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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece
+by John Addington Symonds
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece
+
+Author: John Addington Symonds
+
+Release Date: February 8, 2005 [EBook #14972]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SKETCHES IN ITALY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ted Garvin, Leonard Johnson and the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SKETCHES AND STUDIES IN ITALY AND GREECE
+
+
+
+
+
+ BY JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS
+
+ AUTHOR OF "RENAISSANCE IN ITALY", "STUDIES OF THE GREEK POETS," ETC
+
+
+
+
+
+ FIRST SERIES
+
+
+
+
+ NEW EDITION
+
+ LONDON
+ JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
+ 1914
+
+
+
+
+PREFATORY NOTE
+
+
+In preparing this new edition of the late J.A. Symonds's three volumes
+of travels, 'Sketches in Italy and Greece,' 'Sketches and Studies
+in Italy,' and 'Italian Byways,' nothing has been changed except the
+order of the Essays. For the convenience of travellers a topographical
+arrangement has been adopted. This implied a new title to cover the
+contents of all three volumes, and 'Sketches and Studies in Italy
+and Greece' has been chosen as departing least from the author's own
+phraseology.
+
+HORATIO F. BROWN.
+Venice: _June_ 1898.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ THE LOVE OF THE ALPS
+
+ WINTER NIGHTS AT DAVOS
+
+ BACCHUS IN GRAUBÜNDEN
+
+ OLD TOWNS OF PROVENCE
+
+ THE CORNICE
+
+ AJACCIO
+
+ MONTE GENEROSO
+
+ LOMBARD VIGNETTES
+
+ COMO AND IL MEDEGHINO
+
+ BERGAMO AND BARTOLOMMEO COLLEONI
+
+ CREMA AND THE CRUCIFIX
+
+ CHERUBINO AT THE SCALA THEATRE
+
+ A VENETIAN MEDLEY
+
+ THE GONDOLIER'S WEDDING
+
+ A CINQUE CENTO BRUTUS
+
+ TWO DRAMATISTS OF THE LAST CENTURY
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SKETCHES AND STUDIES
+
+ IN
+
+ ITALY AND GREECE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+_THE LOVE OF THE ALPS_[1]
+
+
+Of all the joys in life, none is greater than the joy of arriving on
+the outskirts of Switzerland at the end of a long dusty day's journey
+from Paris. The true epicure in refined pleasures will never travel
+to Basle by night. He courts the heat of the sun and the monotony
+of French plains,--their sluggish streams and never-ending poplar
+trees--for the sake of the evening coolness and the gradual approach
+to the great Alps, which await him at the close of the day. It is
+about Mulhausen that he begins to feel a change in the landscape.
+The fields broaden into rolling downs, watered by clear and running
+streams; the green Swiss thistle grows by riverside and cowshed; pines
+begin to tuft the slopes of gently rising hills; and now the sun has
+set, the stars come out, first Hesper, then the troop of lesser lights;
+and he feels--yes, indeed, there is now no mistake--the well-known,
+well-loved magical fresh air, that never fails to blow from snowy
+mountains and meadows watered by perennial streams. The last hour is
+one of exquisite enjoyment, and when he reaches Basle, he scarcely
+sleeps all night for hearing the swift Rhine beneath the balconies,
+and knowing that the moon is shining on its waters, through the town,
+beneath the bridges, between pasture-lands and copses, up the still
+mountain-girdled valleys to the ice-caves where the water springs.
+There is nothing in all experience of travelling like this. We may
+greet the Mediterranean at Marseilles with enthusiasm; on entering
+Rome by the Porta del Popolo, we may reflect with pride that we
+have reached the goal of our pilgrimage, and are at last among
+world-shaking memories. But neither Rome nor the Riviera wins our
+hearts like Switzerland. We do not lie awake in London thinking of
+them; we do not long so intensely, as the year comes round, to revisit
+them. Our affection is less a passion than that which we cherish for
+Switzerland.
+
+Why, then, is this? What, after all, is the love of the Alps, and when
+and where did it begin? It is easier to ask these questions than to
+answer them. The classic nations hated mountains. Greek and Roman
+poets talk of them with disgust and dread. Nothing could have been
+more depressing to a courtier of Augustus than residence at Aosta,
+even though he found his theatres and triumphal arches there. Wherever
+classical feeling has predominated, this has been the case. Cellini's
+Memoirs, written in the height of pagan Renaissance, well express
+the aversion which a Florentine or Roman felt for the inhospitable
+wildernesses of Switzerland.[2] Dryden, in his dedication to 'The
+Indian Emperor,' says, 'High objects, it is true, attract the sight;
+but it looks up with pain on craggy rocks and barren mountains, and
+continues not intent on any object which is wanting in shades and
+green to entertain it.' Addison and Gray had no better epithets than
+'rugged,' 'horrid,' and the like for Alpine landscape. The classic
+spirit was adverse to enthusiasm for mere nature. Humanity was too
+prominent, and city life absorbed all interests,--not to speak of what
+perhaps is the weightiest reason--that solitude, indifferent
+accommodation, and imperfect means of travelling, rendered mountainous
+countries peculiarly disagreeable. It is impossible to enjoy art or
+nature while suffering from fatigue and cold, dreading the attacks of
+robbers, and wondering whether you will find food and shelter at the
+end of your day's journey. Nor was it different in the Middle Ages.
