in this murmur he fancied he heard
-once more the last words of Perdita.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III<br />
-<small>THE NUPTIALS OF AUTUMN AND VENICE</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>The murmur swelled louder, diminished, then
-ceased, as Stelio, with firm, light movement,
-ascended the marble steps of the platform. As
-he turned toward the audience, his dazzled eyes
-rested upon the formidable monster with a thousand
-human faces, amid the gold and somber purple of the
-immense hall.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden thrill of pride gave him complete self-control.
-He bowed to the Queen and to Donna Andriano
-Duodo, who smiled upon him with the same twin smiles
-he had seen from the gliding gondola on the Grand
-Canal. He threw a keen glance toward the scintillating
-first rows, seeking La Foscarina, then looked toward
-the farther end of the hall, where only a dark zone,
-dotted with white spots, could be distinguished. The
-silent, attentive multitude seemed to him like an enormous,
-many-eyed chimera, its breast covered with glittering
-scales, extending its black bulk under the arches of
-the rich, heavy ceiling that hung over it like a suspended
-treasure.</p>
-
-<p>Dazzling was that chimeric breast, where sparkled
-necklaces that must once have flashed their fires under
-the same ceiling on the night of a coronation banquet.
-The tiara and the necklaces of the Queen&mdash;the rows of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-pearls, like grains of light, somehow suggesting the miraculous
-image of a smile just about to appear&mdash;the dark
-emeralds of Andriano Duodo, taken long ago from the
-handle of a scimitar; the rubies of Giustiniana Memo,
-set in the semblance of carnations by the inimitable
-craftsmanship of Vettor Camelio; the sapphires of Lucrezia
-Priuli, taken from the shoes in which the Most
-Serene Zilia had walked to her throne on the day of
-her triumph; the beryls of Orsetta Contarini, delicately
-set in dull gold by the art of Silvestro Grifo; the turquoises
-of Zenobia Corner, bathed in a strange pallor by
-the mysterious malady that, in a single night, changed
-them as they lay on the warm breast of the Princess de
-Lusignan, among the delights of Asolo&mdash;all the rich
-jewels that had illumined the nights of the Anadyomenean
-city glowed with renewed fire on the breast of
-the chimera, from which rose a moist odor of feminine
-breaths and many perfumes. The rest of that strangely
-marked and shapeless body extended to the rear of the
-hall, in a sort of long tail, passing between the two gigantic
-spheres, which recalled to the memory of the
-"Image-maker" the two bronze spheres that the monster
-with the bandaged eyes presses with his paws in
-Giambellino's allegory. And this vast animal life, devoid
-of all thought for the time before him who alone
-at that moment must think, endowed with the inert fascination
-of enigmatic idols, covered with its own silence
-as with a shield capable of receiving and resisting any
-shock, awaited the first thrill of his dominating word.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena measured this silence, upon which his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-first syllable must fall. While his voice was rising to his
-lips, an effort of will summoning it and fortifying it
-against instinctive hesitation, he perceived La Foscarina
-standing near the railing that encircled the celestial
-sphere. The pale face of the tragic actress rose from
-her bare neck, and the purity of her white shoulders was
-just above the orbit of the zodiacal figures. Stelio admired
-the art of this apparition. With his own eyes fixed
-upon those distant, adoring ones, he began to speak
-slowly, as if the rhythm of the oars still lingered in his
-ears.</p>
-
-<p>"One afternoon, not long ago, while I was returning
-from the gardens along the warm bank of the Schiavoni,
-where the souls of poets sometimes believe they see I
-know not what magic golden bridge spanning a sea of
-light and silence toward a dream of infinite beauty, I
-thought&mdash;or rather, I witnessed with my thoughts, as
-at some intimate spectacle&mdash;of the nuptial alliance, under
-those skies, of Autumn and Venice.</p>
-
-<p>"Everywhere was disseminated a spirit of life, arising
-from passionate expectation and restrained ardor, which
-made me marvel at its vehemence, but which seemed not
-altogether new to me; I had already seen it in some
-shadowy zones, under the almost death-like immobility
-of Summer; and sometimes I had felt it vibrating, like
-a mysterious pulse, in the strange feverish odor of the
-water. Thus, I thought, it is true, then, that this pure
-city of Art aspires to a supreme state of beauty which
-for her returns annually, as the flowers return to the
-forest. She tends to reveal herself in full harmony,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-as if always she bore within her bosom, powerful and
-conscious, the same desire of perfection from which
-she sprang and was formed throughout the ages, like
-some divine creature. Under the motionless fire of
-Summer, she seemed to palpitate no more, to breathe
-no more, but to lie dead in her green waters. My feeling
-did not deceive me, however, when I fancied I saw
-her secretly inspired by a spirit of life sufficient to
-renew the most sublime of the ancient miracles.</p>
-
-<p>"That is what I thought, and what I saw. But how
-can I convey to you that listen to me any idea of that
-vision of joy and beauty? No sunrise, no sunset, could
-equal the glory of that hour of light on the water and
-the marble. The unexpected apparition of the beloved
-woman in a forest in springtime could not be as intoxicating
-as this sudden revelation by daylight of the
-heroic and voluptuous city, which carries in its marble
-embrace the richest dream of a Latin soul."</p>
-
-<p>The voice of the orator, clear, penetrating, almost icy
-at the beginning, was suddenly warmed by the invisible
-sparks kindled within him by the effort of improvisation,
-yet governed by the extreme nicety of his ear. While
-his words flowed without hesitation, and the rhythmic
-line of his periods set forth their beauty with the clearness
-of a figure drawn at one stroke by a bold hand, his
-auditors were conscious of the excessive tension of his
-mind, and it captivated them as one of those terrifying
-feats at the circus, where all the herculean energies of
-the athlete show the test by his quivering tendons and
-swelling arteries. They felt the reality, the living warmth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-of the thought thus expressed, and their pleasure was
-the greater because unexpected, for most of his auditors
-had anticipated from this indefatigable searcher after
-perfection the studied reading of a laboriously composed
-discourse. His devotees observed with emotion this audacious
-test, as if they saw before them, unveiled, the
-secret labor that had brought forth the forms that had
-given them so much joy. And this first wave of emotion,
-spreading by contagion, indefinitely multiplied and
-becoming unanimous, returned to him who caused it,
-and seemed almost to overcome him.</p>
-
-<p>This was the expected danger. Under the pressure
-of a wave so strong, the speaker faltered. For a few
-seconds a thick cloud darkened his brain; the light of
-his mind was extinguished, as a torch before an irresistible
-wind; his eyes grew dim, as if he were about
-to faint. But he felt how mortifying would be the shame
-of defeat if he yielded to this seizure; and in that darkness,
-by a sort of effort of brute force, or like the striking
-of steel on flint, his will rose in triumph over the instinctive
-weakness. With glance and gesture, he directed
-the eyes of the assemblage to the great masterpiece in
-the ceiling of that hall, spreading there in a kind of
-sun-like radiance.</p>
-
-<p>"I am certain," he exclaimed, "that Venice appeared
-thus to Paolo Veronese, when he sought within himself
-for an image of the Queen triumphant."</p>
-
-<p>He explained the reason why the great master, after
-throwing upon his canvas a profusion of gold, jewels,
-silks, purple, ermine, and all imaginable richness, at last
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-could represent the glorious face only in the nimbus of
-a shadow.</p>
-
-<p>"We ought to exalt Veronese for that shadowy veil
-alone! Representing by a human face the Queen of
-Cities, he yet knew how to express its essential spirit,
-whose symbol was an inextinguishable flame seen
-through a watery veil. And one I know well, who, having
-plunged his soul in this sublime element, has withdrawn
-it enriched with a new power, and consequently
-has lived a fuller and more ardent spiritual life."</p>
-
-<p>This one he knew well&mdash;was it not himself? In the
-assertion of his own personality he found again all his
-courage, and felt that henceforth he was master of his
-thoughts and words, freed from danger, capable of drawing
-within the charmed circle of his dream the enormous,
-many-eyed chimera, with the glittering breast&mdash;the
-ephemeral and versatile monster from whose side
-emerged its offspring, the Tragic Muse, her head rising
-above the constellations.</p>
-
-<p>Obedient to his movement, the innumerable faces
-turned toward the Apotheosis, their awakened eyes contemplating
-with wonder this marvel, as if they beheld
-it for the first time, or under a new aspect. The naked
-back of the woman with the golden helmet shone under
-the cloud with an effect of muscular life so perfect
-that it looked as attractive as palpable flesh. And, from
-this nudity, more realistic than all the rest, victorious
-over Time, which had darkened around it heroic images
-of sieges and battles, seemed to emanate a powerful enchantment,
-the sweetness of which was augmented by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-the breath of the autumn night coming through the open
-windows; while, from above, the princesses of a former
-day, leaning over the balustrades between two columns,
-inclined their illumined faces and opulent breasts toward
-their worldly sisters below.</p>
-
-<p>Under the new spell of enchantment, the poet threw
-off his winged words, harmonious as lyric strophes. He
-described the Queen City palpitating with ardor within
-her thousand green girdles, extending her marble arms
-toward the wild Autumn, whose humid breath reached
-her, balmy with the delicious death of the fields and
-islands, making her sigh like a bride awaiting her hour
-of joy. By the magic of his words, Venice seemed to
-be possessed of marvelous hands, with which she wove
-for herself the inimitable tissue of allegory that covered
-her.</p>
-
-<p>"And since, in all the world, poetry alone is truth, he
-that knows how to contemplate it, and to draw it into
-his own soul by the virtue of his thought, will be very
-near to mastering the secret of victory over life."</p>
-
-<p>In pronouncing these last words, Stelio sought the
-eyes of Daniele Glauro, and saw that they sparkled with
-happiness beneath that large, meditative brow, which
-seemed swollen by the weight of an unborn world. The
-mystic doctor was there, near the platform, with several
-of those unknown disciples that he had described to
-the master as eager and anxious, full of faith and expectation,
-impatient to break the chain of their daily servitude,
-and to know the free intoxication of joy and
-sadness. Stelio noted that they were grouped, like a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-nucleus of compressed force, against the great red bookcases,
-wherein lay buried innumerable volumes of useless
-and forgotten lore. He marked their eager and attentive
-faces, their long hair, their lips, half parted with
-child-like absorption, or closed tightly in a kind of violent
-sensitiveness, their bright eyes, to which the breath
-of his words carried lights and shadows, as a changeful
-breeze stirs a parterre of delicate flowers. He felt that
-in his own hand he held all their souls blended into one
-spirit, which he could at will agitate, crush, tear, or
-burn, as if it were a filmy scarf.</p>
-
-<p>While his mind expanded and relaxed, in its continued
-effort, he still retained a strange power of exterior investigation,
-a faculty of material observation which became
-the clearer and more penetrating with the warmth
-and quickening of his eloquence.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he saw with his mental vision the picture
-he wished to present, and his verbal expression of it
-was after the manner of the master painters that had
-reigned in that place, with the luxuriance of Veronese,
-and the fire of Tintoretto.</p>
-
-<p>"All the vitalities and all the transfigurations of the
-ancient stones, where Time has accumulated so many
-mysteries, and where glory has set her emblems; all the
-alternations of marvelously easy creations and destructions
-were reflected in the water; the effulgence of a jubilant
-light glittered between the crosses of cupolas
-inflated by prayer, and the slender saline crystals hanging
-under the arch of the bridges. Like a sentinel on a
-rampart uttering his shrill cry to him that listens for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-the signal, so the golden angel from the summit of the
-highest tower at last flashed out the announcement.</p>
-
-<p>"And He appeared! The Bridegroom appeared, seated
-in his fiery chariot, which he turned toward the Queen
-of Cities, and in his youthful, superhuman countenance
-was a strange fascination springing from an animal-like
-cruelty and delicacy contrasting with the deep eyes, full
-of all knowledge. His blood rioted through his veins,
-from the tips of his fingers to his nimble feet; mysterious,
-occult things veiled his being, concealing joy
-as the grape in bloom conceals the vine; and all the
-tawny gold and purple that surrounded him were like
-the vestment of his senses.</p>
-
-<p>"With what passion, throbbing under her thousand
-emerald girdles, and the richness of her jewels, the
-Queen of Cities gave herself to the magnificent god!"</p>
-
-<p>Swept up in this rushing flight of words, the soul
-of the multitude seemed to reach the sentiment of
-Beauty, as if it were a summit never before attained. The
-pulse of the people and the voice of the poet seemed to
-give back to those ancient walls their former life, and
-to reawaken in that cold museum its original spirit: a
-flood of powerful ideas, concrete, and organized in the
-most durable substance to attest the nobility of a great
-race.</p>
-
-<p>The splendor of divine youth descended upon the
-women, as it might have descended in a sumptuous alcove,
-for each felt within herself the breathlessness of
-expectation and the joy of yielding, like that of the
-Queen of Cities. They smiled with vague languor as if
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-wearied by the strain upon their emotions; their cool,
-polished shoulders rose from their corollas of jewels.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio looked down upon the sparkling breast of the
-great, many-eyed chimera, on which rose and fell many
-fluttering feather fans, like tiny wings; and over his
-spirit passed an intoxicating glow that disquieted him.
-The vibration of his nerves, acting upon those of his
-auditors and thus reacting upon himself, unsettled him
-so much as almost to unbalance him. For an instant
-he felt that he was oscillating above the crowd, like a
-concave and sonorous body, the resonances of which
-were engendered by an indistinct yet infallible will.</p>
-
-<p>He was surprised at the unknown power that dwelt
-within him, abolishing his own personal limits and conferring
-the fulness of a chorus on his single voice.</p>
-
-<p>This, then, was the mysterious truce which the revelation
-of Beauty could grant to the daily existence of
-wearied man; this was the mysterious will that could
-possess the poet at the moment when he replied to the
-souls of his followers who questioned him as to the value
-of life and tried to raise themselves, if only once, to
-the height of the eternal Ideal. He was only the messenger
-through whom Beauty offered to those men, assembled
-in this place consecrated by centuries of human
-glory, the divine gift of oblivion. He was only the translator
-into rhythmic speech of the visible language whereby,
-in this same place, the noble craftsmen of a former
-day had expressed the prayers and aspirations of the
-race. And for one hour, at least, those men would contemplate
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-the world with different eyes; they would
-think and dream with different souls.</p>
-
-<p>In fancy, he passed beyond the walls that enclosed
-the palpitating throng in a kind of heroic cycle, a circle
-of red triremes, fortified towers, and triumphal theories.
-The place now seemed too narrow for the exaltation
-of his new feeling; and once more he was drawn toward
-the real people, the immense, unanimous crowd he had
-seen outside the palace, who had sent upward in the
-starry night a clamor that, like blood or wine, intoxicated
-them as they uttered it.</p>
-
-<p>And not alone to this multitude did his thoughts turn;
-his fancy beheld an infinity of multitudes, massed together
-in theaters, dominated by an idea of truth and of
-beauty, pale and intent before the great arch of the
-stage, which should open before them some marvelous
-transfiguration of life, or frenzied by the sudden splendor
-radiating from an immortal phrase. And the dream
-of a higher Art, as it surged up again in his thought
-showed him mankind once more reverencing poets, as
-those who alone can interrupt at intervals its daily anguish,
-quench its thirst, and dispense oblivion. He even
-judged too slight the test he was now undergoing; he
-felt himself capable of creating gigantic fictions. The
-still formless work that he nourished in his soul shook
-him with a thrill of life as he looked again at the tragedienne,
-standing above the sphere of constellations&mdash;the
-Muse with the transcendent voice, who seemed to
-carry the frenzy of far-off throngs, now silenced, in the
-classic folds of her robes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Almost overcome by the incredible intensity of emotion
-that had possessed him during the brief pause, he
-began to speak again in a lower tone. He spoke of the
-growth of art between the youth of Giorgione and the
-old age of Tintoretto, and described it as golden, purple,
-rich and expressive as the pomp of the earth irradiated
-by the glow of sunset.</p>
-
-<p>"When I consider the impetuous creators of such marvelous
-beauty, my mind recalls an image from a fragment
-of Pindar's: 'When the centaurs became acquainted
-with the virtues of wine, sweet as honey and
-a conqueror of men, they banished milk from their
-tables and hastened to quaff their wine from silver horns.'
-No one in the world better knew than they how to taste
-the wine of life. They drew from it a kind of lucid intoxication
-that multiplied their powers and communicated
-to their eloquence a fertilizing energy. And in
-their greatest creations, the violent throbbing of their
-pulses seems to have persisted throughout the ages, like
-the veritable rhythm of Venetian art.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, how pure and poetic is the slumber of the Virgin
-Ursula on her immaculate bed! The most religious silence
-reigns in that chamber, where the pious lips of the
-sleeper seem to form themselves into the act of uttering
-prayer. Through the doors and the windows steals
-the timid light of dawn, illumining the syllables inscribed
-on her pillow: INFANTIA is the simple word
-that spreads around that virginal head, like the fresh
-aurora of the morning: INFANTIA. She sleeps, the
-maiden already betrothed to the pagan prince and destined
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-to martyrdom. So chaste, so ingenuous, so fervent,
-is she not the image of Art such as the precursors
-saw it, with the sincerity of their child-like eyes? INFANTIA!
-The word evokes around that couch all those
-forgotten ones: Lorenzo Veneziano, Simone da Cusighe,
-Catarino, Jacobello, Maestro Paolo, Giambono, Semitecolo,
-Antonio, Andrea, Quirizio da Murano, and all the
-laborious family by whom color&mdash;which later was the
-rival of fire&mdash;was prepared in the burning island of furnaces.
-But would not they themselves have uttered a
-cry of admiration if they had seen the drops of blood
-that sprang from the maiden's heart when it was pierced
-by the arrow of the beautiful pagan archer? A current
-so red from a virgin nourished on white milk! This victory
-was a sort of festival: to it the archers brought their
-finest bows, their richest garments, their most elegant
-air. The golden-haired barbarian, aiming his arrows at
-the martyr, with a movement so proud and graceful,
-does he not resemble an adolescent and wingless Eros?
-That gracious slayer of innocence (or perhaps his
-brother), after laying aside his bow, will abandon himself
-to the enchantment of music to dream a dream of
-infinite pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>"It was indeed Giorgione that poured into him a new
-soul, and kindled it with an implacable longing. The
-music that charms him is not the melody that last night
-the lutes diffused among the curving arches, over radiant
-thrones, or diminishing in the silence of distances in the
-visions of the third Bellini. Under the touch of religious
-hands, it still rises from the harpsichord; but the world
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-it awakens is full of a joy and a sadness wherein sin hides
-its head.</p>
-
-<p>"He that has looked at the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Concerto</i> with the eyes of
-wisdom has comprehended an extraordinary and irrevocable
-moment of the Venetian soul. By means of a
-harmony of color&mdash;whose power of expression is as
-boundless as the mystery of sounds&mdash;the artist reveals
-the first agitation of an eager spirit to whom life has
-suddenly appeared under the aspect of a rich inheritance.</p>
-
-<p>"The monk, seated at his harpsichord, and his older
-companion, do not resemble those monks that Vettor
-Carpaccio represented as flying before the wild beast
-tamed by Jerome, in San Giorgio degli Schiavoni. Their
-essence is nobler and stronger; they breathe an atmosphere
-higher and richer, propitious to the birth of a
-great joy, a great sadness, or a superb dream. What
-notes do those beautiful, sensitive hands draw from the
-keys on which they linger? Magic notes, no doubt, since
-they have power to work in the musician a transfiguration
-so great. He is half-way through his mortal existence,
-already far from his youth and near his decline,
-yet only now life reveals itself to him, rich with all good
-things, like a forest full of ripe, red fruit, the velvety
-freshness of which his always busy hands never before
-have known. As his senses still slumber, he has not
-yet fallen under the domination of a single seductive
-image, but he suffers a sort of confused anguish wherein
-regret overcomes desire, while in the web of harmonies
-that he seeks, the vision of his past&mdash;but only as it might
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-have been and was not&mdash;weaves itself like the tissue of a
-chimera.</p>
-
-<p>"His companion divines this inner agitation, for he is
-already at the threshold of old age; calm, sweet, and
-serious, he touches the shoulder of the passionate player
-with a pacifying movement. But there, emerging from
-the warm shadows like the embodiment of youthful ardor
-itself, is the young man with hat beplumed and flowing
-locks, the glowing flower of adolescence which Giorgione
-created under the influence of a reflection from
-that Hellenic myth whence arose the ideal form of Hermaphrodite.
-He is there, present, yet a stranger, separated
-from the others, like a being that cares only for
-his own welfare. The music exalts his inexpressible
-dream, and seems to multiply indefinitely his capacity
-to enjoy. He knows himself master of that life which
-escapes the other two, and the harmonies sought by the
-musician seem to him only the prelude to his own feast.
-His glance is sidewise and intent, turned toward a certain
-point, as if he would attract to himself something
-that charms him; his closed lips are ready with a kiss
-as yet ungiven; his brow is so spacious that the thickest
-garland would not encumber it; but if I think of his
-hands, I fancy them crushing the laurel leaves to perfume
-his fingers."</p>
-
-<p>The hands of the Inspirer illustrated the gesture of
-the covetous youth, as if they were really pressing out
-the essence of the aromatic leaf; and his voice lent to the
-image an illusion so strong that the young men felt that
-here at last was one who could express their cherished
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-and secret thoughts and dreams, and give voice to their
-unspeakable, continuous, and ceaseless longings. They
-occupied the free space at the back of the seated audience,
-making a living border for that compact mass; and, as
-the edges of a flag that waves in the breeze have a
-stronger flutter, these youthful hearts beat faster than
-those of older men at the warm breath of the poet's
-words.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio recognized them, distinguishing them by their
-singularity of attitude, the intensity of emotion revealed
-by their compressed lips and the glow of ardor in their
-cheeks. On the face of one, turned toward the open
-balcony, he read the enchantment of the autumn night,
-and the delicious breeze coming from the lagoon. The
-glance of another indicated, by a ray of love, some
-woman, seated near by, looking as if she were lost in
-tender recollections, her face white, her red lips slightly
-parted, like the entrance to a hive moist with honey.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes continually returned to the promised woman,
-who looked as she stood there like the living support of
-a starry sphere. He was grateful to her for her choice
-of this manner of appearing to him when, for the first
-time, he gave himself to the people. He no longer regarded
-her as merely the passing fancy of a single night,
-a woman ripened by long experience, but the marvelous
-instrument of a new art, the interpreter of the greatest
-poetry, she that should incarnate in her changeful personality
-his future fictions of beauty, she whose unforgettable
-voice should carry to mankind the long-expected
-word. He now felt attached to her, not by a promise
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-of love, but by a promise of glory; and the formless work
-that he still cherished in his breast again leaped within
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"You that listen to me," he continued, "do you not
-see some analogy between these three symbols of Giorgione's
-and the three generations, all living at the same
-time, that illumined the dawn of a new century? Venice,
-the City Triumphant, reveals herself to their eyes like a
-great, a superabundant banquet, where all the riches accumulated
-throughout centuries of war and commerce
-are to be set out without stint. What richer fountain
-of pleasure could there be to initiate life in insatiable
-desire? It is a time of agitation, almost of distraction,
-which, because of its fulness, is worth an hour of heroic
-violence. Alluring voices and laughter seem to float
-from the hills of Asolo where, surrounded by all delights,
-reigns the daughter of San Marco, Domina Aceli,
-who found in a myrtle grove of Cyprus the cincture of
-Aphrodite. Now approaches the youth with the white
-plumes; he comes to the banquet, followed by his uncurbed
-escort, and all desires kindle and burn like torches
-quickened by the wind. And this was the beginning
-of that divine Autumn of Art toward which men will
-always turn with deep emotion as long as the human
-soul strives to transcend the narrowness of its common
-existence in order to live a life more fervent or to die
-a nobler death.</p>
-
-<p>"I see Giorgione imminent on the marvelous sphere,
-but I do not recognize his mortal person; I seek him
-in the mystery of the fiery cloud that envelops him. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-appears to us more myth-like than human. The destiny
-of no poet on earth is comparable to his. All concerning
-his life is unknown; some even go so far as to deny
-his existence. His name is inscribed on no work, and
-many refuse to attribute any work to him with absolute
-certainty. But the whole of Venetian art was illumined
-by his revelation; it was from him that the great
-Titian received the secret of infusing glowing blood into
-the veins of the beings he created. In fact, that which
-Giorgione represents in Art is the Epiphany of the
-Flame. He deserves to be called 'the Flame-Bearer,' like
-Prometheus.</p>
-
-<p>"When I consider the rapidity with which this sacred
-gift has passed from one artist to another, glowing with
-increasing splendor from color to color, I think of one
-of those <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">lampadeforie</i>, or festivals, in which the Greeks
-tried to perpetuate the memory of the Titan son of
-Japetus. On the day of the festival, a group of young
-Athenian horsemen would set off at a gallop, riding from
-Ceramicus to Colonos, their chief waving a torch that
-had been lighted at the altar of a temple. If the torch
-was extinguished by the swiftness of the course, the
-bearer handed it to a companion, who re-lighted it as
-he rode; and this one gave it to a third; the third to a
-fourth, and so on, always galloping, until the last bearer
-laid it, still alight, on the altar of the Titan. This
-image, with all it suggests of fiery vehemence, represents
-to my fancy the feast of the master-colorists of
-Venice. Each of them, even to the least illustrious, held
-in his hand the sacred gift, if only for an instant. Some
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-of them, like that first Bonifacio, whom we should glorify,
-gathered with incombustible fingers the inmost
-flower of the flame."</p>
-
-<p>His fingers made a movement in the air as if to pluck
-the ideal flower. His eyes turned again toward the celestial
-sphere, as if he wished to offer the fiery gift to
-her who guarded the divine zodiacal beasts. "To you,
-Perdita!" But the woman was smiling at some one at
-a distance.</p>
-
-<p>Following the thread of her smile, Stelio's eyes were
-led to an unknown woman, who suddenly seemed to
-stand out illumined against a shadowy background.</p>
-
-<p>Was not that the creature of music whose name had
-resounded against the iron sides of the ship that evening,
-in the silence and the shadow?</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to Stelio to be almost an interior image,
-suddenly engendered in that part of his soul where the
-brief sensation he had felt while passing through the
-shadow of the vessel had remained like an isolated and
-indistinct point. For a second she was beautiful&mdash;as
-beautiful as were his yet unexpressed thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>"The city to which such creators have given a soul so
-powerful," he continued, floating himself on the rising
-wave, "is considered to-day, by the greater number, only
-as a vast inert reliquary, or as a refuge of peace and
-oblivion.</p>
-
-<p id="id59">"In truth, I know of no other place in the world&mdash;unless
-it be Rome&mdash;where a bold and ambitious spirit can
-better foster the active virtue of his intellect, and all
-the energies of his being toward the supreme heights,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-than on these quiet waters. I know of no marsh capable
-of provoking in human pulses a fever more violent
-that that which at times steals up to us from the shadows
-of a silent canal. Nor do those men who, at noontide
-in the midsummer heat, lie among the ripe grain,
-feel in their veins a more fiery wave of blood than that
-which suffuses our eyes when we lean too intently over
-these waters, to see whether, perchance, we may descry
-in their depths some old sword or ancient diadem.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not all gracious spirits come hither, as to a place
-of sweet refuge&mdash;those that hide some secret pain, those
-that have accomplished some final renunciation, those
-that have become weak through some morbid affection,
-and those that seek silence only to hear the soft step of
-advancing Death? Perhaps in their fading eyes Venice
-appears like a clement city of death, embraced by the
-waters of oblivion. But their presence is no more important
-than the wandering weeds that float at the foot
-of the steps of the marble palaces. They only increase
-the odor of sickly things, that strange, feverish odor on
-which at times, toward evening, after a laborious day,
-we nourish the fulness of our own feelings.</p>
-
-<p>"But the ambiguous city does not always indulge the
-illusions of those that look to her as a giver of peace.
-I know one who, in the midst of sweet repose on her
-breast, started up as terror-struck as if when lying beside
-his loved one, with her hand resting on his weary
-eyelids, he had heard serpents hissing in her hair!</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, if I only knew how to tell you of that prodigious
-life which palpitates beneath her great necklaces and her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-thousand green girdles! Not a day passes that she
-does not absorb more and more of our souls: sometimes
-she gives them back to us fresh and intact, restored
-to their original newness, whereon to-morrow's events
-will be imprinted with indelible clearness; again, she
-gives them back to us infinitely subtle and voracious,
-like a flame that destroys all that it touches, so that, at
-evening, among the cinders and the ashes, we may light
-upon some wonderful sublimate. Each day she urges
-us to the act that is the very genesis of our species: the
-unceasing effort to surpass ourselves. She shows us the
-possibility of transforming pain into the most efficacious
-stimulating energy; she teaches us that pleasure is the
-most certain means of knowledge given to us by Nature,
-and that the man who has suffered much is less wise
-than he that has enjoyed much."</p>
-
-<p>At these audacious words, a slight murmur of disapproval
-passed over the auditorium; the Queen shook her
-head ever so little, in token of denial; several ladies, in
-a rapid exchange of glances, seemed to signify to one
-another a sentiment of graceful horror. But these signs
-were overbalanced by the acclamation of youthful approval
-that rose from all sides toward him that taught
-with a boldness so frank the art of rising to the superior
-forms of life by the virtue of joy.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio smiled as he recognized his own, and so numerous;
-he smiled to recognize the efficacy of his teaching,
-which already, in more than one spirit, had dissipated
-the clouds of inert sadness, shown it the cowardice
-of weak tears, and infused it with a lasting disdain for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-feeble complaint and soft compassion. He rejoiced at
-having been able to proclaim once more the principle of
-his doctrine, emanating naturally from the soul of the
-art he glorified. And those that had retired to a hermit's
-cell, there to adore a sad phantom that lived only
-in the dim mirror of their own eyes; those that had
-created themselves kings of palaces without windows,
-where, from time immemorial, they had awaited a Visitation;
-those that had sought to unearth among ruins
-the image of Beauty, but who had found only a worn
-sphinx, which had tormented them with its endless
-enigmas; those that stood every evening at their thresholds
-to greet the mysterious Stranger bearing gifts
-under his mantle, and who, with pale cheeks, laid their
-ears against the ground to catch the first sound of the
-Stranger's approach; those whose souls were sterilized
-by resigned mourning or devoured by desperate pride;
-those that were hardened by useless obstinacy, or deprived
-of sleep by hope continually disappointed&mdash;all
-these spirits he wished now to summon that they might
-recognize their ailment under the splendor of that ancient
-yet ever-new soul.</p>
-
-<p>"In truth," said he, in a tone full of exultation, "if
-the whole population, abandoning their homes, should
-emigrate, attracted to-day toward other shores as formerly
-their heroic youth were tempted by the arch of the
-Bosphorus, in the time of the Doge Pietro Ziani, and the
-voice of prayer should no more strike against the sonorous
-gold of the concave mosaics, nor the sound of the
-oar perpetuate with its rhythmic stroke the meditation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-of the silent stones, Venice would still remain a City of
-Life. The ideal creatures protected by its silence live in
-the whole past and for the whole future. In them we
-shall always discover new concordances with the edifice
-of the universe, unforeseen meetings with the idea
-born only yesterday, clear announcements of that which
-is with us only a presentiment as yet, open answers
-to that which as yet we have not dared to ask.</p>
-
-<p>"These ideal creatures are simple, but they are full
-of innumerable meanings; they are ingenuous, yet are
-clothed in strange attire. Should we contemplate them
-for an indefinite time, they never would cease to pour
-dissimilar truths into our minds. Should we visit them
-every day, every day they would appear to us under a
-new aspect, as do the sea, the rivers, the fields, the
-woods, the rocks. At times the things they say to us
-do not really reach our intellects, but reveal themselves
-to us in a sort of confused happiness, which causes our
-own substance to dilate and quiver to its inmost depths.
-Some bright day they will point out to us the path to
-the distant forest, wherein Beauty has awaited us from
-time immemorial, buried in her mystic hair.</p>
-
-<p>"Whence came to them their immeasurable power?</p>
-
-<p>"From the pure unconsciousness of the artificers that
-created them.</p>
-
-<p>"Those profound men ignored the immensity of the
-things they wished to express. Penetrating with a million
-roots into the soil of life, not like single trees, but
-like vast forests, they absorbed infinite elements, which
-they transfused and condensed into ideal species, whose
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-essences nevertheless remained unknown to them, as the
-flavor of the apple is unknown to the branch that bears
-it. They were the mysterious means chosen by Nature
-in her effort to represent in an integral form those types
-in which she has not yet succeeded. Because of this,
-continuing the work of the Divine Mother, their minds,
-as Leonardo says, have become transformed into 'a likeness
-of the Divine Mind.' And because creative force
-rushed to their fingers incessantly, like sap to the buds
-of trees, they created with joy."</p>
-
-<p>All the desire of the determined artist, panting and
-struggling to obtain this Olympian gift, all his envy
-of those gigantic creators of Beauty, all his insatiable
-thirst for happiness and glory, were revealed in the tone
-in which he pronounced these last words. Once more
-the soul of the multitude was under the magic of the
-poet's spell, strained and vibrating like a single cord
-composed of a thousand strands, the resonance of which
-could be incalculably prolonged. That resonance awakened
-within the multitude the sense of a truth that had
-lain dormant, but which the poet's words now revealed
-for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>In the sonority of the deep silence, the solitary voice
-reached its climax.</p>
-
-<p>"To create with joy! It is the attribute of Divinity!
-It is impossible to imagine at the summit of the spirit
-an act more triumphal. Even the words that signify
-it possess something of the splendor of sunrise.</p>
-
-<p>"And these artists created by a medium that is in
-itself a joyous mystery: by color, which is the ornament
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-of the world; by color, which seems the effort of matter
-to become light.</p>
-
-<p>"And the newly awakened musical sense they had
-for color was such that their creations transcend the
-narrow limits of figured symbols, and assume the high
-revealing power of an infinite harmony.</p>
-
-<p>"Never have the words of Vinci, on whom Truth
-flashed one day with her thousand secrets, appeared so
-true as when we stand before the great symphonic canvases
-of the masters: 'Music cannot be called anything
-but the sister of Painting.' They are not alone silent
-poetry, but also silent music. The most subtle seekers
-of rare symbols, and those most desirous to impress
-the sign of an internal universe on the purity of a meditative
-brow, seem to us almost sterile compared with these
-great unconscious musicians.</p>
-
-<p>"When we behold Bonifacio, in the parable of Dives,
-intoning with a note of fire the most powerful harmony
-of color in which the essence of a proud and voluptuous
-nature ever has revealed itself, we do not ask questions
-about the blond youth, listening to the music and seated
-between the two magnificent courtesans, whose faces
-glow like lamps of purest amber; but, passing beneath
-the material symbol, we abandon ourselves to the power
-of evocation of those chords, wherein our spirits
-seem to-day to find a presentiment of I know not what
-evening, heavy with beautiful destiny and autumnal gold,
-in a harbor as quiet as a basin of perfumed oil where
-a galley palpitating with oriflammes shall enter with a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-strange silence, like a butterfly of twilight darting into
-the chalice of some great flower.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall we not, with our mortal eyes, really see it, some
-glorious evening, approaching the Palace of the Doges?
-Does it not appear to us from a prophetic horizon in the
-Allegory of Autumn which Tintoretto offers us, like a
-superior, concrete image of our dream of yesterday?</p>
-
-<p>"Seated on the shore, like a deity, Venice receives the
-ring from the young, vine-wreathed god who descends
-into the water, while Beauty floats in the air with a
-starry diadem to crown the marvelous alliance!</p>
-
-<p>"Behold yon distant ship! It seems to bring a message
-from the gods. Behold the symbolic Woman! Her
-body is capable of bearing the germs of a world!"</p>
-
-<p>A whirlwind of applause broke out, dominated by the
-clamor of the young men, who hailed him who had
-kindled before their anxious eyes a hope so glowing, who
-had professed a faith so strong in the occult genius of
-the race, in the lofty virtue of the ideals handed down
-by their fathers, in the sovereign dignity of their spirit,
-the indestructible power of beauty, in all the great things
-held as naught by modern barbarity. The disciples extended
-their arms toward the master with an effusion of
-gratitude, an impulse of love, for he had illumined their
-souls as with a torch. In each lived again Giorgione's
-creation: the youth with the beautiful white plumes, who
-advanced toward the rich mass of spoils; and each fancied
-as multiplied to infinity his own power to enjoy all
-things. Their cry expressed so plainly their perturbation
-of spirit, that the master felt an inward tremor and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-the inrush of a wave of sadness as he thought of the
-ashes of this sudden fire, and of the cruel wakening of
-the morrow. Against what sharp obstacles must be
-broken this terrible desire to live, this violent will of
-each to shape the wings of Victory to his own destiny,
-and to bend all the energies of his nature toward the
-sublime end!</p>
-
-<p>But that night favored youthful delirium. All the
-dreams of domination, of pleasure and of glory, that
-Venice has first cradled, then stifled, in her marble arms,
-seemed to rise anew from the foundations of the palace,
-to enter from the open balconies, palpitating like a people
-revivified under the arch of that rich and heavy ceiling,
-which was like a suspended treasure. The strength
-which, on the ceiling and the walls, seemed to swell the
-muscles of the gods, the kings, and the heroes, the beauty
-which, in the nudity of the goddesses, the queens, and
-the courtesans, ran like visible music&mdash;all that human
-strength and beauty, transfigured by centuries of art,
-harmonized itself in a single figure, which these intoxicated
-ones fancied they beheld, real and breathing,
-erected before them by the new poet.</p>
-
-<p>They vented their intoxicated enthusiasm in that great
-cry which they sent up to him who had offered to their
-thirsty lips a cup of his own wine. Henceforth, all would
-be able to see the inextinguishable flame through its
-watery veil. Some one among them already imagined
-himself crumpling laurel leaves to perfume his hands;
-and another resolved to seek at the bottom of a silent
-canal for the old sword and the ancient diadem.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV<br />
-<small>THE SPIRIT OF MELODY</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>Alone with the statues in one of the rooms
-of the neighboring museum, Stelio Effrena
-rested for a moment, shrinking from any other
-contact, feeling the need of gathering his
-strength and quieting his nerves, to free himself from
-the unusual vibration through which it seemed to him
-all the essence of his spirit had been dissipated and
-scattered over the composite soul of the throng. Of
-his recent words, no trace remained in his memory,
-and of recent images he perceived no vestige. The
-only phrase that lingered in his mind was that "inmost
-flower of the flame," which he had conjured up in
-speaking of the glory of the first Bonifacio, and which
-he had plucked with his own incombustible fingers to
-offer to his promised love. He remembered how, at the
-precise instant of this spontaneous offering, the woman
-had turned away her head, and how, instead of a glance
-from her dreamy eyes, he had encountered the indicating
-smile. Then the intoxicating cloud that had been just on
-the point of melting away, seemed to condense itself anew
-in his brain, in the vague form of the creature of music;
-and he fancied that she held in her hand the flower of
-flame, as, in a dominating attitude, she emerged above
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-his inward agitation as from the trembling waves of a
-summer sea.</p>
-
-<p>As if to celebrate that image, from the Hall of the
-Greater Council came the first notes of the symphony
-of Benedetto Marcello, the fugue-like movement of which
-revealed at once its grand style. A sonorous idea, clear
-and strong as a living person, developed itself in the
-powerful measure; and in that melody Stelio recognized
-the virtue of the same principle around which, as around
-a thyrsus, he had twined the garlands of his poesy.</p>
-
-<p>Then the name that had already resounded against the
-sides of the vessel, in the silence and the shadow, that
-name which, in the great wave of sound from the evening
-bells, had been lost like a sibylline leaf, seemed to
-his fancy to propose its syllables to the orchestra as a
-new theme to be interpreted by the musicians' bows.
-The violins, viols, and violoncellos sang it in turn; the
-sudden blasts of the heroic trumpets exalted it; and at
-last a whole quartette, in one great, thrilling chord, flung
-it toward that heaven of joy where later would sparkle
-the starry crown offered to Ariadne by the golden
-Aphrodite.</p>
-
-<p>In the pause that followed, Stelio experienced a singular
-agitation, almost like a religious ecstasy, before
-that annunciation. He realized what it was worth to
-him, in that inestimable lyric moment, to find himself
-alone amid this group of white and motionless statues.
-A shred of the same mystery which, under the quarter
-of the ship, had seemed to float lightly across his senses
-like a misty veil, again waved before his eyes in that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-deserted hall, which was so near to the human throng.
-It was like the silence of the sea-shell, lying on the shore
-beside the stormy ocean. He again felt a conviction,
-such as he had already experienced in certain extraordinary
-hours of his journey, of the presence of his fate,
-which was about to give to his spirit a new impulse,
-perhaps to quicken within him a marvelous act of will.
-And, as he remembered the thousands of obscure
-destinies hanging over the heads of that crowd, which
-had been so stirred by his images of an ideal life, he
-congratulated himself on being able to adore alone the
-propitious demon that came to visit him secretly, to
-offer to him a veiled gift, in the name of an unknown
-mistress.</p>
-
-<p>He thrilled at the burst of human voices that saluted
-with triumphal acclamation the unvanquished god.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva il forte, viva il grande!</i></p>
-
-<p>The vast hall resounded like a great timbrel, and the
-reverberation penetrated through the Censors' Stairway,
-the Golden Stairway, the corridors and the vestibules to
-the furthermost parts of the palace, like a thunder of
-joy echoing in the serene night.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva il forte, viva il grande!<br />
-Vincitor dell' Indie dome!</i></p>
-
-<p>It seemed indeed that the chorus was saluting the
-apparition of the magnificent god invoked by the poet
-on the City Beautiful. It seemed that in those vocal
-notes the folds of his purple draperies quivered like
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-flames in a crystal tube. The living image hung suspended
-over the assemblage, which nourished it with
-its own dream.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva il forte, viva il grande!</i></p>
-
-<p>In the impetuous fugue movement, the bass, the contraltos,
-the sopranos repeated the frenzied acclamation
-to the Immortal of the thousand names and the thousand
-crowns, "born on an ineffable bed, like to a young man
-in his first youth."</p>
-
-<p>The old Dionysian intoxication seemed born again,
-diffusing itself through that divine chorus. The fulness
-and freshness of life in the smile of Zeus, who freed
-men's souls from sadness, expressed itself in a luminous
-outburst of joy. The torches of the Bacchantes blazed
-and crackled in the sound. As in an Orphic hymn, the
-brightness of conflagration illumined that youthful brow,
-surmounted by azure hair. "When the splendor of fire
-invaded the whole earth, he alone checked the whirlwinds
-of flame." As in the Homeric hymn, there palpitated
-the sterile bosom of the sea, expressing in regular
-cadences the measured stroke of the oars that propelled
-the stout vessel toward unknown lands. The Flower-bearer,
-the Fructifier, the visible Remedy for mortal man,
-the sacred Flower, The Friend of Pleasure, Dionysius,
-the liberator, suddenly appeared before mankind on the
-wings of song, crowning for them that nocturnal hour
-with happiness, placing before them once more the cup
-overflowing with all the good things of life.</p>
-
-<p>The song increased in power; all the voices blended
-in the rush of melody. The hymn celebrated the tamer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-of tigers, of panthers, lions and lynxes. A cry seemed
-to rise from Mænads with heads turned backward, flying
-locks and floating robes, who struck their cymbals and
-shook their castanets: <em>Evoé!</em></p>
-
-<p>But now suddenly surged above these heroic measures
-a broad, pastoral rhythm, invoking the Theban Bacchus,
-of the pure brow and gentle thoughts:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Quel che all'olmo la vite in stretto nodo<br />
-Pronuba accoppia, e i pampini feconda</i> ...</p>
-
-<p>Only two voices, in a succession of sixths, now sang
-the flowery nuptials, the leafy marriage, the flexible
-bonds. Before the eyes of the multitude again passed
-that image already created by the poet of the barque
-laden with clusters, like a vat filled with grapes to be
-made into wine. And again the song seemed to recall
-the miracle witnessed by the prudent pilot Medeia:
-"And behold! a sweet and fragrant wine ran over the
-swift, black boat.... And behold! a vine climbed
-to the top of the sail, and from it hung innumerable
-clusters of grapes. And a dark ivy twined about the
-mast, and it was covered with flowers, and beautiful
-fruits amid their foliage grew thereon, and garlands were
-wound about the rowlocks."</p>
-
-<p>The spirit of the fugue then passed into the orchestra,
-and mounted in exquisitely light roulades, while the
-voices struck on the orchestral web with simultaneous
-percussion. And, like a thyrsus waving over the Bacchic
-troop, a single voice floated out in the nuptial melody,
-with the laughing joy and grace of the pastoral marriage:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva dell'olmo,<br />
-E della vite<br />
-L'almo fecondo<br />
-Sostenitor!</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The voices seemed to evoke the image of erect and
-graceful Tiades, gently waving their thyrsi in the mists
-of divine intoxication, dressed in long saffron-hued robes,
-their faces lighted up, ardent as those women of Veronese,
-who leaned over their aerial balconies to listen to
-the song.</p>
-
-<p>But the heroic acclamation once more sprang up with
-final vehemence. The face of the conquering god reappeared
-amid torches frantically waved aloft. Then,
-in unison, in a supreme burst of joy, voices and orchestra
-thundered together at the many-eyed chimera under the
-suspended treasure of that dome circled by red triremes,
-armed towers, and triumphal bands:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva dell'Indie,<br />
-Viva de' mari,<br />
-Viva de' mostri<br />
-Il domator.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena had gone as far as the threshold;
-through the throng that made way before him he penetrated
-into the hall and halted near the platform occupied
-by the orchestra and the singers. His restless eyes
-sought La Foscarina near the celestial sphere, but did
-not find her. The head of the Tragic Muse no longer
-rose above the constellations. Where was she? To what
-place has she withdrawn? Could she see him, although
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-he could not see her? A confused anxiety agitated him,
-and the remembrance of the early evening on the water
-returned to him indistinctly, accompanied by the words
-of her recent promise. Glancing up at the open balconies,
-he thought that perhaps she had stepped outside to
-breathe the fresh night air, and that, perhaps, leaning
-against the balustrade she felt passing over her cool
-throat the wave of music, which would seem as sweet
-to her as the delight of a kiss from beloved lips.</p>
-
-<p>But his impatience to hear the divine voice dominated
-all other impatience, abolished all other desire. He observed
-that again a profound silence reigned throughout
-the hall, as at the instant when he had opened his lips
-to speak his first word. And, as at that instant, the
-versatile and ephemeral monster, with a thousand
-human faces, seemed to extend itself and yawn to receive
-a new soul.</p>
-
-<p>Some one near Stelio whispered the name of Donatella
-Arvale. He turned his eyes toward the platform, past
-the row of violoncellos, which formed a brown hedge.
-The singer remained invisible, hidden in the delicate,
-quivering forest of bows, whence would arise the mournful
-harmony that must accompany the Lament of
-Ariadne.</p>
-
-<p>Amid a sympathetic silence rose a prelude of violins.
-Then the viols and violoncellos added a sigh more profound
-to that imploring plaint. Was not this&mdash;after the
-Phrygian flute and the castanets, after the instruments
-of orgies, which trouble the reason and provoke delirium&mdash;was
-not this the august Doric lyre, grave and sweet,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-the harmonious support of song? Thus was the Drama
-born from the boisterous Dithyramb. The great metamorphosis
-of the Dionysian rite, the frenzy of the sacred
-festival before the creative inspiration of the tragic poet,
-were figured in that musical alternance. The fiery
-breath of the Thracian god gave life to a sublime form
-of Art. The crown and the tripod, the prize of the
-poet's victory, had displaced the lascivious goat and the
-Attic basket of figs. Æschylus, keeper of a vineyard,
-had been visited by the god, who had infused into him
-his spirit of flame. On the bank of the Acropolis, near
-the sanctuary of Dionysius, a marble theater had risen,
-capable of containing the chosen people.</p>
-
-<p>Thus suddenly opened in the mind of the Master the
-pathways of centuries, extending through the distance
-of primitive mysteries. That form of Art, toward which
-now tended the effort of his genius, attracted by the
-obscure aspirations of human multitudes, appeared to
-him in the sanctity of its origins. The divine sadness of
-Ariadne, up-springing like a melodious cry from the
-furious Thiaros, made leap once more within him the
-work he nourished in his soul, unformed yet alive. With
-a glance, again he sought the Muse of the revealing voice
-against the sphere of constellations, but he did not see
-her, and turned once more to the forest of instruments,
-whence rose the imploring plaint.</p>
-
-<p>Then, amid the slender bows, that rose and fell upon
-the strings with alternating movement, appeared the
-singer, erect as a stem; and, like a stem, she seemed
-to balance herself an instant on the softened harmony.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-The youthfulness of her agile and robust body shone
-resplendent through the texture of her robes, as a flame
-is seen through the thinness of polished ivory. Rising
-and falling around her white form, the bows seemed
-to draw their melody from the secret music that dwelt
-within her. When her lips opened in an enchanting
-curve, Stelio recognized the strength and purity of the
-voice before the singer had uttered one modulation, as
-if she were a crystal statue wherein he could behold
-the unspringing of a jet of living water.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Come mai puoi<br />
-Vedermi piangere?</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The melody of a by-gone love and long-dead sorrow
-flowed from those lips with an expression so pure and
-strong that suddenly, within the soul of the multitude,
-it was changed into a mysterious happiness. Was that
-strain indeed the divine plaint of the daughter of Minos,
-as she held out her arms in vain to the fair Stranger
-on the deserted shore of Naxos? The fable vanished;
-the illusion of the moment was abolished. The eternal
-love and eternal sorrow of gods and of men were exhaled
-in that perfect voice. The futile regret for each lost
-joy, the recollection of each fugitive blessing, the supreme
-prayer flying toward every sail on the sea, toward
-every sun hiding itself among the mountains, the implacable
-desire and the promise of death&mdash;all these things
-passed into the great, solitary song, transformed by the
-power of Art into sublime essences which the soul could
-receive without suffering. The words were dissolved
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-in tone, losing their significance, changed into notes of
-love and sadness, indefinitely illuminating. Like a circle
-that is closed, and yet dilates continually in accordance
-with the rhythm of universal life, the melody encircled
-the composite soul which dilated with it in immeasurable
-joy. Through the open balconies, in the perfect
-calm of the autumn night, the enchantment spread over
-the peaceful waters and mounted to the watchful stars,
-higher than the motionless masts of the ships, higher
-than the sacred towers, inhabited by the now silent
-bronze bells. During the interludes the singer drooped
-her youthful head and stood motionless as a white statue
-among the forest of instruments, where the long bows
-rose and fell in alternate movement, perhaps unconscious
-of that world which in a few brief moments her song
-had transfigured.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V<br />
-<small>THE EPIPHANY OF THE FLAME</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>Descending to the courtyard hastily, in order
-to escape importunate curiosity, Stelio took refuge
-in a shadowy corner, to watch, among the
-crowd coming down the Giants' Stairway, for
-the appearance of the two women, the actress and the
-singer, who were to meet him near the well.</p>
-
-<p>Every instant his expectation became more anxious,
-while around him rose the tumultuous cry that extended
-to the outer walls of the palace and lost itself among
-the clouds, now lighted with a glare as of a conflagration.