+Then individuals had either no leisure from war or strife with the
+elements, or else they devoted themselves to the salvation of their
+souls. But when the ideas of the Middle Ages had decayed, when
+improved arts of life had freed men from servile subjection to daily
+needs, when the bondage of religious tyranny had been thrown off and
+political liberty allowed the full development of tastes and
+instincts, when, moreover, the classical traditions had lost their
+power, and courts and coteries became too narrow for the activity of
+man,--then suddenly it was discovered that Nature in herself possessed
+transcendent charms. It may seem absurd to class them all together;
+yet there is no doubt that the French Revolution, the criticism of the
+Bible, Pantheistic forms of religious feeling, landscape-painting,
+Alpine travelling, and the poetry of Nature, are all signs of the same
+movement--of a new Renaissance. Limitations of every sort have been
+shaken off during the last century; all forms have been destroyed, all
+questions asked. The classical spirit loved to arrange, model,
+preserve traditions, obey laws. We are intolerant of everything that
+is not simple, unbiassed by prescription, liberal as the wind, and
+natural as the mountain crags. We go to feed this spirit of freedom
+among the Alps. What the virgin forests of America are to the
+Americans, the Alps are to us. What there is in these huge blocks and
+walls of granite crowned with ice that fascinates us, it is hard to
+analyse. Why, seeing that we find them so attractive, they should have
+repelled our ancestors of the fourth generation and all the world
+before them, is another mystery. We cannot explain what rapport there
+is between our human souls and these inequalities in the surface of
+the earth which we call Alps. Tennyson speaks of
+
+ Some vague emotion of delight
+ In gazing up an Alpine height,
+
+and its vagueness eludes definition. The interest which physical
+science has created for natural objects has something to do with it.
+Curiosity and the charm of novelty increase this interest. No towns,
+no cultivated tracts of Europe however beautiful, form such a contrast
+to our London life as Switzerland. Then there is the health and joy
+that comes from exercise in open air; the senses freshened by good
+sleep; the blood quickened by a lighter and rarer atmosphere. Our
+modes of life, the breaking down of class privileges, the extension of
+education, which contribute to make the individual greater and society
+less, render the solitude of mountains refreshing. Facilities of
+travelling and improved accommodation leave us free to enjoy the
+natural beauty which we seek. Our minds, too, are prepared to
+sympathise with the inanimate world; we have learned to look on the
+universe as a whole, and ourselves as a part of it, related by close
+ties of friendship to all its other members Shelley's, Wordsworth's,
+Goethe's poetry has taught us this; we are all more or less
+Pantheists, worshippers of 'God in Nature,' convinced of the
+omnipresence of the informing mind.
+
+Thus, when we admire the Alps, we are after all but children of
+the century. We follow its inspiration blindly; and while we think
+ourselves spontaneous in our ecstasy, perform the part for which we
+have been trained from childhood by the atmosphere in which we live.
+It is this very unconsciousness and universality of the impulse we
+obey which makes it hard to analyse. Contemporary history is difficult
+to write; to define the spirit of the age in which we live is still
+more difficult; to account for 'impressions which owe all their force
+to their identity with themselves' is most difficult of all. We must
+be content to feel, and not to analyse.
+
+Rousseau has the credit of having invented the love of Nature. Perhaps
+he first expressed, in literature, the pleasures of open life among
+the mountains, of walking tours, of the '_école buissonnière_,'
+away from courts, and schools, and cities, which it is the fashion now
+to love. His bourgeois birth and tastes, his peculiar religious
+and social views, his intense self-engrossment,--all favoured the
+development of Nature-worship. But Rousseau was not alone, nor yet
+creative, in this instance. He was but one of the earliest to seize
+and express a new idea of growing humanity. For those who seem to be
+the most original in their inauguration of periods are only such
+as have been favourably placed by birth and education to imbibe the
+floating creeds of the whole race. They resemble the first cases of an
+epidemic, which become the centres of infection and propagate disease.
+At the time of Rousseau's greatness the French people were initiative.