-An almost terrible joy seemed to spread over the Anadyomenean
-City, as if a vehement breath had suddenly
-dilated all breasts, filling the veins of all men with a
-superabundance of life. The repetition of the Bacchic
-Chorus celebrating the crown of stars, placed by Aphrodite
-on the forgetful head of Ariadne, had drawn a cry
-from the throng on the Molo beneath the open balconies.
-When, at the final elevation, the word <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva!</i> rang out
-from the chorus of Mænads, Satyrs, and Egipans, the
-chorus of the populace had responded to it like a formidable
-echo from the harbor of San Marco. And in this
-moment of Dionysian delirium it seemed as if the people
-remembered the forests of old that were burned on sacred
-nights, and had given a signal for the conflagration that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-must light up the beauty of Venice in final, dazzling
-splendor.</p>
-
-<p>The dream of Paris Eglano&mdash;the spectacle of marvelous
-flames offered to love on a floating couch&mdash;flashed
-before Stelio's vision. The persistent image of Donatella
-Arvale lingered in his thought: a supple, youthful
-figure, strong and shapely, rising erect amid the sonorous
-forest of bows, which seemed to draw their notes from
-the hidden music within herself. And, seized with a
-strange distress, through which passed something like
-the shadow of horror, he saw the image of the other
-woman: poisoned by art, worn with experience, with the
-taste of maturity and worldly corruptness on those eloquent
-lips, a feverish dryness in those hands, which had
-pressed the juice from deceitful fruits, and with the marks
-of a thousand masks on the face that had simulated the
-fury of all mortal passions. To-night, at last, after a
-long period of waiting and of hope, he was to receive
-the gift of that heart, no longer young, which had been
-claimed by others before him, but which he never yet
-had called his own. How his heart had throbbed in
-the early evening as he sat beside that silent woman,
-floating toward the City Beautiful over the waters that
-seemed to bear them on with the terrifying smoothness
-of mysterious machinery. Ah, why did she come now to
-meet him in company with the other temptress? Why
-did she place beside her despair and worldly wisdom the
-pure splendor of innocent youth?</p>
-
-<p>He started suddenly as he perceived in the throng at
-the top of the marble staircase, by the light of the smoking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-torches, the form of La Foscarina pressed so closely
-against that of Donatella Arvale that the robes of both
-blended into one mass of whiteness. He followed them
-with his eyes until they reached the lowest stair, anxious
-as if at each step they had approached the edge of an
-abyss. The unknown during these hours had already
-led in the heart of the poet a life so intense that on
-seeing her approach him he experienced the emotion that
-would have seized him before a breathing incarnation of
-one of the ideal creatures born of his art.</p>
-
-<p>She descended slowly on the human wave. Behind
-her, the Palace of the Doges, filled with streams of lights
-and confused sounds, made one think of those fairy-tale
-awakenings which suddenly, in the depths of the forest,
-transfigure inaccessible castles where for centuries the
-hair on royal heads had grown longer and longer during
-a protracted sleep. The two guardian Giants shone
-red in the blaze of the torches; the cuspid of the Golden
-Gate sparkled with tiny lights. And still the clamor
-rose and swelled above the groups of marbles, loud as
-the moaning of the stormy sea against the walls of Malamocco.</p>
-
-<p>In this tumult, Effrena saw advancing toward him the
-two temptresses, escaping from the crowd as if from
-the clasp of a monster. And his fancy pictured extraordinary
-assimilations, which should be realized with
-the ease of dreams and the solemnity of liturgic ceremonies.
-He said to himself that Perdita was leading
-this magnificent prey to him, that he might discover
-some rarely beautiful secret, that some great work of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-love might be accomplished, in which she desired to be
-his fellow artisan. He told himself that this very night
-she would say to him most marvelous words. Across
-his spirit passed once again the indefinable melancholy
-he had felt when he leaned over the bronze rim to contemplate
-the reflection of the stars in that dark mirror;
-he waited in expectation of some event that should stir
-that secret soul in the furthermost depths of his being,
-where it lay motionless, strange, intangible. By the
-whirling of his thoughts, he comprehended that he was
-again plunged into that delirium which the glamor of the
-lagoon had given him at twilight. Then, emerging from
-the shadowy corner, he went forward to meet the two
-women with an intoxicating presentiment.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, Effrena!" said La Foscarina, as she reached the
-well, "I had given up all hope of finding you here. We
-are very late, are we not? But we were caught in the
-crowd and could not escape."</p>
-
-<p>Then, turning toward her companion with a smile, she
-said:</p>
-
-<p>"Donatella, this is the Master of the Flame."</p>
-
-<p>Without speaking, but with a slight smile, Donatella
-Arvale responded to the low bow of the young man.</p>
-
-<p>"We must find our gondola," said La Foscarina. "It
-is waiting for us at the Ponte della Paglia. Will you
-come with us, Effrena? We must profit by the opportunity.
-The crowd is rushing toward the Piazzetta. The
-Queen will leave by the Porta della Carta."</p>
-
-<p>A long, unanimous cry saluted the appearance of the
-fair Queen in her pearls, as she stood at the head of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-stairs, where long ago, in the presence of the populace,
-the Doge received the ducal ensign. Again the name of
-the white starry flower and the pearl arose from the
-crowd and was echoed among the marbles. Flashes of
-joy sparkled against the dark sky, a thousand fiery doves
-flew from the pinnacles of San Marco, like messengers
-of Fire.</p>
-
-<p>"The Epiphany of the Flame!" cried La Foscarina,
-as she reached the Molo and gazed upon the marvelous
-spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>Donatella Arvale and Stelio Effrena stood side by
-side, astonished; then they looked into each other's eyes,
-bewildered. And their faces, illumined by the reflections,
-shone as if they were leaning over a furnace or a glowing
-crater.</p>
-
-<p>All the innumerable appearances of the volatile and
-multi-colored Fire spread over the firmament, crept over
-the waters, curled around the masts of the ships, enwreathed
-the cupolas and the towers, adorned the friezes,
-draped the statuary, bejeweled the capitals, enriched
-every line and transfigured every aspect of the sacred
-and profane architectures around that profound and mysterious
-watery mirror, which multiplied these marvels.
-The astonished eye could no longer distinguish between
-the contour and the quality of the elements, but it was
-charmed by a moving vision wherein all forms lived a
-lucid, fluid life, suspended in vibrating ether, so that
-the slender prows curving over the waves and the myriad
-of golden doves against the dark sky seemed to rival
-one another in the glory of swift motion, and together to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-reach the summit of immaterial beauty. That which in
-the twilight had seemed a silvery palace of Neptune,
-built in imitation of a rare shell, at this hour had become
-a new temple, erected by the nimble genii of the Fire.
-It seemed like one of those labyrinthian constructions
-of our dreams, prodigiously enlarged, that rise on andirons,
-at the hundred gates of which stand the two-faced
-augurs who make ambiguous gestures to the watching
-maiden; or like one of those fairy-like red palaces, at
-the thousand windows of which appear the faces of salamander
-princesses, who smile amorously upon the dreaming
-poet.</p>
-
-<p>Rosy as a setting moon, the sphere of the Fortuna,
-borne on the shoulders of the Atlantides, radiated on
-the triple loggia, its rays engendering a cycle of satellites.
-From the Riva, from San Giorgio, from the Giudecca,
-with a continual crackling, clusters of fiery stems
-rose toward the clouds, and there blossomed into sparkling
-roses, lilies, and palms, a flowery paradise, forming
-an aerial garden that continually faded and bloomed
-again with yet stranger and richer blossoms. It was like
-a rapid succession of springs and autumns in the empyrean.
-An immense sparkling shower of leaves and petals
-fell from the celestial dissolutions, enveloping all things
-in its golden shimmer.</p>
-
-<p>From a distance, through gaps in the glittering rain,
-a flotilla gay with flags could be seen approaching over
-the waters of the lagoon: a fairy-like fleet such as might
-float through the dream of a sybarite sleeping his last
-sleep on a bed steeped in deadly perfumes. Like those,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-perhaps, their ropes were made from the twisted hair
-of slaves captured in conquered cities, and still redolent
-of fragrant oils; like those, perhaps, their hulls were
-laden with myrrh, spikenard, benzoin, cinnamon, aromatic
-herbs; with sandal-wood, cedar, terebinth, and all
-oderiferous woods in rich profusion. The indescribable
-colors of the flags suggested perfumes and spices. Of
-blue-green peacock shades, saffron, violet, and indistinct
-hues, those flaming flags seemed to spring from
-some burning interior and to have been colored by some
-unknown process.</p>
-
-<p>"The Epiphany of the Flame!" repeated La Foscarina.
-"What an unforeseen commentary on your poem, Effrena!
-The City of Life responds by a miracle to your
-act of adoration. She burns, through her watery veil.
-Are you not satisfied? Look! Millions of golden pomegranates
-are hanging everywhere!"</p>
-
-<p>The actress was smiling, her face illumined by the
-magic fire. She was suddenly possessed by that singular
-gayety of hers which Stelio knew well, and which, because
-of its effect of incongruity with her usual pose,
-suggested to him the image of a dark, closed house where
-violent hands had suddenly opened on rusty hinges all
-the doors and windows.</p>
-
-<p>"We must praise Ariadne," he replied, "for having uttered,
-in all this harmony, the most sublime note."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio said those flattering words only to induce the
-fair singer to speak, only through a desire to know the
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">timbre</i> of that voice when it descended from the heights
-of song. But his praise was lost in the reiterated clamor
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-of the crowd, which overflowed on the Molo, making a
-longer stay impossible. From the bank, Stelio assisted
-the two friends into their gondola; then he sat down
-on a stool at their knees, and the long, dentellated prow
-sparkled, like all else, in the magic fire.</p>
-
-<p>"To the Rio Marin, by the Grand Canal," La Foscarina
-ordered the gondolier. "Do you know, Effrena, we
-are to have at supper some of your best friends: Francesco
-de Lizo, Daniele Glauro, Prince Hoditz, Antimo
-della Bella, Fabio Molza, Baldassare Stampa"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Then it will be a banquet?"</p>
-
-<p>"But not, alas! like that of Cana."</p>
-
-<p>"And will not Lady Myrta, with her Veronese greyhounds,
-be there?"</p>
-
-<p>"Rest assured that we shall have Lady Myrta. Did
-you not see her in the hall? She sat in the first row,
-lost in admiration of you."</p>
-
-<p>Because they had looked into each other's eyes as they
-spoke, a sudden emotion seized them. The remembrance
-of that full twilight hour on the water that rippled beneath
-their oar filled their hearts with a wave of troubled
-blood; and each was surprised by a swift return of the
-same agitation felt when leaving the silent estuary already
-in the power of shadow and death. Their lips
-refused to utter vain, light words; their souls refused
-to make the effort to incline themselves through prudence
-toward the passing trivialities of the superficial
-life, which now seemed worthless to both; and their
-spirits became absorbed in the contemplation of the
-strange fancies that rose from their inmost thoughts in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-a garb of indescribable richness, like the heaped-up treasures
-the streams of light seemed to reveal in the depths
-of the nocturnal waters.</p>
-
-<p>And, because of that very silence, they felt the presence
-of the singer weigh heavily upon them, as in the moment
-when her name had first been spoken between them; and
-little by little the oppression became intolerable. Although
-Stelio was seated close to her, she appeared no
-less distant than when she rose above the forest of instruments;
-she was as absent and unconscious as she
-had been when her voice soared high in song. She had
-not yet spoken.</p>
-
-<p>Simply to hear her speak, and almost timidly, Stelio
-said:</p>
-
-<p>"Shall you remain some time longer in Venice?"</p>
-
-<p>He had pondered on the first words he should say
-to her, but was dissatisfied with whatever rose to his
-lips, for all phrases seemed too vivid, insidious, full of
-ambiguous significance, capable of infinite changes and
-transformations, like the unknown seed from which may
-spring a thousand roots. And it seemed to him that
-Perdita could not hear one of those phrases without feeling
-that a shadow darkened her love.</p>
-
-<p>After he had spoken those simple, conventional words,
-he reflected that even that question might suggest an
-infinity of hope and eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>"I must leave Venice to-morrow," Donatella replied.
-"I ought not to be here even now."</p>
-
-<p>Her voice, so clear and powerful in the heights of song,
-was low and sober, as if suffused with a slight opacity,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-suggesting the image of the most precious metal wrapped
-in the most delicate velvet. Her brief reply indicated
-that there was a place of suffering to which she must
-return, where she must undergo some familiar torture.
-Like iron tempered with tears, a strong though sorrowful
-will shone through the veil of her youthful beauty.</p>
-
-<p>"To-morrow!" Stelio exclaimed, not seeking to hide
-his sincere regret. "Have you heard, Signora?"</p>
-
-<p>"I know," the actress replied, gently taking Donatella's
-hand. "I am filled with regret to see her go. But
-she cannot remain away longer from her father. Perhaps
-you do not yet know"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"What?" asked Stelio quickly. "Is he ill? Is it true,
-then, that Lorenzo Arvale is ill?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, he is only fatigued," said La Foscarina, touching
-her forehead with a gesture perhaps involuntary but
-which revealed to Stelio the horrible menace hanging
-over the genius of the artist who had seemed as fertile
-and indefatigable as one of the old masters&mdash;a Della
-Robbia or a Verrocchio.</p>
-
-<p>"He is only fatigued," repeated La Foscarina. "He
-needs repose and quiet. And his daughter's singing is
-very soothing to him. Do you not believe, also, Effrena,
-in the healing power of music?"</p>
-
-<p>"Certainly," Stelio replied, "Ariadne possesses a divine
-gift whereby her power transcends all limits."</p>
-
-<p>The name of Ariadne came spontaneously to his lips
-to indicate the singer as she appeared to his fancy, for
-it seemed to him impossible to pronounce the young
-girl's real name preceded by the ordinary appellation imposed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-by social usage. In his eyes she was perfect and
-singular, free from the little ties of custom, living her
-own sequestered life, like a work of art on which style
-had set its inviolable seal. He thought of her as isolated
-like those figures that stand out with clear contour, far
-from common life, lost in mystic reverie; and already,
-before that impenetrable character, he felt a sort of passionate
-impatience, somewhat similar to that of a curious
-man before something hermetically sealed that tempts
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"Ariadne had for the soothing of her griefs the gift
-of forgetfulness," said Donatella, "and that I do not possess."</p>
-
-<p>A bitterness perhaps involuntary infused these words,
-in which Stelio fancied he detected the indication
-of an aspiration toward a life less oppressed by useless
-suffering. He guessed at her revolt against a certain
-form of domestic slavery, the horror of her self-imposed
-sacrifice, her vehement desire to rise toward joy, and her
-inborn aptitude for being drawn like a beautiful bow by
-a strong hand that would know how to use it for some
-high conquest. He divined that she had no longer any
-hope of her father's recovery, and that she was saddened
-at the thought that henceforth she could only be the
-guardian of a darkened hearth, of ashes without a spark.
-The image of the great artist rose in his mind, not as he
-was, since Stelio never had known him personally, but
-such as he had fancied the sculptor after studying his
-ideas of beauty expressed in imperishable bronze and
-marble. His mind fixed itself on that image with a sensation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-of terror more icy than that which the most appalling
-aspects of death could have inspired. And all his
-strength, all his pride and his ardor seemed to resound
-within him like weapons shaken by a menacing hand,
-sending a quiver through every fiber of his heart.</p>
-
-<p>Presently La Foscarina lifted the funereal black curtain,
-which suddenly, amid the splendors of the festival,
-had seemed to change the gondola into a coffin.</p>
-
-<p>"Look!" she said, pointing out to Stelio the balcony
-of Desdemona's palace: "See the beautiful Nineta receiving
-the homage of the Serenade, as she sits between
-her pet monkey and her little dog."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, the beautiful Nineta!" said Stelio, rousing himself
-from his wild thoughts, and saluting the smiling occupant
-of the balcony, a little woman who was listening
-to the music, her face illumined from two silver candelabra,
-from the branches of which hung wreaths of
-the last roses of the year. "I have not yet seen her
-this time. She is the gentlest and most graceful animal
-I know. How fortunate was our dear Howitz to discover
-her behind the lid of an old harpsichord when he was
-rummaging in that curiosity shop at San Samuele! Two
-pieces of good fortune in one day: the lovely Nineta and
-a harpsichord lid painted by Pordenone. Since that day,
-the harmony of his life has been complete. How I should
-like to have you penetrate to his nest! You would find
-there a perfect example of that which I spoke of this
-evening, at twilight. There is a man who, by obeying
-his native taste for simplicity, has arranged for himself
-with minute art his own little love-story, in which he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-lives as happily as did his Moravian ancestor in the Arcady
-of Rosswald. Ah! I know a thousand exquisite
-things about him!"</p>
-
-<p>A large gondola, decorated with many-colored lanterns,
-and laden with singers and musicians, had stopped
-beneath the balcony of Desdemona's house. The old
-song of brief youth and fleeting beauty rose sweetly toward
-the little woman who listened with her child-like
-smile, sitting between the monkey and the lapdog, making
-a group like one of Pietro Longhi's prints.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Do beni vu gharè<br />
-Beleza e zoventù;<br />
-Co i va no i torna più,<br />
-Nina mia cara....</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>"Does it not seem to you, Effrena, that these surroundings
-express the true soul of Venice, and that the
-other picture, which you presented to the multitude, is
-only your own fancy?" said La Foscarina, nodding her
-head slightly in time with the rhythm of the sweet
-song that spread through the Grand Canal and was reechoed
-from afar by singers in other gondolas.</p>
-
-<p>"No," Stelio replied, "this does not at all represent
-the true soul of Venice. In each one of us, fluttering like
-a butterfly over the surface of our deeper nature, is a
-lighter soul, an <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">animula</i>, a little playful sprite that often
-dominates us for the moment, and leads us toward simple
-and mediocre pleasures, toward puerile pastimes and
-frivolous music. This <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">animula vagula</i> exists even in the
-gravest and most violent natures, like the clown attached
-to the person of Othello; and sometimes it misleads our
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-better judgment. That which you hear now, in the songs
-and the melodies of the guitars, is the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">animula</i>, or lighter
-spirit, of Venice; but her real soul is discovered only
-in silence, and most terribly, be assured, in full summer,
-at noonday, like the soul of the great god Pan. Out in
-the harbor of San Marco, I thought that you felt its
-mystic vibration during those moments of the great conflagration.
-You are forgetting Giorgione for Rosalba!"</p>
-
-<p>Around the large gondola beneath the balcony had
-gathered other gondolas bearing languid women who
-leaned out to listen to the music in attitudes of graceful
-<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">abandon</i>, as if in fancy they felt themselves sinking into
-invisible arms. And around this romantic group the reflections
-of the lanterns in the water quivered like a
-flowering of rare and luminous water-lilies.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse ileft2"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Se lassarè passar</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">La bela e fresca età,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Un zorno i ve dirà</i></div>
-<div class="verse ileft2"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Vechia maura,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">E bramarè, ma invan,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Quel che ghavevi in man</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Co avè lassà scampar</i></div>
-<div class="verse ileft2"><i lang="it" xml:lang="it">La congiontura.</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was, in truth, the song of the last roses that entwined
-the candelabra. It called up in Perdita's mind the funeral
-cortège of the dead Summer, the opalescent veil in
-which Stelio had wrapped the sweet body in its golden
-robe. Through the glass, sealed by the Master of Fire,
-she could see her own image at the bottom of the lagoon,
-lying on a field of seaweed. A sudden chill stole over
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-her; once more she felt horror and disgust of her own
-body, no longer young. And, remembering her recent
-promise, thinking that perhaps this very night the beloved
-one would claim its fulfilment, she shuddered with
-a sort of sorrowful modesty, a mingling of fear and pride.
-Her experience and despairing eyes ran over the young
-girl beside her, studying her, penetrating her, realizing
-her occult but certain power, her intact freshness, pure
-health, and that indefinable virtue of love that emanates
-like an aroma from chaste maidens when they have arrived
-at the perfection of their bloom. She felt that
-some secret current of affinity existed between this fair
-creature and the poet; she could almost divine the words
-he addressed to her in the silence of his heart. A bitter
-pang seized her, so intolerable that, with an involuntary
-movement, her fingers clutched convulsively the black
-rope of the arm-rest beside her, so that the little metal
-griffin that held it creaked audibly.</p>
-
-<p>This movement did not escape Stelio's anxious vigilance.
-He understood her agitation, and for a moment he
-experienced the same pang, but it was mingled with impatience
-and almost with anger, for her anguish, like a
-cry of destruction, interrupted the fiction of transcendent
-life that he had been constructing within himself in order
-to conciliate the contrast, to conquer this new force that
-offered itself to him like a bow to be drawn, yet at the
-same time not to lose the savor of that ripe maturity
-which life had impregnated with all its essences, and the
-benefit of that devotion and that passionate faith which
-sharpened his intelligence and fed his pride.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Perdita!" he said to himself, "From the ferment
-of your human loves, why has not a love more than
-human sprung. Ah, why have I finally vanquished you
-by my pleading, although I know it is too late? and why
-do you allow me to read in your eyes the certainty of
-your yielding, amid a flood of doubts which, nevertheless,
-never again will have power to reëstablish the abolished
-interdiction. Each of us knows full well that that
-interdiction conferred the highest dignity upon our long
-communion, yet we have not known how to preserve its
-rule, and at the last hour we yield blindly to an imperious
-internal call. Yet, a short time ago, when your noble head
-dominated the belt of constellations, I no longer saw
-in you an earthly love, but the illuminating, revelatory
-Muse of my poetry; and all my heart went out to you
-in gratitude, not for the promise of a fleeting happiness,
-but for the promise of glory. Do you not understand&mdash;you,
-who understand everything? By a marvelous inspiration,
-such as always comes to you, have you not
-turned my inclination, by the ray of your smile, toward
-a resplendent youthfulness which you have chosen and
-reserved for me? When you descended the stairway together,
-and approached me, had you not the appearance
-of one that bears a gift or an unexpected message? Not
-wholly unexpected, perhaps, Perdita! For I have anticipated
-from your infinite wisdom some extraordinary
-action toward me."</p>
-
-<p>"How happy the beautiful Nineta is, with her monkey
-and her little dog!" sighed the actress, looking back at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-the light songsters and the smiling woman on the balcony.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">La zoventù xe un fior<br />
-Che apena nato el mor,<br />
-E un zorno gnanca mi<br />
-No sarò quela.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Donatella Arvale and Stelio also looked back, while
-the light barque, without sinking, bore over the water
-and past the music the three faces of a heavy destiny.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">E vegna quel che vol,<br />
-Lassè che voga!</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Suddenly, in front of the red palace of the Foscari,
-at the curve of the canal, they saw the state vessel of
-the Doge of Venice so brightly illumined that it looked
-like a burning tower. New streaks of fire flashed against
-the sky. Other flaming doves flew up from the deck,
-rose above the terraces, sank among the statues, hissed
-as they fell into the water, multiplied themselves in
-thousands of sparks, and floated along in smoke. Along
-the parapets, from the decks, the poop, the prow, in a
-simultaneous explosion, a thousand fountains of fire
-opened, dilated, blended, illuminating with an intense,
-fiery radiance each side of the canal as far as San Vitale
-and the Rialto. Then the vessel of the Doge glided
-out of sight, transformed into a purple thunder-cloud.</p>
-
-<p>"Go through San Polo!" called La Foscarina to the
-gondolier, bending her head as under a storm, and shutting
-out the roar with her palms over her ears.</p>
-
-<p>Again Donatella Arvale and Stelio Effreno looked at
-each other with dazzled eyes. Again their faces, lighted
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-by the glare, glowed as if they were leaning over a furnace
-or a burning crater.</p>
-
-<p>The gondola turned into the canal of San Polo, gliding
-along through the darkness. A cold shadow seemed
-suddenly to fall over the spirits of the three silent occupants.
-Under the arch of the bridge, the hollow echo
-of the dipping oar struck upon their souls, and the hilarity
-of the festival sounded infinitely far-away. All the
-houses were dark; the campanile rose silent and solitary
-toward the stars; the Campiello del Remer and the
-Campiello del Pistor were deserted, and the grass
-breathed there in untrodden peace; the trees, bending
-over the low walls of the little gardens, seemed to feel
-their leaves dying on the branches pointing to the serene
-sky.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI<br />
-<small>THE POET'S DREAM</small></h2>
-
-
-<p>"So, for a few hours at least, the rhythm of
-Art and the pulse of Life have again
-throbbed in unison in Venice," said Daniele
-Glauro, raising from the table an exquisite
-chalice, to which only the Sacred Host was wanting.
-"Allow me to express, for myself and also for the many
-that are absent, the gratitude and fervor that blend in
-one single image of beauty the three persons to whom
-we owe this miracle: the mistress of the feast, the daughter
-of Lorenzo Arvale, and the poet of Persephone."</p>
-
-<p>"And why the mistress of the feast, Glauro?" asked
-La Foscarina, smiling in graceful surprise. "I, like you,
-have not given joy, but have received it. Donatella and
-the Master of the Flame: they alone merit the crown;
-and to them alone the glory must be given."</p>
-
-<p>"But, a short time ago, in the Hall of the Greater
-Council," said the mystic doctor, "your silent presence
-beside the celestial sphere was not less eloquent than
-the words of Stelio, nor less musical than the song of
-Ariadne. Once again you have divinely carved your own
-statue in silence, and it will live in our memories blended
-with the music and the words."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio shuddered as he recalled to mind the ephemeral
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-flexible monster from the side of which had emerged the
-Tragic Muse above the sphere of constellations.</p>
-
-<p>"That is true, very true," said Francesco de Lizo. "I,
-too, had the same thought. As we looked at you, we all
-realized that you were the soul of that ideal world which
-each of us forms for himself, according to his own aspirations
-and thoughts when listening to the mystic
-word, the song, the symphony."</p>
-
-<p>"And each of us," said Fabio Molza, "felt that in your
-presence, dominating the throng, before the poet, dwelt
-a great and rare significance."</p>
-
-<p>"One might almost have said that you alone were
-about to assist at the mysterious birth of a new idea,"
-said Antimo della Bella. "Everything around us seemed
-awakening itself to produce it&mdash;that idea which must
-soon be revealed to us, as a reward for the profound
-faith with which we have awaited it."</p>
-
-<p>The Animator, with another trembling of the heart,
-felt the work that he cherished within him leap once
-more, formless yet, but already living; and his whole
-soul, as if impelled by a lyric breath, suddenly felt drawn
-toward the fertile and enlightening power that emanated
-from the Dionysian woman to whom these fervent spirits
-addressed their praise.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she had become very beautiful: a nocturnal
-creature, fashioned by dreams and passion on a golden
-anvil, living embodiment of immortal fate and eternal
-enigmas. She might remain motionless and silent, but
-her famous accents and her memorable gestures seemed
-to live around her, vibrating indefinitely, as melodies
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-seem to hover over the cords accustomed to sound them,
-as rhymes seem to breathe from the poet's closed book,
-wherein love and sorrow seek comfort and intoxication.
-The heroic fidelity of Antigone, the oracular fury of Cassandra,
-the devouring fever of Phædre, the cruelty of
-Medea, the sacrifice of Iphigenia, Myrrha before her
-father, Polyxenes and Alceste before the face of death,
-Cleopatra, fitful as the wind and the fires of the world,
-Lady Macbeth, the dreamy murderess with the little
-hands; and those great, fair lilies empearled with dew
-and tears&mdash;Imogen, Juliet, Miranda, Rosalind, Jessica,
-and Perdita&mdash;the tenderest, most terrible, and most magnificent
-souls dwelt within her, inhabited her body,
-shone from her eyes, breathed through her lips, which
-knew both honey and poison, the jeweled chalice and the
-cup of wormwood. Thus, through unlimited space, and
-endless, the outlines of human life and substance appeared
-to perpetuate themselves; and from the simple
-movement of a muscle, a sign, a start, a quiver of the
-eyelids, a slight change of color, an almost imperceptible
-inclination of the head, a fugitive play of light and shade,
-a lightning-like virtue of expression radiating from that
-frail and slender body, infinite worlds of imperishable
-beauty were continually generated.</p>
-
-<p>The genii of the places consecrated by poetry hovered
-around her, and encircled her with changing visions:
-the dusty plain of Thebes, the arid Argolide, the parched
-myrtles of Trezene, the sacred olives of Colonus, the
-triumphant Cydnus, the pale country of Dunsinane,
-Prospero's cavern, the Forest of Arden, land dampened
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-with blood, toiled upon with pain, transfigured by a
-dream or illumined by an inextinguishable smile, seemed
-to appear, to recede, then to vanish behind her head.
-And a vision of countries still more remote&mdash;regions of
-mists, northern lands, and, far across the ocean, the immense
-continent where she had appeared like an unknown
-force amid astonished multitudes, bearer of the
-mystic word and the flame of genius&mdash;vanished behind
-her head: the throngs, the mountains, rivers and gulfs,
-the impure cities, the ancient, enfeebled, savage race, the
-strong people aspiring to dominate the world, the new
-nation that wrests from Nature her most secret energies
-to make them serve an all-powerful work in erecting edifices
-of iron and of crystal; the bastard colonies that
-ferment and grow corrupt on virgin soil; all the barbarous
-crowds she had visited as the messenger of Latin
-genius; all the ignorant masses to whom she had spoken
-the sublime language of Dante; all the human herds
-from which had mounted toward her, on a wave of confused
-anxieties and desires, the aspiration to Beauty.</p>
-
-<p>She stood there, a creature of perishable flesh, subject
-to the sad laws of time, but an illimitable mass of reality
-and poetry weighed upon her, surged around her, palpitated
-with the rhythm of her breath. And not upon
-the stage alone had she uttered her cries and suppressed
-her sobs: this had entered into her daily life. She had
-loved, fought and suffered violently, in her soul and in
-her body. What loves? What combats? What pangs?
-From what abysses of melancholy had she drawn the
-exaltations of her tragic force? At what springs of bitterness
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-had she watered her free genius? She had certainly
-witnessed the crudest misery, the darkest ruin;
-she had known heroic effort, pity, horror, and the threshold
-of death. All her thirst had burned in the delirium
-of Phædre, and in the submissiveness of Imogen had
-trembled all her tenderness. Thus Life and Art, the irrevocable
-Past and the eternal Present, had made her
-profound, many-souled, and mysterious, had magnified
-her ambiguous destiny beyond human limits, and rendered
-her equal to great temples and natural forests.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, she stood there, a living, breathing
-woman, under the gaze of the poets, each of whom saw
-her, and yet in her many others.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! I will embrace you as in some mad revelry; I
-will clasp you, shake you; from your ripe experience, I
-will draw all the divine and abnormal secrets that weigh
-upon you&mdash;the things you have already done, and those
-on which you still meditate in the mysterious depths of
-your soul," sang the lyric demon in the ear of the poet,
-who recognized in the mystery of this woman the surviving
-power of primitive myth, the renewed initiation
-of the god that had concentrated in one single ferment
-all the energies of Nature, and, by a variety of rhythms,
-had raised, in an enthusiastic worship of himself, the
-senses and the spirit of man to the highest summits of
-joy and of pain.</p>
-
-<p>"I have done well, I have done wisely, to wait!" said
-Stelio to himself. "The passing of years, the tumult of
-dreams, the agitation of struggle and the swiftness of
-triumph, the experience of many loves, the enchantment
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-of poets, the acclamations of the people; the marvels of
-earth, the patience and the fury, the steps in the mud,
-the blind flight, all evil, all good, that which I know and
-do not know, that which you know, as well as that
-which you are ignorant of&mdash;all this had to be to prepare
-the fulness of this night, which belongs to me!"</p>
-
-<p>He felt himself suffocate and turn pale. A wild impulse
-seized him by the throat, and would not relax its
-hold. His heart swelled with the same keen emotion
-that had possessed both in the twilight, as they floated
-over the water.</p>
-
-<p>And, as the exaggerated radiance of the city and the
-event had suddenly disappeared, the glory of this woman
-of the night reappeared to his mind still more closely
-blended with the city of the wonderful necklaces and
-the thousand emerald girdles. In the city and in the
-woman, the poet now saw a power of expression that
-he never had seen before: each glowed in the Autumn
-night; the same feverish fire that coursed through the
-canals ran also in her veins.</p>
-
-<p>The stars sparkled, the trees waved their branches behind
-Perdita's head, back of which were the shadows of
-a garden. Through the open balconies the sweet air of
-heaven entered the room; shook the flames of the candelabra
-and the chalices of flowers; swept through the
-doorways, making the draperies wave to and fro, animating
-that old house of the Capello, wherein the last great
-daughter of San Marco whom the people had covered
-with gold and glory had gathered relics of republican
-magnificence. Galleon lamps, Turkish targets, bronze
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-helmets, leathern quivers, and velvet scabbards ornamented
-the apartments inhabited by the last descendant
-of that marvelous Cesare Darbes who maintained the Art
-of Comedy against the Goldonian reform, and changed
-the agony of the Most Serene Republic into a burst of
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p>"I only ask that I may be the humble servitor of that
-idea," was La Foscarina's reply to Antimo della Bella's
-words. Her voice trembled a little, her eyes had met
-Stelio's gaze.</p>
-
-<p>"You alone could make it triumphant," said Francesco
-de Lizo. "The soul of the people is yours forever."</p>
-
-<p>"The drama can only be a rite or a message," declared
-Glauro sententiously. "Acting should again become
-as solemn as a religious ceremony, since it embraces
-the two constituent elements of all worship: the
-living person, in whom, on the stage as before an altar,
-the word of the revealer is made incarnate, before a multitude
-as silent as if in a temple"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Bayreuth!" interrupted Prince Hoditz.</p>
-
-<p>"No; the Janiculum!" exclaimed Stelio, suddenly breaking
-his silence of blissful dizziness. "A Roman hill. We
-do not need the wood and brick of Upper Franconia;
-we will have a marble theater on a Roman hill."</p>
-
-<p>The sudden opposition of his words seemed to spring
-from a light, good-natured disdain.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not admire the work of Richard Wagner?"
-Donatella Arvale inquired, with a slight frown that for
-a moment made her Hermes-like face look almost hard.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio looked deep into her eyes; he felt that there was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-something obscurely hostile in the young girl's manner,
-and also that he himself experienced against her an indistinct
-suggestion of enmity. At this moment he again
-saw her living her own isolated life, fixed in some deep,
-secret thought, strange and inviolable.</p>
-
-<p>"The work of Richard Wagner," he replied, "is founded
-in the German spirit, and its essence is purely northern.
-His reform is not without analogy with that attempted
-by Luther; his drama is the supreme flower of the genius
-of a race, the extraordinarily powerful summary of the
-aspirations that have stirred the souls of the symphonists
-and national poets, from Bach to Beethoven, from Wieland
-to Goethe. If you could imagine his work on the
-Mediterranean shores, amid our pale olive-trees, our
-slender laurels, under the glorious light of the Latin
-sky, you would see it grow pale and dissolve. Since,
-according to his own words, it is given to the artist to
-behold a world as yet unformed resplendent in its future
-perfection, and to enjoy it prophetically through
-desire and through hope, I announce to you the coming
-of a new, or rather a renewed, art which, by the strong,
-sincere simplicity of its lines, by its vigorous grace,
-by its ardor of inspiration, by the pure power of its
-harmonies, will continue and crown the immense ideal
-edifice of our elect race. I glory in being Latin, and&mdash;will
-you pardon me, most exquisite Lady Myrta, and
-you, my delicate Hoditz?&mdash;in every man of different
-blood I see a barbarian."</p>
-
-<p>"But Wagner, too," said, Baldassare Stampa, who, having
-just returned from Bayreuth, was still full of ecstasy,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-"when he first unwound the thread of his theories, departed
-from the Greeks."</p>
-
-<p>"It was an uneven and a tangled thread," the poet replied.
-"Nothing is further from the Orestiades than the
-tetralogy of the Ring. The Florentines of the Casa
-Bardi have penetrated much deeper into the true meaning
-of Greek tragedy. All honor to the Camerata of
-the Conte di Vernio!"</p>
-
-<p>"I have always thought that the Camerata was only
-an idle reunion of scholars and rhetoricians," said Baldassare
-Stampa.</p>
-
-<p>"Did you hear that, Daniele?" exclaimed Stelio, addressing
-the mystic doctor. "When was there in the
-world a more fervid intelligence? They sought the spirit
-of life in Grecian antiquity; they tried to develop harmoniously
-all human energies, to manifest man in his
-integrity by every method of art. Giulio Caccini taught
-that that, which contributed to the excellence of the
-musician is not only the study of particular things, but
-of everything in general; the tawny hair of Jacopo Peri
-and of Zazzerino flamed in their song like that of Apollo.
-In the discourse that serves as a preface to the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Rappresentazione
-di Anima et di Corpo</i>, Emilio del Cavaliere presents
-the same ideas on the organization of the new
-theater that have since been realized at Bayreuth, comprising
-the rules of perfect silence, an invisible orchestra,
-and appropriate darkness. Marco da Gagliano, in celebrating
-a festal performance, eulogizes all the arts that
-contributed to it 'in such a way that through the intellect
-all the noblest sentiments are flattered at the same time
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-by the most delightful art that the human mind has discovered.'
-That is sufficient, I think."</p>
-
-<p>"Bermino," resumed Francesco de Lizo, "presented an
-opera in Rome, for which he himself built the theater,
-painted the decorations, carved the ornamental statues,
-invented the machinery, wrote the words, composed the
-music, arranged the dances, rehearsed the actors, and in
-which he, too, danced, sang, and acted."</p>
-
-<p>"Enough! Enough!" cried Prince Hoditz, laughing.
-"The barbarian is vanquished."</p>
-
-<p>"No, that is not yet enough," said Antimo della Bella;
-"it remains to us to glorify the greatest of all these innovators;
-him that was consecrated a Venetian by his
-passion and death, him whose tomb is in the Church
-of the Frari, and is worthy of a pilgrimage&mdash;the divine
-Claudio Monteverde."</p>
-
-<p>"There was a heroic soul, of pure Italian essence,"
-warmly acceded Daniele Glauro.</p>
-
-<p>"He accomplished his work in the tempest, loving, suffering,
-struggling, alone with his faith, his passion, and
-his genius," said La Foscarina slowly, as if absorbed in
-a vision of that sad and courageous life that had nourished
-the creations of its art with its warmest blood.
-"Tell us about him, Effrena."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio thrilled as if she had suddenly touched him.
-Again her expressive mouth called up an ideal figure,
-which rose as if from a sepulcher before the eyes of the
-poets, with the color and the breath of life. The ancient
-viola-player, bereaved, ardent, and sorrowful, like the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-Orpheus of his own fable, seemed to appear before them.</p>
-
-<p>It was a fiery apparition, more fervid and dazzling
-than that which had glowed in the harbor of San Marco;
-a flaming force of life, expelled from the deepest recesses
-of Nature toward the expectant multitude; a vehement
-zone of light, flashing out from an interior sky to illumine
-the most secret depths of human will and desire;
-an unheard word emerging from original silence to say
-that which is eternal and eternally ineffable in the heart
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p>"Who could speak of him, even if he himself should
-speak to us?" said the Inspirer, agitated, unable to conceal
-the wave of emotion surging in his soul like the
-troubled waters of a stormy sea.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at the singer, and beheld her as she had appeared
-during the pauses, when she stood amid the forest
-of instruments, white and inanimate as a statue.</p>
-
-<p>But the spirit of Beauty they had called up was to
-manifest itself through her.</p>
-
-<p>"Ariadne!" Stelio murmured, as if to awaken her from
-a dream.</p>
-
-<p>She arose without speaking, reached the door, and entered
-the adjoining room. The light sweep of her skirts
-and her soft footfall were audible; then they heard the
-sound of the piano being opened. All were silent and
-expectant. A musical silence filled the vacant place in
-the supper-room. A sudden gust of wind shook the
-flames of the candles and swayed the flowers. Then
-all became motionless in the anxiety of anticipation.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Lasciatemi morire!</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Suddenly their souls were ravished by a power comparable
-to the strength of the eagle which, in Dante's
-dream, bore the poet to the region of flame. They
-burned together in eternal truth; they heard the melody
-of the world pass through their luminous ecstasy:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Lasciatemi morire!</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Was it Ariadne, still Ariadne, weeping in some new
-grief, still rising to higher martyrdom?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">E che volete<br />
-Che mi conforte<br />
-In cosa dure sorte,<br />
-In cosi gran martire?<br />
-Lasciatemi morire!</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The voice ceased; the singer did not reappear. The
-aria of Claudio Monteverde composed itself in the auditors'
-memories like an immutable lineament.</p>
-
-<p>"Is there any Greek marble that has a perfection of
-style more sure and simple?" said Daniele Glauro softly,
-as if he feared to break the musical silence.</p>
-
-<p>"But what sorrow on earth ever has wept like that?"
-stammered Lady Myrta, her eyes full of tears, that ran
-down her poor, pale cheeks, which she wiped with her
-trembling hands, misshaped by gout.</p>
-
-<p>The austere intellect of the ascetic and the sweet, sensitive
-soul shut within the old, infirm body bore witness
-to the same power. In the same way, nearly three centuries
-before, at Mantua, in the famous theater, six thousand
-spectators had been unable to repress their sobs;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-and the poets had believed in the living presence of
-Apollo on the new stage.</p>
-
-<p>"See, Baldassare," said Stelio, "here is an artist of our
-own race who by the simplest means succeeded in attaining
-the highest degree of that beauty which the
-German but rarely approached in his confused aspirations
-toward the land of Sophocles."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know the lament of the ailing king?" asked
-the young man with the sunny locks, which he wore long
-as a heritage from the Venetian Sappho, the "high Gaspara,"
-unfortunate friend of Collalto.</p>
-
-<p>"All the agony of Amfortas is contained in a <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">mottetto</i>
-that I know: <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Peccantem me quotidie</i>, but with what lyric
-impetus, what powerful simplicity! All the forces of
-tragedy are there, sublimated, so to speak, like the instincts
-of a multitude in a heroic heart. The language
-of Palestrina, much more ancient, appears to me still
-purer and more virile.</p>
-
-<p>"But the contrast between Kundry and Parsifal, in
-the second act, the Herzeleide <em>motif</em>, the impetuous figure,
-that figure of pain drawn from the word of the sacred
-feast, the <em>motif</em> of Kundry's aspiration, the prophetic
-theme of the promise, the kiss on the lips of the 'pure
-fool,' all that rending and intoxicating contrast of desire
-and horror.... 'The wound, the wound! Now
-it burns, now it bleeds within me!' And above the despairing
-frenzy of the temptress, the melody of submission:
-'Let me weep on thy breast! Let me unite myself
-with thee for one hour; then, even if God repel me,
-through thee I shall be redeemed and saved.' And Parsifal's
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-response, in which the <em>motif</em> of the 'pure fool,' now
-transfigured into the promised Hero, returns with lofty
-solemnity: 'Hell would be our fate for all eternity if
-for one single hour I should permit thee to clasp me
-in thy arms.' Then the wild ecstasy of Kundry: 'Since
-my kiss has made thee a prophet, embrace me wholly,
-and my love will render thee divine! One hour, one
-single hour with thee, and I shall be saved!' And the
-last effort of her demoniac will, the last gesture of enticement,
-the entreaty and the furious words: 'Only thy
-love can save me! Oh, let me love thee! Mine for a
-single hour! Thine for a single hour!'"</p>
-
-<p>Perdita and Stelio, entranced, gazed into each other's
-eyes; for an instant their spirits rushed together and
-mingled, in all the joy of an actual embrace.</p>
-
-<p>La Marangona, the largest bell of San Marco, sounded
-midnight, and, as at the eventide, the two enamored
-ones felt the reverberation of the bronze bell in the
-roots of their hair, almost like a quiver of their own
-flesh. Once more they felt, hovering over them, the
-whirlwind of sound, in the midst of which, in the twilight,
-they had suddenly become aware of the rising apparition
-of consoling Beauty, evoked by unanimous prayer.
-All the beauty of the waters, the timidity of concealed
-longing, the anxiety, the promise, the parting, the festival,
-the formidable, many-headed monster, the great,
-starry sphere, the clamor, the music, the song, and the
-wonders of the miraculous Flame, the return through
-the echoing canal, the song of brief youth, the mental
-struggle and silent agitation in the gondola, the sudden
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-shadow over their three destinies, the banquet illumined
-by beautiful thought, the presentiments, hopes, pride, all
-the strongest pulsations of life were renewed between
-those two, quickened, became a thousand, and again one.
-They felt that in that one moment they had lived beyond
-all human limits, and that before them was opening
-a vast unknown, which they might absorb as the
-ocean absorbs, for, though they had lived so much, they
-felt their hearts were empty; though they had drunk
-so deep, they were still athirst. An overmastering illusion
-seized upon these rich natures, and each seemed
-to grow immeasurably more desirable in the other's eyes.
-The young girl had disappeared. The expression of the
-despairing, nomadic actress seemed to repeat: "Embrace
-me wholly, and my love will render thee divine! One
-hour, one single hour with thee, and I shall be saved!
-Mine for a single hour! Thine for a single hour!"</p>
-
-<p>The eloquent commentary of the enthusiast still dwelt
-upon the sacred tragedy. Kundry, the mad temptress,
-the slave of desire, the Rose of Hell, the original perdition,
-the accursed, now reappeared in the spring dawn;
-she reappeared humble and pale in her messenger's attire,
-her head bent, her eyes cast down; and her harsh,
-broken voice spoke only the single phrase: "Let me
-serve! Let me serve!"</p>
-
-<p>The melodies of solitude, of submission, of purification
-prepared around her humility the enchantment of
-Good Friday. And behold Parsifal, in black armor and
-closed helmet, his spear lowered, lost in an infinite
-dream: "I have come by perilous paths, but perhaps
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-this day I shall be saved, since I hear the murmur of
-the sacred forest." ... Hope, pain, remorse, memory,
-the promise, faith panting for the soul's health, and the
-sacred, mysterious melodies wove the ideal mantle that
-should cover the Simple One, the Pure, the promised
-Hero sent to heal the incurable wound. "Wilt thou take
-me to Amfortas to-day?" He languished and fainted in
-the old man's arms. "Let me serve! Let me serve!"
-The melody of submission rose again from the orchestra,
-drowning the original impetuous <em>motif</em>. "Let me serve!"
-The faithful woman brings water, kneels humbly and
-eagerly, and washes the feet of her beloved. The faithful
-one drew from her bosom a vase of balm, anointed
-the beloved feet, and wiped them with her flowing hair.
-"Let me serve!" The Pure One bent over the sinner,
-sprinkling water on her wild head: "Thus I accomplish
-my first office; receive this baptism and believe in the
-Redeemer!" Kundry burst into tears, and knelt with
-her brow in the dust, freed from impurity, freed from
-the curse. And then, from the profound final harmonies
-of the prayer to the Redeemer, rose and spread with
-superhuman sweetness the melody of the flowery fields:
-"How beautiful to-day is the meadow! Once I was entwined
-with marvelous flowers; but never before were
-the grass and wild blossoms so fragrant!" In ecstasy,
-Parsifal contemplated the fields and forests, dewy and
-smiling in the light of morn.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! who could forget that sublime moment?" cried
-the fair-haired enthusiast, whose thin face seemed to
-reflect the light of that joy. "All, in the darkness of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-the theater, remained motionless, like one solid, compact
-mass. One would have said that, in order to listen
-to that marvelous music, the blood had ceased to flow in
-our veins. From the Mystic Gulf, the symphony rose
-like a shaft of light, the notes transformed into rays of
-sunshine, born with the same joy as the blade of grass
-that pierces the earth, the opening flower, the budding
-branch, the insect unfolding its wings. And all the innocence
-of new-born things entered into us, and our
-souls lived over again I know not what dream of our
-far-away childhood.... INFANTIA, the device
-of Carpaccio! Ah, Stelio! how well you brought it
-back to our riper age! How well you knew how to inspire
-us with regret for all that we have lost, and with
-hope of recovering it by means of an art that shall be
-indissolubly reunited to life!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena was silent, oppressed by the thought
-of the gigantic work accomplished by the barbaric creator,
-which the enthusiasm of Baldassare Stampa had
-evoked as a contrast to the fervid poet of <cite>Orpheus</cite> and
-of <cite>Ariadne</cite>. A kind of instinctive rancor, an obscure
-hostility that did not spring from the intellect, sustained
-him against the tenacious German who had succeeded,
-by his own unaided effort, in inflaming the world. To
-achieve his victory over men and things, he, too, had
-exalted his own image and magnified his own dreams
-of dominating beauty. He, too, had approached the
-multitude as if it were his chosen prey; he, too, had
-imposed upon himself, as if it were a discipline, an unceasing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-effort to surpass himself. And now he had the
-temple of his creed on the Bavarian hill.</p>
-
-<p>"Art alone can lead men back to unity," said Daniele
-Glauro. "Let us honor the nobler master that has proclaimed
-this dogma for all time. His Festival Theater,
-though built of bricks and wood, though narrow and
-imperfect, has none the less a sublime significance, for
-within it Art appears as a religion in a living form; the
-drama there becomes a rite."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, let us honor Richard Wagner," said Antimo
-della Bella, "but, if this hour is to be memorable by an
-announcement and a promise from him who this night
-has shown the mysterious ship to the people, let us invoke
-once more the heroic soul that has spoken to us
-through the voice of Donatella Arvale. In laying the
-corner-stone of his Festival Theater, the poet of <cite>Siegfried</cite>
-consecrated it to the hopes and victories of Germany.
-The Apollo Theater, which is now rising rapidly
-on the Janiculum, where eagles once descended, bearing
-their prophecies, must be the monumental revelation of
-the idea toward which our race is led by its genius. Let
-us reaffirm the privilege with which nature has ennobled
-our Latin blood."</p>
-
-<p>Still Stelio remained silent, deeply stirred by turbulent
-forces that worked within his soul with a sort of blind
-fury, like the subterranean energies that swell, rend, and
-transform volcanic regions for the creation of new mountains
-and new chasms. All the elements of his inner
-life, assailed by this violence, seemed to dissolve and
-multiply at the same time. Images of grandeur and of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-terror passed through this tumult, accompanied by
-strange harmonies. Swift concentrations and dispersions
-of thought succeeded one another, like electric flashes
-in a tempest. At certain moments, it seemed to him that
-he could hear songs and wild clamors through a doorway
-that was opened and closed incessantly; sounds
-as if a tempestuous wind bore to his ears the alternate
-cries of a massacre and an apotheosis.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, with the intensity of a feverish vision, he
-saw the scorched and fatal spot of earth whereon he
-wished to create the souls of his great tragedy; he felt
-all its parching thirst within himself. He saw the mythical
-fountain which alone could quench the burning aridity;
-and in the bubbling of its springs the purity of
-the maiden that must die there. He saw on Perdita's
-face the mask of the heroine, quiescent in the beauty
-of an extraordinarily calm sorrow. Then the ancient
-dryness of the plain of Argos converted itself into flames;
-the fountain of Perseia flowed with the swiftness of a
-stream. The fire and the water, the two primitive elements,
-rushed over all things, effaced all other traces,
-spread and wandered, struggled, triumphed, acquired
-a word, a language wherewith to unveil their inner essence
-and to reveal the innumerable myths born of their
-eternity. The symphony expressed the drama of the
-two elementary Souls on the stage of the Universe, the
-pathetic struggle of two great living and moving Beings,
-two cosmic Wills, such as the shepherd Arya fancied it
-when he contemplated the spectacle from the high plateau
-with his pure eyes. And, of a sudden, from the very
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-center of the musical mystery, from the depths of the
-symphonic Ocean, arose the Ode, brought by the human
-voice, and attaining the loftiest heights.</p>
-
-<p>The miracle of Beethoven renewed itself. The winged
-Ode, the Hymn, sprang from the midst of the orchestra
-to proclaim, in phrases absolute and imperious, the joy
-and the sorrow of Man. It was not the Chorus, as in the
-Ninth Symphony, but the Voice, alone and dominating,
-the interpreter, the messenger to the multitude. "Her
-voice! her voice! She has disappeared. Her song
-seemed to move the heart of the world, and she was
-beyond the veil," said the Animator, who in mental vision
-saw again the crystal statue within which he had watched
-the mounting wave of melody. "I will seek thee, I shall
-find thee again; I will possess myself of thy secret. Thou
-shalt sing my hymns, towering at the summit of my
-music!" Freed now from all earthly desire, he thought
-of that maiden form as the receptacle of a divine gift.
-He heard the disembodied voice surge from the depths
-of the orchestra to reveal the part of eternal truth that
-exists in ephemeral fact. The Ode crowned the episode
-with light. Then, as if to lead back to the play of
-imagery his ravished spirit from "beyond the veil," a
-dancing figure stood out against the rhythm of the dying
-Ode. Between the lines of a parallelogram drawn
-beneath the arch of the stage, as within the limits of a
-strophe, the mute dancer, with her body seemingly free
-for a moment from the sad laws of gravity, imitated
-the fire, the whirlwind, the revolutions of the stars. "La
-Tanagra, flower of Syracuse, made of wings, as a flower
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-is made of petals!" Thus he invoked the image of the already
-famous Sicilian who had re-discovered the ancient
-orchestic art as it had been in the days when Phrynichus
-boasted that he had within himself as many figures of
-the dance as there were waves on the ocean on a stormy
-winter night. The actress, the singer, the dancer&mdash;the
-three Dionysian women&mdash;appeared to him like perfect
-and almost divine instruments of his creations. With
-an incredible rapidity, in word, song, gesture and symphony,
-his work should crystallize itself and live an all-powerful
-life before the conquered multitude.</p>
-
-<p>He was still silent, lost in an ideal world, waiting to
-measure the effort necessary to manifest it. The voices
-surrounding him seemed to come from a long distance.</p>
-
-<p>"Wagner declares that the only creator of a work of
-art is the people," said Baldassare Stampa, "and that the
-sole function of the artist is to gather and express the
-creation of the unconscious multitude."</p>
-
-<p>The extraordinary emotion that had stirred Stelio
-when, from the throne of the Doges, he had spoken to
-the throng seized on him once more. In that communion
-between his soul and the soul of the people an almost
-divine mystery had existed; something greater and more
-exalted was added to the habitual feeling he had for his
-own person; he had felt that an unknown power converged
-within him, abolishing the limits of his earthly
-being and conferring upon his solitary voice the full harmony
-of a chorus.</p>
-
-<p>There was, then, in the multitude a secret beauty, in
-which only the poet and the hero could kindle a spark.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-Whenever that beauty revealed itself by the sudden outburst
-from a theater, a public square, or an entrenchment,
-a torrent of joy must swell the heart of him who
-had known how to inspire it by his verse, his harangue,
-or a signal from his sword. Thus, the word of the poet,
-when communicated to the people, was an act comparable
-to the deed of a hero&mdash;an act that brought to birth
-in the great composite soul of the multitude a sudden
-comprehension of beauty, as a master sculptor, from the
-mere touch of his plastic thumb upon a mass of clay,
-creates a divine statue. Then the silence that had spread
-like a sacred veil over the completed poem would cease.
-The material part of life would no longer be typified by
-immaterial symbols: life itself would be manifested in
-its perfection by the poet; the word would become flesh,
-rhythm would quicken in breathing, palpitating form,
-the idea would be embodied with all the fulness of its
-force and freedom.</p>
-
-<p>"But," said Fabio Molza, "Richard Wagner believes
-that the real heart of the people is composed only of
-those that experience grief in common&mdash;you understand,
-grief in common."</p>
-
-<p>"Toward Joy&mdash;still toward eternal Joy," Stelio reflected.
-"The real heart of the people is composed of
-those that feel vaguely the necessity of raising themselves,
-by means of Fiction, Poetry, the Ideal, out of
-the daily prison in which they serve and suffer."</p>
-
-<p>In his waking dream he beheld the disappearance of
-the small theaters of the city, where, amid suffocating
-air heavy with impurities, before a crowd of rakes and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-courtesans, the actors make public prostitution of their
-talents. And then, on the steps of the new theater, his
-mental vision beheld the true people, the great, unanimous
-multitude, whose human odor he had inhaled,
-whose clamor he had listened to in the great marble
-shell, under the stars. By the mysterious power of
-rhythm, his art, imperfectly understood though it was,
-had stirred the rude and ignorant ones with a profound
-emotion, penetrating as that felt by a prisoner about to
-be released from his chains. Little by little, the sensation
-of joy at their deliverance had crept over the most
-abject; the deep-lined brows cleared; lips accustomed to
-brutal vociferation had parted in amazement; and, above
-all, the hands&mdash;the rough hands enslaved by instruments
-of toil&mdash;had stretched out in one unanimous gesture of
-adoration toward the heroine who in their presence had
-wafted toward the stars the spirit of immortal sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>"In the life of a people like ours," said Daniele Glauro,
-"a great manifestation of art has much more weight than
-a treaty of alliance or a tributary law. That which never
-dies is more prized than that which is ephemeral. The
-astuteness and audacity of a Malatesta are crystallized
-for all time in a medal of Pisanello's. Of Machiavelli's
-politics nothing survives but the power of his prose."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true, most true!" thought Stelio; "the fortunes
-of Italy are inseparable from the fate of the Beauty
-of which she is the Mother." This sovereign truth now
-appeared to him the rising sun of that divine, ideal land
-through which wandered the great Dante. "Italy!
-Italy!" Throughout his being, like a call to arms, seemed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-to thrill that name, that name which intoxicates the
-world. From its ruins, bathed in so much heroic blood,
-should not the new art, robust in root and branch, arise
-and flourish? Should it not become a determining and
-constructive force in the third Rome, reawakening all
-the latent power possessed by the hereditary substance
-of the nation, indicating to her statesmen the primitive
-truths that are the necessary bases of new institutions?
-Faithful to the oldest instincts of his race, Richard
-Wagner had foreseen, and had fostered by his own efforts,
-the aspiration of the German States to the heroic
-grandeur of the Empire. He had evoked the noble figure
-of Henry the Fowler, standing erect beneath the ancient
-oak: "Let warriors arise from every German land!"
-And at Sadowa and at Sedan these warriors had won.
-With the same impulse, the same tenacity, people and
-artist had achieved their glorious aim. The same degree
-of victory had crowned the work of the sword and
-the work of melody. Like the hero, the poet had accomplished
-an act of deliverance. Like the will of the
-Iron Chancelor, like the blood of his soldiers, the Master's
-musical numbers had contributed toward the exalting and
-perpetuating of the soul of his race.</p>
-
-<p>"He has been here only a few days, at the Palazzo
-Vendramin-Calergi," said Prince Hoditz.</p>
-
-<p>And suddenly the image of the barbaric creator seemed
-to Stelio to approach him; the lines of his face became
-visible, the blue eyes gleamed under the wide brow, the
-lips closed tight above the powerful chin, armed with
-sensuousness, pride, and disdain. The slight body, bent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-with the weight of age and glory, straightened itself,
-appeared almost as gigantic as his work, took on the
-aspect of a god. The blood coursed like a swift mountain
-torrent, its breath sighed like a forest breeze. Suddenly
-the youth of Siegfried filled the figure and permeated
-it, radiant as the dawn shining through a cloud.
-"To follow the impulse of my heart, to obey my instinct,
-to listen to the voice of Nature within myself&mdash;that is
-my supreme law!" The heroic, resounding words, springing
-from the depths, expressed the young and healthy
-will that had triumphed over all obstacles and all evil,
-always in accord with the law of the Universe. And
-the flames, called forth from the rock by the wand of
-Wotan, arose in the magic circle: "On the flaming sea
-a way has opened! To plunge into that fire, oh, ineffable
-joy! To find my bride within that flaming circle!"
-All the phantoms of the myth seemed to blaze anew
-and then vanish.</p>
-
-<p>Then the winged helmet of Brunehilde gleamed in the
-sunlight: "Glory to the sun! Glory to the light! Glory
-to the radiant day! My sleep was long. Who has awakened
-me?" The phantoms fled in tumult, and dispersed.
-Then arose from the dark shadows the maiden of the
-song, Donatella Arvale, as she had appeared to him
-amid the purple and gold of the immense hall in a commanding
-attitude and holding a fiery flower in her hand:
-"Dost thou not see me, then? Do not my burning gaze
-and ardent blood make thee tremble. Dost thou not
-feel this wild ardor?" Though she was absent, she
-seemed to resume her power over his dream. Infinite
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-music seemed to rise from the silent, empty place in the
-supper-room. Her Hermes-like face seemed to retain
-an inviolable secret: "Do not touch me; do not trouble
-my repose, and I will reflect forever thy luminous image.
-Love only thyself and renounce all thought of me!" And
-again, as on the feverish water, a passionate impatience
-tortured the Animator, and again he fancied the absent
-one like a beautiful bow to be drawn by a strong hand
-that would know how to use it as an instrument to
-achieve some great conquest: "Awake, virgin, awake!
-Live and laugh! Be mine!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio's spirit was drawn violently into the orbit of
-the magic world created by the German god; its visions
-and harmonies overwhelmed him; the figures of the
-Northern myth towered above those of his own art and
-passion, obscuring them. His own desire and his own
-hope spoke the language of the barbarian: "I must love
-thee, blindly, and laughing: and, laughing, we must unite
-and lose ourselves, each in the other. O radiant Love!
-O smiling Death!" The joyousness of the warrior-virgin
-on the flame-circled summit reached the loftiest height;
-her cry of love and liberty mounted to the heart of the
-sun. Ah, what heights and what depths had he not
-touched, that formidable Master of human souls! What
-effort could ever equal his? What eagle could ever hope
-to soar higher? His gigantic work was there, finished,
-amidst men. Throughout the world swelled the last
-mighty chorus of the Grail, the canticle of thanksgiving:
-"Glory to the Miracle! Redemption to the Redeemer!"</p>
-
-<p>"He is tired," said Prince Hoditz, "very tired and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-feeble. That is the reason why we did not see him at
-the Doge's Palace. His heart is affected." ...</p>
-
-<p>Once more the giant became a man: the slight body,
-bent with age and glory, consumed by passion, slowly
-dying. And Stelio heard again in his heart Perdita's
-words, which had called up the image of another stricken
-artist&mdash;the father of Donatella Arvale. "The name of
-the bow is BIOS ("life"), and its work is death!"</p>
-
-<p>The young man saw his pathway blazed before him
-by victory&mdash;the long art, the short life. "Forward, still
-forward! Higher, ever higher!" Every hour, every
-second, he must strive, struggle, fortify himself against
-destruction, diminution, oppression, contagion. Every
-hour, every second, his eye must be fixed on his aim, concentrating
-and directing all his energies, without truce,
-without relaxation. He felt that victory was as necessary
-to his soul as air to his lungs. At the contact with
-the German barbarian, a furious thirst for conflict awoke
-in his Latin blood. "To you now belongs the will to
-do!" Wagner had declared, on the day of the opening
-of the new theater: "In the work of art of the future,
-the source of invention will never run dry." Art was
-infinite, like the beauty of the world. There are no
-limits to courage or to power. Man must seek and find,
-further and still further. "Forward, still forward!"</p>
-
-<p>Then a single wave, vast and shapeless, embodying all
-the aspirations and all the agitations of that delirium,
-whirling itself into a maelstrom, seemed to take on the
-qualities of plastic matter, obeying the same inexhaustible
-energy that forms all animals and all things under
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-the sun. An extraordinary image, beautiful and pure,
-was born of this travail, lived and glowed with unbearable
-intensity. The poet saw it, absorbed it with a pure
-gaze, felt that it took root in the very depths of his being.
-"Ah, to express it, to manifest it to the world, to
-fix it in perfection for all eternity!" Sublime moment
-that never would return! All visions vanished. Around
-him flowed the current of daily life; fleeting words
-sounded; expectation palpitated, desire still lived.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at the woman. The stars sparkled; the
-trees waved, and the dark garden spread out behind Perdita,
-and her eyes still said: "Let me serve! Let me
-serve!"</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII<br />
-THE PROMISE</h2>
-
-
-<p>Descending the terrace to the garden, the guests
-had dispersed among the shady paths and under
-the vine-covered trellises. The night breeze
-was damp and warm, touching the long lashes
-on delicate eyelids like lips brushing them in a caress.
-The invisible stars of the jasmine perfumed the darkness;
-the rich fragrance of fruit, too, was even stronger
-than in the island gardens. A vivid power of fertility
-emanated from this narrow trace of cultivated earth,
-which appeared like a place of exile, surrounded by a
-girdle of water, and, like an exiled soul, all the more
-intense.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish me to remain here? Shall I return after
-the others have gone? Say quickly! It is late!"</p>
-
-<p>"No, no, Stelio, I beg of you! It is late&mdash;it is too late!
-You yourself say it is."</p>
-
-<p>La Fosacarina's voice was full of mortal terror. Her
-white arms and shoulders trembled in the shadows. She
-wished at once to refuse and to yield; she wished to
-die, yet she wished to feel his strong embrace. She
-trembled more and more; her teeth chattered slightly,
-for a glacial stream seemed to submerge her, chilling her
-from head to foot. The strange emotion caused a fancy
-that her very limbs were ready to break, and she was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-conscious that the stiffness of her set features had even
-changed the sound of her voice. And still she longed
-at once to die and to be loved; still, over her terror, her
-chill, her body no longer young, hung the terrible sentence
-the beloved had pronounced, which she herself had
-repeated: "It is late&mdash;it is too late!"</p>
-
-<p>"Your promise, your promise, Perdita! I will not be
-put off!"</p>
-
-<p>The tide, swelling like a full, fair throat, the estuary,
-lost in darkness and death, the City, when illumined
-by the twilight fire, the water flowing in the invisible
-clepsydra, the bronze bells with their vibrations reaching
-to the sky, the eager wish, the contracted lips, lowered
-eyelids, feverish hands, all recurred with the memory
-of the silent promise. With wild ardor he longed
-to clasp that being, whose knowledge of all things was
-immeasurably deep and rich.</p>
-
-<p>"No, I will not be put off!"</p>
-
-<p>His ardor had come to him from far-distant ages, from
-the most ancient origins, the primitive simplicity of
-sudden unions, the antique mystery of sacred furies.
-Like the horde that was possessed by the enchantment
-of the gods, and descended the mountain side, tearing up
-trees, rushing on with blind fury, momentarily increasing,
-its numbers swelled by other madmen, spreading
-madness in its way, and finally becoming one vast bestial
-yet human multitude, impelled by a monstrous will, so
-the crudest of instincts urged him on, confusing all his
-ideas in a dizzy whirl. And what most attracted him
-in that wandering and despairing woman, whose knowledge
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-was deep and rich, was the consciousness that she
-was a being oppressed by the eternal servitude of her
-nature, destined to succumb to the sudden convulsions
-of her sex; a being who soothed the fever of stage life
-in sensuous repose, the fiery actress, who passed from
-the frenzied plaudits of the multitude to the embrace of
-a lover; the Dionysian creature who chose to crown her
-mysterious rites as they were crowned in the ancient
-orgies.</p>
-
-<p>His amorous madness was now immeasurable, and was
-a mingling of cruelty, jealousy, poetry and pride. He
-regretted that he never had sought her after some dramatic
-triumph, warm from the breath of the people,
-breathless and disheveled, showing the traces of the tragic
-soul that had wept and cried in her, with the tears
-of that alien spirit still damp on her agitated face. As
-by a flash of light, he had a sudden vision of her reclining,
-at rest, yet full of the power that had drawn forth
-a howl from the monster, panting like a Mænad after the
-dance, athirst and weary.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, do not be cruel!" entreated the woman, who
-felt in the voice of the beloved, and read in his eyes,
-the madness that possessed him. From the burning gaze
-of the young man she shrank with pathetic modesty.
-His insistence hurt the sensitive delicacy of her spirit.
-She recognized in it all that there was of mere selfish
-impulse; she well knew that he thought of her as something
-poisonous and corrupt, with memories of many
-loves, a wandering, implacable temptress. She divined
-the sudden grudgingness, jealousy and feverish resentment
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-that had blazed up in the long-beloved friend, to
-whom she had consecrated all of herself that was most
-precious and most sincere, preserving the perfection of
-that sentiment by her steadfast refusal to break down
-all barriers. Now, all was lost; all was suddenly devastated,
-like a fair domain at the mercy of rebellious
-and vindictive slaves. Then, almost as if she were passing
-through the last agonies of death, her whole bitter
-and stormy past rose before her: that life of struggle and
-pain, bewilderment, effort, passion, and triumph. She
-felt all its heavy burden weighing on her, and recalled
-the ineffable joy, the feeling of mingled terror and
-freedom, with which, in her far-distant youth, she had
-given her first, fresh love to the man who had deceived
-her. And through her mind passed the image of herself,
-that maiden who had disappeared, who perhaps was
-still dreaming in some solitary place, or weeping, or
-promising herself future happiness. "Too late&mdash;it is
-too late!" The irrevocable word rang continually in
-her ears like the reverberation of the bronze bells.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not be cruel, Stelio!" she repeated, white and
-delicate as the swansdown that encircled her shoulders.
-She seemed suddenly to have shorn herself of her power,
-to have become slight and weak, to have assumed a
-secret, tender personality, easy to kill, to destroy, to immolate
-as a bloodless sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>"No, Perdita, I will not be cruel," he stammered, suddenly
-discomposed by her face and voice, his heart stirred
-with human pity, arising from the same depths that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-had harbored his wilder instincts. "Pardon me! Forgive!"</p>
-
-<p>He would have liked to take her in his arms that moment,
-to nurse her, console her, let her weep on his breast,
-and to dry her tears. He felt that he no longer recognized
-her, that some unknown creature stood before
-him, infinitely humble and sad, deprived of all strength.
-His pity and remorse were like the emotion we feel if
-we unwillingly hurt or offend an invalid or a child&mdash;some
-lonely and inoffensive little being.</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me!"</p>
-
-<p>He would have liked to kneel, to kiss her feet in the
-grass, to murmur little fond phrases in her ear. He
-bent toward her and touched her hand. She started
-violently, opened wide her large eyes upon him; then
-lowered her eyelids and stood motionless. Shadows
-seemed to gather under her arched brows, throwing into
-relief the curve of her cheeks. Again the glacial wave
-submerged her.</p>
-
-<p>Voices arose from the guests dispersed about the
-garden, then a long silence followed.</p>
-
-<p>Presently a crunching of gravel, as if trodden by a
-heavy foot, was heard, followed by another long silence.
-Soon a confused clamor was heard coming from the
-canals; the jasmine's fragrance was heavier than before,
-as a heart in suspense quickens in movement. The night
-seemed fraught with miracles, and eternal forces worked
-harmoniously between the earth and the stars.</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me! If my love oppresses you, I will continue
-to stifle it; I will even renounce it forever, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-obey you. Perdita! Perdita! I will forget all that your
-eyes said to me a little while ago, in the midst of the idle
-talk. What embrace, what caress could more wholly
-unite our souls? All the passion of the night threw us
-together. I received your soul like a wave. And now
-it seems that never again can I separate my heart from
-yours, nor can you separate yours from mine. Together
-we must go forward to meet I know not what mysterious
-dawn...."</p>
-
-<p>He spoke in a low tone, with absolute abandon, having
-become for the moment a vibrating substance that
-responded to every change in the nocturnal spirit that
-bewitched him. That which he saw before him was no
-longer a corporeal form, an impenetrable prison of flesh;
-it was a soul unveiled by a succession of appearances
-not less expressive than melody itself, an infinite sensibility,
-delicate and powerful, which, in that slight frame,
-created in turn the fragility of the flower, the vigor of
-marble, the flash of the flame, all shadows and all light.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio!"</p>
-
-<p>She hardly breathed that name aloud; yet in the sigh
-that died on her soft lips was as thrilling a note of
-wonder and exultation as would have been revealed in
-the most piercing cry. In the accent of the man she had
-recognized love: love, real love! She, who had so often
-listened to beautiful and perfect words pronounced by
-that clear voice, and who had suffered under them as
-from a torture or a heartless jest, now saw her own life
-and all the world suddenly transformed at this new accent.
-Her very soul seemed changed; that which had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-encumbered it fell away into dim, far-off obscurity, while
-to the surface rose something free and immaculate, that
-dilated and curved over her like the sky; and, as the wave
-of light mounts from the horizon to the zenith with mute
-harmony, the illusion of happiness mounted to her lips.
-A smile softly spread over her lips, which quivered like
-leaves in the breeze, showing a glimpse as pearly as the
-jasmine's starry flowers.</p>
-
-<p>"All is abolished&mdash;all is vanished. I never have lived,
-I never have loved, I never have suffered. I am renewed.
-I never have known any love but this. My heart is
-pure. I should wish to die in the joy of your love.
-Years and experience have passed over me without reaching
-that part of my soul which I have kept for you, that
-secret heaven which has suddenly opened to the unforeseen,
-has triumphed over all my sadness, and has remained
-alone to cherish the strength and the sweetness
-of your name. Your love will save me; the fulness of my
-love will render you divine!"</p>
-
-<p>Words of wildest transport sprang from her liberated
-heart, though her lips dared not speak them. But she
-smiled&mdash;smiled her infinite, mysterious, silent smile!</p>
-
-<p>"Is it not true? Speak&mdash;answer me, Perdita! Do you
-not feel too our need of each other&mdash;all the stronger
-from our long renunciation, from the patience with which
-we have awaited this hour? Ah, it seems to me that
-all my presentiments and all my hopes would count as
-nothing, if it were fated that this hour should not come to
-pass. Say that without me you could not have waited,
-after life's darkness, for the glorious dawn, as I could
-not wait without you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, yes!"</p>
-
-<p>In that stifled syllable, she was lost irrevocably. The
-smile faded, the lines of the mouth became heavy, causing
-it to appear in sharply drawn relief against the pallor
-of her face; the lips seemed athirst, strong to attract,
-to cling, insatiable. And her whole body, which just before
-had seemed to shrink in sensitiveness and apprehension,
-now drew itself up again, as if formed anew,
-recovering all its physical power, and inundated by an
-impetuous wave of emotion.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us have no more uncertainty. It is late."</p>
-
-<p>He could not disguise his impatience of the social restraints
-that must be observed on account of the other
-guests.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes!" La Foscarina repeated, but in a new accent,
-her eyes dwelling upon his, commanding, imperious, as
-if she felt certain now of possessing a philter that should
-bind him to her forever.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio felt his heart-throbs quicken still more at the
-thought of the love this mysterious being must be able
-to give. He gazed deep into her eyes, and saw that she
-was as pale as if all her blood had been sapped by the
-earth to nourish the rich fruits of the garden; and it
-seemed to him that the present was part of a dream-life,
-wherein he and she lived alone in all the world.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 460px;" id="ilop130">
-<img src="images/ilo3.jpg" width="460" height="700" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center caption"><em><small>HE GAZED DEEP INTO HER EYES AND SAW THAT SHE<br />
-WAS AS PALE AS IF HER BLOOD HAD BEEN SAPPED<br />
-TO NOURISH THE RICH FRUITS OF THE GARDEN</small></em></p>
-
-<p class="center caption"><em>From an Original Drawing by Arthur H. Ewer</em></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>La Foscarina was standing under a shrub laden with
-fruit. The sudden beauty that had illumined her in the
-supper-room, made up of a thousand ideal forces, reappeared
-in her face with still greater intensity, kindled
-now from the flame that never dies, the fervor that never
-languishes. The magnificent fruits hung over her head,
-bearing the crown of a royal donor. The myth of the
-pomegranate was revivified in the mystery of midnight,
-as it had been at the passing of the boat in the mystic
-twilight. Who was this woman? Was she Persephone
-herself, Queen of Shades? Had she dwelt in that unknown
-region where all human agitations seem as trifling
-as idle winds on a dusty, interminable road? Had she
-contemplated the springs of the world, sunk deep in the
-earth? Had she counted the roots of the flowers, immobile
-as the veins in a petrified body? Was she weary
-or intoxicated with human tears, laughter, and sensuousness,
-and with having touched, one after another, all
-things mortal, to make them bloom only to see them
-perish? Who was she? Had she struck upon cities like
-a scourge, silenced forever with her kiss all lips that
-sang, stopped the pulsation of tyrannous hearts? Who
-was she&mdash;who? What secret past made her so pale, so
-passionate, so perilous? Had she already divulged all
-her secrets and given all her gifts, or could she still, by
-new arts, enchant her new lover, for whom life, love, and
-victory were one and the same thing? All this, and
-more, was suggested to him by the little veins in her
-temples, the curve of her cheeks, the lithe strength of
-her body.</p>
-
-<p>"All evil, all good, that which I know and do not
-know, that which you know, as well as that which you
-are ignorant of&mdash;all this had to be, to prepare the fulness
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-of this night." Life and the dream had become one.
-Thought and sense were as wines poured into the same
-cup. Even their garments, their faces, their hopes, their
-glances, were like the plants of the garden, like the air,
-the stars, the silence.</p>
-
-<p>Sublime moment, never to return! Before he realized it,
-his hands involuntarily reached out to draw her to himself.
-The woman's head fell backward, as if she were
-about to faint; between her half-closed eyelids and her
-parted lips her eyes and her teeth gleamed as things
-gleam for the last time. Then swiftly she raised her
-head again and recovered herself; her lips sought the
-lips that sought hers.</p>
-
-<p>After a moment they saw each other again in a lucid
-way. The voices of the guests in the garden were wafted
-to their ears, and an indistinct clamor from the far-off
-canal rose from time to time.</p>
-
-<p>"Well?" demanded the young man feverishly, after
-that burning kiss of body and soul.</p>
-
-<p>The lady bent to lift a fallen pomegranate from the
-grass. The fruit was ripe; it had burst open in its fall
-and now poured out its blood from the wound it had received.
-With the vision of the fruit-laden boat, the pale
-islet, and the field of asphodels, to the impassioned
-woman's mind returned the words of the Inspirer: "This
-is my body.... Take, eat!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes!"</p>
-
-<p>With a mechanical movement she crushed the fruit
-in her hand, as if she wished to expel all its juice, which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-trickled in a stream over her wrist. She trembled, as the
-glacial wave rushed over her anew.</p>
-
-<p>"Go away when the others go, but then&mdash;return! I
-will wait for you at the gate of the Gradenigo garden."</p>
-
-<p>She trembled still, partly from terror, a prey to an invincible
-power. As by a flash of light, again he saw
-her reclining, at rest, panting like a Mænad after the
-dance. They gazed at each other, but could not bear the
-fierce light of each other's eyes. They parted.</p>
-
-<p>She went in the direction of the voices of the poets
-who had exalted her ideal power.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-"TO CREATE WITH JOY!"</h2>
-
-
-<p>Lost! Lost! Now she was lost! She still lived&mdash;vanquished,
-humiliated, as if some one had
-trampled pitilessly upon her; she still lived, and
-dawn was breaking, the days were beginning
-again, the fresh tide was flowing once more into the
-City Beautiful, and Donatella was still sleeping upon her
-pure pillow. Into an infinite distance had faded the hour,
-in reality so short a time before, when she had waited
-at the gate for her beloved, recognized his step in the
-funereal silence of the deserted path, and felt her knees
-weaken as if from a blow, while a strange reverberation
-rang in her ears. How far-away now seemed that hour!
-yet the little incidents of her vigil returned to her mind
-with intensity: the cold iron rail against which she had
-leaned her head, the sharp, acrid odor that rose from
-the grass as from a retting-vat, the moist tongue of Lady
-Myrta's greyhounds that came noiselessly and licked her
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>"Good-by! Good-by!"</p>
-
-<p>She was lost! He had left her as he would have left
-some light love, almost with the manner of a stranger,
-almost impatient even, drawn by the freshness of the
-dawn, by the freedom of the morning.</p>
-
-<p>"Good-by!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From her window she perceived Stelio on the bank
-of the canal; he was inhaling deep breaths of the fresh
-morning air; then in the perfect calm that reigned over
-all things, she heard his clear, confident voice calling
-the gondolier:</p>
-
-<p>"Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>The man was asleep in the bottom of his gondola, and
-his human slumber resembled that of the curved boat
-that obeyed his movements. Stelio touched him lightly
-with his foot, and instantly he sprang up, jumped to
-his place and seized the oar. Man and boat awoke at the
-same time, as if they had but one body, ready to glide
-over the water.</p>
-
-<p>"Your servant, Signor!" said Zorzi with a smile, glancing
-up at the brightening sky. "Sit down, Signor, and I
-will row."</p>
-
-<p>Opposite the palace, the door of a large workshop was
-thrown open. It was a stonecutter's shop, where steps
-were fashioned from the stone of Val-di-Sole.</p>
-
-<p>"To ascend!" thought Stelio, and his superstitious soul
-rejoiced at the good omen. On the sign, the name of the
-quarry seemed radiant with promise&mdash;the Valley of the
-Sun. He had already seen, a short time before, the image
-of a stairway, on a coat-of-arms in the Gradenigo garden&mdash;a
-symbol of his own ascension. "Higher, always
-higher!" Joy came bubbling up from the depths of his
-being. The morning awakened all manly energies.</p>
-
-<p>"And Perdita? And Ariadne?" He saw them again,
-as they descended the marble stairway, in the light of
-the smoking torches. "And La Tanagra?" The Syracusan
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-appeared to his vision, with her long, goat-like
-eyes, reposing gracefully upon her mother earth, motionless
-as a bas-relief on the marble in which it is carved.
-"The Dionysian Trinity!" He fancied them as exempt
-from all passion, immune from all evil, like creations
-of art. The surface of his soul seemed covered with
-swift and splendid images, like sails scattered over a
-swelling sea. His heart beat calmly, and with the approaching
-sunrise he felt a renewal of his life-forces, as
-if he were born anew with the morning.</p>
-
-<p>"We do not need this light any longer," murmured
-the gondolier slyly, extinguishing the lantern of the gondola.</p>
-
-<p>"To the Grand Canal, by San Giovanni Decollato!"
-cried Stelio, seating himself.</p>
-
-<p>As the dentellated prow swung into the Canal of San
-Giacomo dall'Orio, he turned to look once more at the
-palace, of a leaden hue in the early dawn. One lighted
-window grew dark at that moment, like an eye suddenly
-blinded. "Good-by! Good-by!" The woman no
-longer young was up there alone, sad with the sadness
-of death; the Song-Maiden was preparing to return to
-the place of her long sacrifice. He knew not how to
-pity, he could only promise. From the abundance of his
-strength, he drew an illusion that he might change those
-two destinies for his own joy.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop before the Palazzo Vendramin-Calergi!" he ordered
-the gondolier.</p>
-
-<p>The canal, ancient stream of silence and of poetry, was
-deserted. The pale green sky was reflected in it with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-its last fading stars. At first glance, the palace had an
-aerial appearance, like an artificial cloud hung over the
-water. The shadows in which it was still wrapped suggested
-the quality of velvet, the beauty of something
-soft and magnificent. And, just as in studying a deep-piled
-velvet, the pattern gradually becomes discernible,
-the architectural lines revealed themselves in the three
-Corinthian columns that rose with rhythmic grace
-and strength to the point where the emblems of nobility,
-the eagles, the horses, and the amphora, were mingled
-with the roses of Loredan. NON NOBIS, DOMINE,
-NON NOBIS.</p>
-
-<p>Within that palace throbbed the great ailing heart.
-Stelio saw again the image of the barbaric creator: the
-blue eyes gleaming under the broad brow, the lips compressed
-above the powerful chin, armed with sensuousness,
-pride, and disdain. Was he sleeping? Could he
-sleep, or was he lying sleepless with his glory? The
-young man recalled strange things that were told of
-Wagner. Was it true that he could not sleep unless his
-head rested on his wife's bosom, and that, despite advancing
-years, he clung to her as a lover to his mistress?
-He remembered a story told him by Lady Myrta, who,
-while she was in Palermo, had visited the Villa d'Angri,
-where the very closets in the room occupied by the
-master had remained impregnated with an essence of
-rose so strong that it made her ill. He fancied that slight,
-tired body, wrapped in sumptuous draperies, ornamented
-with jewels, perfumed like a corpse ready for the pyre.
-Was it not Venice that had given him, as long ago it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-had given Albert Dürer, a taste for luxury and magnificence?
-Yes, and it was in the silence of her canals
-that he had heard the passing of the most ardent breath
-of all his music&mdash;the deadly passion of Tristan and Isolde.</p>
-
-<p>And now, within that palace throbbed the great ailing
-heart, and there its formidable impetuosity was flagging.
-The patrician palace, with its eagles, its horses,
-amphora, and roses, was as tightly closed and silent as
-a great tomb. Above its marble towers the sunrise
-turned the pale green sky to rosy pink.</p>
-
-<p>"Hail to the Victorious One!" Stelio stood up and
-cast his flowers at the threshold of the palace door.</p>
-
-<p>"On! On!" he cried.</p>
-
-<p>Urged by this sudden impatience, the gondolier bent to
-his oar, and the light craft threaded its way along the
-stream. A brown sail passed silently. The sea, the
-rippling waves, the laughing cry of the sea-gulls, the
-sweeping breeze arose before his desire.</p>
-
-<p>"Row, Zorzi, row! To the Veneta Marina, by the
-Canal dall'Olio!" the young man cried.</p>
-
-<p>The canal seemed too narrow for the expanse of his
-soul. Victory was now as necessary to his spirit as air
-to his lungs. After the delirium of the night, he wished
-to prove the perfection of his physical nature by the
-light of day and in the sharp breeze of the sea. He did
-not wish to sleep. He felt a circle of freshness around
-his eyes, as if he had bathed them with dew. He had
-no desire for repose, and the thought of his bed in the
-hotel filled him with disgust. "The deck of a ship, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-odor of pitch and of salt, the flutter of a red sail....
-Row, Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>The gondolier redoubled his efforts. The Fondaco dei
-Turchi disappeared from their view, a vision of marvelously
-yellow old ivory, like the only remaining portico
-of some ruined mosque. They passed the Palazzo of the
-Cornaro and the Palazzo of the Pesaro, those two giants
-blackened by time as by smoke from a fire; they passed
-the Ca' d'Oro, a divine marvel of air and stone; and suddenly
-the Rialto bridge showed its ample back, laden
-with shops, already bustling with life, sending forth the
-odor of vegetables and fish, like a great horn of plenty
-pouring out upon the shores the fruits of earth and sea
-to feed the Queen of Cities.</p>
-
-<p>"I am hungry, Zorzi, I am very hungry!" said Stelio,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>"A good sign when a wakeful night makes one hungry;
-it makes only the old feel sleepy," said Zorzi.</p>
-
-<p>"Row to shore!"</p>
-
-<p>He bought at a stall some grapes of the Vignole and
-some figs from Malamocco, laid on a plate of vine-leaves.</p>
-
-<p>"Row, Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>The gondola turned, then sped under the Fondaco dei
-Tedeschi, making its way toward the Rio de Palazzo.
-The bells were now ringing joyously in the full daylight,
-drowning the noises of the market-place with their brazen
-tongues.</p>
-
-<p>"To the Ponte della Paglia!"</p>
-
-<p>A thought, spontaneous as an instinct, led him back
-to the glorious spot where it seemed some trace must
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-remain of his lyric inspiration and of the great Dionysian
-chorus: <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Viva il forte!</i> The gondola grazed the side of
-the Palace of the Doge, massive as a monolith cut by
-chisels not less apt in finding melodies than the bows of
-the musicians. With all his new-born soul he embraced
-the mass; he heard once more the sound of his own
-voice and the bursts of applause. He said again to himself:
-"To create with joy! That is an attribute of Divinity!
-Impossible to imagine, in the highest flight of the
-spirit, a more triumphal act. Even the phrase itself has
-something of the splendor of the dawn."</p>
-
-<p>Again and again he repeated to the air, the waters,
-the stones, to the ancient city, to the young dawn: "To
-create with joy! To create with joy!"</p>
-
-<p>When the prow passed under the bridge and entered
-the mirror of light, a freer breath gave him fresh realization,
-with his hope and his courage, of the beauty and
-strength of the life of the past.</p>
-
-<p>"Find me a boat, Zorzi&mdash;a boat that will go out to sea."</p>
-
-<p>He longed for still wider space in which to breathe;
-he longed to feel a strong wind, salt air and dashing
-spray; to see the sails swell, and the bowsprit pointed
-toward a boundless horizon.</p>
-
-<p>"To the Veneta Marina! Find me a fishing-boat, a
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">bragozzo</i> from Chioggia."</p>
-
-<p>He perceived a large red and black sail, just hoisted,
-and now flapping in the breeze, superb as an ancient
-banner of the Republic, with the device of the Lion and
-the Book.</p>
-
-<p>"That one there&mdash;that will do. Let us catch it, Zorzi."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In his impatience he waved his hand, to sign to the
-boat to stop.</p>
-
-<p>"Call out to them to wait for me, Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>The gondolier, heated and dripping, cried out to the
-man at the sail. The gondola flew like a canoe in a
-regatta.</p>
-
-<p>"Bravo, Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>But Stelio was panting, too, as if he were in pursuit
-of fortune, some happy aim, or the certainty of a kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>"We have won the flag!" laughed the gondolier, rubbing
-his burning palms. "What foolishness!"</p>
-
-<p>The movement, the tone, the good-humor, the astonished
-faces of the fishermen leaning over the rail, the
-reflection of the red sail in the water, the cordial odor
-of fresh bread from a neighboring bake-shop, the smell
-of boiling pitch from a dock-yard, the voices of workmen
-entering the arsenal, the strong emanations from
-the quays, impregnated with the odor of the old rotten
-vessels of the Serene Republic, the resounding blows of
-the hammer on the vessels of the new Italy&mdash;all these
-rude and healthful things aroused a wonderful joyousness
-in the heart of the young man, who laughed aloud
-for very gladness.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you wish?" demanded the older of the fishermen,
-bending toward the ringing laughter his bearded
-bronzed face. "What can I do for you, Signor?"</p>
-
-<p>The mast creaked as if it were alive, swaying from
-top to bottom.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"You can come on board, if you like," he said. "Is
-that all you want?"</p>
-
-<p>He brought a ladder and attached it to the stern. It
-was a simple affair of ropes and pegs, but to Stelio it
-seemed, like all else in the rough craft, to have a life
-of its own. As he stepped upon it he felt almost ashamed
-of his light, glossy shoes. The heavy, calloused hand
-of the sailor, covered with blue tattoo-marks, helped him
-to climb up and pulled him on board with a jerk.</p>
-
-<p>"The grapes and the figs, Zorzi!"</p>
-
-<p>From the gondola, Zorzi handed him the vine-leaf plate.</p>
-
-<p>"May it make new blood for you, Signor!"</p>
-
-<p>"And the bread?"</p>
-
-<p>"We have some warm bread," said one of the sailors,
-"just out of the oven."</p>
-
-<p>Hunger would certainly give that bread a delicious
-flavor, finding therein all the nourishment of the grain.</p>
-
-<p>"Your servant, Signor, and a fair wind to you!" said
-the gondolier, taking leave.</p>
-
-<p>"Starboard!"</p>
-
-<p>The lateen sail, with the Lion and the Book, swelled
-crimson. The craft turned toward the open sea, directing
-its course toward San Servolo. The shore seemed
-to assume a sharp curve, as if to repel it.</p>
-
-<p>"To the right!"</p>
-
-<p>The boat veered with great force. A miracle met it:
-the first rays of the sun pierced the fluttering sail and
-illumined the angels on the campaniles of San Marco
-and San Giorgio Maggiore, setting on fire the globe of
-the Fortuna and crowning the five miters of the Basilica
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-with a diadem of light. Venice Anadyomene reigned
-over the waters, and from her beauty all her veils were
-ravished.</p>
-
-<p>"Glory to the Miracle!" An almost superhuman feeling
-of power and of freedom swelled the young man's
-heart as the wind had swollen the sail transfigured for
-him. In its crimson splendor, he saw himself as in the
-splendor of his own blood. It seemed to him that all
-the mystery of this beauty demanded of him a triumphal
-act. He felt confident that he was able to accomplish it.
-"To create with joy!"</p>
-
-<p>And the world was his!</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a><br /><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="half-title">BOOK II<br />
-THE EMPIRE OF SILENCE</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a><br /><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I<br />
-"IN TIME!"</h2>
-
-
-<p>"In time!" In a room of the Academy, La
-Foscarina had stopped before <cite>La Vecchia</cite>, by
-Francesco Torbido&mdash;that wrinkled, toothless,
-flaccid, yellow old woman, who could no
-longer either smile or weep, that human ruin worse than
-decay, that species of earthly Parca, who, instead of
-spindle, thread, or scissors, held in her hand a card
-bearing that significant warning.</p>
-
-<p>"In time!" she said again, when she and her companion
-were once more in the open air. She said it to
-break the pensive silence, during which she had felt her
-heart sink, like a stone cast into dark waters. She spoke
-again suddenly:</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio, do you know that closed house in the Calle
-Gambara?"</p>
-
-<p>"No&mdash;which house?"</p>
-
-<p>"The house of the Countess of Glanegg."</p>
-
-<p>"No, I don't know it."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not know the story of the beautiful Austrian?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, Fosca. Tell it to me."</p>
-
-<p>"Will you go with me as far as the Calle Gambara;
-it is only a short distance?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I will go."</p>
-
-<p>They walked along, side by side, toward the closed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-mansion. Stelio fell back a step, that he might observe
-the actress, that he might behold her grace as she walked
-in that warm, dead air. With his ardent gaze he seemed
-to embrace her whole person: the line of her shoulders
-sloping with noble grace, the free and pliant waist on the
-strong hips, the knees that moved lightly among the folds
-of her robe, and that pale, passionate face, those eloquent
-lips, that brow, lofty and beautiful as that of a man, the
-fringe of dark lashes over the elongated eyes, that sometimes
-were clouded over, as if tears rose to them and
-remained unshed&mdash;the whole passionate face full of lights
-and shadows, love and sadness, feverish force and quivering
-life.</p>
-
-<p>"I love you! I love you! You alone please me! Everything
-about you pleases me!" he said to her suddenly,
-whispering the words close to her cheek. He was now
-walking so close as almost to press against her, as he
-accommodated his step to hers, his arm passed under
-her arm. He could not bear to know that she was seized
-with startled anguish at those terrible warning words.</p>
-
-<p>She trembled, stopped; her eyelids drooped, her cheeks
-turned pale.</p>
-
-<p>"My friend!" she said, in a tone so faint that the two
-words seemed modulated less by her lips than by the
-rare smile of her spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Her sudden sadness melted away, changed into a wave
-of tenderness that poured in a lavish flood over her
-friend. Her unbounded gratitude inspired her with an
-eager desire to find some great gift for him.</p>
-
-<p>"Tell me, Stelio, what can I do for thee?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She imagined some marvelous test, some unheard-of
-proof of love. "Let me serve! Let me serve!" cried her
-heart. She yearned to own the whole earth, that she
-might offer it to him.</p>
-
-<p>"What dost thou wish? Tell me&mdash;what can I do for
-thee?"</p>
-
-<p>"Love me&mdash;only love me!"</p>
-
-<p>"Poor friend, my love is sad."</p>
-
-<p>"It is perfect; it crowns my life."</p>
-
-<p>"But you are young."</p>
-
-<p>"I love you!"</p>
-
-<p>"You should possess one with strength equal to your
-own."</p>
-
-<p>"But it is you, and only you, that each day increases
-my strength and exalts my hope. My blood runs quicker
-when I am near you in your mystic silence. At those
-times things are born in my brain that in time you will
-marvel to see. You are necessary to me."</p>
-
-<p>"Do not say that!"</p>
-
-<p>"Each day you confirm me in the assurance that all
-promises made to me will be kept."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you will have your own beautiful destiny. For
-you I have no fear; you are sure of yourself. No peril
-can surprise you, no obstacle can impede your progress.
-Oh, to be able to love without fear! One always fears
-when one loves. It is not for you that I fear. You seem
-to me invincible. I thank you for that also."</p>
-
-<p>She showed him her faith, deep as her passion, lucid
-and unlimited. For a long time, even in the heat of
-her own struggles and the vicissitudes of her wandering
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-life, she had kept her eyes fixed on this young, victorious
-existence, as on an ideal form born of the purification
-of her own desire. More than once, in the sadness of
-vain loves and the nobility of the prohibition imposed
-between them, she had thought: "Ah, if, some day, from
-all my courage, hardened in many storms, from all the
-strong, clear things that grief and revolt have revealed
-in the depths of my soul, from the best of myself, I
-could fashion for thee the wings that shall bear thee upward
-in thy last supreme flight!" More than once, her
-melancholy had been dissipated in a heroic presentiment.
-And then she had subjected her soul to restraint, had
-raised it to the highest plane of moral beauty that she
-could, had guided it in paths of purity, solely to merit
-that for which she hoped and feared at once&mdash;to be
-worthy of offering her servitude to him who was so impatient
-to conquer the world.</p>
-
-<p>And now a sudden violent shock of Fate had thrown
-her before him in the guise of a mere weak woman, overcome
-by earthly passion. She had united herself to him
-by the closest tie; she had watched him at dawn, sleeping;
-she had had sudden awakenings, alarmed by cruel
-fear, and had found it impossible to close her tired eyes
-again, lest he should gaze on her while she slept, and
-see in her face the lines of care and years.</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing is worth the inspiration you give me," said
-Stelio, pressing her arm close and seeking her soft wrist
-under her glove, urged by a longing to feel the pulsation
-of that devoted life. "Nothing is worth the assurance
-that nevermore until death shall I be alone."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Ah, you too feel that, do you&mdash;that it is forever?"
-she cried in a transport of joy at seeing the triumph of
-her love. "Yes, forever, Stelio&mdash;whatever happens,
-wherever your destiny may lead you, in whatever way
-you wish me to serve you, either near you or afar...."</p>
-
-<p>In the misty air rose a confused and monotonous sound,
-which La Foscarina recognized as the chorus of sparrows
-gathered among the dying trees in the garden of
-the Countess of Glanegg. The words died on her lips;
-she made an instinctive movement as if to turn back and
-to draw her companion with her.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are we going?" Stelio asked, surprised at her
-sudden movement, and at the unforeseen interruption,
-that came like a burst of magic music.</p>
-
-<p>She stopped, smiling her faint smile that showed her
-heart was aching. ("IN TIME!")</p>
-
-<p>"I wished to escape," she replied, "but I cannot."</p>
-
-<p>She looked like a pale flame, as she stood there.</p>
-
-<p>"I had forgotten, Stelio, that I was to take you to the
-closed house."</p>
-
-<p>Like one lost in a desert, she stood there, helpless,
-under the gray sky.</p>
-
-<p>"It seemed to me that we were to go somewhere else.
-But we are already here. 'In time'!"</p>
-
-<p>She appeared to him now as she had in that memorable
-night, when she had said "Do not be cruel, Stelio!"
-Clothed in her sweet, tender soul she stood there, so
-easy to kill, to destroy, to immolate in a bloodless sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Come away&mdash;let us go," he said, trying to lead her
-with him. "Let us go somewhere else."</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot."</p>
-
-<p>"Let us go home&mdash;let us go to your house; we will
-light a fire, the first fire of October. Let me pass this
-evening with you, Foscarina. It will rain soon. It would
-be so sweet to sit in your room and talk, or be silent,
-hand-in-hand. Come! Let us go."</p>
-
-<p>He would have liked to take her in his arms, to nurse
-her, soothe her, charm away her sadness. The sweetness
-of his own words augmented his tenderness. Of
-all her lovable person, he loved most fondly the delicate
-little lines that radiated from the corners of her eyes to
-her temples, the little purple veins that made her eyelids
-look like violets, the curve of her cheeks, the pointed
-chin, and all that seemed touched by the finger of Autumn,
-every shadow that overspread that passionate face.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina! Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>Whenever he called her by her real name, his heart
-beat faster, as if something more deeply human had entered
-into his love, as if suddenly her whole past had
-seized once more the figure he was pleased to isolate in
-his dream, and as if innumerable threads formed a bond
-uniting it more closely than ever to implacable life.</p>
-
-<p>"Come! Let us go!"</p>
-
-<p>She smiled pensively.</p>
-
-<p>"But why? The house is very near. Let us pass it by
-the Calle Gambara. Do you not wish to know the story
-of the Countess of Glanegg? Look! One would think
-it a convent."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The street was deserted as the path leading to a hermitage;
-it was gray, damp, strewn with dead leaves.
-The east wind had brought a light, warm mist that softened
-all sounds.</p>
-
-<p>"Behind those walls, a desolate soul survives the beauty
-of its body," said La Foscarina softly. "Look! The
-windows are closed, the blinds are nailed, the doors are
-sealed. Only one door is still open for the servants, and
-through it they carry the dead woman her nourishment,
-though she is walled up as if in an Egyptian tomb. The
-servants feed a body that no longer has the spirit of life."</p>
-
-<p>The naked trees, which rose to the top of the cloister-like
-enclosure, looked almost smoky in the mist; the
-sparrows, more numerous than the leaves, twittered incessantly.</p>
-
-<p>"Guess the Countess's name, Stelio. It is beautiful
-and rare&mdash;as beautiful as if you had originated it."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not know."</p>
-
-<p>"Radiana! The prisoner is called Radiana."</p>
-
-<p>"But whose prisoner is she?"</p>
-
-<p>"The prisoner of Time, Stelio. Time stands on guard
-at her door, with his scythe and hour-glass, as she is
-shown in old prints."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you trying to describe an allegory?"</p>
-
-<p>A boy passed, whistling. When he saw the two
-strangers looking at the closed windows, he stopped to
-gaze too, his large eyes full of curiosity and astonishment.
-They were silent. Presently the little boy grew
-tired of staring; nothing interesting could be seen; the
-windows were not opened; everything was motionless,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-so he ran away. They heard the flight of his little bare
-feet on the wet stones and rotting leaves.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," said Stelio, "and what did Radiana do? You
-have not yet told me who is this woman, nor the reason
-why she is a recluse. Tell me her story. I have already
-been thinking of Soranza Soranzo."</p>
-
-<p>"The Countess Glanegg is one of the greatest ladies
-of the aristocratic Viennese world, and perhaps the most
-beautiful I ever have seen. Franz Lenbach has painted
-her in the armor of the Valkyries, with the four-winged
-helmet. Have you ever visited his red studio in the
-Palazzo Borghese?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, never."</p>
-
-<p>"Go there some day, and ask him to show you that
-portrait. You will see it unchanged, as I see it now
-through all those walls. She has wished to remain like
-that in the memory of those that saw her in the splendor
-of her beauty. One day, when the sun shone too bright,
-she saw that the time had come for that beauty to fade,
-and she resolved to take leave of the world in such a
-way that men should not be witnesses of the decay and
-destruction of her famous beauty. Perhaps it was her
-sympathy with things that disintegrate and fall in ruins
-that has kept her in Venice. She gave a magnificent farewell
-banquet, where she appeared, still sovereignly beautiful;
-then she withdrew forever from the world to this
-house that you see, in this walled garden, where, alone
-with her servants, she awaits the end. She has become
-a legendary figure. They say that there are no mirrors
-in her house, and that she has forgotten her own face.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-She has forbidden even her most devoted friends and
-her nearest relatives to visit her. How does she live?
-What are her thoughts? By what means does she wile
-away the time of waiting? Is her soul in a state of
-grace?"</p>
-
-<p>Every pause in that veiled voice questioning the mystery
-was filled with deepest melancholy.</p>
-
-<p>"Does she pray? Does she contemplate? Does she
-weep? Or, perhaps, has she become inert, and suffers
-no more than a withered apple in the back of some old
-closet."</p>
-
-<p>"What if she should suddenly show herself at that
-window?" said Stelio, feeling something like a real sensation,
-as he fancied he heard a creaking hinge.</p>
-
-<p>Both looked closely at the nailed blinds.</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps she is sitting behind them, looking at us,"
-he added, in a half whisper.</p>
-
-<p>This thought made them both shudder.</p>
-
-<p>They were leaning against a wall facing the house,
-and did not wish to move a step. The encircling inertia
-affected them, the smoke-like mist enveloped them more
-and more thickly; the chatter of the birds lulled their
-senses as a drug given to feverish patients. The siren
-whistles pierced the air from afar. The brown leaves
-dropped from the trees. How long it took for a floating
-leaf to reach the earth! All around them was mist,
-heaviness, slow consumption, ashes.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II<br />
-AFTER THE STORM</h2>
-
-
-<p>"I must die, my dear&mdash;I must die!" said La
-Foscarina, in a heart-rending voice, after a
-long silence, raising her face from the cushions
-where she had buried it, after a stormy
-scene of passion, in which the ardent words of her beloved
-had given her as much pain as pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at Stelio, who had thrown himself, half
-reclining, on a divan near the balcony, and now lay
-silent, his eyes half-closed, his disordered hair touched
-with a ray of gold from the setting sun. She realized
-that she was possessed by an incurable madness, spreading
-throughout her declining body. Lost! Lost! She
-was irrevocably lost!</p>
-
-<p>"Die?" said her beloved, in a dreamy voice, without
-moving or opening his eyes, as if he were wrapped in
-a melancholy trance.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes&mdash;die&mdash;before you hate me!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio opened his eyes quickly, raised himself erect and
-held up one hand, as if to prevent her from saying more.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, why do you torment yourself in this way?" he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>He saw that she was ivory pale; her hair fell in wandering
-wavy locks over her cheeks; she seemed consumed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-by some corrosive poison; her face was full of
-terror and misery.</p>
-
-<p>"What are you doing with me? What are we both
-doing?" she exclaimed in anguish.</p>
-
-<p>"I love you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Not as I wish, not as I have dreamed; I do not wish
-to be loved thus."</p>
-
-<p>"But you set my heart on fire, and then madness
-seizes me."</p>
-
-<p>"It is like the madness of hatred."</p>
-
-<p>"No, no; do not say that!"</p>
-
-<p>"Your fierceness makes me feel that you hate me&mdash;that
-you even wish to kill me."</p>
-
-<p>"But you make me blind, I tell you, and then I know
-not what I say or do."</p>
-
-<p>"What is it that maddens you so? What do you see
-in me?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, I know not&mdash;I cannot tell!"</p>
-
-<p>"But I know very well what it is!"</p>
-
-<p>"Why do you torment yourself, I say? I love you!
-This is the love...."</p>
-
-<p>"That condemns me! I must die of it! Call me once
-more by the name you gave me long ago."</p>
-
-<p>"You are mine! You belong to me, and I will not lose
-you."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you will lose me."</p>
-
-<p>"But why? I do not understand. What wild fancy
-is this of yours? Does my love offend you? Do you not
-love me in the same way?"</p>
-
-<p>His irritation and misunderstanding only aggravated
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-her suffering. She covered her face with her hands. Her
-heart throbbed with hammer-like beating in her rigid
-breast, seeming to echo in her brain.</p>
-
-<p>Presently she raised her head and looked at him with
-painful effort.</p>
-
-<p>"I have a heart, Stelio," she said, with trembling lips,
-as if she were struggling with a sort of fierce timidity
-in order to force herself to speak those words. "I suffer
-from a heart, too keenly alive&mdash;oh, Stelio, alive and eager
-and anguished as you never will know...."</p>
-
-<p>She smiled the sweet, faint smile with which she sought
-to disguise her suffering; hesitated a moment, then
-reached toward a bunch of violets, which she took and
-pressed close to her lips. Her eyelids drooped, her classic
-brow, between her dark hair and the flowers, showed
-its ivory-like beauty.</p>
-
-<p>"You wound my heart sometimes, Stelio," she said
-softly, her lips still caressing the violets. "Sometimes
-you are cruel to it."</p>
-
-<p>It seemed as if those fragrant, humble blossoms helped
-her to confess her sadness, to veil still more the timid
-reproach she had made to her beloved. She was silent;
-Stelio bowed his head. The logs on the hearth crackled;
-the autumn rain fell monotonously in the fading garden.</p>
-
-<p>"I long for kindness, with a thirst that you never
-will understand. For that deep, true kindness, dear
-friend, which does not speak but which comprehends,
-which knows how to give all in a single look or a single
-movement; which is strong, sure, always armed against
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-the evil impulse that tempts us. Do you know the sort
-of kindness I mean?"</p>
-
-<p>Her voice, alternately strong and wavering, was so
-warm with inner light, was so full of revelation of a
-soul, that it passed through the young man's blood more
-like a spiritual essence than a sound.</p>
-
-<p>"In you, yes, Foscarina, I know it."</p>
-
-<p>He took in his own hands the slender hands that lay
-filled with violets on her lap; he bowed his head low
-over them and kissed them submissively. Then he knelt
-at her feet, in the same submission. The delicate perfume
-seemed to arouse his tenderness. During the long
-pause the fire and the rain continued their murmured
-speech.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she asked in a clear voice:</p>
-
-<p>"Do you think that I believe myself sure of you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Have you not watched over my slumbers?" he replied,
-but in an altered tone, for he was suddenly seized
-by a new emotion: with her query he had seen rise before
-him her naked soul; and he felt that that soul had
-penetrated his own, and recognized his secret yearning
-for the belief and confidence of others in himself.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, but what does that prove?" was her reply.
-"Youth sleeps quietly on any pillow. You are young"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I love you and I have faith in you! I give myself
-entirely to you. You are my life's companion, and your
-hand is strong."</p>
-
-<p>He saw the well known sadness in the lines of that
-loved face, and his voice trembled with tenderness.</p>
-
-<p>"Kindness!" said she, caressing with light touch the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-hair on his temples. "You know how to be kind&mdash;you
-even feel a need to comfort at times. But a fault has
-been committed, and it calls for expiation. Once it
-seemed to me that for you I could do the humblest as
-well as the highest things; but now I feel that I can
-do only one thing&mdash;to go away, disappear, and leave you
-free with your destiny."</p>
-
-<p>He interrupted her by springing to his feet and taking
-the loved face between his hands.</p>
-
-<p>"I can do this, which love alone could not do," she
-said softly, turning pale, and looking at him with an
-expression he never had seen before.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio felt that he held her soul in his hands&mdash;a living
-spring, infinitely beautiful and precious.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina, Foscarina! my soul, my life! Yes, you
-can give me more than love&mdash;I know it well, and nothing
-is worth to me that which you give me; no other offer
-could console me for not having you beside me on my
-way. Believe me, believe! I have said this to you so
-often&mdash;don't you remember?&mdash;even before you became all
-my own, when the compact still held between us"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Still holding her face between his palms, he leaned over
-and kissed her passionately on her lips.</p>
-
-<p>This time she shivered; the glacial flood she felt at
-times seemed passing over her.</p>
-
-<p>"No! no!" she pleaded, turning away from the young
-man. Dreamily she bent to gather up the scattered
-violets.</p>
-
-<p>"The compact!" she said, after an interval of silence.
-"Why have we violated it?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Stelio's eyes were fixed on the changeful splendor of
-the fire on the hearth, but in his open hands lingered the
-strange sensation, the trace of a miracle&mdash;that human
-face over which, through its sad pallor, had passed a
-wave of sublime beauty.</p>
-
-<p>"Why?" the woman repeated sadly. "Ah, confess&mdash;confess
-that you, too, before we were seized with the
-blind madness of that night, felt that the higher life was
-about to be devastated and lost; that we must not yield
-if we wished to save the good that remained in us&mdash;that
-powerful, intoxicating thing which seemed to be the only
-treasure left in my life. Confess, Stelio! speak the truth!
-I can almost name the exact moment when the better
-voice spoke to you in warning. Was it not on the water,
-on the way home, when we had with us&mdash;Donatella?"</p>
-
-<p>Before pronouncing that name she had hesitated a
-second, then she felt an almost physical bitterness&mdash;a
-bitterness that descended from her lips to the depths
-of her soul, as if the syllables held poison for her. She
-awaited his reply with suffering. "I do not know how
-to think about the past, Fosca," the young man replied;
-"moreover, I do not wish to think about it. I have lost
-no good attribute that belonged to me. It pleases me
-that your soul springs to your ripe lips, heavy with
-sweetness, and that your fair cheek pales when I embrace
-you."</p>
-
-<p>"Hush, hush!" she begged. "Do not speak like that!
-Do not prevent me from saying what it is that troubles
-me! Why do you not help me?"</p>
-
-<p>She shrank back among the cushions, and looked fixedly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-at the fire, to avoid meeting the eyes of her beloved.</p>
-
-<p>"More than once I have seen a look in your eyes that
-has filled me with horror," she said at last, with a touch
-of hoarseness in her effort to speak.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio started, but dared not contradict her.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, with horror," she repeated, in a clearer tone,
-implacable against herself, having already triumphed
-over her fear and regained her courage.</p>
-
-<p>Both were now face to face with the truth.</p>
-
-<p>She continued without faltering.</p>
-
-<p>"The first time I saw it was out there in the garden&mdash;that
-night&mdash;you know! I understood then what it
-was you saw in me; all the mire over which I have
-walked, all the infamy that clung to my feet, all the impurity
-for which I have so much disgust! Ah, you could
-not have acknowledged the visions that kindled your
-thoughts that night! Your eyes were cruel and your
-mouth was convulsed. When you felt that you wounded
-my sensitiveness, you took pity on me. But then&mdash;but
-since then"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Her face was covered with blushes; her voice had
-grown impetuous, and her eyes were brilliant.</p>
-
-<p>"To have nourished for years, with all the best that
-was in me, a sentiment of devotion and unbounded admiration,
-near you or from afar, in joy and in sadness;
-to have accepted in the purest spirit all the consolation
-offered by you to mankind through your poetry, and to
-have awaited eagerly other gifts, even higher and more
-consoling; to have believed in the great force of your
-genius since its dawn, and never to have relaxed my
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-watch over your ascent, and to have accompanied it
-with a wish that has been my morning and evening
-prayer all these years; to have continued, with silent
-fervor, the effort to give some beauty and harmony to my
-own spirit, that it might be more worthy to approach
-yours; so many times, on the stage, before an ardent
-audience, to have pronounced with a thrill some immortal
-phrase, thinking of those which perhaps one day you
-would communicate to mankind through my lips; to have
-worked without respite, to have tried always to rise to
-a higher and simpler form in my art, to have aspired
-unceasingly to perfection, fearing that nothing less would
-please you, that otherwise I should seem inferior to your
-dream; to have loved my fleeting glory only because
-some day it might serve yours; to have hastened, with
-the fervent confidence of faith, the latest of your revelations,
-that I might offer myself to you as the instrument
-of your victory before my own decay; against all and
-everything, to have defended this secret ideal in my soul,
-against all and against myself as much as against others;
-to have made of you my melancholy, my steadfast hope,
-my heroic test, the symbol of all things good, strong,
-and free&mdash;ah, Stelio! Stelio!"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She paused an instant, overcome by that memory as
-by a new shame.</p>
-
-<p>"And then to have reached that dawn&mdash;to have seen
-you leaving my house in that way on that horrible morning&mdash;Do
-you remember?"</p>
-
-<p>"I was happy&mdash;happy!" cried the young man, in a
-stifled voice, pale and agitated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"No, no! Do you remember? You left me as you
-would have left some light love, some passing fancy, after
-a few hours of idle pastime."</p>
-
-<p>"You deceive yourself!"</p>
-
-<p>"Confess! Come, speak the truth. Only through truth
-can we now hope to save ourselves."</p>
-
-<p>"I was happy, I tell you; my whole heart expanded
-with joy; I dreamed, I hoped, I felt as if I were born
-anew."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, yes!&mdash;happy to breathe freely, to feel your youth
-in the breeze and the fresh air. What did you see in her
-who in her renunciation had so many times suffered
-keenly&mdash;yes, you know it well!&mdash;rather than break the
-vow that she had taken and borne with her in her wanderings
-over the earth? Tell me! what did you see in
-me, if you did not believe me a corrupt creature, the
-heroine of chance amours, the vagabond actress who in
-her own life, as on the stage, may belong to any man
-and every man?"</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina! Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio leaned over her and closed her lips with a trembling
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>"No, no, do not say that! You are mad! Hush! hush!"</p>
-
-<p>"It is horrible!" murmured the woman, sinking back
-on the cushions, unnerved by her agitation, submerged
-in the bitter wave that had flooded her heart.</p>
-
-<p>But her eyes remained wide open, fixed as two crystal
-orbs, hard as if they had no lashes, fastened on Stelio.
-They prevented him from speaking, from denying or
-softening the truth they had discovered. In a moment
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-or two he found that gaze intolerable, and gently pressed
-the lids down with the tips of his fingers, as one closes
-the eyes of the dead. She noted the movement, which
-was full of infinite melancholy; she felt that only tender
-love and pity were in that touch. Her bitterness passed
-away, her eyes grew moist. She extended her arms,
-clasped them around his neck, and raised herself a little.
-She seemed to be shutting her soul within herself, and
-became once more gentle and weak, full of silent pleading.</p>
-
-<p>"And so I must go," she sighed at last. "Is there no
-help for it? Is there no pardon?"</p>
-
-<p>"I love you!" her lover repeated.</p>
-
-<p>She disengaged one arm, and held her open hand toward
-the fire, as if to conjure fate. Then once more
-she clasped her lover in a close embrace.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, still a little while! Let me remain with you a
-little longer. Then I will go away; I will go somewhere,
-far-away, and die on a stone under a tree. But let me
-stay with you a little longer."</p>
-
-<p>"I love you!"</p>
-
-<p>The blind and indomitable forces of life were whirling
-over them in that embrace. And because they realized
-this with terror their clasp grew closer; and from
-that embrace sprang an impulse, both good and evil, that
-stirred them to the soul. In the silent room, the voices
-of the elements spoke their obscure language, which was
-like an uncomprehended reply to their mute questioning.
-The fire, near them, and the rain, from without, discoursed,
-replied, narrated. Little by little, these voices
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-reached the spirit of the Animator, enticed it, charmed
-it, drew it into the world of innumerable myths, born of
-their eternity. His keener spiritual senses heard the deep
-resonance of the two melodies expressing the intimate
-essence of the two elementary wills&mdash;the two marvelous
-melodies that he had found, to weave them into the symphonic
-web of the new tragedy. Of a sudden, all sadness
-and anxiety left him as in a happy truce, an interval
-of enchantment. And the woman's clasp relaxed,
-as if in obedience to some command of liberation.</p>
-
-<p>"There is no help for it!" she repeated to herself,
-seeming to repeat a formula of condemnation heard by
-her in the same mysterious way that Stelio had heard
-the wonderful melodies.</p>
-
-<p>She leaned forward, resting her chin in her hand and
-her elbow on her knee; and in this attitude she gazed
-a long time into the fire, with a slight frown on her
-brow.</p>
-
-<p>As Stelio looked at her, his soul was troubled. He
-yearned to find some way of breaking the iron band that
-oppressed her, of dissipating that mist of sadness, of
-leading his beloved back to joy.</p>
-
-<p>The fire in its sudden burst of flame illumined her
-face and hair; her forehead was as beautiful as a noble
-manly brow; something natural and untamed was suggested
-in the rippling waves and changeful hue of her
-thick hair.</p>
-
-<p>"What are you looking at so intently?" she said at
-last, feeling his fixed gaze. "Have you found a gray
-hair?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He knelt before his love again, flexible and tender.</p>
-
-<p>"I see only your beauty. In you I always find something
-that delights me. I was looking then at the strange
-wave of your hair here&mdash;a wave not made by the comb,
-but by the storm!"</p>
-
-<p>He slipped his fingers through the thick tresses. She
-closed her eyes, feeling again the spell of his terrible
-power over her.</p>
-
-<p>"I see only your beauty. When you close your eyes
-thus, I feel that you are mine to the depth of your heart&mdash;lost
-in me, as the soul is one with the body: a single
-life, mine and thine."</p>
-
-<p>She listened in the half light, and his voice seemed
-to come from a long distance, and to be speaking not to
-her but to another woman; she felt as if she were overhearing
-a lover's protestations to his mistress, and suddenly
-fancied herself mad with jealousy, possessed by a
-desire to kill, filled with a spirit of revenge; but that
-body must remain motionless, her hands hanging at her
-sides, nerveless and powerless.</p>
-
-<p>"You are my delight and my inspiration. You have
-a stimulating power of which you are unconscious. Your
-simplest act suffices to reveal to me some truth of which
-I was ignorant. And love is like the intellect: it shines
-in the measure of the truth it discovers. Why, why do
-you grieve yourself? Nothing is destroyed, nothing is
-lost. It was intended that we should be united, so that
-together we might rise to joy and triumph. It was necessary
-that I should be free and happy in your true and
-perfect love in order to create the work of beauty that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-so many men expect of me. I need your faith; I need
-to pass through joy and to create. Your presence alone
-suffices to inspire my mind with incalculable fruitfulness.
-Just now, when your arms held me close, I heard a
-sudden torrent of music, a flood of melody, passing
-through the silence."</p>
-
-<p>To whom was he speaking? Whom did he ask for
-joy? Was not his imperious demand for music a yearning
-toward her that sang, transfiguring the universe with
-her song? Of whom, if not of fresh youth and maidenhood,
-could he ask joy and creation? While she had held
-him in her embrace, it was the other woman who had
-sung and spoken within him! And now, now&mdash;to whom
-was he speaking, if not to that other woman? She alone
-could give him what was necessary for his art and his
-life. The maiden was a new force, a closed beauty, an
-unused weapon, keen and magnificent for the intoxication
-of war. Malediction! Malediction!</p>
-
-<p>Mingled sorrow and anger stirred her heart, in that
-vibrating darkness which she dared not leave. She suffered
-the torments of a nightmare; as if she were rolling
-toward a precipice with the indestructible burden of
-her vanished years&mdash;years of misery and of triumph&mdash;her
-fading face with its thousand masks, her despairing
-soul, and the thousand other souls that had inhabited
-her mortal body. This grand passion of her life, which
-was to have saved her, seemed now to be pushing her
-relentlessly toward ruin and death. In order to reach
-her, and through her to attain to his highest joy, the
-passion of her beloved was compelled to make its way
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-through what he believed to be a multitude of unknown
-loves; it would contaminate, corrupt and embitter itself,
-perhaps even change by slow degrees to disgust. Always
-that shadowy multitude must keep alive in him that instinct
-of brutal ferocity which lurked in his strong nature.
-Ah, what had she done? She herself had armed a furious
-devastator, and had put him between her friend and
-herself. No escape was possible. She herself, on that
-night of the flame, had led before him the fresh and
-beautiful prey, of whom he had taken possession by one
-of those looks that are a choice and a promise. To whom
-was he speaking now, if not to that other woman. Of
-whom did he ask joy?</p>
-
-<p>"Do not be sad! do not be sad!"</p>
-
-<p>But now she heard his words only confusedly, more
-faint than before, as if her soul had sunk into a chasm;
-but she felt his impatient hands as they touched her
-caressingly. And, in that red darkness, wherein, as it
-seemed to her, all madnesses and folly were born, she
-felt a surging revolt in her veins.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish me to take you to her? Do you wish
-me to call her to you?" cried the unhappy woman, suddenly
-opening her eyes with an expression that astonished
-Stelio; she seized his wrists and shook him with a
-grasp so tight that he felt her nails in his flesh. "Go!
-go! She awaits you! Why do you remain here? Go,
-run! She awaits you!"</p>
-
-<p>She sprang up, raising him at the same time, and tried
-to push him toward the door. She was no longer recognizable,
-transfigured by fury into a dangerous, threatening
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-creature. The strength of her hands was incredible,
-like the energy of evil intent in her whole being.</p>
-
-<p>"Who awaits me? What did you say? What is the
-matter with you? Come back to your senses, Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>He stammered his appeal, he trembled, fancying he saw
-madness in that distorted face. But she was like one
-distraught and heard him not.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina!" He called her with all his soul, white
-with terror, as if to stop with his cry her escaping reason.</p>
-
-<p>She gave a great start, opened her hands, and gazed
-around as if just roused from a long sleep, of which she
-remembered nothing.</p>
-
-<p>"Come, sit down."</p>
-
-<p>He led her back to the cushions, and gently made her
-settle herself among them. She allowed herself to be
-soothed by his solicitous tenderness. Presently she
-moaned:</p>
-
-<p>"Who has beaten me?"</p>
-
-<p>She felt of her bruised arms, and touched her face
-lightly, trembling as if she were cold.</p>
-
-<p>"Come; lie down! Put your head here."</p>
-
-<p>He made her lie on the couch; disposed her head comfortably,
-put a light cushion over her feet, softly and carefully,
-leaning over her as over a dear invalid, giving
-up to her all his heart still throbbing with fear.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, yes," she repeated, in a voice no louder than a
-sigh, at each movement he made, as if she would prolong
-the sweetness of these cares.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you cold?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Shall I cover you with something?" Stelio inquired.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>He sought for some wrap, and found on a table a piece
-of antique velvet, which he spread over her. She smiled
-faintly.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you comfortable like that?"</p>
-
-<p>She made an affirmative sign by simply closing her
-eyelids.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio gathered up the violets, now warm and languid,
-and laid them on the pillow near her head.</p>
-
-<p>"So?"</p>
-
-<p>Her eyelids drooped even more slightly than before.
-He kissed her forehead, amid the perfume of the violets;
-then he turned to stir the fire, putting on more wood
-and raising a fine blaze.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you feel the heat? Are you getting warm?" he
-asked softly.</p>
-
-<p>He approached and bent over the poor soul. She slept;
-the contraction of her face had relaxed, and the lines of
-her mouth were composed in the equal rhythm of sleep;
-a calm like that of death spread over her pale face.
-"Sleep! Sleep!" He was so moved by love and pity that
-he would have liked to transfuse into that slumber an
-infinite virtue of consolation and forgetfulness.</p>
-
-<p>He remained standing on the rug, watching her, counting
-her respirations. Those lips had said: "I can do
-one thing that love alone cannot do." Those lips had
-said: "Do you wish me to take you to her? Do you
-wish me to call her to you?" He neither judged nor
-resolved, but let his thoughts scatter. Once again he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-felt the blind, indomitable forces of life whirling over his
-head, over that sleeping form, and also his terrible desire
-to cling to life. "The bow is named BIOS, and its
-work is death."</p>
-
-<p>In the silence, the fire and the rain continued to talk.
-The voice of the elements, the woman sleeping in her
-sadness, the imminence of fate, the immensity of the future,
-remembrance and presentiment, all these things
-created in his mind a state of musical mystery wherein
-the yet unwritten work surged anew and illumined his
-thought. He listened to his melodies developing themselves
-indefinitely, and heard a personage in the drama
-say: "This alone quenches our thirst, and all the thirst
-in us turns eagerly toward this freshness. If it did not
-exist, none could live here; we should all die of thirst."
-He saw a country furrowed by the dry, white bed of
-an ancient river, dotted with bonfires which lighted up
-the extraordinarily calm, pure evening. He saw a funereal
-gleam of gold, a tomb filled with corpses all covered
-with gold, and the crowned corpse of Cassandra among
-the sepulchral urns. A voice said: "How soft her ashes
-are! They run between the fingers like the sands of the
-sea." Another voice said: "She speaks of a shadow that
-passes over things, and of a damp sponge that effaces
-all traces." Then night fell; stars sparkled, the myrtles
-breathed perfume, and a voice said: "Ah! Behold the
-statue of Niobe! Before dying, Antigone sees a stone
-statue whence gushes an eternal fountain of tears." The
-error of the age had passed away; the remoteness of centuries
-was abolished.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III<br />
-A FALLEN GIANT</h2>
-
-
-<p>One afternoon in November, Stelio returned on
-the steamer from the Lido, accompanied by
-Daniele Glauro. They had left behind them
-the thunder of the greenish waves of the Adriatic,
-the trees of San Niccolò despoiled by a predaceous
-wind, whirlwinds of dead leaves, heroic phantoms of departures
-and arrivals, the memory of the archers playing
-to win the scarlet ensign, and the mad rides of Lord
-Byron, devoured by the desire to surpass his own destiny.</p>
-
-<p>"I too, to-day, would have given a kingdom for a
-horse," said Effrena, in self-ridicule, irritated by the mediocrity
-of life. "Not a cross-bow nor a horse in San
-Niccolò, not even the courage of an oarsman! <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Perge
-andacter!</i> So here we are, on this ignoble gray carcass
-that smokes and seethes like a kettle. Look at Venice,
-dancing down there!"</p>
-
-<p>The anger of the waves was extending to the lagoon.
-The waters were agitated by a violent wind, and the
-agitation seemed to reach to the foundations of the city,
-and the palaces, cupolas, and campaniles appeared to
-heave like vessels on the water. Clusters of floating seaweed
-showed their white roots; and flocks of sea-gulls
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-circled in the wind, their strange, wild laughter echoing
-above the crested waves.</p>
-
-<p>"Wagner!" Daniele Glauro said suddenly, in a low
-tone, touched with emotion, as he pointed at an old
-man leaning against the railing of a prow. "There he
-is, with Franz Liszt and Donna Cosima. Do you see
-him?"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio's heart beat quicker; for him too all other surrounding
-figures disappeared; his bitter sense of ennui
-and inertia disappeared; and he felt remaining only the
-suggestion of superhuman power evoked by that name,
-and realized that the only reality hovering over all those
-indistinct phantoms was the ideal world conjured up by
-that name around the little old man leaning over the
-troubled waters.</p>
-
-<p>Victorious genius, fidelity of love, unchangeable friendship,
-the supreme apparitions of heroic nature, were reassembled
-in silent union beneath the tempestuous sky.
-The same dazzling whiteness crowned the three heads,
-whose hair had become blanched through sadness. A
-troubled sorrow was revealed in their faces and attitudes,
-as if the same undefined presentiment oppressed their
-blended spirits. The white face of the woman had a
-beautiful, strong mouth, with clear-cut lines, revealing a
-tenacious soul; and her light, steel-like eyes were fixed
-continually on him who had chosen her for the companion
-of his noble warfare, watching over him who, having
-vanquished all hostile forces, would be powerless to vanquish
-Death, whose menace perpetually pursued him.
-That feminine vigil, full of fear, opposed itself to the invisible
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-gaze of the other Woman, and threw around the
-old man a vague, funereal shadow.</p>
-
-<p>"He seems to be suffering," said Daniele Glauro. "Do
-you not see? He seems almost on the point of swooning.
-Shall we go to them?"</p>
-
-<p>Effrena looked with inexpressible emotion at those
-white locks blown about by the sharp wind on the aged
-neck under the broad brim of the felt hat, and at the
-almost livid ear, with its swollen lobe. That body, which
-had withstood the keenest warfare by the proud instinct
-of its own domination, now looked as limp as some rag
-which the wind could bear away and destroy.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Daniele! what can we do for him?" said Stelio,
-yielding to an almost religious impulse to manifest in
-some way his reverence and pity for that great oppressed
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>"What can we do?" repeated Glauro, to whom that
-ardent desire to offer something of himself to the hero
-now suffering the human fate had immediately communicated
-itself. Their souls were blended in that impulse
-of fervor and gratitude, that sudden exaltation of
-their innate nobility; but they could give nothing more
-than that. Nothing could check the secret ravages of
-the fatal malady; and both were filled with profound
-sorrow as they saw the snowy hair tossed about on the
-old man's neck by the wind coming from afar, and bringing
-to the quivering lagoon the murmur and the foam
-of the open sea.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, glorious sea, thou shalt hear me still! Never
-shall I find on the earth the health I seek. To thee,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-therefore, will I remain faithful, O waves of the boundless
-sea!" The impetuous harmonies of <cite>The Flying Dutchman</cite>
-returned to Effrena's memory, with the despairing
-call that pierces through them from time to time; he
-fancied that in the rushing wind he could hear again the
-wild chant of the crew on the ship with the blood-red
-sails: <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">"Iohohé! Iohohé!</i> come ashore, black Captain!
-Seven years have passed!" Again his imagination conjured
-up the figure of Richard Wagner in youth; he saw
-once more the lonely one wandering in the living horror
-of Paris, poor yet undaunted, devoured by the fever of
-genius, his eyes fixed on his star, and his mind resolved
-to force the world to recognize it. In the myth of the
-shadowy captain, the exiled one had seen the image of
-his own breathless race, his furious struggle, his supreme
-hope. "But some day the pale hero may be delivered,
-should he meet on earth a woman that will be faithful
-to him until death."</p>
-
-<p>The woman was there, beside the hero, an ever vigilant
-guardian. She too, like Senta, knew the sovereign
-law of fidelity; and death was soon to dissolve the sacred
-vow.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you think that, steeped as he is in poetic myths,
-he has dreamed of some extraordinary manner of dying,
-and that he now prays every day to Nature to conform
-his end to his dream?" said Glauro, thinking of the
-mysterious will that induced the eagle to mistake for a
-rock the brow of Æschylus, and led Petrarch to die
-alone over the pages of a book. "What would be an end
-worthy of him?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"A new melody of unheard-of power, which in his
-youth had been to him indistinct and impossible to fix,
-should suddenly rend his soul like a terrible sword."</p>
-
-<p>"True!" said Glauro.</p>
-
-<p>The wind-driven clouds were battling in phalanxes
-through space; the towers and cupolas seemed swaying
-in the background; the shadows of city and sky, equally
-vast and mobile on the troubled waters, alternately
-changed and blended, as if they had been produced by
-things equally near dissolution.</p>
-
-<p>"Look at the Magyar, Daniele; there is a generous soul!
-He has served the hero with boundless faith and devotion;
-and by this service, more than by his art, he has
-won glory. But see how this very feeling, so strong
-and so sincere, inspires him with almost theatrical affectation,
-because of his continual wish to impose upon
-his spectators a magnificent image of himself, which
-shall delude them."</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé Liszt straightened his thin and bony frame,
-which seemed encased by a coat of mail, and drawing
-himself to his full height he bared his head to pray, addressing
-a mute prayer to the God of Tempests. The
-wind stirred his thick white hair, that leonine mane that
-at times seemed to emit electric currents which affected
-his listeners, and many women. His magnetic eyes were
-raised to heaven, while the words of his inaudible prayer
-moved his thin lips, lending a mystic air to that face so
-deeply furrowed with wrinkles.</p>
-
-<p>"What matters it?" said Glauro. "He possesses the
-divine faculty of fervor and a taste for all-powerful
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-strength and dominating passion. Does not his art aspire
-toward Prometheus, Orpheus, Dante, Tasso? He
-was attracted by Richard Wagner as by some great force
-of nature; perhaps he heard in him the theme he has attempted
-to express in his symphonic poem: 'That which
-is heard on the Mountain'."</p>
-
-<p>"That may be," said Effrena.</p>
-
-<p>But both started on seeing the old man turn suddenly,
-with the gesture of one groping in darkness, and clutch
-convulsively at his companion, who uttered a cry. They
-ran toward the group. Everyone on the boat crowded
-around them, struck by that cry of anguish. A look from
-the woman prevented the curious from venturing too
-close to the apparently lifeless body. She herself supported
-him, laid him on a bench, felt his pulse, and bent
-over to listen to his heart-beats. Her love and her
-grief traced an inviolable circle around the stricken one.
-The bystanders stepped back and waited in silence,
-anxiously looking on that livid face for signs of either
-life or death.</p>
-
-<p>The face was still and pale, as it lay on the woman's
-knees. Two deep furrows descended along the cheeks
-toward the half-open mouth, deepening near the imperious
-nose. Puffs of wind ruffled the thin, fine hair
-on the full forehead, and the white collar of beard below
-the square chin where the vigor of the jawbone was visible
-through the wrinkled skin. The temples were covered
-with perspiration, and one of the feet twitched
-slightly. The smallest detail of that fallen figure impressed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-itself forever on the minds of the two young
-men.</p>
-
-<p>How long did his suffering endure? The shadows continued
-to float over the dark water, broken at intervals
-by long shafts of sun-rays that appeared to pierce the
-air and bury themselves like arrows in the dark waves.
-The regular cadence of the engine beat upon the air;
-and now arose the wild laughter of the sea-gulls, and a
-sort of dull, prolonged moan from the tempest-stricken
-city.</p>
-
-<p>"We must carry him," said Stelio in his friend's ear;
-he was intoxicated by the sadness of the situation and
-by the solemnity of his own visions.</p>
-
-<p>The motionless face gave a slight sign of returning
-life.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, let us offer our services," said Glauro, whose
-face was pale.</p>
-
-<p>They looked at the woman with the snow-white cheeks;
-then they advanced and offered their arms.</p>
-
-<p>How long did that terrible removal last? The distance
-from the boat to the shore was not great, but those
-few steps seemed a long journey. The waves dashed
-against the posts of the pier; the distant moan came to
-them from the Grand Canal as if from the winding paths
-of a cavern; the bells of San Marco rang for vespers;
-but this confusion of sounds had lost all immediate reality,
-and seemed infinitely profound and distant, like a
-lament of the ocean itself.</p>
-
-<p>In their arms they bore the Hero's body&mdash;the unconscious
-form of him who had inundated the world with the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-flood of melody from his oceanic soul, the mortal being
-of the Revealer who had translated into infinite song the
-essence of the Universe for man's adoration. With an
-ineffable thrill of terror and joy, such as would stir a
-man who should see a mighty river dashing itself over
-vast rocks, a volcano bursting into flame, a conflagration
-devouring a forest, a dazzling meteor obscuring the
-light of the stars, Effrena felt beneath the hand that he
-had slipped under the shoulder to sustain the body&mdash;and
-he paused an instant to gather his strength, which was
-failing him, and gazed at that white head against his
-breast&mdash;he felt the renewed beating of that sacred heart.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV<br />
-THE MASTER'S VISION</h2>
-
-
-<p>"You were strong, Daniele&mdash;you who can hardly
-break a twig! And he was heavy, that old
-barbarian; his body seemed built over a
-framework of bronze: well constructed, firm,
-able to stand on a deck that might rise and fall&mdash;the
-body of a man that nature destined for the sea. Whence
-came your strength, Daniele? I almost feared for you,
-but you did not even stagger. Do you realize that we
-have borne a hero in our arms? This is a day we ought
-to distinguish and celebrate in some way. His eyes
-opened again and looked into mine; his pulse revived
-under my hand. We were worthy to carry him, Daniele,
-because of our fervor."</p>
-
-<p>"You are worthy not only to carry him, but of gathering
-and preserving some of the most beautiful promises
-offered by his art to men who still have hope."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, if only I am not overwhelmed by my own abundance,
-and if I can master the anxiety that suffocates
-me, Daniele!"</p>
-
-<p>The two friends walked on and on, side by side, in
-exalted and confident mood, as if their friendship had
-taken on an added nobility.</p>
-
-<p>"It seems as if the Adriatic had overthrown the Murazzi,
-in this tempest," said Daniele, pausing to look at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-the waves that had mounted even to the Piazza. "We
-must return."</p>
-
-<p>"No, let us cross the ferry. Here is a boat. Look at
-the reflection of San Marco on the water!"</p>
-
-<p>The boatman rowed them to the Torre dell' Orologio.
-The rising tide soon overflowed the Piazza, looking like
-a lake surrounded by porticoes, reflecting the greenish-yellow
-twilight sky.</p>
-
-<p>"EN VERUS FORTIS QUI FREGIT VINCULA
-MORTIS," read Stelio on the curve of an arch, below a
-mosaic of the Resurrection. "Did you know that Richard
-Wagner held his first colloquy with Death in Venice,
-exactly twenty years ago, at the time he produced Tristan?
-Consumed by a hopeless passion, he came here to
-die in silence, and here he composed that wild second
-act, which is a hymn to eternal night. And now fate
-has led him back to the lagoons. Fate, it seems, has
-decreed that here he shall breathe his last, like Claudio
-Monteverde. Is not Venice full of musical desire, immense
-and indefinable? Every sound transforms itself
-into an expressive voice. Listen!"</p>
-
-<p>The city of stone and water seemed indeed to have
-become as sonorous as a great organ. The hissing and
-moaning had changed to a sort of choral supplication,
-rising and falling in regular rhythm.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not hear the theme of a melody in that chorus
-of moans? Listen!"</p>
-
-<p>They had debarked from the little boat, and had resumed
-their walk through the narrow streets.</p>
-
-<p>"Listen!" Stelio repeated. "I can detect a melodic
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-theme, which swells and decreases without power to
-develop itself. Do you hear it?"</p>
-
-<p>"It is not given to me to hear what you hear," replied
-the sterile ascetic to the genius. "I will await the time
-when you can repeat to me the word that Nature speaks
-to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" Stelio resumed, "to be able to restore to melody
-its natural simplicity, its ingenuous perfection, its divine
-innocence; to draw it, living, from its eternal source,
-from the true mystery of nature, the inmost soul of
-the Universe! Have you ever reflected upon the myth
-connected with the infancy of Cassandra? She had
-been left one night in the temple of Apollo; and in the
-morning she was found lying on the marble floor,
-wrapped in the coils of a serpent that licked her ears.
-And from that day she understood all the voices of
-Nature in the air, all the melodies of the world. The
-power of the great seeress was only a high musical
-power; and a part of that Apollonian virtue entered the
-souls of the poets that coöperated in the creation of the
-tragic Chorus. One of those poets boasted of understanding
-the voices of all birds; another was able to hold
-converse with the winds; another comprehended perfectly
-the language of the sea. More than once I have
-dreamed that I too was lying on the marble floor, folded
-in the coils of that serpent. The magic of that old myth
-must be renewed, Daniele, in order that we may create
-the new art.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you ever thought what might be the music of
-that species of pastoral ode sung by the Chorus in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-<cite>&#338;dipus Tyrannus</cite>, &#338;when Jocasta flees, horror-struck, and
-the son of Laïus still cherishes the illusion of a last
-hope? Do you recall it? Try to imagine the strophes as
-if they were a frame, within which an expressive dance-figure
-is animated by the perfect life of melody. The
-spirit of Earth would rise before you: the consoling apparition
-of the great common Mother at the unhappiness
-of her stricken, trembling children&mdash;a celebration, as
-it were, of all that is divine and eternal above Man, who
-is dragged to madness and death by blind and cruel
-Destiny. Try now to conceive how this song has helped
-me in the writing of my great tragedy to find the
-means of the highest and at the same time the simplest
-expression."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you purpose, then, to reëstablish the ancient
-Chorus on the stage?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no! I shall not revive any ancient form; I intend
-to create a new form, obeying only my instinct and the
-genius of my own race, as did the Greeks when they
-created that marvelous structure of beauty, forever inimitable&mdash;the
-Greek drama. For a very long time, the
-three practicable arts of music, poetry, and dancing have
-been separated; the first two have developed toward a
-superior form of expression, but the third is in its decadence,
-and I think that now it is impossible to combine
-them in a single rhythmical structure without taking
-from one or another its own dominant character, which
-has already been acquired. If they are to blend in one
-common effect, each must renounce its own particular
-effect&mdash;in other words, become diminished. Among the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-things most susceptible of rhythm, Language is the
-foundation of every art that aspires to perfection. Do
-you think that language is given its full value in the
-Wagnerian drama? Do you not think that the musical
-conception itself often loses some of its primitive purity
-by being made to depend on matters outside the realm of
-music? Wagner himself certainly realizes this weakness,
-and shows it when he approaches a friend in Bayreuth,
-covering his eyes with his hand, that he may
-abandon his sense of hearing entirely to the virtue of
-the pure sound of the voice."</p>
-
-<p>"This is all new to me," said Glauro, "yet it rejoices
-and intoxicates me as we rejoice when we hear something
-that has been long foreseen and felt by presentiment.
-Then, as I understand, you will not superpose
-the three rhythmic arts, but will present them each in
-its single manifestation, yet all linked by a sovereign
-idea, and raised to the supreme degree by their own significant
-energy?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Daniele! how can I give you any idea of the
-work that lives within me?" Stelio exclaimed. "The
-words you use in trying to formulate my meaning are
-hard and mechanical."</p>
-
-<p>They stood at the foot of the Rialto steps. The gale
-swept over them; the Grand Canal, dark in the shadow
-of the palaces, seemed to bend like a river hastening
-to a cataract.</p>
-
-<p>"We cannot remain here," said Glauro, leaning against
-a door; "the wind will blow us down."</p>
-
-<p>"Go on; I will overtake you. Only a moment," cried
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-the master, covering his eyes with his hand, and concentrating
-his soul upon sound alone.</p>
-
-<p>Formidable was the voice of the tempest, in the midst
-of the immobility of centuries, turned to stone. Its
-unaccompanied song, its hopeless, wailing lamentation,
-was raised in memory of the multitudes that had become
-ashes, the scattered pageants, the fallen grandeur, the
-innumerable days of birth and of death&mdash;things of an
-age without name or form. All the melancholy of the
-world rushed in the wind over that eager, listening soul.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! I have seized you!" Stelio cried suddenly, with
-triumphant joy.</p>
-
-<p>The complete and perfect line of the melody had been
-revealed to him, now belonged to him, and would become
-immortal in his spirit and in the world.</p>
-
-<p>"Daniele! I have found it!"</p>
-
-<p>He raised his eyes, and saw the first stars in the
-adamantine sky. He feared to lose the precious treasure
-he had found. Near, a column he now saw a man
-with a flickering light at the end of a long pole, and
-heard the slight sound of the lighting of a lantern.
-Swiftly and eagerly he jotted down in his notebook,
-under the lamplight, the notes of the melodic theme,
-compressing into five lines the message of the elements.</p>
-
-<p>"O day of marvels!" said Daniele Glauro, on seeing
-Stelio on the steps, as light and agile as if he had robbed
-the air of some of its elasticity. "May Nature cherish
-you forever, my brother!"</p>
-
-<p>"Come, come!" said Stelio, taking him by the arm and
-urging him on with boyish gayety. "I must run!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He drew him through the narrow streets leading to
-San Giovanni Elemosinario.</p>
-
-<p>"What you told me one day, Daniele, is quite true.
-I mean that the voice of things is essentially different
-from their sound," said Stelio. "The sound of the wind
-may represent the moans of a frightened throng, the
-howling of wild animals, the falling of cataracts, the
-rustle of waving banners, or mockery, threats, and despair.
-But the voice of the wind is the synthesis of all
-these sounds: that is the voice which sings and tells
-of the terrible travail of time, the cruelty of human
-destiny, the eternal warfare for an illusion eternally
-born anew."</p>
-
-<p>"And have you never thought that the essence of
-music does not lie in the sounds alone?" asked the mystic
-doctor. "It often dwells in the silence that precedes
-and follows sound. Rhythm makes itself felt in these
-intervals of silence. Rhythm is the very heart of music,
-but its pulsation is inaudible except during the intervals
-between sounds."</p>
-
-<p>This metaphysical law confirmed Stelio in his belief
-of the justness of his own intuition.</p>
-
-<p>"Imagine," said he, "an interval between two scenic
-symphonies wherein all the <em>motifs</em> concur in expressing
-the inmost essence of the characters that are struggling
-in the drama as well as in revealing the inmost depths
-of the action, as, for instance, in Beethoven's great prelude
-in <cite>Leonora</cite>, or the prelude to <cite>Coriolanus</cite>. That musical
-silence, pulsating with rhythm, is like the mysterious
-living atmosphere where alone can appear words of pure
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-poetry. Thus the personages seem to emerge from the
-symphonic sea as if from the hidden truth that works
-within them; their spoken words will possess an extraordinary
-resonance in that rhythmic silence, will reach
-the farthest limit of verbal power, because it will be
-animated by a continuous aspiration to song that cannot
-be appeased except by the melody which must rise again
-from the orchestra, at the close of the tragic episode.
-Do you understand me?"</p>
-
-<p>"Then you place the episode between two symphonies,
-which prepare it and also terminate it, because music is
-the beginning and the end of human utterance."</p>
-
-<p>"Thus I bring nearer to the spectator the personages
-of the drama. Do you recall the figure employed by
-Schiller in the ode he wrote in honor of Goethe's translation
-of <cite>Mahomet</cite>, to signify that, on the stage, only the
-ideal world seems real. The chariot of Thespis, like
-the barque of Acheron, is so slight that it can carry
-only shadows or the images of human beings. On the
-stage commonly known, these images are so unreal that
-any contact with them seems as impossible as would
-be contact with mental forms. They are distant and
-strange, but in making them appear in the rhythmic
-silence, accompanied by music to the threshold of the
-visible world, I shall be able to bring them marvelously
-close, because I shall illumine the most secret depths
-of the will that produces them. I shall reveal, in short,
-the images painted on the veil and that which happens
-beyond the veil. Do you understand?"</p>
-
-<p>They were now entering the Campo di San Cassiano
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-lonely and deserted on the banks of the gray stream;
-their voices and their footsteps echoed there as if in
-an amphitheater of stone, distinct above the sound of
-the Grand Canal, which made a rushing noise like that
-of a river. A purple mist rose from the fever-laden
-waters, spreading like a poisonous breath. Death
-seemed to have reigned there a long time. The shutter
-of a high window beat in the wind against the wall,
-grinding on its hinges, a sign of abandonment and ruin.
-But, in the mind of the Inspirer, all these appearances
-produced extraordinary transfigurations. He saw again
-the wild and solitary spot near the tomb of Mycenæ.
-Myrtles flourished between the rugged rocks and the
-cyclopic ruins. Beside a rock lay the rigid, pure body
-of the Victim. In the death-like silence he could hear
-the murmuring water and the intermittent breath of
-the breeze among the myrtles.</p>
-
-<p>"It was in an august place," said he, "that I had the
-first vision of my new work&mdash;at Mycenæ, under the
-gateway of the Lions, while I was re-reading <cite>Orestes</cite>.
-Land of fire, country of thirst and delirium, birthplace of
-Clytemnestra and of the Hydra, earth forever sterile
-by the horror of the most tragic destiny that ever has
-overtaken a human race. Have you ever thought about
-that barbarian explorer who, after passing the greater
-part of his existence among his drugs behind a counter,
-undertook to find the tombs of the Atridæ among the
-ruins of Mycenæ, and who one day (the sixth anniversary
-of the event is of recent date) beheld the greatest
-and strangest vision ever offered to mortal eyes? Have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-you ever pictured to yourself that fat Schliemann at
-the moment when he discovered the most dazzling treasure
-ever held by Death in the dark obscurity of the
-earth for centuries&mdash;for thousands of years? Have you
-ever fancied that this superhuman and terrible spectacle
-might have been revealed to some one else&mdash;to a youthful
-and fervent spirit, to a poet, a life-giver, to you, to
-me, perhaps? Then the fever, the frenzy, the madness&mdash;Imagine!"</p>
-
-<p>He was on fire and vibrating, suddenly swept away
-by his own fancy as by a whirlwind. His seer's eyes
-sparkled with the gleam of the buried treasure. Creative
-force flowed to his brain as blood to his heart. He was
-an actor in his own drama, with accent and movement
-expressing transcendent beauty and passion, surpassing
-the power of the spoken word, the limit of the letter.
-And his brother spirit hung upon his speech, trembling
-before the sudden splendor that proved to him the truth
-of his own divinations.</p>
-
-<p>"Imagine! Imagine that the earth in which you explore
-is baleful&mdash;it must still exhale the miasma of
-monstrous wickedness. The curse upon the Atridæ was
-so terrific that some vestige of it must still have remained
-to be feared in the dust that they once trod upon.
-You are bewitched: the dead you seek and cannot find
-are reincarnated in you, and breathe in your body with
-the terrible breath with which Æschylus infused them,
-huge and sanguinary as they appear in the <cite>Orestes</cite>,
-pierced perpetually with the darts and flames of their
-destiny. Hereafter, all the ideal life with which you
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-have nourished yourself must assume the form and impress
-of reality. And still you go on in this land of
-thirst, at the foot of the bare mountain, enclosed within
-the fascination of the dead city, always delving in the
-earth, with those terrifying phantoms ever before your
-eyes in the burning dust. At each thrust of the spade
-you tremble to the very marrow, eager to see the face of
-one of the Atridæ, still perfect, but with the signs still
-visible of the violence he suffered, the inhuman carnage.
-And behold it! the gold, the gold, the bodies, piles of
-gold, bodies covered with gold"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The Atridæ princes seemed to be lying there on the
-stones, a miracle evoked in the obscurity of the pathway.
-And the one who had evoked these images, as
-well as his listener, shuddered at the same instant.</p>
-
-<p>"A succession of tombs: fifteen bodies, intact, one lying
-beside another, on a golden bed, with masks of gold
-on their faces, their brows crowned with gold and
-breasts bound with gold; and covering them, on their
-forms, at their sides, at their feet, everywhere, a prodigality
-of golden things, countless as the leaves falling
-in a fairy forest. Do you see? Do you see?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, yes, I see! I see!"</p>
-
-<p>"For a second, that man's soul has traversed hundreds
-and thousands of years, has breathed the terrible legend,
-has palpitated in the horror of the ancient carnage. For
-a second, his soul has lived that antique life of violence.
-The slain ones were all there: Agamemnon, Eurymedon,
-Cassandra, and the royal escort, and for a moment they
-lay under his eyes, motionless. Then&mdash;they vanished
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-into nothingness&mdash;do you see?&mdash;like a vapor exhaled,
-like scattered foam, like flying dust, like I know not what
-frail and fleeting thing&mdash;engulfed in the same fatal
-silence that surrounded their radiant immobility. And
-there was only a handful of dust and a mass of gold!"
-Daniele Glauro, deeply moved, seized his friend's hand;
-and the Inspirer read in his faithful eyes the mute flame
-of enthusiasm consecrated to the great work.</p>
-
-<p>They stopped near a door in the dark wall. A mysterious
-sense of distance possessed the mind of each,
-as if their souls were lost in the mists of time; and they
-fancied that behind that door an ancient people lived
-enthralled by a changeless Destiny. The sound of a
-rocking cradle came from the house, and the croon of a
-soft lullaby to a wailing child. The stars glowed in the
-narrow glimpse of sky; against the walls the sea was
-moaning. And in another spot a hero's heart suffered
-while waiting for death.</p>
-
-<p>"Life!" said Stelio, resuming his walk, and drawing
-Daniele with him. "Here, at this moment, all that
-trembles, weeps, hopes, breathes, and raves in the immensity
-of life, gathers itself in your mind, condensing
-itself there with a sublimation so rapid that you believe
-yourself able to express it all in a single word. But
-what word? What word? Do you know it? Who will
-ever know it well enough to speak it?"</p>
-
-<p>Again he was distressed at his inability to embrace
-all and express all.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you ever seen, at certain times, the whole universe
-standing before you, as distinct as a human head?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-I have, a thousand times. Ah, to cut it off, like him
-that cut off Medusa's head, at one stroke, and hold it
-up before the multitude so that it never should be forgotten!
-Have you ever thought that a great tragedy
-might resemble the attitude of Perseus? I tell you this:
-I should like to take the bronze of Benvenuto Cellini
-from the Loggia of Orcagna and place it in the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">foyer</i> of
-the new theater as an admonition. But who will give
-to a poet the sword of Hermes and the mirror of Athena?</p>
-
-<p>"Perseus!" continued the Inspirer. "In the ravine,
-below the citadel of Mycenæ, is a fountain called Perseia,
-and it is the only living thing in that place where
-all is parched and dead. Men are attracted toward it
-as to a spring of life in that region where the melancholy
-whiteness of the dried river-beds is visible late in the
-twilight. All human thirst ardently approaches that
-freshness. And throughout my work the music of that
-stream shall be heard&mdash;the water, the melody of the
-water. I have found it! In that, the pure element, shall
-be accomplished the pure Act which is the aim of the
-new tragedy. On its clear, cold waters shall sleep the
-virgin destined to die 'deprived of nuptials,' like Antigone.
-Do you understand? The pure Act marks the
-defeat of antique Destiny. The new soul suddenly
-breaks the iron band that held it, with a determination
-born of madness, of a lucid delirium that resembles
-ecstasy, or a deeper, clearer vision of Nature. In the
-orchestra, the final ode is of the salvation and liberation
-of man, obtained through pain and sacrifice. The
-monstrous Fate is there, vanquished, near the tombs of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-the Atridæ, before the very corpses of the victims. Do
-you understand? He that frees himself by means of
-the pure Act, the brother that kills his sister to save
-her soul from the horror that was about to seize her,
-has himself in reality seen the face of Agamemnon!"</p>
-
-<p>The fascination of the funereal gold had taken fresh
-hold upon his fancy; the evidence of his internal vision
-gave him a look as of one under a spell of hallucination.</p>
-
-<p>"One of the corpses surpasses all the others in height
-and in majesty: his brow is crowned with a golden diadem,
-and he wears a cuirass, shoulder-plates, and a girdle
-of gold, surrounded with swords, lances, daggers, cups,
-and countless golden discs scattered like petals over
-his body, more venerable than a demigod. The man
-bends over this body, while it is vanishing in the light
-before his very eyes, and lifts the heavy mask. Ah,
-does he not then see the face of Agamemnon? Is not
-this corpse perhaps the King of kings? The mouth and
-the eyes are open. Do you remember that passage of
-Homer's? 'As I lay dying, I raised my hands to my
-sword; but the woman with dog-like eyes went away,
-and would not close my eyes and my mouth, at the moment
-when I was about to descend to the abode of
-Hades.' Do you remember? Well, the mouth of this
-corpse is open, and its eyes are open. He has a high brow,
-ornamented with a single large golden leaf; the nose
-is long and straight, the chin oval"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The magician paused an instant, his eyes fixed and
-dilated. He was a seer. All about him disappeared, and
-his fiction remained the only reality. Daniele trembled,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-for he too was able to see through the eyes of the other.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, the white spot on the shoulder, too! He has
-raised the armor. The spot, the spot! the hereditary
-mark of the race of Pelops 'of the ivory shoulder'! Is
-he not indeed the King of kings?"</p>
-
-<p id="id195">The rapid, half-broken utterances of the seer were like
-a succession of flashes whereby he himself was dazzled.
-He had astonished even himself by that sudden apparition,
-that unexpected discovery which illumined the
-shadows of his mind, because exterior reality, and almost
-tangible. How had he been able to discover that spot
-on Agamemnon's shoulder? From what abyss of his
-memory had suddenly surged up that detail so strange,
-yet precise and decisive as a mark that affords recognition
-of a body dead since the preceding day?</p>
-
-<p>"You were there!" exclaimed Daniele, intoxicated. "It
-was you yourself that lifted that armor and that mask!
-If you have really seen what you have just described,
-you are no longer a man!"</p>
-
-<p>"I have seen! I have seen!"</p>
-
-<p>Again he became an actor in his own drama, and it
-was with a violent palpitation that he heard, from the
-lips of a living person, the words of the drama&mdash;the very
-words that were to be spoken in the episode itself: "If
-you have really seen what you have described, you are
-no longer a man." From that instant, the explorer of
-sepulchers took on the aspect of a noble hero fighting
-against the ancient destiny that had risen from the ashes
-of the Atridæ to contaminate and overthrow him.</p>
-
-<p>"Not with impunity," he continued, "does a man open
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-tombs and gaze upon the faces of the dead&mdash;and what
-dead! He lives alone with his sister, the sweetest creature
-that ever has breathed the air of earth&mdash;alone with
-her, in the dwelling full of light and silence, as in a
-prayer, a consecration. Now, imagine one that unconsciously
-drinks poison, a philter, I know not what impure
-thing, which poisons his blood and corrupts his
-thoughts&mdash;suddenly, while his soul is at peace. Imagine
-this terrible evil, this vengeance of the dead! He is
-suddenly seized by an unholy passion; he becomes the
-miserable, trembling prey of a monster; he fights a
-desperate, secret fight, without truce, without mercy,
-day and night, every hour, every moment&mdash;all the more
-atrocious the more the innocent pity of the poor creature
-inclines toward his evil. How can this man be freed?
-From the very beginning of the tragedy, as soon as the
-innocent one begins to speak, it is evident that she is
-destined to die. And all that is said and done in the
-episodes, all that is expressed by the music, and by the
-songs and dances of the interludes, serves to lead her
-slowly but inexorably toward death. She is the equal
-of Antigone. In her brief, tragic hour, she passes accompanied
-by the light of hope and the shadow of presentiment;
-she passes accompanied by songs and tears,
-by the noble love that offers joy, by the mad love
-that engenders mourning; and she never pauses except
-to fall asleep on the cold, clear waters of the
-fountain that called to her from the solitudes with
-its continual murmur. Hardly has her brother killed
-her when he receives from her, through death, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-gift of his redemption. 'All stain,' he cries, 'is
-effaced from my soul! I have become wholly pure!
-All the sanctity of my former love has reëntered my soul
-like a torrent of light. Were she here now, all my
-thoughts of her would be pure as lilies. Were she to
-rise again, she could walk over my heart as over immaculate
-snow. Now she is perfect; now she can be
-adored as a divinity. I will lay her in the deepest of
-my sepulchers, and around her I will lay all my treasures.'
-Thus, the act of death, into which he has been
-drawn by his lucid madness, becomes an act of purification
-and of liberation, marking the defeat of ancient
-Destiny. Emerging from the symphonic ocean, the ode
-shall sing of the victory of man, shall illumine the darkness
-of the catastrophe with an unknown light, and shall
-elevate to the summit of music the first word of the
-Drama renewed."</p>
-
-<p>"The gesture of Perseus!" exclaimed Daniele, still
-under the spell of exaltation. "At the end of the tragedy
-you cut off the head of the Moira, and show it to the
-multitude, ever young and ever-new, which shall bring
-the spectacle to a close amid great cries of enthusiasm."</p>
-
-<p>Both saw, as in a dream, the marble theater on the
-Janiculum, the multitude swayed by the idea of truth
-and of beauty, the illimitable starry Roman sky; they
-saw the frenzied multitude descending the slope of the
-hill, bearing in their rude hearts the confused revelation
-of poetry; they heard the clamor prolonging itself in
-the darkness of the immortal city.</p>
-
-<p>"And now good-by, Daniele," said the master, reminded
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-of his need to hasten, as if some one waited for
-him or called him.</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of the Tragic Muse remained immovable in
-the depths of his dream, sightless, petrified in the divine
-blindness of statues.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you going?"</p>
-
-<p>"To the Palazzo Capello."</p>
-
-<p>"Does La Foscarina know the thread of your work?"</p>
-
-<p>"Vaguely."</p>
-
-<p>"And what figure shall you give to her?"</p>
-
-<p>"She shall be blind, having already passed into another
-world, and gone beyond the life of this. She shall
-see that which others do not see. Her feet shall be in
-the shadows, but her head in the light of eternal truth.
-The contrasts of the tragic hour shall reverberate in
-the darkness of her soul, multiplying themselves there
-like thunder among the deep circles of solitary rocks.
-Like Tiresias, she shall comprehend everything, permitted
-or forbidden, celestial and terrestrial, and she shall
-know 'how hard it is to know when knowing is useless.'
-Ah, I shall put marvelous words into her mouth, and
-silences that shall give birth to infinite beauties."</p>
-
-<p>"On the stage," said Glauro, "whether she speaks or
-is silent, her power is almost more than human. She
-reveals to us the existence in our own hearts of the most
-secret evil and the most hidden hopes; by her enchantment,
-our past becomes present; and, by the virtue of
-her aspect, we recognize ourselves in the trials suffered
-by others throughout time, as if the soul she reveals to
-us were our own."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They stopped on the Ponte Savio. Stelio was silent,
-under a flood of love and melancholy, which had suddenly
-come upon him.</p>
-
-<p>"I wish I had not to leave you to-night, Stelio," confessed
-the faithful brother, who was also invaded by a
-peculiar melancholy. "When I am with you, I breathe
-more freely, and live a swifter life."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio was silent. The wind had abated somewhat.
-The brown church and the square tower of naked brick
-seemed to be praying silently to the stars.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know the green column that stands in San
-Giacomo dall' Orio?" Daniele resumed, intending to
-hold his friend a little longer, because he dreaded to say
-farewell. "What sublimity! It is like the fossilized
-condensation of an immense green forest. In following
-its innumerable veins, the eye travels in a dream through
-sylvan mysteries. When I look at it I fancy myself
-visiting Sila and Ercinna."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio knew the column. One day Perdita had leaned
-long against the precious shaft, contemplating the magic
-frieze of gold that curves above the canvas of Bassano,
-obscuring it.</p>
-
-<p>"To dream&mdash;always to dream," he sighed, with a return
-of that bitter impatience which had suggested sneering
-words to him when he had come on the boat from
-the Lido. "To live on relics! Think of Dandolo, who
-overthrew the column and an empire at the same time,
-and who preferred to remain doge when he might have
-become emperor. Perhaps he lived more than you, who
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-wander in fancy through forests when you examine the
-marble he pillaged. Good-by, Daniele."</p>
-
-<p>"I shall stop at the Palazzo Vendramin for news,"
-said the faithful brother.</p>
-
-<p>These words recalled afresh the thought of the great
-ailing heart, the weight of the hero in their arms, the
-terrible removal.</p>
-
-<p>"He has conquered&mdash;he can die," said Stelio.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V<br />
-SOFIA</h2>
-
-
-<p>Stelio entered La Foscarina's house like a
-spirit. His mental exaltation changed the aspect
-of things. The hall, lighted by a galley
-lamp, appeared immense to him. The detached
-cabin of a gondola standing on the pavement near the
-door, startled him as if he had suddenly seen a coffin.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Stelio!" exclaimed the actress, rising with a start
-and hastening toward him impetuously, with all the
-spring of her eagerness that had been repressed by expectation.
-"At last!"</p>
-
-<p>She stopped before him suddenly, without touching
-him. The swift impulse vibrated in her visibly. She
-was like a wind when it falls. "Who has detained you
-from me?" was her thought, while her heart was filled
-with doubt; for in one instant she had discerned something
-about the beloved one that rendered him intangible
-to her&mdash;something strange and far-away in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>But he had found her most beautiful at the very moment
-when she sprang from the shadows, animated by
-a violence like that of the tempest sweeping the lagoons.
-The cry, the gesture, the sudden halt, the vibration of
-her body, the light in her countenance suddenly extinguished
-like a fire fallen to ashes, the intensity of her
-gaze, like the glow of battle, the breath that parted her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-lips as heat breaks open the lips of the earth&mdash;all these
-aspects of her real self showed a capability of pathos
-comparable only to the effervescence of natural energies,
-the power of cosmic force. The artist recognized in
-her the Dionysian creature, the living material, apt for
-receiving the rhythms of art, to be modeled according
-to poetic forms. And, because he saw her character as
-varying as the waves of the sea, he found inert the blind
-mask he thought to put on her face; the tragic fable
-through which she was to pass in sadness seemed narrow,
-and too limited was the order of sentiment whence
-she should draw her expressions, almost subterranean
-the soul she must reveal. His mental images were
-seized with a sort of panic, a fleeting terror. What could
-be that single work in the immensity of life? Æschylus
-composed more than a hundred tragedies, Sophocles still
-more. They had constructed a world with gigantic fragments
-lifted by their titanic arms. Their labor was as
-vast as a cosmogony. The Æschylian figures seemed
-still warm with ethereal life, shining with sidereal light,
-humid from the fertilizing cloud. The spirit of the Earth
-worked in the creators.</p>
-
-<p>"Hide me, hide me! Do not ask me anything, and
-let me be silent!" he implored, incapable of concealing
-his perturbation, powerless to control the tumult of his
-disordered thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>The woman's heart beat fast in the ignorance of fear.</p>
-
-<p>"Why? What have you done?"</p>
-
-<p>"I suffer."</p>
-
-<p>"From what?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Anxiety, anxiety&mdash;from that trouble of mine which
-you know well."</p>
-
-<p>She clasped him in her arms. He felt that she was
-trembling in doubt.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you mine&mdash;are you still mine?" she asked, in a
-stifled voice, her lips pressed to his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes&mdash;always yours."</p>
-
-<p>This woman always suffered a horrible fear every time
-she saw him depart from her, every time she saw him
-return. When he went, was it not toward the unknown
-betrothed? When he returned, was it not to bid her
-a last farewell?</p>
-
-<p>She clasped him in her arms with the fondness of a
-lover, a sister, a mother&mdash;with all human love.</p>
-
-<p>"What can I do for you? Tell me!"</p>
-
-<p>A continual need tormented her to offer, to serve, to
-obey a command that urged her toward peril, toward
-a struggle to seize some good that she might bring to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"What can I give you?"</p>
-
-<p>He smiled wearily, overcome by sudden languor.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you wish? Ah, I know!"</p>
-
-<p>He smiled again, allowing himself to be caressed by
-that voice, by those adoring hands.</p>
-
-<p>"You wish for everything, do you not? You desire
-everything?"</p>
-
-<p>Still he smiled sadly, like an ailing child listening to
-descriptions of delightful games.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, if I only could! But no one in the world can
-give you anything of any value, dearest friend. Your
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-poetry and your music&mdash;they alone can demand everything.
-I remember that ode of yours beginning 'I was
-Pan.'"</p>
-
-<p>He leaned against the faithful heart his head now
-filled with the light of beautiful thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>"'I was Pan.'"</p>
-
-<p>Through his spirit passed the splendor of that lyrical
-moment, the delirium of that ode.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you seen your sea to-day? Did you see the
-storm?"</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head, without speaking.</p>
-
-<p>"Was it a great storm? One day you told me that
-you have many mariners among your forefathers. Have
-you been thinking to-day of your home on the dunes?
-Are you homesick for the sand? Do you wish to go
-back there? You have worked a great deal there, and
-have done great work. It is a consecrated house. Your
-mother was with you while you worked. You could
-hear her stepping softly in the next room. Sometimes
-she stopped to listen, did she not?"</p>
-
-<p>He embraced her silently. That voice penetrated his
-very soul, and refreshed it.</p>
-
-<p>"And your sister was with you, too? You told me her
-name once, and I have not forgotten it. She is called
-Sofia. I know that she is like you. I should like to
-hear her speak once, or to watch her walking along the
-road. Once you praised her hands. They are beautiful,
-are they not? You told me one day that when she
-is sad her hands hurt her, as if they were the roots of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-her soul. That is what you said&mdash;'the roots of her
-soul.'"</p>
-
-<p>He listened, almost happy. How had she discovered
-the secret of soothing him, the balm for his soul? From
-what hidden spring did she draw the fluid melody of
-those memories?</p>
-
-<p>"Sofia never will know the good she has done to the
-poor traveler. I know little of Sofia herself, but I know
-that she resembles you, and I have often pictured her
-to myself. I can see her at this moment. When I have
-been in distant countries, far-away among strangers,
-feeling almost lost, she has appeared to me often, and
-borne me company. She has appeared to me suddenly,
-when I had neither called nor expected her. Once I
-saw her at Mürren, where I had arrived after a long,
-weary journey, made in order to see a poor friend who
-was at the point of death. Day was breaking; the
-mountains had that cold, delicate color of beryl that is
-seen only among glaciers. Why did she come? We
-waited, together. The sun touched the summits of the
-mountains. Then a brilliant rainbow crowned them for
-a moment, then vanished. And Sofia vanished with the
-rainbow, with the miracle."</p>
-
-<p>He listened, almost happy. Were not all the beauty
-and all the truth that he himself would like to express
-contained in a stone, or in a flower of those mountains?
-The most tragic struggle of human passions was not
-worth the apparition of that mystic light upon the
-eternal snows.</p>
-
-<p>"And another time?" he asked softly, for the pause
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-was long, and he feared that she would not continue.
-She smiled, then looked sad.</p>
-
-<p>"Another time I was at Alexandria in Egypt, in a
-time of confused horror, as if after a shipwreck. The
-city had an aspect of putrefaction, like a city in decay.
-I remember: a street full of muddy water; a white horse,
-thin as a skeleton, that splashed in the water, its mane
-and tail of an ochre color; the turrets of an Arabian
-cemetery, the far-away gleam of the marsh of Mareotis.
-What misery! What disgust!"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, dear soul, never, never again shall you be left
-alone and despairing," said Stelio in his heart, now filled
-with fraternal tenderness for the nomad woman who
-recalled the sadness of her continual wanderings.</p>
-
-<p>"And another time?" he said aloud.</p>
-
-<p>"Another time it was in Vienna, in a museum. There
-was a great, empty hall, the rain whipped against the
-windows; innumerable precious relics were there in crystal
-cases; the signs of death were everywhere, exiled
-things no longer prayed to or adored. Together Sofia
-and I leaned over a case containing a collection of holy
-arms, with their metal hands fixed in an immovable
-gesture. There were martyr's hands sown with agates,
-amethysts, topaz, garnets, and pale turquoises. Through
-certain openings, splinters of bone were visible. One
-hand held a golden lily, another a miniature city, another
-clasped a column. One was smaller than the
-others; it had a ring on every finger, and held a vase
-full of ointment: the relics of Mary Magdalene. Exiled
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-things, become profane, no longer prayed to or adored.
-Is Sofia devout? Has she the habit of prayer?"</p>
-
-<p>He did not reply. He felt that he should not speak,
-nor give any visible sign of his own life in the enchantment
-of that distant life.</p>
-
-<p>"Sometimes your sister used to enter your room while
-you were at work, and lay a blade of grass on the page
-newly begun."</p>
-
-<p>The enchantress trembled; a veiled image seemed to
-be suddenly revealing itself.&mdash;Do you know that I began
-to love her&mdash;the girl that sings, the girl whom you
-cannot have forgotten&mdash;because I thought of your sister?
-Yes&mdash;in order to pour into a pure soul the tenderness
-my soul wished to offer to your sister, from whom so
-many cruel things separated me! Do you know that?&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Those words quivered with life, but they were not
-spoken; yet the voice trembled at their mute presence.</p>
-
-<p>"Then you would grant yourself a few moments of
-rest. You went to the window with her, and both gazed
-out upon the sea. A plowman drove his young oxen
-over the sand to teach them a straight furrow. When
-they were finally taught, they no longer plowed the
-sand, but went up on the hill. Who has told me these
-things?"</p>
-
-<p>He himself had told her once, almost in the same
-words, but now these memories came back like unexpected
-visions.</p>
-
-<p>"Then flocks of sheep passed along the shore; they
-came from the mountains, and were on the way to the
-plains of the Puglia. All was still; a golden silence covered
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-the shore. Later, you went with your sister, and
-followed the tracks left by the sheep along the wet
-sand.... Who has told me all these things?"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio's fevered mind was calmed. A slow peace, like
-slumber, descended upon him.</p>
-
-<p>"Then sudden storms sprang up; the sea sometimes
-overflowed the dunes and the land, leaving foam on
-juniper and tamarisk trees, on myrtle and rosemary.
-Heaps of seaweed and jetsam would be thrown on the
-beach. A boat had been wrecked somewhere. The sea
-brought firewood to the poor, and mourning to heaven
-knows whom! The beach would be thronged with
-people, each trying to collect the largest bundle of wood.
-Then your sister would bring other aid&mdash;bread, wine,
-vegetables, linen. Blessings would rise louder than the
-noise of the waves. You looked out of the window, and
-thought that none of your beautiful images was worth
-the odor of warm bread. You left the half-finished page,
-and hurried to help Sofia, speaking to the women, the
-children and the old men.... Who has told me all
-these things?"</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI<br />
-A BROTHER TO ORPHEUS</h2>
-
-
-<p>From that first evening, Stelio had preferred to
-go to the house of his beloved through the
-gate of the Gradenigo garden, making his way
-through trees and shrubs that had become wild
-again. The actress had received permission to open a
-communication between her own garden and that of
-the long-abandoned palace by means of an opening in
-the dividing wall. But soon afterward, the Lady Myrta
-had come to live in the great silent rooms wherein the
-last guest had been the son of the Empress Josephine,
-the Viceroy of Italy. The apartments were ornamented
-with old, stringless musical instruments, and the garden
-was peopled by graceful hounds, that lacked any prey.</p>
-
-<p>To Stelio, nothing seemed sweeter or more sad than
-that walk toward the woman that waited for him while
-counting the hours&mdash;so slow, yet so swift in their flight.
-In the afternoon, the path of San Simeone Piccolo turned
-a pale golden hue, like a bank of the finest alabaster.
-The reflected rays of sunlight danced on the iron prows
-that stood in a row by the pier. A few decaying gondola
-cabins lay in the shadow of the pavements, with
-their curtains and cushions stained and spoiled by rain,
-as if they were catafalques worn out by continual use
-in funeral ceremonies, grown old on the way to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-churchyard. The garden gate opened at the end of the
-Campiello della Comare, green and mossy like a country
-cemetery; it spread out between two columns, topped
-by broken statues, on the limbs of which the dry
-branches of ivy were outlined like veins.</p>
-
-<p>"Helion! Sirius! Altair! Donovan! Ali-Nour! Nerissa!
-Piuchebella!"</p>
-
-<p>Seated on a bench near a rose-covered wall, Lady
-Myrta was calling her dogs. La Foscarina stood near
-her, in a fawn-colored costume, the material of which
-resembled that superb textile called <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">rovana</i>, used in
-ancient times in Venice. The sunlight bathed the
-women and the roses in the same soft warmth.</p>
-
-<p>"You are dressed like Donovan to-day," said Lady
-Myrta to the actress, with a smile. "Did you know
-that Stelio prefers Donovan to all the others?"</p>
-
-<p>A slight blush rose to La Foscarina's cheeks; she
-looked at the fawn-colored greyhound.</p>
-
-<p>"He is the strongest and the most beautiful," she
-replied.</p>
-
-<p>"I believe that Stelio would like to have him," added
-the old lady, with a sweet, indulgent smile.</p>
-
-<p>"What is there that he would not like to have?"</p>
-
-<p>Lady Myrta noted the tinge of melancholy in the tone
-of the woman in love. She remained silent.</p>
-
-<p>The dogs lay near them, serious and sad, sleepy and
-dreamy, far from plains, steppes, and deserts, stretched
-out in the clover, where also grew the gourds, with
-their greenish-yellow fruit.</p>
-
-<p>"Does your lover grieve you?" the elder woman would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-have liked to ask of the woman in love, for the silence
-weighed on her, and she felt her own heart revivified by
-the fire within that sorrowful soul. But she dared not.
-She only sighed. Her heart, ever young, still throbbed
-at the sight of despairing passion and beauty menaced.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, you are still beautiful, and your lips still attract
-kisses, and the man that loves you can still be intoxicated
-with your sweet pallor and your eyes," she thought, as
-she looked at the pensive actress, toward whom the November
-roses leaned. "But I am a specter."</p>
-
-<p>She lowered her eyes, gazed upon her own deformed
-hands lying on her lap, and wondered that those hands
-were hers, they were so dead and distorted, lamentable
-monsters that could no longer touch anyone without
-exciting disgust, that had nothing to caress any more
-except the dogs. She felt the wrinkles in her face, the
-false teeth against her gums, the false hair on her head,
-all the ruin of her poor body, which once was obedient
-to the graceful will of her delicate spirit; and she wondered
-at her own persistence in struggling against the
-outrages of Time, in deceiving herself, in recomposing
-every morning that ridiculous illusion with essences, oils,
-unguents, rouge and powder. But, in the perpetual
-springtime of her dreams, was she not ever youthful?
-Was it not yesterday, only yesterday, that she had caressed
-a loved face with her perfect fingers, hunted the
-fox and the deer in the northern counties, danced with
-her betrothed in the park to an air of John Dowland's?&mdash;There
-are no mirrors in the house of the Countess
-Glanegg; there are too many in Lady Myrta's house&mdash;was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-La Foscarina's thought.&mdash;One has hidden her decline
-from herself and from everyone else; the other sees herself
-growing older day by day. She counts her wrinkles
-one by one, gathers up her dead hair in her comb, feels
-her teeth rattling against her pale gums, and tries to
-repair the damage by artificial devices. Poor tender
-soul, who wishes still to be smiling and charming! But
-we must die, disappear, descend into the earth!&mdash;She
-observed the little cluster of violets that Lady Myrta
-had pinned to her skirt. In all seasons fresh flowers
-were fastened there, barely visible, hidden among the
-folds, a sign of her daily illusion of springtime, of the
-ever-new enchantment she wove about herself by the
-aid of memory, music, poetry, and all the arts of dreams
-against old age, infirmity, and solitude.&mdash;We should live
-one supreme, flaming hour, then disappear forever in
-the earth before all charm has vanished, before all grace
-is dead!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She felt the beauty of her own eyes, the careless
-strength of her hair, blown back by the wind, all the
-power of rhythm and transport that slumbered in her
-muscles and her bones. She heard again in fancy the
-words of her lover, saw him again in his tender transport
-of love, in the sweetness of languor, the moments
-of profound oblivion.&mdash;Still a little while, still a few days
-longer I shall please him, and seem beautiful to him,
-and put fire in his blood. A little while longer!&mdash;With
-her feet in the deep grass, her brow raised to the sunlight,
-amid the fragrance of fading roses, in the fawn-colored
-robe that made her seem like the magnificent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-beast of prey, she glowed with passionate joy of life and
-hope, a sudden quickening of the blood, as if that future
-which she had renounced by her resolution to die were
-flowing back into the present.&mdash;Come! come!&mdash;Within
-herself she called to her beloved with a sort of intoxication,
-sure that he would come, because she already felt
-that he would, and never had she been deceived by her
-presentiment.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, here is Stelio!" said Lady Myrta at that instant,
-seeing the young man advancing among the laurels.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina turned swiftly, with a blush. The greyhounds
-rose, pricking up their slender ears. The meeting
-glance of those lovers had something in it like an
-electric flash. Again, as always, in the presence of that
-wonderful creature, her lover had the divine sensation
-of suddenly being enfolded in a cloud of flaming ether,
-in a vibrant wave that seemed to isolate him from ordinary
-atmosphere and almost to ravish his senses.</p>
-
-<p>"You were awaited here by all that dwell in this
-seclusion," said Lady Myrta, with a smile that hid the
-emotion that stirred the youthful heart in the infirm and
-aged body at the sight of love and longing. "In coming
-here, you have responded to a call."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true," said the young man, holding the collar
-of Donovan, which, remembering his caresses, had run
-to meet him. "The fact is, I have come a long distance.
-Guess from where?"</p>
-
-<p>"From the country of Giorgione!"</p>
-
-<p>"No, from the cloister of Santa Apollonia. Do you
-know that place?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Is that one of your inventions to-day?"</p>
-
-<p>"Invention? It is a cloister of stone, a real cloister,
-with a well and with little columns."</p>
-
-<p>"It may be so, but everything that you have once
-looked at, Stelio, becomes your invention."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Lady Myrta, I should like to offer you that gem
-of a cloister. I wish I might move it here, into your
-garden. Imagine a small, secret cloister, opening on
-a sequence of slender columns, set in pairs like nuns
-when they walk, fasting, in the sun; very delicate,
-neither white, gray nor black, but that most mysterious
-tint ever given to stone by the great master colorist&mdash;Time.
-In the midst of these is a well, and on the curb,
-which is worn by the rope, hangs a pail without a bottom.
-The nuns have disappeared, but I believe that the
-shades of the Danaïdes frequent the place."</p>
-
-<p>He stopped speaking suddenly, seeing himself surrounded
-by the greyhounds, and began to imitate the
-guttural sounds the kennel-men make to gather the
-dogs. The animals became excited; their wistful eyes
-brightened.</p>
-
-<p>"Ali-Nour! Crissa! Nerissa! Clarissa! Altair! Helion!
-Hardicanute! Veronese! Hierro!"</p>
-
-<p>He knew them all by name, and when he called them
-they seemed to recognize him for their master. There
-was the Scottish hound, native of the highlands, with
-thick, rough coat; the Irish wolf-hound, ruddy and
-strong, with brown irises showing clearly in their whites;
-the Tartary hound, spotted with black and yellow, a native
-of vast Asiatic steppes, where at night he had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-guarded a tent against hyenas and leopards; the Persian
-dog, light-colored and small, with ears covered with long
-silky hair, a fluffy tail, of lighter tint on the sides and
-legs, more graceful than the antelopes he had killed;
-there was also the Spanish <em>galgo</em> that had migrated with
-the Moors, that magnificent animal held in leash by a
-pompous dwarf in the painting by Velásquez, instructed
-to course and to force on the naked plains of the Mancha;
-the Arabian <em>sloughi</em>, illustrious depredator of the desert,
-with black tongue and palate, a noble animal, all pride,
-courage, and elegance, accustomed to sleep on rich rugs
-and to lap pure milk from a pure vase. Assembled in a
-pack, they quivered around him who knew how to reawaken
-in their torpid blood their primitive instincts of
-pursuit and carnage.</p>
-
-<p>"Which among you was Gog's best friend?" he asked,
-looking from one to another of the pairs of beautiful,
-eager eyes fixed upon him. "You, Hierro? You, Altair?"</p>
-
-<p>His peculiar accent animated the sensitive creatures,
-which listened with suppressed and intermittent growls.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I must tell you all something that I have kept
-secret till to-day. Gog&mdash;do you hear?&mdash;who could crush
-a hare with one snap of his jaws&mdash;Gog is crippled."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, indeed!" exclaimed Lady Myrta, concerned. "Is
-it possible, Stelio? And Magog&mdash;how is he?"</p>
-
-<p>"Magog is safe and well."</p>
-
-<p>These were the names of a pair of greyhounds that
-Lady Myrta had given to the young man.</p>
-
-<p>"How did it happen?"</p>
-
-<p>"Alas, poor Gog! He had already killed thirty-seven
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-hares. He possessed all the virtues of his fine breed:
-swiftness, resistance, incredible rapidity in turning, and
-the constant desire to kill his prey, besides the classical
-manner of running straight and seizing his prey from
-behind almost at the same instant. Have you ever
-watched a greyhound in coursing, Foscarina?"</p>
-
-<p>"Never."</p>
-
-<p>"Then you never have seen one of the rarest spectacles
-of daring, vehemence, and grace in the world. Look!"</p>
-
-<p>He drew Donovan toward him, knelt beside him, and
-began feeling the animal with his expert hands.</p>
-
-<p>"No machine in nature exists that is more exactly
-and powerfully adapted to its purpose. The muzzle is
-sharp in order to penetrate the air; it is long, so that
-the jaws can crush the prey at the first snap. The skull
-is wide between the ears in order to contain the greatest
-courage and skill. The jowls are dry and muscular, and
-the lips so short they hardly cover the teeth."</p>
-
-<p>With sure and easy touch, he opened the mouth of
-the dog, which offered no resistance.</p>
-
-<p>"Look at those white teeth! See how long the eyeteeth
-are, with a little curve at the top, the better to
-hold his prey. No other species of dog has a mouth so
-well constructed for biting."</p>
-
-<p>His hands lingered over the examination, and his admiration
-for the superb specimen was unbounded. He
-was kneeling in the clover, and received in his face the
-breath of the dog, which quietly permitted him to examine
-it, as if it comprehended and enjoyed the praise
-of the connoisseur.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"See what elegance in his ribs, arranged with the symmetry
-of a fine keel, and in that line curved inward toward
-the abdomen, which is hidden. All point to one
-aim. The tail, thick at the root and slender at the tip&mdash;look!
-almost like that of a rat&mdash;serves as a sort of
-rudder, necessary to enable him to turn swiftly when the
-hare doubles. Let us see, Donovan, whether you are
-perfect also in this respect."</p>
-
-<p>He took the tip of the tail, passed it under the leg,
-and drew it toward the haunch-bone, where it exactly
-touched the projecting part.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, perfect! Once I saw an Arab of the tribe of
-Arbâa measuring his <em>sloughi</em> in that way. Ali-Nour, did
-you tremble when you discovered the herd of gazelles?
-Imagine, Foscarina&mdash;the <em>sloughi</em> trembles when he discovers
-his prey, quivers like a willow, and turns his
-soft, pleading eyes toward his master, begging to be
-released. I do not know the reason why this pleases
-me and stirs me so much. His desire to kill is terrible;
-his whole body is ready to stretch itself like a bow, yet
-he trembles! Not with fear, nor with uncertainty, but
-with sheer desire. Ah, Foscarina! if you could see a
-<em>sloughi</em> at that moment, you would not fail to learn from
-him his manner of quivering, and you would render the
-manner human by the power of your tragic art, and
-would give mankind a new sensation. Up, Ali-Nour!
-swift desert arrow! Do you remember? But now you
-tremble only when you are cold."</p>
-
-<p>Blithe and graceful, he had let Donovan go, and had
-taken between his hands the serpentine head of the slayer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-of gazelles; he gazed into those deep eyes, wherein lurked
-nostalgia for the silent, tropical land; for tents unfolded
-after a march toward some deceiving mirage; for fires
-kindled for the evening meal under stars that seemed to
-throb in the waves of the wind just above the summits
-of the palm-trees.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina had entered into that physical enchantment
-of love whereby the limits of one's being seem to
-dilate and be fused in the air, so that every word and
-movement of the beloved object brings a feeling of happiness
-sweeter than any caress. Her lover had taken
-between his hands the head of Ali-Nour, but she felt
-the touch of those hands upon her own brow. He was
-gazing into Ali-Nour's eyes, but she could feel that gaze
-deep in her own soul.</p>
-
-<p>Had he not touched the obscurest mystery of her being?
-Did he not compel her to feel within herself the
-animal depths whence had sprung the unexpected revelation
-of her tragic genius, moving and maddening the
-multitude as would a splendid spectacle of sea and sky,
-a gorgeous sunrise, a tremendous tempest. When he had
-spoken of the trembling <em>sloughi</em>, had he not divined the
-natural analogies whence she drew the power of expression
-that amazed peoples and poets? It was because
-she had re-discovered the Dionysian sense of Nature
-as a naturalizer, the antique fervor of instinctive and
-creative energies, the enthusiasm of the multiform god
-emerging from the fermentation of all sap, that she appeared
-so new and so great on the stage. Sometimes
-she felt within herself something like an immanence of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-the miracle which in the mystic past swelled with divine
-milk the breasts of the Mænads at the approach of the
-hungry young panthers.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio began again to imitate the guttural call of the
-kennel-keeper. The dogs grew more excited; their eyes
-brightened again; the tense muscles swelled under the
-coats&mdash;tawny, black, white, gray, spotted; the long
-haunches were curved like bows ready to hurl into
-space those bodies dry and slender, like a quiver-full
-of arrows.</p>
-
-<p>"There, Donovan, there!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio pointed to a reddish-gray object in the grass
-at the end of the garden; it looked somewhat like a
-crouching hare with flattened ears. The imperious voice
-deceived the hesitating hounds, and it was beautiful to
-see the slender, vigorous bodies quivering in the sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>"There, Donovan!"</p>
-
-<p>The great tawny dog looked him deep in the eyes,
-gave a formidable bound toward the imaginary prey,
-with all the vehemence of his reawakened instinct. He
-reached the spot in an instant, then stopped, disappointed,
-followed by the whole pack.</p>
-
-<p>"A gourd! a gourd!" cried the deceiver, with shouts
-of laughter. "Not even a rabbit. Poor Donovan! He
-bit only a gourd! Poor Donovan! what humiliation!
-Take care, Lady Myrta, lest he drown himself in the
-canal for very shame!"</p>
-
-<p>From the contagion of her lover's gayety, La Foscarina
-laughed too. Her fawn-tinted gown and the tan coats
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-of the hounds shone in the sunlight against the green
-clover. Her white teeth, revealed by rippling laughter,
-graced her mouth with a renewal of youth.</p>
-
-<p>"Would you like to own Donovan?" said Lady Myrta,
-with a touch of graceful, malicious significance. "I
-know your arts!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio ceased laughing, and blushed like a boy.</p>
-
-<p>A wave of tenderness filled La Foscarina's heart as
-she saw the boyish blush. She fairly sparkled with love;
-she felt a wild wish to clasp him in her arms at that
-very moment.</p>
-
-<p>Before thanking Lady Myrta, Stelio looked again at
-the dog, admiring him as he was, strong, splendid, perfect,
-with the mark of style on his limbs as if Pisanello
-had drawn him for the reverse of a medal. Then he
-looked at La Foscarina, who had turned to the group of
-animals, moving over the grass with a swift undulation,
-like the movement called the greyhound step by the
-ancient Venetians. She advanced, with Donovan, holding
-him by the collar. The chill of evening began to
-be felt, the shadow of the bronze cupola grew longer on
-the grass; a purple mist, in which the last flecks of
-golden sunlight swam, began to spread over the branches
-that swayed in the breeze.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;See, we are yours!&mdash;the woman seemed to be saying
-mutely, while the animal, beginning to shiver, pressed
-close against her.&mdash;We are yours forever. We are here
-to serve you!</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII<br />
-ONLY ONE CONDITION</h2>
-
-
-<p>Heartrending was the sweetness of that November,
-smiling like a sick person who fancies
-himself to have reached a state of convalescence
-and feels an unusual sense of relief and
-well-being, knowing not that his hour of agony draws
-near.</p>
-
-<p>"What is the matter with you to-day, Fosca? What
-has happened to you? Why are you so distant to me?
-Speak! Tell me!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio had entered San Marco by chance, and had seen
-her there, leaning against the chapel-door that leads to
-the baptistry. She was alone, motionless, her face devoured
-by fever and by shadows, with terrified eyes fixed
-on the fearful figures of the mosaics that flamed in a
-yellow fire.</p>
-
-<p>"Leave me here alone, I entreat you&mdash;I beg of you!
-I must be alone! I implore you!"</p>
-
-<p>She turned as if to flee, but he detained her.</p>
-
-<p>"But tell me! Speak at least one word that I may
-understand."</p>
-
-<p>Still she sought to escape, and her movement expressed
-unspeakable anguish.</p>
-
-<p>"I implore you! If you pity me, the only thing you
-can do for me now is to let me go."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"But one word&mdash;at least one word, so that I shall
-understand."</p>
-
-<p>A flash of fury passed over the agitated face.</p>
-
-<p>"No! I wish to be alone!"</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was as hard as her glance. She turned,
-taking a step or two like a person overcome by dizziness
-seeking some support.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>But he dared not detain her longer. He saw the despairing
-one walk through the zone of sunlight that
-invaded the basilica like a rushing torrent entering
-through a door opened by an unknown hand. Behind
-her the deep golden cavern, with its apostles, martyrs,
-and sacred beasts, glittered as if the thousand torches
-of the daylight were pouring in on it.</p>
-
-<p>"I am lost in the depths of sadness.... This violent
-impulse to revolt against fate, to rush away in search of
-adventure&mdash;to seek.&mdash;Who will save my hope? Whence
-will come a ray of light?... To sing, to sing! But
-I would sing a song of life at last.... Can you tell
-me where the Lord of the Flame is at present?"</p>
-
-<p>These words, in a letter from Donatella Arvale, were
-branded on her eyes and on her soul, with all the characteristics
-of handwriting, as much alive as the hand
-that traced them, as throbbing as that impatient pulse.
-She saw them graved on the stones, outlined on the
-clouds, reflected in the water, indelible and inevitable
-as the decrees of Fate.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;Where shall I go? Where shall I go?&mdash;Through all
-her agitation and despair, she had still a sense of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-sweetness of things, the warmth of the gilded marbles,
-the perfume of the quiet air, the languor of human
-leisure.</p>
-
-<p>She turned with a start, fearing yet hoping to be followed
-by her lover. She could not see him. She would
-have fled had she seen him, but her heart ached as if
-he had sent her to death without a word of recall.&mdash;All
-is over!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She entered the Porta della Carta, having crossed the
-threshold. The intoxication of her sorrow led her to
-the spot where, on a night of glory, the three destinies
-had come together. She went to the well, the point of
-that rendezvous. Around that bronze curb the whole
-life of those few seconds rose again with the distinct
-outline of reality. There she had said, addressing her
-companion with a smile: "Donatella, this is the Lord
-of the Flame!" Then the immense cry of the multitude
-had drowned her voice, and above their head rose a
-flight of fiery pigeons against the dark sky.</p>
-
-<p>She approached the well, and gazed into it. She
-leaned over the curb, saw her own face in the deep mirror,
-saw in it terror and perdition, saw the motionless
-Medusa she carried in the depth of her soul. Without
-realizing it, she repeated the action of him she loved.
-She saw his face, too, and Donatella's, as she had seen
-them illumined for an instant that night, close together,
-lighted by the radiance in the sky.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;Love, love each other! I will go away, I shall disappear!
-Good-by!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She closed her eyes at the thought of death, and in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-that darkness she saw the kind, strong eyes of her
-mother, infinite as a horizon of peace.&mdash;You are at
-peace, and you await me&mdash;you whose life and death were
-of passion.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She stood erect, then departed by the Molo, stepped
-into a gondola, and ordered it to be rowed to the
-Giudecca. The buildings and the water formed a
-miracle of gold and opal. The image of dead Summer
-flashed across her memory&mdash;dead Summer dressed in
-gold and shut in a coffin of opalescent glass. She imagined
-herself submerged in the lagoon, sleeping on a bed
-of seaweed; but the memory of the promise made on
-that water, and kept in the delirium of that night, pierced
-her heart like a knife, and threw her into a convulsion.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;Never more, then? Never more!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She reached the Rio della Croce. The gondola stopped
-before a closed door. She landed, took out a small key,
-opened the door, and entered the garden.</p>
-
-<p>This was her refuge, the secret place for her solitude,
-defended by the fidelity of her melancholy as by silent
-guardians.</p>
-
-<p>"Never more?" She walked under the trellises, approached
-the water, stopped a moment, felt weary, and
-at last sat down on a stone, held her temples between
-her hands, and made an effort to concentrate her mind,
-to recover her self-possession. "He is still here, near
-me. I can see him again. Perhaps I shall find him
-standing on the steps of my house. He will take me in
-his arms, kiss my lips and eyes, tell me again that he
-loves me, that everything about me pleases him. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-does not know&mdash;he does not understand. Nothing irreparable
-has happened. What is it, then, that has so
-upset and disturbed me? I have received a letter written
-by a girl who is far-away, imprisoned in a lonely
-villa near her demented father, who complains of her
-lot and seeks to change it. That is all. There is no
-more to say. And here is the letter."</p>
-
-<p>Her fingers trembled, and she fancied she could detect
-Donatella's favorite perfume, as if the young girl
-were sitting beside her.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;Is she beautiful? Really beautiful? How does she
-look?&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The lines of the image were indistinct at first. She
-tried to seize them, but they eluded her. One particular
-above all others fixed itself in her mind&mdash;the large, massive
-hand.&mdash;Did he see her hand that night? He is very
-susceptible to the beauty of hands. When he meets a
-woman, he always looks at her hands. And he adores
-Sofia's hands.&mdash;She allowed herself to dwell on these
-childish considerations, then she smiled bitterly. And
-suddenly the image became perfect, lived, glowing with
-youth and power, overwhelmed and dazzled her.&mdash;Yes,
-she is beautiful! And hers is the beauty he desires.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She kept her eyes fixed on the silent splendor of the
-waters, with the letter on her lap; she was nailed there
-by the inflexible truth. And involuntary thoughts of
-destruction flashed upon her inert discouragement; the
-face of Donatella burned by fire, her body crippled by
-a fall, her voice ruined by an illness! Then she had a
-horror of herself, followed by pity for herself and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-other woman.&mdash;Has she not too the right to live? Let
-her live, let her love, let her have her joy.&mdash;She imagined
-for the young girl some magnificent adventure, a happy
-love, an adorable betrothed, prosperity, luxury, pleasure.&mdash;Is
-there only one man on this earth, then, that
-she can love? Is it impossible that to-morrow she might
-meet some one who would win her heart? Is it impossible
-that her fate should suddenly turn her in another
-direction, take her far from here, lead her through unknown
-paths, separate her from us forever? Is it necessary
-that she should be loved by the man I love? Perhaps
-they never will meet again.&mdash;She tried thus to escape
-her presentiment. But a contrary thought whispered:
-"They have met once; they will seek each other,
-they will meet again. Her soul is not obscure&mdash;not one
-that can be lost in the multitude. She possesses a gift
-that shines like a star, and it will always be easily recognizable
-even from afar&mdash;her song. The marvel of her
-voice will serve her as a signal. She will surely avail
-herself of this power; she too will pass among mankind
-leaving a wake of admiration behind her. She will have
-glory as she has beauty&mdash;two attributes that will easily
-attract Stelio. They have met once; they will meet
-again."</p>
-
-<p>The sorrowing woman bent as if under a yoke. A
-clear, pearly light bathed the lagoon in radiance. The
-islands of La Follia, San Clemente, and San Servilio
-were enveloped in a light mist. From a distance came
-at intervals a faint cry, as of shipwrecked sailors becalmed,
-answered by the harsh voice of a siren whistle
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-or by the raucous call of the sea-gulls. At first the
-silence seemed terrible, then it grew sweet.</p>
-
-<p>The woman, little by little, recovered her deep goodness
-of heart, felt again her old tenderness for the beautiful
-creature in whose personality she had once deceived
-her desire to love the good sister, Sofia. She thought
-again of the hours passed in the lonely villa on that
-hill of Settignano, where Lorenzo Arvale created his
-statues in the fulness of his strength and fervor, ignorant
-of the blow that was about to fall. She lived again
-in those days, saw again those places; she sat once more
-in memory for the famous sculptor who modeled her in
-clay, while Donatella sang some quaint old song; and
-the spirit of melody animated at once the model and the
-effigy, and her thoughts and that pure voice and the
-mystery of Art composed an appearance of a life almost
-divine in that great studio open on all sides to the light
-of heaven, whence Florence and its river was visible
-in the springtime valley.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to fancying the girl a reflection of Sofia,
-had she not been attracted otherwise to her&mdash;the sweet
-Donatella, who never had known a mother's caress since
-her birth? She saw her again, grave and calm beside her
-father, the comfort for his hard work, guardian of the
-sacred flame, and also of a resolve of her own&mdash;a secret
-resolve, which preserved itself as bright and keen as a
-sword in its sheath.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;She is sure of herself; she is mistress of her own
-power. When at last she knows she is free, she will reveal
-herself as one made to rule. Yes, she is made to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-subjugate men, to excite their curiosity and their dreams.
-Even now, her instinct, bold and prudent as experience
-itself, directs her.&mdash;La Foscarina remembered Donatella's
-attitude toward Stelio on that night; her almost disdainful
-silence, her brief, dry words, her manner of leaving the
-table, her disappearance, leaving the image of herself
-framed within the circle of an unforgettable melody.
-Ah, she knows the art of stirring the soul of a dreamer.
-Certainly he cannot have forgotten her. And just as
-certainly he awaits the hour when it shall be given him
-to meet her again&mdash;not less impatiently than she, who
-asks me where he is.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Again she lifted the letter and ran her eyes over it,
-but her memory traveled faster than her eyes. The
-enigmatic query was at the foot of the page, like a half-veiled
-postscript. Looking at the written words, she
-felt again the same sharp pang as when she read them
-the first time, and once more her heart was shaken as
-if the danger were imminent, as if her passion and her
-hope were already lost beyond recall.&mdash;What is she
-about to do? Of what is she thinking? Did she expect
-him to search for her without delay, and, disappointed
-in that, does she now wish to tempt him? What
-does she intend to do?&mdash;She struggled against that uncertainty
-as against an iron door which she must force
-in order to find again behind it the light of her life.&mdash;Shall
-I answer her? Suppose I reply in such a way
-as to make her understand the truth, would my love
-necessarily be a prohibition of hers?&mdash;But here her soul
-rose with a mingled feeling of repugnance, modesty, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-pride.&mdash;No, never! Never shall she learn of my wound
-from me&mdash;never, not even should she question me!&mdash;And
-she realized all the horror of an open rivalry between a
-woman no longer young and a girl strong in her maiden
-youth. She felt the humiliation and cruelty of such an
-unequal struggle. "But if not Donatella, would it not
-be some one else," again whispered the contrary spirit
-"Do you believe you can bind a man of his nature to
-your melancholy passion? The only condition under
-which you should have allowed yourself to love him,
-and to offer him a love faithful unto death, was in keeping
-the compact that you have broken."</p>
-
-<p>"True, true!" she murmured, as if answering a distinct
-voice, in formal judgment, pronounced in the silence
-by invisible Fate.</p>
-
-<p>"The only condition on which he can now accept your
-love, and recognize it, demands that you leave him free,
-that you give up all claim on him, that you renounce
-all, forever, and ask for nothing&mdash;the condition of being
-heroic. Do you understand?"</p>
-
-<p>"True, true!" she repeated aloud, raising her head.</p>
-
-<p>But the poison bit her. She remembered all the sweetness
-of caresses&mdash;the lips, the eyes, the strength and
-ardor of the lover had re-animated all her being.</p>
-
-<p>A far-away monotonous sound of song floated in the
-air&mdash;a song of women's voices, that seemed to rise from
-bosoms oppressed, from throats as slender as reeds, like
-the sound evoked from the broken wires of old spinets
-at a touch on the worn keys; a shrill, unequal tone, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-a lively and vulgar rhythm, which sounded sadder in
-that light and silence than the saddest things of life.</p>
-
-<p>"Who is singing?"</p>
-
-<p>With obscure emotion she arose, approached the shore,
-and listened.</p>
-
-<p>"The madwomen of San Clemente!"</p>
-
-<p>From the isle of La Follia, from the barred windows
-of the light, lonely hospital, came the lively yet melancholy
-chorus. It trembled, hesitated in the immensity
-of space, grew fainter and almost died away, then rose
-again and swelled to a piercing shriek, diminished once
-more, and finally sank to silence.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-ILLUSIONS</h2>
-
-
-<p>Yes, heart-rending was the sweetness of that November,
-smiling like a sick person who has become
-free from suffering, knowing it is the last,
-and tasting again the sweetness of life, which
-reveals to him new charms when just about to leave
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"Look at the Euganean hills below us, Foscarina; if
-the wind should come they will rise and float in the air
-like gauzy veils, and pass over our heads. I never have
-seen them so transparent. Some day I should like to
-go with you to Arquà; the villages there are as pink
-as the shells we find in myriads in the earth. When we
-arrive there, the first drops of a sudden shower will be
-robbing the peach-blossoms of their petals. We will
-wait under one of the arches of the Palladio to avoid
-getting wet. Then, without inquiring the way of anyone,
-we will look for the fountain of Petrarch. We will
-carry with us his poems in the small edition of Misserini's,
-that little book you keep beside your bed and cannot
-close any more because it is so full of pressed leaves
-and grasses. Would you like to go to Arquà some spring
-day?"</p>
-
-<p>She did not reply, but gazed silently at the lips that
-said these graceful things; and, without hope, she simply
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-took a fugitive pleasure in their movement and accent.
-For her there was in his image of the Spring the same
-enchantment as in a stanza of Petrarch's; but she could
-lay a bookmark in the one and find it again, while the
-poetic fancies must be lost with the passing hour.</p>
-
-<p>She wished to say: "I will not drink at that fountain,"
-but kept silence, that she might still enjoy the
-caress.&mdash;Oh, yes, intoxicate me with illusions! Play
-your own game; do with me as you will.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Here we are at San Giorgio in Alga. We shall reach
-Fusina in a few minutes."</p>
-
-<p>The little walled islet passed before them, with its
-marble Madonna, perpetually admiring her reflection in
-the water, like a nymph.</p>
-
-<p>"Why are you so sweet, my beloved? I never have
-seen you like this before. I know not where I am with
-you to-day. I cannot find words to tell you with what
-a sense of melody your presence inspires me. You are
-here beside me, I can hold your hand, yet you are diffused
-in the horizon, you yourself are the horizon, blended
-with the waters, with the islands, with the hills. When
-I was speaking just now, it seemed that each syllable
-created in you infinitely dilating circles, like those round
-that leaf just fallen from the gold-leaved tree. Is it true?
-Tell me that it is. Oh, look at me!"</p>
-
-<p>He felt himself enveloped in this woman's love as by
-the air and the light; he breathed in that soul as in a
-distinct element, receiving from it an ineffable fulness
-of life as if a stream of mysterious things were flowing
-from her and from the glory of the daylight at the same
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-time, and pouring itself into his heart. The desire to
-make some return for the happiness she gave him lifted
-him to an almost religious height of gratitude, and suggested
-to him words of thanks and of praise which he
-would have spoken had he been kneeling before her in
-the shadows. But the splendor of sky and sea around
-them was so great that he could only be as silent as
-she. And for both this was a moment of marvelous
-communion in the light; it was a journey brief yet immense,
-in which both traversed the dizzy distances they
-had within themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The boat reached the shore of Fusina. They roused
-themselves, and gazed at each other with dazzled eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;Does he love me, then?&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Hope and pain revived in the woman's heart. She
-did not doubt the sincerity of her beloved, nor that his
-words expressed the ardor of his heart. She knew how
-absolutely he abandoned himself to every wave of emotion,
-how incapable he was of deception or of falsehood.
-More than once she had heard him utter cruel truths
-with the same feline, flexible grace that some men adopt
-when they wish to appear charming. She knew well the
-direct, limpid gaze which sometimes became hard and icy,
-but which never was otherwise than straight; but she
-knew also the rapidity and marvelous diversity of emotion
-and thought that rendered his spirit unseizable.
-There was always in him something flexible and vigorous
-that suggested to the actress the double and diverse
-image of flame and of water. And it was this man she
-wished to fix, to captivate, to possess! There was always
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-in him an unlimited ardor of life, a sense of
-<em>euphoria</em>, or joy in existence, as if every second were the
-supreme instant, and he were about to tear himself from
-the pleasure and pain of living, as from the tears and
-embraces of a last farewell. And it was for this insatiable
-avidity that she wished to remain the only
-nourishment!</p>
-
-<p>What was she to him, if not an aspect of that "life of
-the thousand and thousand faces," toward which the
-poet's desire, according to one of his own images, continually
-shook all its thyrsi? For him she was a theme
-for visions and inventions, like the hills, the woods, the
-storms. He absorbed mystery and beauty from her as from
-all forms of the universe. Even now he had withdrawn
-his thoughts from her, and was occupied with a new
-quest; his changeful, ingenuous eyes sought for some
-miracle to marvel at and adore.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him, but he did not turn his face toward
-her; he was studying the damp, foggy region
-through which they were driving slowly. She sat beside
-him, feeling herself deprived of her strength, no
-longer capable of living in and for herself, of breathing
-with her own breath, of following a thought that was unknown
-to her beloved, hesitating even in her enjoyment
-of natural objects that he had not pointed out.</p>
-
-<p>Her life seemed to be alternately dissolving and condensing
-itself. An instant of intensity would pass, and
-then she waited for the next, and between them she
-was conscious of nothing save that time was flying, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-lamp was flickering, the body was fading, and that all
-things were perishing, dying.</p>
-
-<p>"My dear, my friend," said Stelio, suddenly turning
-and taking her hand, impelled by an emotion that had
-overcome him, "why did we come to these places? They
-seem very sweet, but they are full of terror."</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her keenly.</p>
-
-<p>"You suffer," he said, with a depth of pity in his tone
-that made the woman turn pale. "Do you too feel this
-terror?"</p>
-
-<p>She looked around with the anxiety of one pursued,
-and fancied she saw a thousand ominous phantoms rising
-from the earth.</p>
-
-<p>"Those statues!" said Stelio, in a tone that changed
-them in her eyes into witnesses of her own wasting
-life.</p>
-
-<p>The country around them was as deserted and silent
-as if its former inhabitants had been gone for centuries,
-or were sleeping in graves new-made the day before.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish to return? The boat is still there."</p>
-
-<p>She seemed not to hear.</p>
-
-<p>"Speak, Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>"Let us go&mdash;let us go on," she replied. "Wherever
-we may go our fate will not change."</p>
-
-<p>Her body swayed to the slow, lulling roll of the
-wheels, and she feared to interrupt it; she shrank from
-the least effort, the smallest fatigue, overcome by heavy
-inertia. Her face was like the delicate veil of ash that
-covers a live coal, hiding its consumption.</p>
-
-<p>"Dear, dear soul!" said Stelio, leaning toward her and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-lightly touching the pale cheek with his lips. "Lean on
-me; give yourself entirely to me; have confidence in
-me. Never will I fail you, never will you fail me. We
-shall find it&mdash;we shall find the true secret on which our
-love can rest forever, immovable. Do not be reserved
-with me. Do not suffer alone, nor hide your sorrows
-from me. When your heart swells with grief, speak to
-me. Let me believe that I can comfort you. Let us
-not hide anything from each other. I shall venture to
-recall to you a condition that you yourself made. Speak
-to me, and I will always answer you truthfully. Let
-me help you&mdash;me, who have received from you so much
-of good. Tell me that you do not fear to suffer. I believe
-your soul capable of supporting all the sadness of
-the world. Do not let me lose faith in that force of passion,
-whereby more than once you have seemed to me
-divine. Tell me you do not fear suffering.... I don't
-know.... I may be mistaken. But I have felt a
-shadow around you, like a desperate wish to withdraw
-yourself, to leave me, to find some end. Why? Why?
-And, just now, looking at all this terrible desolation that
-smiles at us, a great fear suddenly filled my heart&mdash;I
-thought that perhaps even your love might change like
-all things, and pass away into nothingness. 'You will
-lose me.' Ah, those words were yours, Foscarina! They
-fell from your own lips."</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer. For the first time since she had
-loved him, his words seemed vain, useless sounds, moving
-powerless through the air. For the first time, he
-seemed to her a weak and anxious creature, bound by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-inexorable laws. She pitied him as well as herself. He
-asked her to be heroic, a compact of grief and of violence.
-At the moment when he attempted to console and comfort
-her, he predicted a difficult test, prepared her for
-torture. But what was courage worth, of what use was
-any effort? What were all miserable human agitations
-worth, and why think of the future, even of the uncertain
-morrow?</p>
-
-<p>The Past reigned supreme around them, and they
-themselves were nothing, and everything was nothing.&mdash;We
-are dying; both of us are dying. We dream, and
-then we die.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Hush! Hush!" was all she said, softly, as if they
-were in a cemetery. A slight smile touched her lips,
-and rested there as fixedly as the smile on the lips of a
-portrait.</p>
-
-<p>The wheels rolled on over the white road, along the
-shores of the Brenta. The stream, sung and praised
-in the sonnets of the gallant abbés in the days when
-gondolas laden with music and pleasure had glided
-down its current, had now the humble aspect of a canal,
-where the iris-necked ducks splashed in flocks. On the
-damp, low plain the fields smoked, the bare trees showed
-plainly, their leaves rotting on the damp earth. A slow,
-golden mist floated above an immense vegetable decay
-that seemed to encroach even upon the walls, the
-stones, the houses, seeking to destroy them like the
-leaves. The patrician villas&mdash;where a pale life, delicately
-poisoned by cosmetics and perfumes, had burned itself
-out in languid pastimes&mdash;were now in ruins, silent and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-abandoned. Some had an aspect like a human ruin,
-with empty spaces that suggested hollow orbits and
-toothless mouths; others were crumbling, and looked
-as if ready to fall in powder, like a dead woman's hair
-when her tomb is opened; and here, there, everywhere,
-rose the still surviving statues. They seemed innumerable,
-like a scattered people. Some were still white,
-others were gray or yellow with lichens, or green and
-spotted with moss. They stood in all sorts of attitudes:
-goddesses, heroes, nymphs, seasons, hours, with their
-bows and arrows, their wreaths, cornucopias, and torches,
-with all the emblems of power, riches and pleasure,
-exiled now from fountains, grottoes, labyrinths, arbors,
-and porticoes: friends of the greenwood and the myrtle,
-protectors of fleeting loves, witnesses of eternal vows,
-figures of a dream far more ancient than the hands that
-had carved them, and the eyes that had contemplated
-them in the ruined gardens. And, in the sweet sunlight
-of the dying season, their shadows were like the shadows
-of the irrevocable Past&mdash;all, all that loves no
-longer, laughs and weeps no more, never will live, never
-will return. And the unspoken word on their marble
-lips was the same that was expressed in the fixed smile
-on the lips of the world-weary woman&mdash;NOTHING!</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX<br />
-THE LABYRINTH</h2>
-
-
-<p>But that day they were to pass through other
-shadows, to know other fears.</p>
-
-<p>Henceforth the tragic meaning of life filled
-both their minds, and they tried in vain to
-banish the physical sadness which from moment to moment
-made their spirits more clear yet more disturbed.
-They clasped each other's hand, as if they were groping
-in dark, dangerous places. They spoke little, but
-often they gazed into each other's eyes, and the look
-of the one poured into that of the other a wave of confused
-emotion, the mingling of their love and horror.
-But it did not calm their hearts.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall we go farther?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, let us go on."</p>
-
-<p>Still they clasped each other's hand closely, as if they
-were about to go through some strange test, and were
-resolved to experiment as to what depths could be
-reached by the combined force of their melancholy. At
-the Dolo, the wheels made the chestnut-leaves rustle
-and crackle beneath them, and the tall changing trees
-flamed over their heads like crimson draperies on fire.
-At a distance was the Villa Barbariga, silent, deserted,
-of a reddish hue in its denuded garden, showing vestiges
-of old paintings in the cracks of its façade, like
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-streaks of rouge on the wrinkled cheeks of an old woman.
-And, at every glance, the distances of the landscape
-seemed fainter and bluer, like things slowly submerged.</p>
-
-<p>"Here is Strà."</p>
-
-<p>They alighted before the Villa Pisani, and, accompanied
-by its guardian, they visited the deserted apartments.
-They heard the sound of their own footsteps on
-the marble that reflected them, the echoes in the historic
-arches, the creaking of the doors, the tiresome voice of
-the keeper awakening the memories of the place. The
-rooms were vast, hung with faded draperies and furnished
-in the style of the Empire, with Napoleonic emblems.
-The walls of one room were covered with portraits
-of the Pisani, procurators of San Marco; of another,
-with marble medallions of all the Doges; of a
-third, with a series of flowers painted in water-colors
-and mounted in delicate frames, pale as the dry flowers
-that are laid under glass, in memory of love or death.</p>
-
-<p>As La Foscarina entered one room, she said:</p>
-
-<p>"<em>In time!</em> Here, too!"</p>
-
-<p>There, on a bracket, stood a transformation into
-marble of <cite>La Vecchia</cite> by Francesco Torbido, made even
-more repulsive by the relief, by the subtle skill of the
-sculptor, to bring out with his chisel each tendon,
-wrinkle, and hollow place in the old woman's face. And
-at the doors of this room seemed to appear the ghosts
-of the crowned women that had hidden their unhappiness
-and their decay in that vast dwelling, at once like
-a palace and a monastery.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Maria Luisa di Parma, in eighteen hundred and seventeen,"
-continued the monotonous voice.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, the Queen of Spain, wife of Charles the Fourth,
-and mistress of Manuel Godoï," said Stelio. "She attracts
-me more than all the others. She came here when
-they were in exile. Do you know whether she stayed
-here with the King and the favorite!"</p>
-
-<p>But the guardian knew only that name and the date.</p>
-
-<p>"Why does she attract you?" La Foscarina asked. "I
-know nothing of her history."</p>
-
-<p>"Her end, the last years of her life of exile, after so
-much struggle and passion, are extraordinarily full of
-poetry."</p>
-
-<p>And he described that violent and tenacious character,
-the weak, credulous King, the handsome adventurer who
-had enjoyed the smiles of the Queen, and had been
-dragged through the streets by the infuriated mob; the
-agitations of the three lives bound together by Fate,
-and swept before Napoleon's will like leaves in a whirlwind;
-the tumult at Aranjuez, the abdication, the exile.</p>
-
-<p>"And Godoï&mdash;the Prince of Peace, as the King called
-him&mdash;faithfully followed the sovereigns into exile; he
-remained faithful to his royal mistress, and she to him.
-They all lived together under the same roof thenceforth,
-and Charles never doubted the virtue of Maria Luisa.
-Even to the day of his death, he lavished all manner of
-kindness on the two lovers. Imagine their life in this
-place; imagine here such a love coming safely through
-a storm so terrible. All was broken down, overthrown,
-reduced to powder by the destroyer. Bonaparte had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-passed that way, but had not smothered that love, already
-old, beneath the ruins. The faithfulness of those
-two violent natures moves my heart not less than the
-credulity of the kindly King. Thus they grew old.
-Imagine it! The Queen died first, then the King; and
-the favorite, who was younger than they, lived a wandering
-life a few years more."</p>
-
-<p>"This is the Emperor's room," said the guardian solemnly,
-flinging open a door.</p>
-
-<p>The great shade seemed omnipresent in the villa of
-the Doge Alvise. The imperial eagle, symbol of his
-power, dominated all the faded relics. But in the yellow
-room, the shade seemed to occupy the vast bed, to rest
-under the canopy, surrounded by the four bedposts ornamented
-at the top with golden flames. The formidable
-sigla inscribed within the laurel crown shone upon the
-polished side of the bed. And this species of funereal
-couch seemed to be prolonged in the dim mirror hanging
-between the two figures of Victory that supported the
-candelabra.</p>
-
-<p>"Did the Emperor sleep in this bed?" inquired the
-young man of the custodian, who pointed out to him on
-the wall the portrait of the great <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">condottiere</i> mantled in
-ermine, wearing a crown of laurel and holding a scepter,
-as he appeared at the coronation blessed by Pius VII.
-"Is it certain?"</p>
-
-<p>He was surprised at himself at not feeling the emotion
-experienced by ambitious spirits at the sight of the
-traces of heroes&mdash;that strong throb he knew so well.</p>
-
-<p>He lifted the edge of the yellow counterpane, and let
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-it fall as suddenly as if the pillow under it had been full
-of vermin.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us go away from this place; let us go!" said La
-Foscarina, who had been looking through the windows
-at the park, where the golden bars of the setting sun
-alternated with bluish-green zones of shade. "We cannot
-breathe here," she added.</p>
-
-<p>The air, in truth, was like that of a vault.</p>
-
-<p>"Now we pass into the room of Maximilian of Austria,"
-said the droning voice, "he took the dressing-room
-of Amélie de Beauharnais for his bedroom."</p>
-
-<p>They crossed this apartment in a flood of crimson
-light. The sunlight struck on a crimson couch, flashed
-rainbows from a frail chandelier with crystal drops that
-hung from the ceiling and kindled perpendicular red lines
-on the wall. Stelio stopped on the threshold, evoking in
-his fancy as he did so, the pensive figure of the young
-Archduke, with blue eyes, that fair flower of Hapsburg
-fallen in a barbaric land one summer morning!</p>
-
-<p>"Let us go!" begged La Foscarina again, seeing him
-still delay.</p>
-
-<p>She hastened through the immense salon, painted in
-fresco by Tiepolo; the Corinthian bronze gate closing behind
-her gave forth a clang as resonant as the stroke
-of a bell, sending prolonged vibrations through space.
-She flew along, terrified, as if the whole palace were
-about to crumble and fall, and the light to fail, and she
-dreaded lest she should find herself alone among the
-shadows with these phantoms of unhappiness and death.
-As Stelio followed, through the space wherein the air
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-was moved by her flight, between those walls enclosing
-relics, behind the famous actress who had simulated the
-fury of deadly passions, the desperate efforts of will and
-of desire, and the violent conflict of splendid destines on
-the stage of all lands, the warm blood in his veins grew
-chill, as if he were passing through a freezing atmosphere;
-he felt his heart grow cold, his courage flag; his
-reason for being lost its hold on his mind, and the magnificent
-illusions with which he had fed his soul, that it
-might surpass itself and his destiny, wavered and were
-dispersed.</p>
-
-<p>"Are we still living?" he asked, when they found themselves
-in the air without, in the park, far from the unwholesome
-odor.</p>
-
-<p>He took La Foscarina's hand, shook her gently, gazed
-into her eyes and tried to smile; then he drew her into
-the sunlight in the middle of the green meadow.</p>
-
-<p>"What heat! Do you feel it? How sweet the grass
-is!"</p>
-
-<p>He half-closed his eyes, that he might feel the sun's
-rays on his eyelids, and was once more filled with the
-joy of living. The woman imitated him, calmed by the
-pleasure her beloved showed; and she looked from under
-her half-closed eyelids at his fresh, sensuous mouth.
-They sat thus for some time, hand-in-hand, their feet
-resting on the warm grass. Her thoughts turned back
-to the Eugenean hills, which he had described, to the
-villages pink as the buried shells, to the first drops of
-rain on the tender leaves, Petrarch's fountain, to all
-things fair and pleasant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Life might still be sweet!" she sighed, in a voice
-wherein was the miracle of hope born anew.</p>
-
-<p>The heart of her beloved became like a fruit suddenly
-ripened by a miraculous ray. Joy, delight, and tenderness
-spread through his whole being. Once more he reveled
-in the joy of the moment, as if it were the last of life.
-Love was exalted above Destiny.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you love me? Tell me?"</p>
-
-<p>She made no answer, but she opened wide her eyes,
-and the vastness of the universe was within the circle
-of those pupils. Never was boundless love more powerfully
-signified by mortal woman.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, life with thee is sweet, sweet&mdash;yesterday as well
-as to-morrow!"</p>
-
-<p>He seemed intoxicated with her, with the sunlight,
-the grass, the divine sky, as with something never before
-seen or possessed. The prisoner leaving his stifling
-cell, the convalescent who beholds the sea after looking
-death in the face, are not more intoxicated.</p>
-
-<p>"Would you like to go now? Shall we leave our melancholy
-behind us? Would you like to go to a country
-where there is no autumn?"</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;The autumn is in myself, and I carry it everywhere&mdash;she
-thought; but she smiled the slight smile with which
-she veiled her sadness.&mdash;It is I&mdash;it is I that must go
-away alone; I will disappear; I will go far-away and
-die, my love, O my love!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>During this moment of respite, she had not succeeded
-either in conquering her sadness or reviving her hope;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-but her anguish was softened, and she had lost all bitterness
-and rancor.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish to go away?"</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;To go away, always to be going away, to wander
-throughout the world, to go long distances!&mdash;thought
-the nomad woman.&mdash;Never to stop, never to rest! The
-anxiety of the journey is not over yet, but already the
-truce has expired. You wish to comfort me, my friend,
-and, to console me, you propose that I should go far-away
-once more, although I returned to my home, as it
-were, but yesterday.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly her eyes looked like two sparkling springs.</p>
-
-<p>"Leave me in my home a little while longer. And
-remain here, too, if that is possible. Later, you will be
-free, you will be happy. You have so long a time before
-you! You are young. You will win what you deserve.
-They will not lose you, even if they must wait for you."</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes had two crystal masks before them; they
-glittered in the sunshine, and seemed almost fixed in
-her fevered face.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, always the same shadow!" Stelio exclaimed, with
-an impatience he could not conceal. "But what are you
-thinking of? What do you fear? Why not tell me what
-it is that troubles you? Explain yourself. Who is it
-that must wait for me?"</p>
-
-<p>She trembled with terror at that question, which
-seemed new and unexpected, although he only repeated
-her own last words. She trembled to find herself so
-near danger, as if, in walking across this fair meadow,
-a precipice had suddenly opened under her feet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And suddenly, in that unfamiliar place, on that beautiful
-grass, at the end of the day, after all those specters,
-sanguinary or bloodless, rose a living image of will and
-desire, which filled her with far greater terror. Suddenly,
-above all the figures of the Past, arose the figure
-of the Future, and again the aspect of her life was
-changed; and the sweetness of the respite was already
-lost, and the fair meadow with its sweet grass was
-worth nothing.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, let us talk, if you wish."</p>
-
-<p>But she was obliged to lift her face a little to keep
-her tears from falling.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not be sad!" pleaded the young man, whose soul
-was suspended on those eyelids, whence the tears would
-not fall. "You hold my heart in your hand. I never
-will fail you. Then why torment yourself? I am wholly
-yours."</p>
-
-<p>For him, too, the image of Donatella was there, with
-her rounded figure, her body as robust and agile as a
-wingless Victory, armed with the glory of maidenhood,
-attractive yet hostile, ready to struggle, and then to
-yield. But his soul was suspended from the eyelids of
-the other woman, like the tears that veiled the eyes
-in which he had seen the vastness of the universe, the
-infinity of love.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina!"</p>
-
-<p>At last the warm tears fell, but she did not let them
-course down her cheeks. With one of those movements
-that sometimes sprang from her sadness with the swift
-grace of a freed wing, she checked them, moistened her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-finger-tips with them, and touched her temples without
-drying them. And, while she still kept her tears upon
-herself, she tried to smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Forgive me, Stelio. I am so weak!"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, dear fingers&mdash;beautiful as Sofia's! Let me kiss
-them as they are, still wet."</p>
-
-<p>Within his caressing arm, he drew her across the
-field to a zone of golden green. Lightly, with his arm
-supporting hers, he kissed her finger-tips, one after another,
-more delicate than the buds of the tuberose. She
-startled, and he felt her tremble at each touch of his lips.</p>
-
-<p>"They are salt!"</p>
-
-<p>"Take care, Stelio! Some one may see us."</p>
-
-<p>"No one is here."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps down there, in the hothouses."</p>
-
-<p>"There is not a sound. Hark!"</p>
-
-<p>"What a strange silence! It is ecstasy."</p>
-
-<p>"We might hear the falling of a leaf."</p>
-
-<p>"And the keeper?"</p>
-
-<p>"He has gone to meet some other visitor."</p>
-
-<p>"Does anyone ever come here?"</p>
-
-<p>"The other day Richard Wagner came here with
-Daniela von Bülow."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, yes, the niece of the Countess Agoult, of 'Daniel
-Stern.'"</p>
-
-<p>"And, among all those phantoms, with which did that
-great stricken heart converse?"</p>
-
-<p>"Who can tell?"</p>
-
-<p>"Only with himself, perhaps."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Look at the glass windows and walls of the conservatories&mdash;how
-they sparkle! They appear iridescent.
-Rain, sunshine and time have painted it in that way.
-Does it not seem to reflect a distant twilight? Perhaps
-you have sometimes stopped on the Pesaro quay, to look
-at the beautiful pentafore window of the Evangelists. If
-you raised your eyes, you could see the windows of the
-palace marvelously painted by the changes of weather."</p>
-
-<p>"You know all the secrets of Venice!"</p>
-
-<p>"Not all yet."</p>
-
-<p>"How warm it is here! See how tall those cedars are.
-There is a swallow's nest hanging on that limb."</p>
-
-<p>"The swallows went away very late this year."</p>
-
-<p>"Will you really take me to the Euganean hills in the
-spring?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, Foscarina, I should like to do so."</p>
-
-<p>"Spring is so far-away!"</p>
-
-<p>"Life can still be sweet."</p>
-
-<p>"We are living in a dream."</p>
-
-<p>"Look at Orpheus with his lyre, all dressed in lichens."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, what a land of dreams! No one comes here any
-more. Grass, grass everywhere! There is not a single
-human footstep."</p>
-
-<p>"Deucalion with his stones, Ganymede with his eagle,
-Diana with her stag&mdash;all the gods of mythology."</p>
-
-<p>"How many statues! But these, at least, are not in
-exile. The ancient hornbeams still protect them."</p>
-
-<p>"Here strolled Maria Luisa di Parma, between the
-King and the favorite. From time to time she would
-pause to listen to the click of the blades that cut the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-hornbeams to form arches. She would let fall her handkerchief,
-perfumed with jessamine, and Don Manuel
-Godoï would pick it up with a graceful gesture, hiding
-the pain he suffered when he stooped&mdash;a souvenir of
-the outrages he had endured at the hands of the mob
-in the streets of Aranjuez. How warm the sun was,
-and how excellent the snuff in its enameled box, when
-the King said with a smile: 'Certainly, our dear Bonaparte
-is not so well off at Saint Helena as we are here.'
-But the demon of power, of struggle, and of passion was
-still alive in the Queen's heart. Look at those red
-roses!"</p>
-
-<p>"They fairly burn. One would think each had a live
-coal at its heart. Yes, they seem actually to burn."</p>
-
-<p>"The sun is growing red. This is the hour for the
-Chioggia sails on the lagoon."</p>
-
-<p>"Gather a rose for me."</p>
-
-<p>"Here is one."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, but its leaves are falling."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, here is another."</p>
-
-<p>"These leaves are falling too."</p>
-
-<p>"They are all at the point of death. Perhaps this one
-is not."</p>
-
-<p>"Do not break it off."</p>
-
-<p>"Look! These seem to be redder still. Bonifazio's
-velvet&mdash;do you remember it? It has the same strength."</p>
-
-<p>"'The inmost flower of the flame.'"</p>
-
-<p>"What a memory!"</p>
-
-<p>"Listen! They are closing the doors of the conservatories."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"It is time to go," said Stelio, abruptly yet gently.</p>
-
-<p>"The air is beginning to be cooler."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you feel cold?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, not yet."</p>
-
-<p>"Did you leave your cloak in the carriage?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"We will wait at Dolo for the train, and return to
-Venice by the railway."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"We still have time to spare."</p>
-
-<p>"What is this? Look!"</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know."</p>
-
-<p>"What a bitter odor! It is a sort of shrubbery of
-box and hornbeams."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, it is the labyrinth!"</p>
-
-<p>A rusty iron gate barred the entrance to the labyrinth
-between two columns that bore two Cupids riding
-on stone dolphins. Nothing was to be seen on the other
-side of the gate, except the beginning of the path, and
-a kind of solidly built and intricate thicket, dark and
-mysterious. In the center of the maze rose a tower, at
-the summit of which stood the statue of a warrior, as
-if reconnoitering from that point.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you ever been in a labyrinth?" Stelio inquired.</p>
-
-<p>"No, never," she replied.</p>
-
-<p>They lingered to examine the entrance to the deceptive
-playground, composed by an ingenious gardener for
-the amusement of ladies and their cavaliers in the days
-of hoops and flowered waistcoats. But age and neglect
-had rendered it mournful and wild, had deprived it of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-all appearance of grace and regularity, and had changed
-it into thick yellowish-brown woodland, full of inextricable
-turns through which the slanting rays of the setting
-sun shone so red that some of the shrubs looked like
-smokeless fire.</p>
-
-<p>"It is open," said Stelio, feeling the gate yield as he
-leaned on it. "Do you see?"</p>
-
-<p>He pushed back the rusty iron gate, took a step forward,
-and crossed the threshold.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you going?" asked his companion, with
-instinctive fear, putting out a hand to detain him.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not wish to go in?"</p>
-
-<p>She was perplexed. But the labyrinth attracted them
-with its mystery, illumined by deep flames.</p>
-
-<p>"Suppose we should lose ourselves?"</p>
-
-<p>"You can see for yourself that it is very small. We
-can easily find the gate again."</p>
-
-<p>"And suppose we don't find it?"</p>
-
-<p>He laughed at this childish fear.</p>
-
-<p>"We might remain in there through all eternity!" he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>"No, no! No one is anywhere near. Let us go away."</p>
-
-<p>She tried to draw him back, but he defended himself,
-stepping backward toward the path. Suddenly he disappeared,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio! Stelio!"</p>
-
-<p>She could see him no longer, but she heard his ringing
-laughter in the midst of the wild thicket.</p>
-
-<p>"Come back! come back!"</p>
-
-<p>"No, no! Come in and find me."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Stelio, come back! You will be lost," she called.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall find Ariadne."</p>
-
-<p>At that name, she felt her heart throb suddenly, then
-contract, then palpitate confusedly. Was not that the
-name he had called Donatella, that first night? Had he
-not called her Ariadne down there, in the gondola, while
-seated at the young girl's feet? She even remembered
-his words: "Ariadne possesses a divine gift, whereby
-her power transcends all limits." She recalled his accent,
-his attitude, his look.</p>
-
-<p>Tumultuous anguish seized upon her, obscured her
-reason, prevented her from realizing the spontaneity of
-the happening, and the simple careless jest in her friend's
-speech. The terror that lay hidden in the depths of her
-love rose in rebellion, mastered her, blinded her with
-misery. The trifling little accident assumed an appearance
-of cruelty and derision. She could still hear that
-laugh ringing from the melancholy maze.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio!"</p>
-
-<p>In her frantic hallucination, she cried out as if she had
-seen him embraced by the other woman, torn from her
-arms forever.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio!"</p>
-
-<p>"Come and find me!" he answered laughing, still invisible.</p>
-
-<p>She rushed into the labyrinth to find him, and advanced
-straight toward the voice and the laugh, guided
-by her impulse. But the path turned; a wall of bushes
-rose before her, impenetrable, and stopped her. She followed
-the winding, deceiving path; but one turning
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-followed another, and all looked alike, and the circle
-seemed to have no end.</p>
-
-<p>"Look for me!" cried the voice from a distance,
-through the living hedges.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you? Where are you? Can you see me?"</p>
-
-<p>She looked about for some opening in the hedge
-through which she might see. But all she saw was
-thick, interlacing branches, and the redness of the setting
-sun which lighted them on one side, while shadows
-darkened them on the other. The box-bushes and the
-hornbeams were so closely mingled that they increased
-momentarily the bewilderment of the breathless woman.</p>
-
-<p>"I am losing myself! Come and meet me!"</p>
-
-<p>Again that boyish laugh came from the maze.</p>
-
-<p>"Ariadne, Ariadne! the thread!"</p>
-
-<p>Now the words came from the opposite side, striking
-her heart as if with a blow.</p>
-
-<p>"Ariadne!"</p>
-
-<p>She turned back, ran, turned again, tried to break
-through the hedge, to see through the undergrowth, to
-break the branches. She saw nothing but the maze,
-always the same in every direction. At last she heard
-a step, so close that she thought it must be just behind
-her, and she started. But she was deceived. Again
-she explored her green prison; she listened, waited; she
-could hear no sound but her own breathing and the
-beating of her heart. The silence had become absolute.
-She gazed at the clear sky, curving in its immensity
-over the two green walls that held her prisoner. She
-felt that that immensity and narrowness were the only
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-things in the world. And she could not succeed in
-separating in her thoughts the reality of that place from
-the image of her mental torture, the natural aspect of
-things from that kind of living allegory created by her
-own anguish.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio, where are you?"</p>
-
-<p>No reply. She listened and waited in vain. The seconds
-seemed like hours.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you? I am afraid!"</p>
-
-<p>No reply. But where was he, then? Had he found
-the way out? Had he left her there all alone? Would
-he continue to play this cruel game?</p>
-
-<p>A mad desire to scream, to sob, to throw herself on
-the ground, to hurt herself, to make herself ill, to die,
-assailed the distracted woman. Again she raised her
-eyes to the silent sky. The tops of the tall hornbeams
-were reddened, like logs when they have ceased to blaze
-and are about to fall in ashes.</p>
-
-<p>"I can see you!" suddenly said a laughing voice, in
-the deep shadows, very near her.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you?"</p>
-
-<p>He laughed among the leaves, but without revealing
-himself, like a faun in hiding. This game excited him;
-his body grew warm and supple by this exercise of his
-agility; and the wild mystery, the contact with the earth,
-the odor of autumn, the strangeness of this unexpected
-adventure, the woman's bewilderment, even the presence
-of the marble deities mingled with his physical pleasure
-an illusion of antique poetry and grace.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Where are you? Oh, do not play any more! Do not
-laugh in that way! Enough!"</p>
-
-<p>He had crept, bareheaded, into the bushes on his hands
-and knees. He felt the dead leaves, the soft moss. And
-as he breathed among the branches, and felt his heart
-throb with the strange delight of the situation, with the
-communion between his own life and the vegetable life
-around him, the spell of his fancy renewed among
-those winding ways the industry of the first maker of
-wings, the myth of the monster that was born of Pasiphaë
-and the Bull, the Attic legend of Theseus in Crete.
-All that ancient world became real to him. In that
-glowing autumn evening, he was transfigured, according
-to the instincts of his blood and the recollections of his
-mind, into one of those ambiguous forms, half animal
-and half divine, one of those glittering genii whose
-throats were swollen with the same gland that hangs
-from the neck of the goat. A joyous voluptuousness suggested
-strange surprises to him, suggested the swiftness
-of pursuit, of flight, capture, and a fleeting embrace in
-the shadows of the wood. Then he desired some one
-like himself, fresh youthfulness that could share his
-laughter, two light feet to fly before him, two arms to
-resist him, a prize to capture at last. Donatella with her
-curved figure recurred to his mental vision.</p>
-
-<p>"Enough, Stelio! I cannot run any more. I shall
-fall."</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina uttered a scream on feeling her skirt
-pulled by a hand that had reached through the shrubbery.
-She bent down, and saw in the shadows the face
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-of a laughing faun. The laughter struck her ear without
-calming her distress, without breaking the sense of suffering
-that overpowered her. As she looked at his boyish
-face, she saw at the same instant the face of the
-singer, who seemed to be stooping with her, imitating
-her movement as if she were a shadow. Her mind became
-more confused, and she could not distinguish between
-illusion and reality. The other woman seemed
-to overthrow her, oppress her, suffocate her.</p>
-
-<p>"Leave me! Leave me! It is not I whom you seek!"</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was so changed that Stelio broke off his
-laughter and his sport, withdrew his arm, and rose to
-his feet. She could not see him; the leafy, impenetrable
-wall was between them again.</p>
-
-<p>"Take me away from this place. I cannot bear any
-more. My strength is gone. I suffer."</p>
-
-<p>He could find no words to comfort her. The simultaneous
-coincidence of his recent thought of Donatella,
-and her sudden divination of it, impressed him deeply.</p>
-
-<p>"Wait a little! I will try to find the way out. I will
-call some one."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you going away?"</p>
-
-<p>"Don't be afraid! There is no danger."</p>
-
-<p>But while he spoke thus to reassure her, he felt the
-inaneness of his words&mdash;the incongruity between that
-laughable adventure and the obscure emotion born of
-a far different cause. And now he too felt the strange
-ambiguity whereby the trifling event appeared in two
-confusing aspects: a suppressed desire to laugh persisted
-under his concern for her, so that his perturbation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-was new to him, like wild agitations born of extravagant
-dreams.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not go away!" she implored, a prey to her hallucinations.
-"Perhaps we can meet there at the next turning.
-Let us try. Take my hands."</p>
-
-<p>Through an opening, he took her hands; he started
-on touching them; they were icy cold.</p>
-
-<p>"Foscarina, what is the matter? Are you really ill?
-Wait! I will try to break through."</p>
-
-<p>He attempted to break down the hedge, and snapped
-off a few twigs, but its thickness resisted him, and he
-scratched his hands uselessly.</p>
-
-<p>"No, it is impossible."</p>
-
-<p>"Cry out! Call some one."</p>
-
-<p>He cried aloud in the silence.</p>
-
-<p>The top of the hedge had lost its deep color, but a
-red light now spread over the sky above them. A triangle
-of wild ducks passed in sweeping flight.</p>
-
-<p>"Let me go, Foscarina. I shall find the tower easily,
-and will call from there. Some one will be sure to hear
-me."</p>
-
-<p>"No! No!"</p>
-
-<p>But she heard him move away, followed the sound of
-his steps, and was once more bewildered by the maze,
-once more alone and lost. She stopped, waited, listened,
-and looked at the sky. She lost all sense of time; the
-seconds seemed hours.</p>
-
-<p>"Stelio! Stelio!"</p>
-
-<p>She was no longer capable of an effort to control her
-disordered and exasperated mind. She felt the approach
-of a crisis of mad fear, as one feels the approach of a
-whirlwind.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 414px;" id="ilop259">
-<img src="images/ilo4.jpg" width="414" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="center caption"><em><small>HE WATCHED THE WOMAN TURNING AND RUNNING LIKE
-A MAD CREATURE ALONG THE DARK, DELUSIVE PATHS</small></em></p>
-
-<p class="center caption"><em>From an Original Drawing by Arthur H. Ewer</em></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>"Stelio!"</p>
-<p>He heard that cry full of anguish, and hastened his
-search along the winding paths that first seemed to lead
-him toward the tower and then away from it. The
-laughter had frozen in his heart. His whole soul shook
-to its foundation every time his name reached him, uttered
-by that invisible agony. And the gradual lessening
-of the light brought up an image of blood that is flowing
-away, of slowly fading life.</p>
-
-<p>"I am here! I am here!"</p>
-
-<p>One of the paths brought him at last to the open
-space where the tower stood. He ran furiously up the
-winding stairs, felt dizzy when he reached the top, closed
-his eyes while grasping the railing, opened them again,
-and saw a long zone of fire on the horizon, the disk
-of the rayless moon, the gray plain, and the labyrinth
-below him, black and spotted with box-bush and horn-beam,
-narrow in its endless convolutions, looking like a
-dismantled edifice covered with wild vines.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop! Stop! Do not run like that! Some one has
-heard me. A man is coming. I can see him coming.
-Wait! Stop!"</p>
-
-<p>He watched the woman turning and running like a
-mad creature along the dark, delusive paths, like something
-condemned to vain torture, to some useless but
-eternal fatigue, like a sister of the fabulous martyrs.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop!"</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that she did not hear him, or that she could
-not control her fatal agitation, and that he could not
-rescue her, but must always remain there, a witness of
-that terrible chastisement.</p>
-
-<p>"Here he is!"</p>
-
-<p>One of the keepers had heard their cries, had approached
-them, and now entered by the gateway. Stelio
-met him at the foot of the tower, and together they
-hastened to find the lost woman. The man knew the
-secret of the labyrinth, and Stelio prevented any chatter
-and jests by surprising him with his generosity.</p>
-
-<p>"Has she lost consciousness&mdash;has she fallen?" The
-darkness and the silence were sinister, and he felt
-alarmed. She did not answer when he called her, and
-he could not hear her footsteps. Night had already fallen
-on the place, and a damp veil was descending from the
-purple sky.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I find her in a swoon upon the ground," he
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>He started at seeing a mysterious figure appear at a
-turning, with a pale face that attracted all the last rays
-of daylight, white as a pearl, with large, fixed eyes, and
-lips closely compressed.</p>
-
-<p>They turned back toward the Dolo, taking the same
-route beside the Brenta. She never spoke, never opened
-her lips, never answered, as if she could not unclose her
-teeth. She lay in the bottom of the carriage, wrapped
-in her cloak, and now and then she shook with a deep
-shudder, as one attacked by malarial fever. Her friend
-tried to take her hands in his to warm them, but in vain&mdash;they
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-were inert and lifeless. And as they drove along,
-the statues passed and passed beside them.</p>
-
-<p>The river flowed black between its banks, under the
-purple and silver sky; the moon was rising. A black
-boat came down the stream, towed by two gray horses
-with heavy hoofs, led by a man who whistled cheerfully,
-and the funnel smoked on the deck like a chimney on a
-hut. The yellow light of a lantern flashed, and the odor
-of supper floated on the air; and here and there, as they
-drove along, the statues passed and passed beside them.</p>
-
-<p>It was like a Stygian landscape, like a vision of Hades,
-a region of shadows, mist, and water. Everything grew
-misty and vanished like spirits. The moon enchanted
-and attracted the plain, as it enchants and attracts the
-water, absorbing the vapors of earth with insatiable,
-silent thirst. Solitary pools shone everywhere; small,
-silvery canals were visible, glittering at uncertain distances.
-Earth seemed to be gradually losing its solidity,
-and the sky seemed to regard its own melancholy reflected
-in innumerable placid mirrors.</p>
-
-<p>And here and there, along the banks of the stream,
-like the ghosts of a people disappeared, the statues
-passed and passed!</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X<br />
-THE POWER OF THE FLAME</h2>
-
-
-<p>"Do you think often of Donatella, Stelio?" La
-Foscarina inquired suddenly, after a long
-silence, during which neither had heard anything
-but the sound of their own footsteps
-along the canal path of the Vetrai, illumined by the
-multi-colored lights from the fragile objects that filled
-the windows of the neighboring shops.</p>
-
-<p>Her voice sounded harsh and strained. Stelio stopped
-suddenly, as one who finds himself confronted by an
-unexpected difficulty. His spirit had been roaming over
-the red and green isle of Murano, begemmed with flowers
-in her present desolate poverty, which seemed to blot
-out the memory of the joyous time when poets had sung
-her praises as "a sojourn for nymphs and demigods." He
-had been thinking of the famous gardens where Andrea
-Navagero, Cardinal Bembo, Aretino, Aldo, and their
-learned followers, rivaled one another in the elegance of
-their Platonic dialogues, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">lauri sub umbra</i>. He had been
-thinking of convents, luxurious as boudoirs, inhabited by
-little nuns dressed in white camelot and laces, with curls
-on their temples, and necks uncovered, after the fashion
-of the ancient honored courtesans, given to secret loves,
-much sought after by wealthy patricians, with such euphonious
-names as Ancilla Soranzo, Cipriana Morosini,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-Zanetta Balbi, Beatrice Falier, Eugenia Muschiera, pious
-instructors in the ways of love. His changeful dreams
-were accompanied by a plaintive little air, a forgotten
-dance measure, in which the faint soul of Murano tinkled
-and whispered.</p>
-
-<p>At this abrupt question, the air fled from his memory,
-all imaginings were dispersed, the enchantment of the
-old life vanished. His wandering mind was called back,
-and came with reluctance. He felt beside him the throbbing
-of a living heart, which he must inevitably wound.
-He looked at his friend.</p>
-
-<p>She was walking beside the canal, calm, with no sign
-of agitation, between the green water and the iridescence
-of the rows of delicate vases. Only her slender
-chin trembled slightly, between her short veil and fur
-collar.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sometimes," he replied, after an instant of hesitation,
-recoiling from falsehood, and feeling the necessity
-to elevate their love above ordinary deceptions and
-pretensions, so that it should remain for him a cause
-of strength, not of weakness, a free agreement, not a
-heavy chain.</p>
-
-<p>She pursued her way without wavering, but she had
-lost all consciousness of movement in the terrible throbbing
-of her heart, which shook her from head to foot. She
-saw nothing more: all she was aware of was the nearness
-of the fascinating water.</p>
-
-<p>"Her voice is unforgettable," Stelio went on, after a
-pause, having found his courage. "Its power is amazing.
-From that first evening, I have thought that that singer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-might be the marvelous instrument for my great work.
-I wish she would consent to sing the lyric parts of my
-tragedy, the odes that arise from the symphonies and
-resolve themselves into figures of the dance at the end,
-between episodes. La Tanagra has consented to dance.
-I have confidence in your good offices, dear friend, to
-obtain also the consent of Donatella Arvale. Thus the
-Dionysiac trinity would be reëstablished in a perfect
-manner on the new stage, for the joy of mankind."</p>
-
-<p>Even while he spoke he realized that his words had a
-false ring, that his unconscious air contrasted too crudely
-with the dark shadow on the woman's face. In spite of
-himself, he had exaggerated his frank tone in speaking
-of Donatella merely as an instrument of art, a purely
-ideal force to be drawn into the circle of his magnificent
-enterprise. In spite of himself, disturbed by the anxiety
-in that soul so near his own, he had leaned slightly
-toward deception. Certainly what he had said was the
-exact truth, but his friend had demanded from him another
-truth. He broke off suddenly, unable to endure
-the sound of his own words. He felt that at that hour,
-between the actress and himself, art had no meaning,
-no vital value. Another force dominated them, more
-imperious, more disquieting. The world created by intellect
-seemed inert as the ancient stones on which they
-trod. The only real and formidable power was the poison
-running in their human blood. The will of the one said:
-"It is my will that you shall love and serve me, wholly,
-mine alone, body and soul." The will of the other said:
-"It is my will that you shall love and serve me, but while
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-I live I shall renounce nothing that may appeal to my
-wish and fancy." The struggle was bitter and unequal.</p>
-
-<p>As she remained silent, unconsciously hastening her
-steps, he prepared himself to face the other truth.</p>
-
-<p>"I understand, of course, that that was not what you
-wished to know."</p>
-
-<p>"You are right: it was not that. Well?"</p>
-
-<p>She turned to him with a sort of convulsive violence
-that reminded him of her fury one far-off evening, when
-she had cried madly: "Go! Run! She awaits you!"</p>
-
-<p>At this moment a workman met them, and offered to
-show them over the neighboring glass factory.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, let us go in there," said La Foscarina, hurriedly
-following the workman. Presently they reached the furnace room,
-and were enveloped in its fiery breath, as they
-gazed at an incandescent altar, the glow from which
-dazzled their eyes with a painful glare.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;To disappear, to be swallowed up, to leave no sign!&mdash;cried
-the woman's heart, intoxicated with the thought
-of destruction.&mdash;In one second that fire could devour me
-like a dry stick, a bundle of straw.&mdash;And she went nearer
-to the open mouths in which she could see the molten
-flame, more resplendent than a midsummer sun, rolling
-around the earthen pots in which the shapeless mass
-was melting; the workmen, standing around, awaited the
-right moment to approach with iron tubes to shape that
-mass with the breath from their lips and the instruments
-of their art.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;O virtue of Fire!&mdash;thought the Inspirer, turned from
-his anxiety by the miraculous beauty of the element that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-had become to him as familiar as a brother, since the
-day he had found the revealing melody.&mdash;Ah, that I
-might give to the life of the creatures that love me the
-perfection of the forms to which I aspire! That I might
-fuse all their weaknesses in some white heat, and make
-of the product obedient matter in which to impress the
-commandments of my heroic will and the images of my
-pure poetry! Why, my friend, why will you not be
-the divine living statue molded by my spirit, the work
-of faith and sorrow whereby our lives might surpass even
-our art? Why are we so near resembling ordinary lovers,
-who lament and curse? When I heard from your lips
-those admirable words: 'I can do one thing that love
-alone cannot do,' I believed indeed that you could give
-me more than love. You must be able always to do
-those things that love can do, besides those it cannot
-do, in order to meet my insatiable nature.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, work was going on about the furnace.
-At the end of the blow pipes the molten glass swelled,
-twisted, became silvery as a little cloud, shone like the
-moon, cracked, divided into a thousand infinitesimal
-fragments, glittering and thin as the threads we see at
-daybreak stretching from tree to tree. The glass-blowers
-were making harmonious vases. The apprentices placed
-a small, pear-shaped mass of burning paste on the spot
-chosen by the master-workmen; and the pear lengthened,
-twisted, transformed itself into a handle, a rim, a spout,
-a foot, or a stem. The glowing heat slowly died out
-under the instruments, and the half-formed cup was
-again exposed to the heat, then drawn from it docile,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-ductile, sensitive to the lightest touches that ornamented
-and refined it, conforming it to the model handed down
-by their ancestors, or to the free invention of a new
-creator.</p>
-
-<p>Extraordinarily light and agile were the human gestures
-that produced these elegant creatures of the fire,
-of breath and iron; they were like the movements of a
-silent dance. The figure of La Tanagra appeared to
-the Inspirer among the perpetual undulations of the
-flame, like a salamander. Donatella's voice seemed to
-sing to him the powerful melody.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;To-day, again, I myself have given you the thought
-of her for a companion&mdash;thought La Foscarina&mdash;I myself
-have called her up between us, and evoked her shadow
-when perhaps your thoughts were elsewhere; I have
-suddenly led her to you, as on that night of delirium.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>It was true, it was true! From the instant when the
-singer's name had been spoken on the water by Foscarina,
-she herself had unconsciously exalted the new
-image in the poet's mind, had nourished it with her
-jealousy and fear, had strengthened and increased it
-day by day, and had at last illumined it with certainty.
-More than once she had said to the young man, who
-perhaps had forgotten: "She awaits you!" More than
-once she had presented to his imagination that distant,
-mysterious figure of expectancy. As on that Dionysian
-night, when the conflagration of Venice had lighted up
-the two youthful faces with the same reflection, it was
-now her own passion that illumined them, and they
-glowed only because she herself had made them.&mdash;Certainly,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-he now possesses that image, and it possesses
-him. My anguish only augments his ardor. It is a joy
-to him to love her before my despairing eyes!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"As soon as the vase is shaped, we put it in the furnace
-room to be tempered," replied one of the men to
-a query from Stelio. "If it were exposed to the air
-immediately it would crack in a thousand pieces."</p>
-
-<p>They could see the radiant vases, still slaves of the
-fire, still under its empire, gathered in a receptacle joined
-to the furnace in which they had been fused.</p>
-
-<p>"They have been there ten hours," said the workman,
-pointing to his graceful family. "Is this our great Foscarina?"
-he added in an undertone to Stelio. He had
-recognized her when she had lifted her veil, suffocating
-with the heat.</p>
-
-<p>Revealing ingenuous emotion, the master workman
-took a step toward her and bowed respectfully.</p>
-
-<p>"One evening, my lady, you made me tremble and
-weep like a child. Will you allow me, in memory of
-that evening, which I never shall forget, to offer you a
-little work from the hands of the poor Seguso?"</p>
-
-<p>"A Seguso, are you?" said the poet, leaning toward
-the little man, to look at him closer; "are you of the
-great family of glass-blowers, one of the genuine race?"</p>
-
-<p>"At your service, master."</p>
-
-<p>"A prince, then."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, a harlequin playing the prince."</p>
-
-<p>"You know all the secrets of the art, eh?"</p>
-
-<p>The Muranese made a mysterious gesture which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-seemed to call up all the deep ancestral knowledge of
-which he affirmed himself the last heir.</p>
-
-<p>"Then, mistress, will you deign to accept it?"</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina had not spoken, fearing to trust her
-voice, but now all her affable grace rose above her
-sadness and accepted the gift while compensating the
-giver.</p>
-
-<p>The vase held by the little bent man that had created
-it was like a miraculous flower blooming on a twisted
-shrub. It was a thing of beauty, mysterious as natural
-things are mysterious; it held the life of a human breath
-in its hollow; its transparence equaled that of sky and
-water; its purple rim was like a floating seaweed; no
-one could have told the reason why it was so beautiful;
-and its value was either slight or beyond price, according
-to the eyes that looked at it.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina chose to take it with her, without having
-it packed, as one carries a flower.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI<br />
-REMINISCENCE</h2>
-
-
-<p>They left the factory, and walked along a road
-that was enclosed between the walls of silent
-gardens. The bronze-like laurels were touched
-with gold at the tops by the setting sun. The
-air was filled with sparkling gold-dust.</p>
-
-<p>"How sweet and terrible was the fate of Gaspara
-Stampa," said Stelio. "Do you know her <em>Sonnets</em>? Yes,
-I saw them one day on your table. She was a strange
-mingling of ice and fire. Sometimes her mortal passion,
-above the Petrarchism of Aretino, lifted a glorious cry.
-I remember a magnificent verse of hers:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Vivere ardendo e non sentire il male!</i>"</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>"Do you remember, Stelio," said La Foscarina, with
-that peculiar slight smile of hers which gave her face
-the look of one walking in her sleep, "do you remember
-the sonnet that begins:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Signore, io so che in me non son più viva,<br />
-E veggo omai ch'ancor in voi son morta?</i>"</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>"I don't remember, Fosca."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you remember your beautiful fancy about the
-dead Summer? Summer was lying on a funeral barge,
-dressed in gold like a dogaressa, and the procession was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-bearing her toward the Island of Murano, where a master
-of the flame was to enclose her in a shroud of
-opalescent glass, so that when she should be submerged
-in the depths of the lagoon, she could at least watch
-the waving seaweed. Do you remember?"</p>
-
-<p>"It was an evening in September."</p>
-
-<p>"The last night of September, the night of the Allegory.
-There was a great light on the water. You
-were in an exalted mood, and talked and talked. What
-things you said! You had come from solitude, and
-your overcharged soul broke forth. You poured a
-sparkling wave of poetry over your companion. A bark
-passed, laden with pomegranates. I called myself Perdita.
-Do you remember?"</p>
-
-<p>As she walked she felt the extreme lightness of her
-step and felt that something in her was vanishing, as
-if her body were on the point of being changed to an
-empty chrysalis.</p>
-
-<p>"My name was still Perdita. Stelio, do you recall
-another sonnet of Gaspara's beginning:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Io vorrei pur che Amor dicesse come<br />
-Debbo seguirlo....</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And the madrigal beginning:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Se tu credi piacere al mio signore?</i>"</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>"I did not know you were so familiar with the unhappy
-Anasilla, my dear."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, I will tell you. I was hardly fourteen years
-old when I played in an old romantic tragedy called
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-<cite>Gaspara Stampa</cite>. I played the leading part. It was at
-Dolo, where we passed the other day on our way to
-Strà. We played in a small rustic theater&mdash;a kind of
-tent. It was the year before my mother died. I remember
-it very well. I can remember the sound of my own
-voice, which was weak then, when I forced it in the
-tirades because some one in the wings kept whispering
-to me to speak louder, louder!... Well, Gaspara was
-despairing; she wept and raved for her cruel Count.
-There were many things about it all that my small, profaned
-soul did not know or understand, and I know not
-what instinct and comprehension of sorrow led me to
-find the accent and the cries that could stir the miserable
-crowd from which we expected to gain our daily
-bread. Ten hungry persons used me as a breadwinner;
-brutal necessity cut and tore away from me all the
-dream-flowers born of my trembling precocity. Oh, it
-was a time of weeping and suffocation, of terror, of
-unthinking weariness, of mute horror. Those that martyrized
-me knew not what they were doing, poor creatures,
-made stupid by poverty and work. God pardon
-them and give them peace! Only my mother&mdash;she, too,
-who 'for having loved too well and been too little loved,
-unhappy lived and died'&mdash;only my mother had pity
-on my pain, and knew how to take me in her arms, how
-to calm my horrible trembling, to weep when I wept,
-to console me. My blessed mother!"</p>
-
-<p>Her voice changed. Her mother's eyes once again
-looked upon her, kind and firm and infinite as a peaceful
-horizon.&mdash;Tell me, tell me what I must do! Guide
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-me, teach me, you who know!&mdash;Her heart felt again the
-clasp of those arms, and from the distance of years the
-old pain came back, but not harshly; it was almost
-sweet. The memory of her struggles and her sufferings
-seemed to bathe her soul in a warm wave, to sustain
-and comfort it. The test had been hard and the victory
-difficult, obtained at the price of persistent labor,
-against brutal and hostile forces. She had witnessed the
-deepest misery and ruin, she had known heroic efforts,
-pity, horror, and the face of Death.</p>
-
-<p>"I know what hunger is, Stelio, and what the approach
-of night seems like when a place of rest is uncertain,"
-she said softly.</p>
-
-<p>She stopped between the high walls, and lifted her
-little veil, looking deep into her friend's eyes.
-He grew pale under that look, so sudden was his
-emotion and surprise at her words. He felt confused,
-as if in the incoherence of a dream, incapable of applying
-the true significance of those words to the woman
-who was smiling at him, holding the delicate glass in
-her ungloved hand. Yet he had heard what she said,
-and she stood there before him in her rich fur cape,
-looking at him with beautiful soft eyes, misty with unshed
-tears.</p>
-
-<p>"And I have known other things."</p>
-
-<p>It relieved her heart to speak like this; his humility
-gave her strength, as if she had accomplished some
-proud and daring deed. She never had felt conscious of
-her power and worldly glory in the presence of her beloved,
-but now the memory of her obscure martyrdom,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-her poverty and hunger, created in her heart a feeling
-of real superiority over him she believed invincible.</p>
-
-<p>"But I have no fear of suffering," she said, remembering
-the words he had spoken once: "Tell me you do
-not fear to suffer.... I believe your soul capable of
-bearing all the sorrow of the world." And her hand
-stole up to his cheek and caressed it, and he understood
-that she had answered those words spoken long ago.</p>
-
-<p>He was silent, as intoxicated as if she had presented
-to his lips the very essence of her heart pressed out into
-that crystal cup like the blood of the grape. He waited
-for her to go on.</p>
-
-<p>They reached a crossroads where stood a miserable
-hut, falling into ruin. La Foscarina stopped to look at
-it. The rude, unhinged windows were held open by a
-stick laid across them. The low sun struck the smoked
-walls within, and revealed the furniture&mdash;a table, a
-bench, a cradle.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you remember, Stelio," said La Foscarina, "that
-inn at Dolo where we waited for the train. Vampa's
-inn, I mean. A great fire burned on the hearth, the
-dishes glittered on the shelves, and slices of <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">polenta</i> were
-toasting on the gridiron. Twenty years ago everything
-was exactly the same&mdash;the same fire, the same
-dishes, the same <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">polenta</i>. My mother and I used to go
-in there after the performance, and sit on the bench
-before a table. I had wept, cried, raved, and had died
-of poison or by the sword, on the stage. I still heard
-in my ears the resonance of the verses I had uttered, in
-a voice that was not my own, and a strange will still
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-possessed my soul, and I could not shake it off&mdash;it was
-as if another person, struggling with my inertness, persisted
-in performing over again those movements and
-actions. The simulation of an outside life remained in
-the muscles of my face, and some evenings I could not
-calm them. Already, even then, the mask, the sensation
-of the living mask, was beginning to grow. My
-eyes would remain fixed, and a chill crept at the roots
-of my hair. I had difficulty in recovering full consciousness
-of myself and my surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>"The odors from the kitchen sickened me; the food
-on our plates seemed too coarse, heavy as a stone, impossible
-to swallow. My disgust at everything sprang
-from something indescribably delicate and precious, of
-which I was conscious under all my weariness&mdash;a vague
-feeling of nobility beneath my humiliation. I hardly
-know how to express it. Perhaps it was the obscure
-presence of that power which later developed in me, of
-that election, of that difference wherewith Nature has
-marked me. Sometimes the consciousness of that difference
-from others became so strong that it almost raised
-a barrier between my mother and myself&mdash;God forgive
-me!&mdash;almost separated me from her. A great loneliness
-possessed me; nothing around me had power to touch
-me any more. I was alone with my destiny. My
-mother, even though she was with me, gradually receded
-into an infinite distance. Ah, she was to die soon,
-and was already preparing to leave me, and perhaps
-this withdrawal was the forerunner. She used to urge
-me to eat, with the words only she knew how to say.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-I answered: 'Wait! Wait!' I could only drink; I had
-a great craving for cold water. At times, when I was
-more tired and trembling than usual, I smiled a long-continued
-smile. And even that dear woman herself,
-with her deep heart, could not understand whence came
-my smile!</p>
-
-<p>"Incomparable hours, wherein it seemed that the
-bodily prison was being broken through by the soul
-that wandered to the extremest limits of life! What must
-your youth have been, Stelio! Who can imagine it?
-We have all felt the weight of sleep that descends upon
-us after fatigue or intoxication, heavy and sudden as
-a stroke from a hammer, and it seems to annihilate us.
-But the power of dreams sometimes seizes upon us in
-waking hours with the same force; it holds us and we
-cannot resist it, though the whole thread of our existence
-seems on the point of being destroyed. Ah, some
-of the beautiful things you said that night in Venice
-come back to my mind, when you spoke of her marvelous
-hands weaving her own lights and shadows in a
-continuous work of beauty. You alone know how to
-describe the indescribable.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, ... on that bench, in front of that rustic
-table, in Vampa's inn at Dolo, where destiny led me
-again with you, I had the most extraordinary visions
-that dreams ever have called up in my brain. I saw that
-which is unforgettable; I saw the real forms around me
-obliterated by the dream-figures born of my instinct
-and my thoughts. Under my fixed eyes, dazzled and
-scorched by the smoky petroleum lamps of the improvised
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-stage, the world of my expression began to throb
-with life. The first lines of my art were developed in
-that state of anguish, of weariness, fever, disgust, in
-which my sensibility became, so to speak, plastic, after
-the manner of the incandescent material we saw the
-workmen holding at the end of the tube. In it was a
-natural aspiration to be modeled, to receive breath, to
-fill a mold. On certain evenings, in that wall covered
-with copper utensils, I could see myself reflected as in
-a mirror, in attitudes of grief or rage; with an unrecognizable
-face; and, in order to escape from this hallucination,
-to break the fixity of my gaze, I opened and shut
-my eyes rapidly. My mother would say, over and over:
-'Eat, my daughter, at least eat this.' But what were
-bread, wine, meat, fruits, all those heavy things, in comparison
-with what I had within me? I said to her:
-'Wait!' and when we rose to go, I used to take only a
-large piece of bread with me. I liked to eat it in the
-country the next morning, under a tree, or sitting on
-the bank of the Brenta.... Oh, those statues! They
-did not recognize me the other day, Stelio, but I recognized
-them!</p>
-
-<p>"It was in the month of March, I remember. I went
-out into the country very early with my bread. I walked
-at random, though I meant to go to the statues. I went
-from one to another, and stopped before every one, as
-if I were paying a visit. Some appeared very beautiful
-to me, and I tried to imitate their poses. But I remained
-longer with the mutilated ones, as if to console them.
-In the evening, on the stage, I remembered some of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-them while I was acting, and with so deep a feeling of
-their distance and their solitude that I felt as if I could
-not speak any more. The audience would grow impatient
-at these pauses too prolonged. At times, when
-I had to wait for my companion in the scene to finish
-his tirade, I used to stand in the attitude of one of those
-statues, and remain as motionless as if I had been made
-of stone. I was already beginning to carve my own
-destiny.</p>
-
-<p>"I loved one of them tenderly; it had lost its arms,
-which once balanced a basket of fruit on its head. But
-the hands still remained attached to the basket, and the
-sight of them always aroused my pity. This statue
-stood on its pedestal in a flax-field; a little canal of stagnant
-water was near it, in which the reflected sky repeated
-the tender blue of the flowers. And always, since
-that time, in my most glowing moments on the stage,
-visions of some landscape rise in my memory, particularly
-when by the mere force of silence I succeed in
-producing a thrill in the listening throng."</p>
-
-<p>Her cheeks had flushed a little, and as the sun
-wrapped her in a radiant garment, drawing sparkles from
-her furs and from the crystal cup, her animation seemed
-like an increase of light.</p>
-
-<p>"What a spring that was! In one of my wandering
-journeys I saw a great river for the first time. It appeared
-to me suddenly, swollen, and flowing rapidly between
-two wild banks. I felt then how much of divinity
-there is in a great stream running through the earth.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-It was the Adige, flowing down from Verona, from the
-city of Juliet."</p>
-
-<p>An ambiguous emotion filled her heart while she recalled
-the poverty and poetry of her youth. She was
-impelled to continue, though she did not know how she
-had arrived at these confidences, when she had intended
-to speak to her friend of another young life, not belonging
-to the past, but to the present. By what surprise
-of love had she been turned from an effort of her will,
-from her firm decision to face the painful truth, from
-the concentration of her slumbering energy to linger in
-the memory of the past, and to cover with the image of
-her own lost virgin self that other image which was so
-different?</p>
-
-<p>"We reached Verona one evening in May. I was devoured
-by anxiety. I clasped close to my heart the book
-in which I had copied the lines of Juliet, and continually
-repeated to myself the words of my first entrance: 'How
-now? Who calls? I am here. What is your will?' My
-imagination was excited by a strange coincidence: on
-that very day I was fourteen years old&mdash;the age of
-Juliet. The Nurse's gossip sounded in my ears; and,
-little by little, my own destiny seemed mingled with
-that of the Veronese. At the corner of every street I
-thought I could see a throng approaching me, accompanying
-a coffin covered with white roses. When I saw
-the Arche degli Scaligeri behind its iron bars, I cried
-to my mother, 'Here is Juliet's tomb!' And I burst into
-sobs, and had a desperate desire to love and to die. 'O
-thou too early seen unknown, and known too late!'"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Her voice, repeating the immortal words, penetrated
-the heart of her lover like a heart-rending melody. She
-paused a moment, then repeated:</p>
-
-<p>"Too late!"</p>
-
-<p>They were the ominous words spoken by her lover,
-which she herself had repeated in the garden, when both
-were on the brink of being swept away on the flood of
-their passion: "It is late; too late!" The woman that
-was no longer young now faced the former image of
-herself, in her maidenhood, throbbing in the form of
-Juliet before her first dream of love. Having reached
-the limit of experience, had she not at the same time
-preserved the dream intact&mdash;but to what purpose? If
-to-day she looked at the image of her far-distant youth, it
-was only to trample upon it in leading her beloved to
-the other woman, to her who lived and waited.</p>
-
-<p>With her smile of inimitable sadness, she said:</p>
-
-<p>"I <em>was</em> Juliet! One Sunday in May, in the immense
-arena in the amphitheater under the open sky, before an
-audience that had breathed in the legend of love and
-death, I was Juliet herself. No thrill from the most responsive
-audience, no applause, no triumph, ever has
-had from me the fulness and intoxication of that unique
-hour. Actually, when I heard Romeo say: 'O, she doth
-teach the torches to burn bright,' my whole being
-kindled. With great economy, I had managed to buy a
-large bunch of roses, and these were my only ornament.
-I mingled the roses with my words, my gestures, with
-every attitude. I dropped one at Romeo's feet when we
-first met; I strewed the petals of another on his head,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-as I stood on the balcony; and I covered his body with
-them as he lay in the tomb. The words came with the
-strangest ease, almost involuntarily, as in delirium, and
-I could feel the throbbing in my veins accompanying
-them.</p>
-
-<p>"I could see the great amphitheater, half in sunlight,
-half in shadow, and in the lighter part a sparkling from
-thousands of eyes. The day was as calm as this. Not
-a breath of air disturbed the folds of my robes, or the
-hair that floated on my uncovered neck. I felt my
-strength and animation momentarily increasing. How
-I spoke of the lark and the nightingale! I had heard
-them both a thousand times in the country. I knew all
-their songs of the woods, the meadows, and the sky.
-Every word, as it left my lips, seemed to have been
-steeped in the warmth of my blood. There was no fiber
-in me that did not give forth harmonious sound. Ah,
-the grace, the state of grace! Every time it is given to
-me to rise to the highest summit of my art I live again
-in that indescribable <em>abandon</em>. Yes, I was Juliet! I cried
-out in terror at the approach of dawn. The breeze
-stirred my hair. I could feel the extraordinary silence
-on which my lamentation fell. The multitude seemed to
-have sunk into the ground. I spoke of the terror of the
-coming day, but already I felt in reality 'the mask of
-night upon my face.' Romeo had descended. We were
-already dead; already both had entered the vale of shadows.
-Do you remember? My eyes sought the fading
-light of the sky. The people were noisy in the arena;
-they were impatient for the death scene; they would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-listen no more to the mother, the nurse, or the friar.
-The quiver of that impatience quickened my throbbing
-heart. The tragedy swept on. I recall the odor of the
-pitch from the funeral torches, and of the roses that covered
-me, and I remember the sound of far-off bells, and
-of the sky that was losing its light, little by little, as
-Juliet was losing her life, and a star, the first star, that
-swam in my eyes with my tears. When I fell dead on
-Romeo's body, the cry of the multitude in the shadows
-was so violent that I was frightened. Some one lifted
-me and dragged me toward that cry. Some one held
-the torch close to my tear-stained face, which must have
-been the color of death.... And thus, Stelio, one night
-in May, Juliet came to life again, and appeared before
-the people of Verona."</p>
-
-<p>Again she paused, and closed her eyes as if she were
-dizzy, but her sorrowful lips still smiled at her friend.</p>
-
-<p>"And then? Then came the need to move, to go no
-matter where, to traverse space, to breathe in the wind.
-My mother followed me in silence. We crossed a bridge,
-walked beside the Adige, and went on and on. My
-mother asked at times where we were going. I wished
-to find the Franciscan convent where Juliet's tomb was
-hidden, since, to my great regret, she was not buried
-in one of those beautiful tombs behind the great iron
-gates. But I did not wish to say so, and I could not
-speak. My voice seemed to have been lost with the
-last word of the dying Juliet. 'Where are we going?'
-again asked that indefatigable kindness. Ah, then the
-last word of Juliet came to me in reply. We were again
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-near the Adige, beside a bridge. I think I began to
-run, because soon afterward I felt myself seized by my
-mother's arms, and I stood leaning against the parapet,
-choking with sobs. 'There let me die!' I wished to say,
-but could not. The river carried with it the night and
-all its stars. I felt that the desire to die was not mine
-alone. Ah, blessed mother!"</p>
-
-<p>She became very pale; her whole heart felt once more
-the embrace of those arms, the kiss of those lips, those
-tender tears, the depth of that suffering.</p>
-
-<p>With a mingled feeling of surprise and alarm, Stelio
-watched the great waves of life that passed over her,
-the extraordinary expressions, the alternating lights and
-shadows; but he dared not speak, dared not break in
-upon the occult workings of that great, unhappy soul.
-He could only feel confusedly in her words the beauty
-and sadness of things unexpressed.</p>
-
-<p>"Speak to me still," he said. "Draw nearer to me,
-sweet soul! No moment since I first loved you has been
-worth the steps that we have taken together to-day."</p>
-
-<p>Again her first sudden question returned to her mind:
-"Do you think often of Donatella?"</p>
-
-<p>A short path led to the Fondamenta degli Angeli,
-whence the lagoon could be seen, smooth and luminous.</p>
-
-<p>"How beautiful that light is!" she said. "It is like
-that night when my name was still Perdita, Stelio."</p>
-
-<p>She now touched a note that she had touched in an
-interrupted prelude.</p>
-
-<p>"The last night of September," she added. "Do you
-remember?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Her heart was filled with exaltation to such a degree
-that she almost feared it would fail her. But she resolved
-that her voice should utter firmly the name that
-must break the silence between her friend and herself.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you remember the ship anchored before the
-gardens? A salute greeted the flag as it slid down the
-mast. Our gondola touched the ship as we passed under
-its shadow."</p>
-
-<p>A moment's pause. Her pallor was animated by a
-wonderful vitality.</p>
-
-<p>"Then, in that shadow, you first spoke Donatella's
-name."</p>
-
-<p>She made a new effort, as a swimmer, submerged by a
-wave, rises again and shakes his head free of the foam.</p>
-
-<p>"She began then to be yours!"</p>
-
-<p>She felt as if she were growing rigid from head to
-foot. Her eyes stared fixedly at the glittering water.</p>
-
-<p>"She must be yours," she said at last, with the sternness
-of necessity in her voice, as if to repel with a second
-shock the terrible things that were ready to surge up from
-her fiery heart.</p>
-
-<p>Seized by sudden anguish, incapable of interrupting
-by a word the lightning-like apparitions of her tragic
-soul, Stelio halted, and laid his hand on his companion's
-arm to make her stop also.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it not true?" she asked with a sweetness almost
-calm, as if her tension had suddenly relaxed, and her
-passion had quietly accepted the yoke laid upon it by
-her will. "Speak! I do not fear to suffer. Let us sit
-down here. I am a little tired."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They sat down on a low wall, facing the water.</p>
-
-<p>"What can I say to you?" said the young man in a
-stifled voice, after a pause, unable to overcome the agitation
-arising from the certainty of his present love and
-the consciousness of his desires, inexorable as fate. "Perhaps
-what you have imagined is true; perhaps it is only
-a fancy of your own mind. I am certain to-day of only
-one thing, and that is that I love you and recognize
-in you all that is noble. I know one other thing that
-is noble&mdash;that I have a work to do and a life to live according
-to the dictates of Nature. You, too, must remember.
-On that September evening I spoke to you a
-long time of my life and of the genii that are leading it
-to its final destiny. You know that I can renounce
-nothing."</p>
-
-<p>He trembled as if he held in his hand a sharp weapon,
-with which, as he was compelled to move it, he could
-not avoid wounding the defenseless woman.</p>
-
-<p>"No, nothing; and especially your love, which ceaselessly
-exalts my strength and my hope. But did you not
-promise me more than love? Can you not do for me
-things that love alone cannot do? Do you not desire
-to be the constant inspiration of my life and my work?"</p>
-
-<p>She listened motionless, with fixed eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"It is true," he continued, after an anxious pause, recovering
-his courage, and feeling that on the sincerity
-of this moment depended the fate of that free alliance
-whereby he had hoped to be broadened, not confined.
-"It is true; that evening, when I saw you descend the
-stairs in the midst of the throng in company with her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-who had sung, I believed that a secret thought guided
-you from the moment that you did not come alone to
-meet me."</p>
-
-<p>The woman felt a chill run through the roots of her
-hair. Her fingers trembled round the crystal cup, wherein
-the colors of sky and water were blended.</p>
-
-<p>"I believed that you yourself had chosen her. Your
-look was that of one who knows and foresees. I was
-struck by it."</p>
-
-<p>By her keen torture, the woman realized how sweet
-a falsehood would have been. She wished that he would
-either lie or be silent. She measured the distance that
-lay between her and the canal&mdash;the water that swallows
-and lulls to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>"There was something about her that was hostile to
-me. She remained to me obscure, incomprehensible.
-Do you remember the way she disappeared? Her image
-faded, and only the desire of her song remained. You
-yourself, who led her to me, have more than once revived
-the remembrance of her. You have seen her
-shadow even where she was not."</p>
-
-<p>She saw Death itself. No other wound had gone
-deeper, had hurt her so cruelly.&mdash;I alone! I alone have
-brought it on myself!&mdash;And she remembered the cry
-that had brought this misery: "Go! She awaits you!"
-Suddenly the internal tempest seemed to become a mere
-hallucination. She thought herself non-existent, and
-wondered to see the glass shining in her hand; she lost
-all corporeal sense. All that had happened was only
-a trick of the imagination. Her name was Perdita. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-dead Summer was lying in the depths of the lagoon.
-Words were words, that was all.</p>
-
-<p>"Could I love her? Were I to see her again, should
-I desire to turn her destiny toward mine? Perhaps. But
-of what use would that be? And of what use would all
-the vicissitudes and necessities of life be against the
-faith that links us? Could you and I resemble commonplace
-lovers who pass their days in quarreling, weeping,
-and cursing?"</p>
-
-<p>The woman gnashed her teeth. She had a wild instinct
-to defend herself, and to hurt him as in a hopeless
-struggle. A murderous desire flashed across her maddened
-brain.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;No, you shall not have her!&mdash;And the brutality of
-her tyrant seemed monstrous to her. Under the measured
-and repeated blows, she felt that she was like a
-man she had once seen on the dusty road of a mining
-town, prostrated by repeated blows on his head from
-a mallet in his enemy's hand. That hideous memory
-mingled with her mental torture. She sprang up, impelled
-by the savage force that filled her being. The
-glass broke in her convulsed hand, cut her, fell in a
-sparkling shower at her feet.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio startled. The woman's motionless silence had
-deceived him, but now he looked at her and saw her
-at last; and once more he saw, as on that night in her
-room when the logs had crackled on the hearth, the expression
-of madness on her agitated face. He stammered
-some words of regret, but impatience boiled under his
-concern.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Ah," said La Foscarina, mastering her agony with a
-bitterness that convulsed her mouth, "how strong I am!
-Another time have a care that your wounds are not made
-so slowly, since my resistance is so slight, my friend."</p>
-
-<p>She saw that blood was dripping from her fingers;
-she wrapped them in her handkerchief. She looked at
-the sparkling fragments on the grass.</p>
-
-<p>"The cup is broken! You had praised it too highly.
-Shall we raise a mausoleum for it here?"</p>
-
-<p>She was very bitter, almost mocking, her lips opening
-slightly to utter a mirthless laugh. Stelio stood silent,
-chagrined, his heart full of rancor at beholding the destruction
-of so beautiful an effort as that perfect cup.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us imitate Nero, since we have already imitated
-Xerxes!"</p>
-
-<p>She felt even more keenly than he the harshness of
-her sarcasm, the insincerity of her voice, the malignity
-of the laugh that was like a muscular spasm. But she
-was unable to conquer her soul at that moment. She
-felt a bitter, irresistible necessity to scorn, to devastate,
-to trample under foot, invaded by a sort of perfidious
-demon. Every vestige of tenderness and benevolence
-had vanished, every hope, every illusion. The bitter
-hatred that lurks under the love of ardent natures was
-dominant. On the man's face she could discern the same
-shadow that darkened her own.</p>
-
-<p>"Do I irritate you? Do you wish to return to Venice
-alone? Would you like to leave the dying season behind
-you? The tide is falling, but there is always enough
-water for one who has no intention of returning. Would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-it suit you to have me try it? Am I not as docile as
-you could wish?"</p>
-
-<p>She said these insensate things in a hissing tone, and
-became almost livid, as if suddenly burned by some corroding
-poison. And Stelio remembered having seen the
-same mask on her face on a distant day of love, madness
-and sadness. His heart contracted, then softened.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, if I have hurt you, I ask for pardon," he said,
-trying to take her hand and soothe her by a gentle act.
-"But did we not begin together to approach this matter?
-Was it not you that"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She interrupted him, exasperated by his gentleness.</p>
-
-<p>"Hurt me? And what does that matter? Have no
-pity, no pity! Do not weep over the beautiful eyes of
-the wounded hare!"</p>
-
-<p>The words broke between her teeth. Her contracted
-lips opened in a convulsion of wild laughter that was
-like heart-rending sobs. Her companion shuddered, spoke
-to her in a low tone, aware of the curious eyes of the
-women who sat at the thresholds of their cabins.</p>
-
-<p>"Calm yourself! Calm yourself! Oh, Foscarina, I beg
-of you! Do not act so, I entreat! We shall soon be
-at the quay, and then we shall go home. I will tell you&mdash;You
-will understand me then. Come, now we are in
-the street. Do you hear me?"</p>
-
-<p>He feared she would fall in her hysterical convulsion,
-and stood ready to support her. But she only walked
-faster, unable to speak, smothering that wild laughter
-with her bandaged hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"What ails you? What do you see?" Stelio inquired
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>Never could he forget the change in those eyes. They
-were dull, staring, sightless, yet they seemed to see something
-that was not there; they were filled with an unknown
-vision, occupied by some monstrous image which
-without doubt had generated that mad and anguished
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall we stop here a little while? Would you like
-some water?"</p>
-
-<p>They found themselves now on the Fondamenta dei
-Vetrai. How long was it since they had walked beside
-the stagnant canal? How much of their life had vanished
-in the interval? What profound shadow were
-they leaving behind them?</p>
-
-<p>Having descended into the gondola, and wrapped herself
-in her cloak, La Foscarina tried to control her hysteria,
-holding her face with both hands, but from time
-to time the terrible laugh would escape; then she pressed
-her hands closer to her mouth, as if she were trying to
-suffocate herself.</p>
-
-<p>The lagoon and the deep twilight obliterated all forms
-and colors; only the rows of posts, like a file of monks
-on a path of ashes, showed against the dark background.
-When the bells began their clamor, her soul remembered,
-her tears gushed forth; the horror was vanquished.</p>
-
-<p>She took her hands from her face, leaned toward her
-friend's shoulder, and found again her voice in saying:</p>
-
-<p>"Forgive me!"</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII<br />
-CASSANDRA'S REINCARNATION</h2>
-
-
-<p>She humbled herself with shame. From that day
-every action of her silently begged for pardon
-and oblivion.</p>
-
-<p>A new grace seemed born within her. She became
-more cheerful, spoke more gently, walked softly
-about the house dressed in quiet colors, veiling her beautiful
-eyes with the deep shadow of her lashes, because
-she dared not look at her friend. The fear of tiring him,
-of displeasing or boring him, gave her the wings of divination.
-Her ever watchful sensibility listened at the
-inaccessible door of his dreams.</p>
-
-<p>Her spirit, determined to create a new feeling capable
-of conquering the violence of instinct, revealed
-in her face with marvelous signs the difficulty of her
-task. Never before had her supreme art found expressions
-so singular. Looking at her one day, Stelio spoke
-to her of the infinite power concentrated in the shadow
-produced by the helmet on the face of <cite>Il Pensieroso</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>"Michelangelo," he said, "has, in a small cavity in the
-marble, concentrated all the effort of human meditation.
-Just as the stream fills a hollowed palm, so the eternal
-mystery that surrounds us fills the small space made by
-the Titan's chisel in the material from the mountains;
-and there it has remained, growing denser through all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-the centuries. I know only the mobile shadow of your
-face, Fosca, that equals that shadow in intensity, and
-sometimes even surpasses it."</p>
-
-<p>Eager for poetry and knowledge, she yearned for the
-Inspirer's presence. She became for him the ideal figure
-of one that listens and understands. The strange, unique
-arrangement of her hair suggested fluttering, impatient
-wings round her pure forehead.</p>
-
-<p>She read aloud to him pages from the sovereign poets.
-The august form of the Book seemed magnified by the
-attitude she assumed in holding it, by her way of turning
-the pages, by her religious gravity of attention, and
-the harmony of the voice that changed the printed symbols
-into vocal cadences. While reading Dante, she was
-as severe and noble as the sibyls in the dome of the
-Sistine Chapel, sustaining the weight of the sacred volumes
-with all the heroism of their bodies moved by
-the breath of prophecy.</p>
-
-<p>When the last syllable had been spoken, she saw Stelio
-rise impetuously, feverishly, and roam about the rooms,
-stirred by the dart of the god, panting in the excitement
-roused by the confused tumult of his own creative force.
-Sometimes he approached her with glowing eyes transfigured
-by a sudden beatitude, kindled by an inner
-flame, as if an immortal truth had just been revealed.
-With a shudder that drove away from her heart the
-memory of every caress, she saw him lay his head upon
-her knees, overwhelmed by the tremendous struggle he
-carried on within himself, by the shock that accompanied
-some hidden metamorphosis. She suffered, yet she was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-happy, though she knew not whether he too suffered or
-was happy; her heart was filled with pity, fear, and reverence
-to feel that vigorous form laboring thus in the
-genesis of the idea. She kept silence; she waited, adoring
-that head that lay upon her knees, filled with thoughts
-unrevealed.</p>
-
-<p>But she comprehended his great emotion better when
-one day, after she had been reading to him, he spoke
-of the exile of Dante.</p>
-
-<p>"Imagine, Fosca, if you can without bewilderment,
-the transport and ardor of that great soul, when uniting
-itself with elementary energies in order to conceive his
-words! Imagine Alighieri, his mind already filled with
-his incomparable vision, on the way to exile, an implacable
-pilgrim, driven by his passion and his poverty
-from country to country, from refuge to refuge, across
-plains, over mountains, beside rivers and seas, in all seasons,
-suffocated by the sweetness of spring, shivering
-under the harshness of winter, always alert, attentive,
-with wide, voracious eyes, anxious with the inner travail
-whereby his gigantic work was formed. Imagine
-the fulness of that soul in the contrast between common
-necessities and the flaming apparitions that rose
-suddenly before him at a turn in the road, on the bank
-of a stream, from a hollow in the rocks, on the slope
-of a hill, in the depths of the forest, or in a meadow
-where the larks were singing. By means of his senses,
-life multiform and multiplex poured into his spirit, transfiguring
-into living images the abstract ideas that filled
-his brain. The sound, the appearance, and the essence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-of the very elements themselves entered into his occult
-labor, developing it with voices, lines, color, movement,
-and with innumerable mysteries. Fire, air, earth, and
-water worked in collaboration at the sacred poem, penetrated
-the sum of its doctrine, warmed it, aërated it,
-watered it, covered it with leaves and flowers. Open
-this Christian book, and imagine at the same time the
-face of a Greek god. Do you not see, springing from
-both, shadows and light, the flashes or the wind from
-the heavens?"</p>
-
-<p>She began to feel that her own life was becoming one
-with the all-absorbing work, that her own personal self
-was entering, drop by drop, into the personage of the
-drama, that her look, her poses, her gestures and voice
-were going to the composing of the figure of the heroine
-"living beyond life." She fancied that she was dissolving
-into her elements in the fire of that other intellect,
-only to be re-formed by the necessity of a heroism that
-should dominate Fate.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes it seemed to her that she was losing her
-human sincerity, and that she would always remain in
-the state of fictitious excitement into which she threw
-herself while studying a tragic rôle she was to create.
-Thus she experienced a new torment. She tried to shut
-and contract her soul under his keen glance, as if
-to prevent his intellect from penetrating her mind and
-robbing her of her secret life. She grew afraid of the
-seer.&mdash;He will read in my soul the silent words that he
-will put in the mouth of his creation, and I shall only
-speak them on the stage, under my mask.&mdash;Sometimes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-she felt a sudden need to break the spell, to withdraw
-from the image that was to be like her, to spoil those
-lines of beauty, which forced her to a determined sacrifice.
-Was there not also in the tragedy a maiden thirsting
-for love and eager for joy, a maiden in whom a great
-mind recognized the living incarnation of his most exquisite
-dream, the Victory that was to crown his life?
-And was there not also an impassioned woman no longer
-young, who had one foot already in the dark shadow,
-and who had but a few steps more to take in order to
-disappear? More than once she was tempted to contradict
-her seeming resignation by some violent act.
-Then, like a penitent, she redoubled her fervor to ward
-off the peril, hardened herself to discipline, sharpened
-her vigilance, repeating with a sort of intoxication the
-act of supreme renunciation that had risen from the
-depths of her sadness at the aspect of the purifying
-flame.&mdash;You must have all; I shall be content with seeing
-you live, seeing your joy. And do with me as you
-will!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Then Stelio loved her for the unexpected visions she
-brought him. He trembled and turned pale one day
-when she entered the room with her soft step, her face
-fixed in calm sorrow, as if she were emerging from
-depths of wisdom whence all human agitations seem
-but a puff of wind on a dusty road.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, at last! I have created you! I have created
-you!" he cried, thinking he saw his heroine herself standing
-on a threshold of the distant chamber filled with
-treasure taken from the tombs of the Atrides. "Stand
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-still a moment! Do not move your eyelids&mdash;keep your
-eyes motionless, as if they were petrified! Now you are
-blind. But you can see things that others do not see,
-and nothing can be hidden from you. Here in this place
-the man you love has declared his love to another, who
-trembles at the revelation. They are still here, they
-have just let go each other's hands, and their love
-quivers in the air. The room is full of funeral treasure,
-and on two tables are laid out the riches that covered
-the bodies of Agamemnon and Cassandra. There are
-the coffers filled with necklaces, and there are the urns
-full of ashes. The balcony looks out upon the plain
-of Argos and on the distant mountains. It is twilight,
-and all that terrible gold glitters in the creeping shadows.
-Do you understand? And you are there, on the threshold,
-led by the nurse. You are blind, yet nothing is
-hidden from you. Stop a moment!"</p>
-
-<p>He spoke in the sudden fever of invention. The
-scene appeared before him, then disappeared, submerged
-in a flood of poetry.</p>
-
-<p>"What shall you do? What shall you say?"</p>
-
-<p>The actress felt a chill at the roots of her hair. Her
-very soul vibrated. She became blind and prophetic.
-The cloud of Tragedy descended and hung over her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>"What shall you say? You will call them. You will
-call both of them by name in that silence where the great
-royal spoils repose."</p>
-
-<p>The actress felt the coursing of her blood; her voice
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-was to resound through the silence of thousands of years,
-to revive the ancient suffering of men and heroes.</p>
-
-<p>"You will take their hands; you will feel their two
-lives stretching toward each other."</p>
-
-<p>The blindness of the immortal statues was in her
-eyes. She could see herself sculptured in the great
-silence, and feel the thrill of the mute throng, seized
-with awe at the sublime power of her attitude.</p>
-
-<p>"And then? And then?"</p>
-
-<p>The Inspirer rushed impetuously toward the actress,
-as if he wished to strike her in order to draw sparks
-from her.</p>
-
-<p>"You must awake Cassandra from her sleep; you must
-feel her ashes revive in your hands; she must be present
-in your mental vision. Will you? Do you understand?
-Your living soul must touch her ancient soul, and blend
-into one soul and one grief, so that the flight of time
-seems annihilated. Cassandra is in you, and you are
-in her. Have you not loved her, and do you not love
-Priam's daughter also? Who that once shall hear it
-can ever forget, who can ever forget the deep notes of
-your voice and the convulsion of your lips at the first
-cry of fatalistic fury: 'O Earth! O Apollo!' I see you
-once more, deaf and dumb, on your chariot with the
-look of a wild beast just captured. But among so many
-terrible cries, some were infinitely sweet and sad. The
-old men compared you to the nightingale. What were
-the words you used when you spoke of your beautiful
-river? And when the old men questioned you about the
-love of the god&mdash;do you remember your answer?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Tragic Muse palpitated as if the breath of the
-god again invaded her. She had become ardent, ductile
-material, subject to all the inspirations of the poet.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you remember your answer?"</p>
-
-<p>"O espousals, espousals of Paris, fatal to the beloved!
-O you, paternal waters of the Scamandros! Once, on
-your shores, my youth was nourished by you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, divine woman, your melody does not make one
-regret the syllables of Æschylus! I remember. The
-soul of the multitude, seized by the lamentation 'of discordant
-sounds,' relaxed and was soothed by that melodious
-sigh, and each of us received the vision of years
-long past and our innocent happiness. You can say:
-'I was Cassandra.' In speaking of her, you will remember
-a former life. Her mask of gold will be in your
-hands."</p>
-
-<p>He seized both her hands; both were intent on the
-flashes generated by their blended forces; the same electric
-spark ran through their nerves.</p>
-
-<p>"You are there, near the spoil of the slave-princess,
-and you feel the mask. What shall you say?"</p>
-
-<p>In the pause that followed, both seemed to be waiting
-for a flash. The actress's eyes again became fixed
-and blind, her face became like marble. The Inspirer
-let go her hands, and they made the gesture of feeling
-the sepulchral golden mask. In a voice that created the
-tangible form, she said:</p>
-
-<p>"How large her mouth is!"</p>
-
-<p>"You see her, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I too can see her. The mouth is large; the terrible
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-effort of prophecy dilated it; she cried aloud,
-cursed, and lamented without ceasing. Can you imagine
-her mouth in silence?"</p>
-
-<p>Still in the same attitude, as if in ecstasy, she said
-slowly:</p>
-
-<p>"What profundity in her wonderful silence!"</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to be repeating words suggested to her
-by mysterious genii, and, while the poet listened to her,
-he fancied that he himself had been about to speak
-them. A profound tremor shook him, as if he were
-witnessing a miracle.</p>
-
-<p>"And her eyes?" he demanded, agitated. "Of what
-color were her eyes?"</p>
-
-<p>She made no reply.</p>
-
-<p>The marble lines of her face changed slightly, as if
-under a wave of suffering. A furrow appeared between
-her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"Her eyes," continued the revealer, "were as sweet
-and sad as two violets."</p>
-
-<p>She paused again, panting, as one who suffers in a
-dream. Her lips were dry, her temples moist.</p>
-
-<p>"Thus they were before they closed forever!"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Sometimes Stelio came to his friend's house breathless
-and excited, as if pursued by an Erinni. La Foscarina
-never questioned him, but her personality soothed
-that restless spirit.</p>
-
-<p>"Sometimes I am afraid of the vastness of my conceptions,"
-he said. "I am afraid of being suffocated by
-them. You believe me to be a little mad, do you not?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-Do you remember that stormy evening when I returned
-from the Lido? How sweet you were that evening!
-A short time before that, standing on the Bridge of the
-Rialto, I found a Motive. I had translated the words
-of the Elements into notes. Do you know what a Motive
-is? It is a small spring, from which may be born
-many other springs, a tiny seed that may give birth to
-a crown of forests; a little spark that may kindle an
-endless chain of conflagration&mdash;a nucleus that produces
-infinite force. A few days ago I began to develop the
-Motive of that stormy evening, which I shall call the
-Pipes of Æolus. Listen to it."</p>
-
-<p>He went to the piano, and struck a few notes with
-one hand.</p>
-
-<p>"It contains no more than that, but you cannot
-imagine the generating force of those few notes. A
-tempest, a whirlwind of music has been born of them,
-but I have not yet been able to master it. I am almost
-vanquished, suffocated, constrained to fly."</p>
-
-<p>He laughed a little; but his soul was swaying like the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>"The Pipes of Prince Æolus, opened by the companions
-of Ulysses. Do you remember it? The imprisoned
-winds arise and push back their vessel, and the
-men tremble with terror."</p>
-
-<p>His spirit could not rest long, and nothing could divert
-him from his mental work. He kissed his friend's
-hand, paced to and fro, stopping before the piano that
-Donatella had played when she sang Claudio's melody.
-He wandered to the window, and gazed upon the leafless
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-garden. His aspiration reached out toward the musical
-creature, toward her that must chant his hymns at the
-summit of his tragic symphonies.</p>
-
-<p>In a low, clear voice the woman said:</p>
-
-<p>"If Donatella were here with us!"</p>
-
-<p>He turned, approached her, and gazed at her fixedly,
-silently. She smiled her slight, mask-like smile at seeing
-him so near her, yet so far removed. She felt that
-he loved no one at that moment&mdash;not herself, not Donatella,
-but that he regarded both simply as instruments
-of his art, forces to employ, bows to bend. He was on
-fire with poetry, and she, with her poor wounded heart,
-her secret torture, her mute plea&mdash;she was there, intent
-on nothing but her sacrifice, ready to pass beyond love
-and life, as the heroine of the future drama. Meanwhile,
-each day must make its mark on her face, discolor
-her lips, fade her hair; each day, in the service of old
-age, would hasten the work of destruction in her miserable
-flesh. And then?</p>
-
-<p>She recognized that it was love, after all, unquenchable
-passion, that created all the illusions and all the
-hopes which seemed to aid her in accomplishing "what
-love alone cannot do."</p>
-
-<p>She realized that the torturing restraint of those days
-had not succeeded in creating in her even a symptom
-of the new feeling whereby love was to be made sublime.
-Her secret task, therefore, meant simply continual dissimulation.
-Was it worth while to live for this?</p>
-
-<p>If once the young man's madness and ardor had caused
-her to suffer, she now suffered far more in seeing that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-that ardor had grown calm, and that a sort of reserve
-had taken its place&mdash;a reserve that sometimes repelled
-the gentlest caress. She felt shame at her regret, knowing
-that he was possessed by his great idea, and was
-concentrating all his energies upon it. But a dark rancor
-often mastered her in the evening, after he had departed,
-and blind suspicions nightly tortured her sleepless soul.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;To go away!&mdash;The necessity to do this came suddenly,
-urgently. She had said to her beloved once, on
-a memorable day: "There is only one thing I can do&mdash;go
-away, and leave you free with your fate. This thing
-I can do, which love alone could not do." Henceforth,
-delay was no longer possible; she must break off with
-all hesitation, and emerge finally from that kind of fatal
-suspension of movement, in which she had lived so long
-in agitation.</p>
-
-<p>Since that October dawn, their outward life had been
-unchanged. Nevertheless, she felt that it was impossible
-for her to continue to live in that way any longer.
-She felt a consciousness of something fully accomplished,
-as in the tree that has yielded all its fruit, as in the
-river that has reached the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Her courage revived; her soul grew stronger, her
-energies awoke once more, and the virile qualities of the
-leader again came to life. In a few days she had arranged
-her professional route, reassembled her dramatic
-company, and fixed the date of departure.&mdash;You must
-go and work over there among the barbarians across
-the ocean. You must wander still from town to town,
-from hotel to hotel, from theater to theater, and every
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-night you will draw howls from the crowd that pays
-you. You will gain much money; you will return laden
-with gold and with wisdom, unless it happens that you
-are crushed by a wheel some misty day on a crowded
-street. Who knows? From whom have you received
-the order to depart? From some one within yourself&mdash;deep,
-deep within you&mdash;who sees that which you cannot
-see, like the blind woman in the tragedy. Who
-knows whether over there, on one of those wide, peaceful
-rivers, your soul will not find its harmony and your
-lips will not learn that smile they have attempted so
-many times in vain! Perhaps you will discover a few
-white hairs and that smile in your mirror at the same
-time!&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>And she went on preparing for her journey.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII<br />
-THE STORY OF THE ARCHORGAN</h2>
-
-
-<p>From time to time a breath of Spring passed
-across the February sky.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you feel the Spring?" said Stelio to his
-friend, inhaling deep breaths of the new air.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina fell behind him a step or two, because
-her resolute heart was weakening; she lifted her face
-to the sky, now flecked with white clouds like floating
-plumes. The raucous shriek of a siren whistle prolonged
-itself in the estuary, becoming fainter by degrees until
-the sound was as soft as the note of a flute. It seemed
-to the woman that something rose from the depths of
-her heart and escaped with that prolonged note, as a
-poignant grief gradually changes into a tender memory.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, Spring has already arrived at the Tre Porti."</p>
-
-<p>Once more they floated aimlessly along the lagoon,
-that water as familiar to their thoughts as is the web
-to the weaver.</p>
-
-<p>"Did you say at the Tre Porti?" the young man
-cried, enthusiastically, as if his soul were reawakened.
-"It is there, near the lower bank, at the setting of the
-moon, that the sailors take the Wind prisoner, and bring
-it, chained, to Dardi Seguso. Some day I will tell you
-the story of the Archorgan."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>His air of mystery in describing the action of the
-sailors made La Foscarina smile.</p>
-
-<p>"What story?" she asked, enticed by his significant
-tone. "And what does Seguso do here? Has the story
-anything to do with the master glassblower?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, but a master of a former day, who knew Latin
-and Greek, music and architecture, who was admitted
-to the Academy of the Pellegrini, whose gardens are at
-Murano; he was often invited to sup with Titian in his
-house in the Contrada dei Biri; was a friend of Bernardo
-Cappello, of Jacopo Zane, and other ancient
-Petrarchists. At Caterino Zeno's house he saw the famous
-organ built for Matthias Corvinus, King of Hungary,
-and his magnificent idea came to him in the course
-of a discussion with that Agostino Amadi who succeeded
-in adding to his collection of instruments a true Grecian
-lyre, a great Lesbian heptachord, rich with gold and
-ivory. Ah, imagine it, that relic of the school of Mitylene,
-brought to Venice by a galley which, in passing
-through the waters of Santa Maura, caught and dragged
-the body of Sappho as far as Malamocco, like an armful
-of dead grass! But that, too, is another tale."</p>
-
-<p>Again the nomad woman recovered her youthful spirits
-enough to smile, pleased as a child to whom one shows
-a picture-book. How many marvelous stories, how many
-delightful fancies had not the Visionary conjured up
-for her on those waters, during the long hours of the
-afternoon? How many enchantments had he not known
-how to weave for her, to the rhythm of the oar, in words
-that made all things seem reality? How many times,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-seated beside her beloved in the light boat, had she not
-enjoyed that sort of waking dream in which all cares
-were banished, carried away on waves of poetry?</p>
-
-<p>"Tell it to me," she begged.</p>
-
-<p>She wished to add:&mdash;This story will be the last.&mdash;But
-she restrained herself, because up to this time she had
-not spoken to him of her fixed resolution.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed.</p>
-
-<p>"You are as eager for stories as Sofia."</p>
-
-<p>At that name, as when she heard the name of Spring,
-she felt her resolution weaken; the cruelty of her fate
-pierced her heart, and her whole being turned with
-yearning toward her escaping happiness.</p>
-
-<p>"Look!" he said, pointing to the mirror-like lagoon,
-rippled here and there by a light breeze. "Do not those
-infinite lines of silence aspire to become music?"</p>
-
-<p>Silvery-white in the calm afternoon, the estuary seemed
-to bear the islets on its breast as lightly as the softest
-clouds hung from the sky.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, the master glassblower heard at Zeno's house
-praises of the famous organ of the King of Hungary,
-and cried: '<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Corpo di Bacco!</i> You shall see what an organ
-I will build, with my stick, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">liquida musa canente!</i> I will
-make the god of organs! <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Dant sonitum glaucæ per stagna
-loquacia cannæ.</i> The waters of the lagoon shall give it its
-tone, and in it the stones, the buoys, and the fish also
-shall sing. <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Multisonum silentium.</i> You shall see, by the
-body of Diana!' All his hearers laughed, save Giulia
-da Ponte&mdash;because she had black teeth! And the Sansovino
-gave a dissertation on hydraulic organs. But the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-boaster, before taking his leave, invited the company to
-hear his new music on the day of the Sensa, and promised
-that the Doge on his Bucentaur should halt in the
-middle of the lagoon to listen. That evening the news
-that Dardi Seguso had lost his senses spread to Venice,
-and the Council, which had a tender regard for its famous
-workmen, sent a messenger to Murano to learn the truth
-about the report. The messenger found the artisan with
-his sweetheart, Perdilanza, who was very loving to him
-because she was anxious, and feared that Dardi was insane.
-The master, after looking at the messenger with
-fiery eyes, burst into a hearty laugh, which reassured
-her as to his state of mind; then, quite calm again, Seguso
-ordered the messenger to report to the Council
-that, on the day of the Sensa, Venice, San Marco, the
-Grand Canal, and the Palace of the Doges should possess
-yet another miracle. On the following day, he made a
-formal request for the possession of one of the five little
-islets that circled Murano like the satellites of a planet,
-but have now disappeared, or have dwindled to mere
-sandbanks. After exploring the waters around Temòdia,
-Trencòre, Galbaia, Mortesina, and La Folèga, he chose
-Temòdia as one chooses a bride, and Perdilanza entered
-the shadow of affliction. Look, Fosca; perhaps even now
-we are passing over the memory of Temòdia. The organ-pipes
-are sunk deep in the mud, but they never will
-decay. There are seven thousand of them. We are passing
-over the ruins of a forest of melodious glass. How
-delicate the seaweed is here!"</p>
-
-<p>"Tell me the reason why Perdilanza entered the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-shadow of affliction," said La Foscarina, as both leaned
-over and looked deep into the beautiful clear waters.</p>
-
-<p>"Because her name had been driven from the lips and
-the heart of her lover by the name of Temòdia, which
-he constantly uttered with vehement ardor, and because
-the island was the only place to which she might not
-follow him. There he had constructed his new work-rooms,
-and there he stayed the greater part of the day,
-and almost all night, assisted by his workmen, whom
-he had bound to silence by a solemn oath before the altar.
-The Council, in ordering that the master should be provided
-with everything necessary for his tremendous task,
-had decreed that he should lose his head should his
-work prove inferior to his proud boast. Then Dardi
-tied a scarlet thread around his bare neck."</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina felt as if she were in a dream. Stelio
-seemed to have been speaking of himself in those strange
-figures of speech, as on that last night of September
-when he had explained the myth of the pomegranate,
-and the name of the imaginary woman began with the
-first two syllables of the name he had given her in those
-days! Was any personal significance veiled behind this
-story? Why had he, deliberately, in the vicinity of the
-place where she had been seized with that terrible
-laughter, called up, by that fanciful tale, the memory of
-the broken vase? In trying to understand, she made
-for herself an instrument of torture, with the dream-fancies
-of Stelio's brain. She did not remember that
-as yet he was ignorant of her approaching departure.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-Instinctively she said within herself:&mdash;I am going far-away;
-do not wound me.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She wished to hear the remainder of the story, however,
-for she longed to understand him fully.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, what happened then to the man with the scarlet
-thread?" she inquired.</p>
-
-<p>"More than once he felt his head was insecure on his
-shoulders," Stelio replied laughingly. "He had to blow
-pipes as large as the trunk of a tree, and he had to do
-it with his own mouth, unaided by bellows. He blew
-and blew with all his might, without ceasing. Fancy
-it! The lungs of a Cyclops would hardly be strong
-enough for that. Ah, some day I shall describe the
-fever of that existence hanging between the ax and the
-production of a miracle, in colloquy with the elements.
-He had Fire, Water, and Earth, but lacked Air&mdash;the
-movement of the Air. But every day the Council of
-Ten sent to him a red-haired man to wish him good
-morning&mdash;you know, that red-haired man, with a cap
-over his eyes, who embraces the column in the <cite>Adoration
-of the Magi</cite> of the second Bonifazio. After colossal labors,
-Seguso had a brilliant idea. He found a magician,
-who was said to have power over the Wind in favor of
-long navigations. He said to the wizard: 'I need a
-little wind, not too light nor too strong, but steady and
-gentle, which I could manage as I wish: only a little
-breeze with which to blow some glass that I have in my
-head. <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Lenius aspirans aura secunda venit.</i> Do you understand,
-old man?'"</p>
-
-<p>The story-teller burst into a ringing laugh, for he could
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-fancy the scene with all its details in a house on the
-Calle della Testa, at San Zanepolo, where the Schiavone
-lived with his daughter.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina tried to join in his gayety; but his boyish
-laughter pained her as it had once before when she
-was lost in the labyrinth.</p>
-
-<p>"It is a long story," Stelio went on. "Some day I
-shall use it, but I am keeping it for a time when I have
-more leisure. Now fancy! The magician works the
-spell. Every night Dardi sent his sailors to the Tre
-Porti to spread a snare for the little Wind. At last, one
-night, or rather just before dawn, when the moon was
-about to set, they caught it asleep on a sandy bank in
-the midst of a flock of tired swallows it had borne
-thither.</p>
-
-<p>"There it lay, on its back, breathing as lightly as a
-child in the salty aroma of the waters, almost covered
-by innumerable little forked tails. The rising tide rocked
-it in its slumber, and the black-and-white travelers fluttered
-about it, weary with their long flight."</p>
-
-<p>"What a charming fancy!" exclaimed La Foscarina
-at this fresh picture. "Where have you seen that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Here begins the real charm of the story," he answered.
-"They seize the sleeping Wind, bind it with
-osier withes, carry it aboard their boat, and set sail for
-Temòdia. The bark is invaded by the flock of swallows,
-which will not abandon the leader of their flight."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio paused, because the details of the fantasy
-crowded his imagination to such a degree that he knew
-not which to choose to relate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"And then?" urged his companion, with interest.</p>
-
-<p>"I can tell no more now, Fosca. I know too many
-things.... Well, imagine that Dardi falls in
-love with his prisoner. It is called Ornitio, because it
-leads flights of migrating birds. A continual twittering
-of swallows surrounds Temòdia; nests hang from the
-posts and the scaffolding that surround the great structure;
-wings are singed in the flames of the furnace,
-when Ornitio blows through the tube to create a light
-and luminous column with that ball of burning paste.
-But before he had tamed it and taught it what to do,
-he had much trouble with it. The Master of the Flame
-began by speaking Latin to it, and reciting lines of Virgil
-to it, believing it would understand. But the azure-haired
-Ornitio spoke Greek, naturally, with a slightly
-sibilant accent. It knew Sappho's odes by heart, and
-while it breathed through the unequal tubes, it remembered
-the pipes of Pan."</p>
-
-<p>"And what did it eat?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pollen and salt."</p>
-
-<p>"Who gave it the food?"</p>
-
-<p>"No one. It was sufficient to inhale the pollen and
-salt scattered on the breeze."</p>
-
-<p>"And did it never try to escape?"</p>
-
-<p>"Always. But Seguso took infinite precautions, like
-the lover he was."</p>
-
-<p>"And did Ornitio return his love?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, it began to love him after a time, particularly
-because of the scarlet thread that the master wore continually
-around his bare neck."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"And Perdilanza?"</p>
-
-<p>"She was left alone, and languished in her grief. I
-will tell you more of her some day. Some day I shall
-go to the seashore of Palestrina, and I will write this
-fable for you in the golden sand."</p>
-
-<p>"But how does the story end?"</p>
-
-<p>"The miracle is accomplished. The Archorgan is
-raised at Temòdia with its seven thousand glass pipes,
-resembling one of those frozen forests which Ornitio&mdash;who
-was a little inclined to boast of the wonders it had
-met in its travels&mdash;declared it had seen in the land of
-the Iporborrei. At last comes the day of the Sensa. The
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Serenissimo</i>, between the Patriarch and the Archbishop of
-Spalatro, goes out of the harbor of San Marco on the
-<cite>Bucentaur</cite>. So great is the pomp that Ornitio believes it
-must be the triumphal return of the son of Chronos. The
-fountains are set playing all around Temòdia; and animated
-by the eternal silence of the lagoon, the gigantic
-organ peals forth, under the magic fingers of the new musicians,
-a wave of harmony so vast that it reaches as far
-as the mainland and even to the Adriatic. The <cite>Bucentaur</cite>
-stops, because its forty oars have suddenly fallen at its
-sides, abandoned by the astonished crew. But suddenly
-the wave of harmony breaks into discordant sounds, and
-at last it dies away in a faint murmur. Dardi feels the instrument
-becoming dumb under his fingers, as if his own
-soul had failed. What has happened? The master hears
-only great shouts of jeers and scorn that come to him
-through the silent pipes&mdash;the sound of firing and the
-uproar of the populace. A group embarks from the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
-<cite>Bucentaur</cite>, bringing the red-haired man, who bears a
-block and an ax. The blow is aimed exactly at the
-scarlet thread; the head falls, and is thrown into the
-water, where it floats like the head of Orpheus."</p>
-
-<p>"But what had happened?"</p>
-
-<p>"Perdilanza had thrown herself into the cataract! The
-water dragged her into the machinery of the organ.
-Her body, with its famous hair, lay across the great
-delicate instrument, and silenced its musical heart."</p>
-
-<p>"But Ornitio?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ornitio rescued the head from the water and flew
-away with it toward the sea. The swallows heard of
-its flight and followed it, and very soon a cloud of black
-wings and white surrounds the fugitive. All the nests
-in Venice remain empty after this sudden flight."</p>
-
-<p>"And Dardi's head?"</p>
-
-<p>"Where it is, no one knows," concluded the story-teller,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>The woman bent her head in thoughtful silence.</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps there is a hidden meaning in your tale,"
-she said, after a pause. "Perhaps I have understood."</p>
-
-<p>"Alas, yes! if there were any resemblance between
-my audacity and that of the master workman. Perhaps I
-too should wear a scarlet thread around my neck, as a
-sort of warning."</p>
-
-<p>"You will have your great destiny. I have no fear
-for you."</p>
-
-<p>He ceased to laugh.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, my friend, I must conquer. And you shall help
-me. Every morning I too receive my menacing visitor&mdash;the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-expectation of those that love me and those that
-hate me. Expectation should wear the dress of the executioner,
-for nothing on earth is so pitiless."</p>
-
-<p>"But it is the measure of your power."</p>
-
-<p>He felt the vulture's beak in his breast. Instinctively
-he straightened himself up, seized with an impatience of
-even their slow idling on the water. Why did he live
-in such idleness? Every hour and every minute he ought
-to be trying, struggling, fortifying himself against destruction,
-diminution, violation, contagion. Every hour
-and every minute his eyes should be fixed on his aim,
-and all his energies should be concentrated upon it.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know this saying of the great Herodotus:
-'The name of the bow is Bios, and its work is death'?
-This saying is one that excites our spirits even before
-communicating to it its exact meaning. I heard it continually
-within myself, that evening last autumn, when
-I was sitting at your table&mdash;the night of the Epiphany
-of the Flame. That night I had an hour of true Dionysian
-life, an hour of secret though terrible delight, as if
-I held in my breast the burning mountain where the
-Tiades howl and shriek. Sometimes I could really
-hear songs and clamor, and the cries of distant battle.
-It astonished me that I could remain motionless, and
-the sense of my bodily immobility increased my mental
-frenzy. I could see only your face, which suddenly
-appeared extraordinarily beautiful, revealing all the
-strength of your soul; and behind it I could see other
-countries and other peoples. If I could only tell you how
-I saw you! In the tumult, at the passage of marvelous
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-images, accompanied by floods of music, I called to you
-as in the thick of battle; I made appeals which perhaps
-you heard&mdash;not for love alone, but for glory; not
-for one thirst, but for two, and I know not which was
-the more ardent. And the face of my great work appeared
-to me then the same as your face. I saw it, I
-tell you! And with incredible rapidity my work took
-form in words, song, movement, and symphony, and was
-so real that if I succeed in infusing a part of it into that
-which I wish to express, I shall surely inflame the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>"To express oneself! That is the necessity. The
-greatest vision has no value if it is not manifested and
-condensed in vital forms. And I have everything to
-create. I am not pouring my substance into hereditary
-molds. My work is entirely my own invention. I must
-not, and I will not, obey anything but my instinct and
-the genius of my race. Nevertheless, like Dardi, who
-saw the famous organ at the house of Caterino Zeno, I
-too have another work before my mind&mdash;a work accomplished
-by a formidable creator, a gigantic work in
-the eyes of man."</p>
-
-<p>The image of the barbaric creator reappeared to him:
-the blue eyes gleamed under the vast forehead, and
-he saw once more the white hair tossed by the wind
-about that aged neck. He remembered his own indescribable
-thrill of joy and fear when he had so unexpectedly
-felt beneath his hand the throbbing of that
-sacred heart.</p>
-
-<p>"I should say not before but around my spirit. Sometimes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-it is like a stormy sea trying to draw me down
-and swallow me. My Temòdia is a granite rock in the
-open sea, and I am like an artisan trying to erect upon
-it a pure Doric temple. Compelled to defend the order
-of his columns from the violence of the waves, his spirit
-is always strained in order never to cease to hear, in
-the midst of the clamor, the secret rhythm which alone
-must regulate the intervals between lines and spaces.
-And in this sense too my tragedy is a battle."</p>
-
-<p>He took one of his friend's hands.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you hear the song?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is it?" she said, raising her face to the sky.
-"Is it in heaven or on the earth?"</p>
-
-<p>An infinite melody seemed to be flowing through the
-peaceful, silvery atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>She felt Stelio's hand quiver.</p>
-
-<p>"When Alessandro enters the illuminated chamber
-where the virgin has been reading the lament of Antigone,"
-he said, "he tells how he has come on horseback
-across the plain of Argos, where the song of the larks
-fills the sky. He says that one lark fell at his horse's
-feet, like a stone, and lay there silent, overcome by
-its own frenzy of joy in its song. He picked it up. 'Here
-it is.' Then you hold your hand toward him, you take
-the bird, and murmur: 'Ah, it is still warm!' And while
-you speak the virgin trembles. You can feel her quivering."</p>
-
-<p>The actress felt the mystic chill steal over her once
-more, as if the soul of the blind woman reëntered her
-own soul.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"At the end of the Prelude, the impetuosity of the
-chromatic progressions expresses this growing joy, this
-fever of delight.... Listen, listen!... Ah,
-what a miracle! This morning, Fosca, this morning I
-was at work upon my melody, and now it is developing
-itself in the air! Are we not in a state of grace?"</p>
-
-<p>A spirit of life seemed indeed running throughout the
-solitude; a vehement inspiration filled the silence with
-emotion. La Foscarina gave up her whole soul to it,
-as a leaf yields itself to the whirlwind, ravished to the
-very summit of love and faith.</p>
-
-<p>But a feverish impatience to act, to work, to accomplish
-seized the young man. His capacity for work
-seemed multiplied. He thought of the plenitude of the
-hours to come; he saw his work in concrete form&mdash;the
-pages, the scores, the variety of needs, the richness of
-material adaptable to rhythm.</p>
-
-<p>"In a week, Fosca, if grace assists me, my Prelude
-will be finished, and I should like to try it immediately
-with an orchestra. Perhaps I shall go to Rome to do
-this. Antimo della Bella is even more impatient than I;
-I receive a letter from him almost every day. I believe
-that my presence in Rome is necessary for a few days
-in order to prevent certain errors that may arise in the
-building of the theater. Antimo writes about the possibility
-of tearing down the old stone stairs leading
-from the Corsini Garden to the Janiculum. The street
-that will lead to the theater, after one passes the Arch
-of Septimius, will continue beside the Palazzo Corsini,
-cross the garden, and extend to the foot of the hill.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-The hill is green and mossy, covered with cypress, laurel,
-and flags. The Paulina fountain rises at the left.
-A flight of stone steps leads to a terrace from which
-open two paths bordered by Apollo-like laurels, and
-worthy of leading the people toward Poetry. Can anyone
-imagine a nobler entrance? Centuries have wrapped
-it in mystery; no sound is heard but the song of birds,
-the tinkling of fountains, the whisper of the forest. And
-I believe that poets and innocents can even hear there
-the fluttering of the Hamadryads and the breath of
-Pan!"</p>
-
-<p>The ugly shores, crumbling stones, decaying roots,
-traces of ruined buildings, the odor of dissolution, the
-funereal cypresses, the black crosses, in vain recalled to
-him the words the statues beside the Brenta had spoken
-with their marble lips. Only the great song of victory
-and liberty, stronger than all other signs, now touched
-the heart of him who was to create with joy. "On! on!
-Higher! ever higher!"</p>
-
-<p>And the heart of Perdita, purified from all cowardice,
-ready for any test, betrothed itself once more to Life!
-As in that distant hour of the delirious night, she repeated:
-"Let me serve! Let me serve!"</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV<br />
-THE WORLD'S BEREAVEMENT</h2>
-
-
-<p>The gondola entered a canal enclosed between
-two green shores, which reached the line of
-vision so precisely that the numerous reeds
-were perceptible, the newer ones discernible by
-their paler tint.</p>
-
-<p>From the fulness of her soul, and the abundance of her
-nature, La Foscarina sought everywhere for living
-things to love; her glance became child-like once more,
-and all things were reflected in it as in the peaceful
-water, and some seemed to reappear from the distant
-past, like apparitions.</p>
-
-<p>When the gondola touched the shore, she was surprised
-at having arrived.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish to land, or do you prefer to go back?"
-asked Stelio, coming out of his reverie.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment she hesitated, because her hand lay in
-his, and to move would have meant a lessening of
-sweetness.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," at last she said, with a smile. "Let us walk
-on this grass a little while."</p>
-
-<p>They landed on the Island of San Francesco. A few
-slender young cypress shrubs greeted them timidly.
-Not a human face was to be seen. The invisible myriad
-filled the desert with their canticle of praise. The mists
-rose in clouds near the sunset hour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"How many times we have walked together on the
-grass, have we not, Stelio?"</p>
-
-<p>"But now comes the steep rock," he replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Let the rock come, no matter how steep and rough
-it may be," said La Foscarina.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio was surprised at the unusual gayety in his companion's
-voice. He looked at her, and saw a sort of intoxicated
-joy deep in her beautiful eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"Why do we feel so joyous and free on this lonely
-island?"</p>
-
-<p>"And do you know the reason why?"</p>
-
-<p>"To others, this is a melancholy pilgrimage. Most
-persons, when they come to this place, leave it with the
-taste of death on their lips."</p>
-
-<p>"But we are in a state of grace," said La Foscarina.</p>
-
-<p>"The more we hope, the more we live," was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>"And the more we love, the more we hope."</p>
-
-<p>The rhythm of the aerial song continued, drawing
-from them their ideal essences.</p>
-
-<p>"How beautiful you are!" said Stelio.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden flush flowed over that impassioned face.
-She was silent, but her breath came quick, and she half-closed
-her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"A warm current of air is passing," she said in a half
-whisper. "Did you not feel on the water an occasional
-breath of warmer air?"</p>
-
-<p>She drew deep breaths.</p>
-
-<p>"There is an odor like that of new-mown hay. Don't
-you detect it?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"That is the odor that comes from the banks of seaweed
-that are beginning to be uncovered."</p>
-
-<p>"See how beautiful the country is!"</p>
-
-<p>"That is Le Vignole. Down there is the Lido. And
-over there is the Island of Sant' Erasmo."</p>
-
-<p>The sun had now thrown aside its veil and was showering
-gold upon the estuary. The damp banks emerging
-from the fog suggested the opening of flowers. The
-shadows of the slender cypresses began to grow longer
-and of a deeper blue.</p>
-
-<p>"I am certain," said La Foscarina, "that almond trees
-are in blossom somewhere near. Let us go on the
-dyke."</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head, tossing back her hair with one
-of those instinctive movements that seemed to break
-a bond or to free her of some fetter.</p>
-
-<p>"Wait!"</p>
-
-<p>And quickly withdrawing from her hat two large pins
-that held it in place, she uncovered her head. She turned
-back to the landing and tossed the sparkling hat into
-the gondola; then she rejoined her friend, running her
-fingers lightly through the waves of her hair, through
-which the air passed, while the sun shone on it warmly.
-She seemed to feel relieved, as if she breathed more
-freely.</p>
-
-<p>"Did the wings hurt?" Stelio asked with a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>And he regarded the ripples, roughened not by the
-comb but by the wind.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, the least weight annoys me. If I should not
-appear eccentric, I should always go without a hat. But
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-when I see the trees I cannot resist my impulses. My
-hair remembers that it was born wild and free, and it
-wishes to breathe in its natural way&mdash;in the desert, at
-least."</p>
-
-<p>Frank and gay in her manner, she glided over the
-grass with her graceful, swaying movement. And Stelio
-recalled the day when, in the Gradenigo garden, she had
-appeared to his eyes like the beautiful tawny greyhound.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, here comes a Capuchin!"</p>
-
-<p>The friar-guardian approached them, and greeted
-them with affability. He offered to conduct Stelio within
-the walls of the monastery, but said that the rules
-forbade the admission of his companion.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I go in?" said Stelio, with a look at La Foscarina,
-who was smiling.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, go."</p>
-
-<p>"But you will be all alone."</p>
-
-<p>"Never mind; I will stay here alone."</p>
-
-<p>"I will bring you a bit from the sacred pine."</p>
-
-<p>He followed the friar under the portico with a raftered
-roof, whence hung the empty swallows' nests.
-Before he crossed the threshold, he turned once more
-to wave his hand at his friend. Then the door closed
-after him.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<p class="indent poetry">
-O BEATA SOLITUDO!<br />
-O SOLA BEATITUDO!</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then, as a change in the stops of an organ changes
-its whole tone, the woman's thoughts were suddenly
-transfigured. The horror of absence, to her the worst
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-of all evils, bore down upon her loving soul. Her beloved
-was no longer there; she no longer heard his voice,
-felt his breath, touched his firm and gentle hand. She
-no longer saw him live; she could no longer realize
-that the air, the lights and shadows, all the life of the
-world, harmonized itself with his life!&mdash;Suppose that
-door never should open again&mdash;that he never should return
-to me!&mdash;No, that could not be. He would surely
-cross that threshold again in a few minutes, and once
-more she would receive him into her eyes and into her
-very soul. But alas! in a few days, would he not thus
-disappear again, as he had disappeared now? And first
-the field, then the mountain, then other fields and
-mountains and rivers, then the strait and the ocean,
-the infinite space that neither tears nor cries can cross,
-would they not come between her and that brow, those
-eyes, those lips? The image of the far-off brutal city
-black with coal and bristling with arms, filled the peaceful
-island; the crash of hammers, the grinding of wheels,
-the puffing of engines, the immense groaning of iron,
-drowned the melody of the springtime. And with each
-of these simple things&mdash;with the grass, the sands, the
-brooks, the seaweed, that soft feather floating downward,
-perhaps from the breast of a songbird&mdash;was contrasted
-the vision of streets overflowing with the human
-torrent, houses with thousands of deformed eyes, full
-of fevers that are enemies to sleep, theaters filled with
-the restlessness or the stupor of men who yield one
-hour to relaxation from the ferocious battle for lucre.
-And still, as in a vision, she saw again her own face
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-and her name on walls contaminated by the leprosy of
-posters, on boards carried by stupid bearers, on gigantic
-bridges of factories, on the doors of public vehicles, here,
-there, and everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>"Look! Look at this! A branch of flowering almond!
-There is an almond tree in bloom in the monastery
-garden, in the second cloister, near the sacred pine!
-And you could detect the odor!"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio ran toward her, joyous as a child, followed by
-the Capuchin, who bore a bouquet of fragrant thyme.</p>
-
-<p>"Look! Take it. See what a wonderful thing it is!"</p>
-
-<p>She took the branch, trembling, and her eyes were
-bright with tears.</p>
-
-<p>"And you knew it was blooming!" said Stelio.</p>
-
-<p>He perceived the glittering silvery drops in her eyes,
-which made them look like the petals of a flower. And
-at that instant, of all her adored person, he loved most
-blindly the delicate lines that went from the corners
-of her eyes to her temples, the tiny veins that made her
-eyelids look like violets, the sweet curve of her cheek,
-the tapering chin, and all that never would bloom again,
-all the shadows of that impassioned face.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Father," said she, with a bright glance, repressing
-her sadness, "will not Christ's Poor Man weep again
-in heaven for this broken branch?"</p>
-
-<p>The friar smiled with playful indulgence.</p>
-
-<p>"When this good gentleman saw our tree," he replied,
-"he gave me no time to speak, but had the branch
-in his hand in a moment, and I could only say Amen.
-But the almond tree is rich."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He was placid and affable, with a crown of hair still
-nearly black, with a refined, olive-skinned face, and great
-tawny eyes, as clear as a topaz.</p>
-
-<p>"Here is some savory thyme," he added, offering the
-herbs to La Foscarina.</p>
-
-<p>They could hear a choir of youthful voices singing a
-Response.</p>
-
-<p>"Those are our novices; we have fifteen with us."</p>
-
-<p>He accompanied the visitors to the meadow behind
-the convent. Standing on a bank, at the foot of a blasted
-cypress, the good monk pointed to the fertile isles,
-praised their abundance, mentioned their varieties of
-fruit, lauded the more delightful according to the seasons,
-and directed their attention toward the boats sailing
-toward the Rialto with their new harvest.</p>
-
-<p>"Praise to Thee, O Lord, for our Mother Earth!" said
-the woman with the flowering branch.</p>
-
-<p>The Franciscan was susceptible to the beauty of that
-feminine voice, and was silent.</p>
-
-<p>Lofty cypresses encircled the pious field; four of them
-showed the marks of lightning strokes. Their tops
-were motionless, and were the only sharp outlines in the
-level of the meadows, and waters that blended with the
-horizon. Not the slightest breeze now stirred the infinite
-mirror. A profound enchantment like an ecstasy filled
-the lovely place with rapture. The melody of the winged
-creatures still continued to float from invisible regions,
-but it, too, seemed to begin to flag and soften in this
-silent sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p>"At this hour, on the hills of Umbria," said he that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-had despoiled the flowering almond of the cloister,
-"every olive-tree has at its base, like a covering that is
-shed, a heap of its cut branches; and the tree seems
-more beautiful because the heap of branches hides its
-rugged roots. Saint Francis passes in the air, and with
-his finger he heals the pain of the wounds made by the
-pruning-knife."</p>
-
-<p>The Capuchin made the sign of the cross, and took
-his leave.</p>
-
-<p>"Praise be to Jesus Christ!"</p>
-
-<p>The visitors watched him as he moved away under
-the deep shadows cast by the cypresses.</p>
-
-<p>"He has found peace," said La Foscarina. "Does it
-not seem so to you, Stelio? There is great peace in his
-face and his voice. Look at his gait, too."</p>
-
-<p>Alternately a ray of light and a bar of shadow fell
-across his tonsure and his tunic.</p>
-
-<p>"He gave me a piece of the sacred pine," said Stelio.
-"I will send it to Sofia, who is devoted to the seraphic
-saint. Here it is. It has no resinous odor now. Smell
-it!"</p>
-
-<p>For Sofia's sake she kissed the relic. The lips of the
-good sister would touch the spot where she had pressed
-her own.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes&mdash;send it."</p>
-
-<p>Silently they strolled along, their heads bent, in the
-footsteps of the man of peace, approaching the landing
-between the rows of cypress trees.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not sometimes wish to see her again?" asked
-La Foscarina, with a touch of shyness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Yes, very much," was Stelio's soft-spoken answer.</p>
-
-<p>"And your mother?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, my heart yearns for her&mdash;for that mother who
-looks for me each day."</p>
-
-<p>"And would you not like to go back there?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I shall return, perhaps."</p>
-
-<p>"When?"</p>
-
-<p>"I do not know yet. But I do wish to see once more
-my mother and Sofia. I long to see them very much,
-Foscarina."</p>
-
-<p>"And why do you not go to them, then? What holds
-you here?"</p>
-
-<p>He took the hand that hung idly at her side, and they
-continued to walk thus. As the oblique rays of the sun
-lighted the right cheek of each, they saw their united
-shadows preceding them on the grass.</p>
-
-<p>"When you were speaking of the hills of Umbria
-just now," said La Foscarina, "perhaps you were thinking
-of the hills of your own part of the country. That
-figure of the pruned olive tree was not new to me. I
-remember you speaking to me once before of the pruning
-of trees. In no other form of his labor can the
-farmer gain a deeper sense of the mute life that is in a
-tree. When he stands before a pear, an apple, or a peach
-tree with the pruning-knife and shears that may increase
-their fertility and strength, but which could nevertheless
-as easily cause their death, the spirit of divination
-surges within him, from the wisdom he has acquired
-from his long communings with the earth and the sky.
-The tree is at its most delicate moment, when its senses
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-are awakened, and the sap is flowing to the buds that
-swell and swell, and are just ready to open. And man,
-with his pitiless knife, must regulate the mysterious
-movement of the sap. The tree is there intact, ignorant
-of Hesiod and of Virgil, in labor with its flowering and
-its fruit; and every branch in the air is as full of life as
-is the arm of the man that wields the knife. Which is
-the branch that must be cut off? Will the sap heal
-the cut? You told me about your orchard once&mdash;I remember
-it. You said that all the cuts should be turned
-toward the north, so then the sun should not see them."</p>
-
-<p>She spoke as she had spoken in that far-off evening
-in November, when the young man had arrived at her
-house, breathless from the tempest of wind, after he had
-borne the hero in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled, and let himself be led by that dear hand.
-He inhaled the fragrance of that flowery branch in which
-was a suggestion of bitterness.</p>
-
-<p>"It is true," he said. "And Laimo would prepare the
-ointment of Saint Fiacre in the mortar, and Sofia would
-bring him the strong linen to bandage the larger wounds,
-after they had been cleansed."</p>
-
-<p>In fancy he could see the kneeling peasant, pounding
-cow-dung, clay, and barley-husks in a stone mortar,
-according to an ancient recipe.</p>
-
-<p>"In ten days," he continued, "the whole hill, seen
-from the seas, will be like a great pink cloud. Sofia
-wrote to remind me of it. Has she ever reappeared to
-you?"</p>
-
-<p>"She is with us now."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"She is now standing at the window, looking out at
-the purpling sea; and our mother, leaning on the window-ledge
-with her, says to her: 'Who knows whether
-Stelio may not be on that sail boat which I see waiting
-at the mouth of the river for the wind? He promised
-me he would return unexpectedly by sea, in a small
-boat.'&mdash;And then her heart aches."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, why do you disappoint her?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, Fosca, you are right. But I can live far-away
-from her for months and months, yet feel that my life
-is full. Then&mdash;an hour comes when nothing in the world
-appears to me so sweet as her dear eyes and there
-is a part of myself that remains inconsolable. I have
-heard the sailors of the Tyrrhenean Sea call the Adriatic
-the Gulf of Venice. To-night I remember that my
-house is on the Gulf, and that seems to bring it nearer
-to me."</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the gondola once more, but turned
-to look back at the isle of prayer, where grew the tall
-cypresses with their imploring arms.</p>
-
-<p>"Over yonder is the canal of the Tre Porti that leads
-to the open sea," said the homesick one, fancying that
-he could see himself standing on the deck of the little
-brig, in sight of his tamarisks and myrtles.</p>
-
-<p>They reëmbarked, and floated away, silent for a long
-time. The aerial melody still fell softly on the archipelago.</p>
-
-<p>"Now that the plan of your work is finished," said La
-Foscarina, beginning again her gentle persuasion,
-though her heart trembled in her breast, "you will need
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
-peace and quiet for your labor upon it. Have you not
-always worked best at your home? In no other place
-will you be able to soothe the restless anxiety that
-possesses you. I know it well."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true," he replied. "When the yearning for
-glory seizes us, we believe that the conquest of art must
-be like the siege of a fortification, and that trumpets
-and shouts accompany the courageous assault; while in
-reality the only work that is of real value is that which
-has been developed in austere silence&mdash;work performed
-with slow, indomitable perseverance, in hard, pure solitude.
-Nothing is of any value save the complete
-abandonment of soul and body to the Idea which we
-desire to establish among men as a permanent and
-dominating force."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, you know it, too!"</p>
-
-<p>The woman's eyes were filled with tears again, at the
-sound of those inexorable words, in which was expressed
-the depth of virile passion, the heroic necessity of mental
-domination, the firm determination to surpass himself
-and to force his destiny without flinching.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you know it well!"</p>
-
-<p>And she was thrilled, as one that beholds a noble
-spectacle; and, contemplating that embodied force of
-will, all else appeared vain to her. The tears she had
-felt in her eyes when he had brought her the flowering
-branch now seemed mean and weakly effeminate in
-comparison with those that in this moment welled up
-and were alone worthy to be kissed away by her friend.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, well, then&mdash;go back to your sea, to your own
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-countryside, to your own home. Light your lamp once
-more with the oil of your own olives."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio's lips were closely compressed, and a deep
-frown wrinkled his brow.</p>
-
-<p>"The dear sister will come to your side again to lay
-a blade of grass on the difficult page."</p>
-
-<p>He bent his brow, which was clouded with a thought.</p>
-
-<p>"You will rest in talking with Sofia by the window;
-and perhaps you will see again the flocks of sheep on
-their way from the plain to the mountains."</p>
-
-<p>The sunlight was approaching the gigantic acropolis
-of the Dolomites. The phalanx of clouds was disordered
-as if in battle, pierced by innumerable darts of
-light, and steeped in a marvelous blood-like crimson.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, after a long silence, Stelio spoke:</p>
-
-<p>"And if she should ask me about the fate of the virgin
-who reads the lament of Antigone?"</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina started.</p>
-
-<p>"And suppose she asks me about the love of the
-brother who searches through the tombs?"</p>
-
-<p>The woman felt a dread of this phantom.</p>
-
-<p>"And suppose the page on which she lays the blade
-of grass were the page wherein that trembling soul
-tells of its secret and terrible battle against the horrible
-evil?"</p>
-
-<p>In her sudden terror, the woman could find no words.
-Both relapsed into silence, looking long at the sharp
-peaks of the distant mountains, which glowed as if just
-emerging from primordial fire. The spectacle of this
-eternally desolate grandeur awakened in them a sense
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-of mysterious fatality and a certain confused terror
-which they could neither conquer nor comprehend.</p>
-
-<p>"And you?" said Stelio suddenly, after a long silence.</p>
-
-<p>La Foscarina made no reply.</p>
-
-<p>The bells of San Marco sounded the signal for the
-Angelus, and their tremendous clamor swelled in ever-widening
-waves over the still crimson lagoon which they
-were leaving to the memories of shadows and death.
-From San Giorgio Maggiore and San Giorgio dei Greci,
-from San Giorgio degli Schiavoni and San Giovanni in
-Bragora, from San Moisé, from the Salute, the Redentore,
-and, from one place to another, throughout the
-whole domain of the Evangelists, even to the distant
-towers of the Madonna dell' Orto, of San Giobbe and
-Sant' Andrea, the bronze voices answered, mingling in
-one great chorus floating over the silent stones and
-waters, a veritable dome of sound, invisible, yet the vibrations
-of which seemed to communicate with the scintillation
-of the first stars. And the reverberation above
-the heads of the two in the gondola was so great that
-they seemed to feel it in the roots of their hair and in
-the cool shiver of their flesh.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, is that you, Daniele?"</p>
-
-<p>Stelio had recognized at the door of his own house,
-on the Fondamenta Samedo, the figure of Daniele
-Glauro.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, Stelio, I have been waiting for you!" cried
-Daniele breathlessly, striving to make himself heard
-above the pealing of bells. "Richard Wagner is dead!"</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV<br />
-THE LAST FAREWELL</h2>
-
-
-<p>All the world seemed to have diminished in
-value.</p>
-
-<p>The nomad woman had armed herself anew
-with courage, and planned the route of her
-next professional tour. From the thought of the hero
-lying in his coffin, a lofty inspiration came to all noble
-hearts. La Foscarina knew how to receive it and to
-convert it to the thoughts and actions of daily life.</p>
-
-<p>It happened that her beloved surprised her at the
-time she was packing her familiar books, the little cherished
-treasures from which she never parted&mdash;things that
-for her possessed the power of imparting dreams or consolation.</p>
-
-<p>"What are you doing?" Stelio asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I am making ready to leave the country."</p>
-
-<p>She saw a change pass over his face, but she did not
-waver.</p>
-
-<p>"And where are you going?"</p>
-
-<p>"A long distance from here&mdash;I shall cross the Atlantic."</p>
-
-<p>Stelio became slightly paler. But suddenly he was
-seized with doubt; he thought she was not speaking
-the truth; that she wished only to prove him; that her
-decision was not absolutely fixed, and that she expected
-to be persuaded to remain. The unlooked-for disillusion
-on the banks of Murano had left its mark on his heart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Have you really decided on this, then, so suddenly?"</p>
-
-<p>She was simple, sure of herself, and prompt in her
-reply.</p>
-
-<p>"My decision is not exactly sudden. My idleness has
-lasted too long, and I have the responsibility of all my
-company on my shoulders. While I am waiting for the
-Theater of Apollo to be opened, and for <cite>The Victory
-of Man</cite> to be finished, I shall go once more to bid farewell
-to the Barbarians. I must work for your beautiful
-enterprise. We shall need a great deal of gold to restore
-the treasures of Mycenæ. And all that is connected with
-your work must appear with unrivaled magnificence.
-I do not wish Cassandra's mask to be of some base metal.
-But, above all, I wish to satisfy your desire that for the
-first three days the populace shall have free admission
-to the theater, and after that on one day of every week.
-My faith aids me to leave you. Time flies. It is necessary
-that each person should be in his own place, ready
-and full of strength, when the great day comes. I shall
-not fail you. I hope that you will be satisfied with your
-friend. I am going away to work, and certainly the task
-will be more difficult than I ever have found it before.
-But you, my poor boy, what a burden you have to bear!
-What an effort we demand from you! What great
-things we expect from you! Ah, you know it!"</p>
-
-<p>She had begun courageously, in a tone that was almost
-blithe, trying to seem what above all she must be&mdash;a
-good and faithful instrument at the service of a powerful
-genius, a strong and willing companion. But a
-wave of repressed emotion would rise in her throat and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-stop her speech. Her pauses grew longer, and her hand
-wandered uncertainly among her books and treasures.</p>
-
-<p>"May everything be ever propitious to your work!
-That is the only thing that really matters&mdash;all else is
-nothing. Let us lift our hearts!"</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head, with its two wild wings, and held
-out both hands to her beloved. He, pale and grave,
-clasped them close. In her dear eyes, that were like
-sparkling springs of water, he saw a flash of the same
-beauty that had dazzled him one evening in the room
-where the fire had roared, and he had listened to the development
-of the two great melodies.</p>
-
-<p>"I love you and I have faith in you," he said; "I will
-not fail you and you will not fail me. Something springs
-from us that shall be stronger than life itself."</p>
-
-<p>"A great melancholy," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>Before her, on a table, lay the familiar book, with
-pages turned down and margins full of scribbled notes;
-here and there a petal, a flower, a blade of grass lay
-between the leaves&mdash;signs of the sorrow that had asked
-and obtained from them the consolation of relief or of
-forgetfulness. Before her were strewn all the little
-cherished objects dear to her, strange, varied; nearly all
-were things of no value: a doll's foot, a silver heart, an
-ivory compass, a watch without a dial, a small iron lantern,
-a single earring, a flint, a key, a seal, and other
-trifles; but all were consecrated by some memory, animated
-by some superstitious belief, touched by the finger
-of love or of death, relics that could speak only to one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-of war and of truce, of hope and of sadness. Among
-these objects were figures to which artists had entrusted
-their secret confession, signs and enigmas, profound allegories,
-hiding truths that, like the sun, could not be
-gazed at by mortal eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The young man put his arm around his friend's waist,
-and silently they went to the window. They saw the
-far-distant sky, the trees, the towers, the end of the
-lagoon over which Twilight was bending her face, while
-the Euganean hills were as quiet and blue as if they
-were the wings of earth folded in the peacefulness of
-eventide.</p>
-
-<p>They turned toward each other, looking into the
-depths of each other's eyes. Then they embraced, as
-if to seal a silent compact.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Yes, all the world seemed to have diminished in value.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena had asked of the widow of Richard
-Wagner that the two young Italian men that had carried
-the unconscious hero from the vessel to the shore
-that night in November, with four of their friends,
-might have granted to them the honor of bearing the
-coffin from the death-chamber to the boat and from
-the boat to the hearse. This request was granted.</p>
-
-<p>It was the sixteenth of February, at one o'clock in
-the afternoon. Stelio Effrena, Daniele Glauro, Francesco
-de Lizo, Baldassare Stampa, Fabio Molza, and
-Antimo della Bella waited in the hall of the palace.
-The latter had come from Rome, bringing with him
-the artisans engaged in the building of the Theater of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-Apollo, that they might bear at the funeral ceremony
-bunches of laurel gathered on the Janiculum.</p>
-
-<p>They waited in silence, without even looking at one
-another, each overcome by the throbbing of his own
-heart. Nothing was heard save a faint dropping of
-water on the steps before the great door, where, on the
-candelabra at the doorposts appeared the two words:
-DOMUS PACIS.</p>
-
-<p>The boatman, who had been dear to the hero, came
-to call them. In that rough yet faithful face, the eyes
-showed that the lids were burned by weeping.</p>
-
-<p>Stelio Effrena advanced first, followed by his companions.
-After ascending the stairs, they entered a low-studded,
-darkened room, filled with the melancholy odor
-of flowers and fluids. They paused there a few minutes.
-A door opened. They passed through the doorway one
-by one into the next room. Each turned pale as he
-entered.</p>
-
-<p>The body was there, enclosed in its crystal coffin,
-and beside it stood the woman with the face of snowy
-pallor. The second coffin, of polished metal, stood shining
-on the floor.</p>
-
-<p>The six bearers ranged themselves about the coffin,
-awaiting a sign. The silence was profound, and no
-one moved; but an impetuous sadness shook each soul
-like a tempest of wind.</p>
-
-<p>Each gazed on the elect of Life and of Death. An
-infinite smile illumined the face of the hero lying there&mdash;infinite
-and distant as the glint of a glacier, as the
-sparkle of the sea, as the halo of the star. Their eyes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
-could not bear to look long at it, but their hearts, with
-an awe-struck fear that made them religious, felt as if
-they had the revelation of a divine secret.</p>
-
-<p>The woman with the snow-white face made a slight
-movement, yet preserved the same attitude, rigid as a
-statue.</p>
-
-<p>Then the six friends approached the body, extended
-their arms, summoned up their strength. Stelio Effrena
-took his place at the head and Daniele Glauro took his
-at the feet, as on that day in November. The young
-men lifted their burden with one movement, at a low-spoken
-word from the leader. The eyes of each were
-dazzled, as if a sudden ray of sunlight had pierced the
-crystal. Baldassare Stampa broke into sobs. The same
-knot was in each throat. The coffin swayed, then it was
-lowered into its metal covering, which enveloped it like
-a suit of armor.</p>
-
-<p>The six friends remained overcome with grief. They
-hesitated to put the cover in its place, fascinated by that
-infinite smile. Stelio Effrena heard a light rustling, and
-looked up. He saw the white face bending over the
-body, a superhuman apparition of love and grief. That
-instant was like eternity. The woman disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>When the coffin was closed, they lifted their burden
-a second time&mdash;heavier now. Out of the room and down
-the stairs they bore it slowly. Rapt in a kind of sublime
-anguish, they could see their fraternal faces reflected
-in the polished metal.</p>
-
-<p>The funeral barge awaited them at the entrance. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-pall was laid over the coffin. The six friends waited,
-with heads uncovered, for the family to descend. They
-came, all together. The widow passed them, veiled.
-But the splendor of her face would remain in their
-memories forever.</p>
-
-<p>The procession was short; the funeral barge went first,
-followed by the widow with her relatives; then came
-the young men. The sky was cloudy above the broad
-road of stone and water. The deep silence was worthy
-of Him who transformed the forces of the universe for
-man's worship into infinite song.</p>
-
-<p>A flock of doves, flying from the marbles of the Scalsi,
-winged their way with a flash of plumage above the bier
-and across the canal, circling the cupola of San Simeone.</p>
-
-<p>At the quay a silent gathering of faithful friends was
-waiting. The large wreaths perfumed the air. The
-water rippled softly under the prows of the boats. The
-six companions lifted the coffin from the boat and bore
-it on their shoulders to the railway and placed it in the
-proper compartment. No one spoke.</p>
-
-<p>Then the two artisans from Rome came forward, with
-the clusters of laurel gathered on the Janiculum. They
-were tall, powerful men, chosen among the strongest
-and finest, and seemed cast in the mold of the ancient
-Roman race. They were calm and serious, with all the
-wild freedom of the Agro in their eyes. Their bold outlines,
-narrow foreheads, short curling hair, solid jaws
-and bull-necks, recalled the profiles of ancient consuls.
-Their bearing, free from any servile obsequiousness,
-showed them to be worthy of their function.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The six young men, rendered equal in their fervor,
-took the branches of laurel and strewed them over the
-hero's coffin.</p>
-
-<p>Noble were those Latin laurels, cut on the hill where,
-in a time long past, the eagles descended bearing prophecies;
-where, in more recent though still fabulous times,
-a river of blood has been shed for the beauty of Italy by
-the legions of the Liberator. The branches were straight,
-dark, and strong; the leaves were firm, deeply veined,
-with sharp edges, green as the bronze of fountains, rich
-with triumphal aroma.</p>
-
-<p>And they journeyed toward the Bavarian hill still sleeping
-beneath its frost and ice, while their trunks were
-already budding anew in the light of Rome, to the murmur
-of invisible waters.</p>
-
-<p class="top1"><em>Settignano di Desiderio:<br />
-<span class="indent1">February 13, 1900.</span></em></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Flame, by Gabriele D'Annunzio
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FLAME ***
-
-***** This file should be named 60601-h.htm or 60601-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/6/0/6/0/60601/
-
-Produced by Andrés V. Galia, Sherry Kaufman and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law 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. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
-
-
diff --git a/old/old/60601-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/old/60601-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d8d99fb..0000000
--- a/old/old/60601-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo1.jpg b/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo1.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 652062e..0000000
--- a/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo1.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo2.jpg b/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo2.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 3e5ba77..0000000
--- a/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo2.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo3.jpg b/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo3.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c203dab..0000000
--- a/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo3.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo4.jpg b/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo4.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 3f41cbf..0000000
--- a/old/old/60601-h/images/ilo4.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