+In politics, in literature, in fashions, and in philosophy, they had
+for some time led the taste of Europe. But the sentiment which first
+received a clear and powerful expression in the works of Rousseau,
+soon declared itself in the arts and literature of other nations.
+Goethe, Wordsworth, and the earlier landscape-painters, proved that
+Germany and England were not far behind the French. In England this
+love of Nature for its own sake is indigenous, and has at all times
+been peculiarly characteristic of our genius. Therefore it is not
+surprising that our life and literature and art have been foremost
+in developing the sentiment of which we are speaking. Our poets,
+painters, and prose writers gave the tone to European thought in this
+respect. Our travellers in search of the adventurous and picturesque,
+our Alpine Club, have made of Switzerland an English playground.
+
+The greatest period in our history was but a foreshadowing of this.
+To return to Nature-worship was but to reassume the habits of the
+Elizabethan age, altered indeed by all the changes of religion,
+politics, society, and science which the last three centuries have
+wrought, yet still, in its original love of free open life among the
+fields and woods, and on the sea, the same. Now the French national
+genius is classical. It reverts to the age of Louis XIV., and
+Rousseauism in their literature is as true an innovation and
+parenthesis as Pope-and-Drydenism was in ours. As in the age of the
+Reformation, so in this, the German element of the modern character
+predominates. During the two centuries from which we have emerged, the
+Latin element had the upper hand. Our love of the Alps is a Gothic, a
+Teutonic, instinct; sympathetic with all that is vague, infinite, and
+insubordinate to rules, at war with all that is defined and systematic
+in our genius. This we may perceive in individuals as well as in the
+broader aspects of arts and literatures. The classically minded man,
+the reader of Latin poets, the lover of brilliant conversation,
+the frequenter of clubs and drawing-rooms, nice in his personal
+requirements, scrupulous in his choice of words, averse to unnecessary
+physical exertion, preferring town to country life, _cannot_
+deeply feel the charm of the Alps. Such a man will dislike German art,
+and however much he may strive to be Catholic in his tastes, will find
+as he grows older that his liking for Gothic architecture and modern
+painting diminish almost to aversion before an increasing admiration
+for Greek peristyles and the Medicean Venus. If in respect of
+speculation all men are either Platonists or Aristotelians, in respect
+of taste all men are either Greek or German.
+
+At present the German, the indefinite, the natural, commands; the
+Greek, the finite, the cultivated, is in abeyance. We who talk so
+much about the feeling of the Alps, are creatures, not creators of our
+_cultus_,--a strange reflection, proving how much greater man is
+than men, the common reason of the age in which we live than our own
+reasons, its constituents and subjects.
+
+Perhaps it is our modern tendency to 'individualism' which makes the
+Alps so much to us. Society is there reduced to a vanishing point--no
+claims are made on human sympathies--there is no need to toil in
+yoke-service with our fellows. We may be alone, dream our own
+dreams, and sound the depths of personality without the reproach of
+selfishness, without a restless wish to join in action or money-making
+or the pursuit of fame. To habitual residents among the Alps this
+absence of social duties and advantages may be barbarising, even
+brutalising. But to men wearied with too much civilisation,
+and deafened by the noise of great cities, it is beyond measure
+refreshing. Then, again, among the mountains history finds no place.
+The Alps have no past nor present nor future. The human beings who
+live upon their sides are at odds with nature, clinging on for bare
+existence to the soil, sheltering themselves beneath protecting rocks
+from avalanches, damming up destructive streams, all but annihilated
+every spring. Man, who is paramount in the plain, is nothing here. His
+arts and sciences, and dynasties, and modes of life, and mighty works,
+and conquests and decays, demand our whole attention in Italy or
+Egypt. But here the mountains, immemorially the same, which were,
+which are, and which are to be, present a theatre on which the soul
+breathes freely and feels herself alone. Around her on all sides is
+God, and Nature, who is here the face of God and not the slave of man.
+The spirit of the world hath here not yet grown old. She is as young
+as on the first day; and the Alps are a symbol of the self-creating,
+self-sufficing, self-enjoying universe which lives for its own ends.
+For why do the slopes gleam with flowers, and the hillsides deck
+themselves with grass, and the inaccessible ledges of black rock bear
+their tufts of crimson primroses and flaunting tiger-lilies? Why,
+morning after morning, does the red dawn flush the pinnacles of Monte
+Rosa above cloud and mist unheeded? Why does the torrent shout, the
+avalanche reply in thunder to the music of the sun, the trees and
+rocks and meadows cry their 'Holy, Holy, Holy'? Surely not for us.
+We are an accident here, and even the few men whose eyes are fixed
+habitually upon these things are dead to them--the peasants do not
+even know the names of their own flowers, and sigh with envy when you
+tell them of the plains of Lincolnshire or Russian steppes.
+
+But indeed there is something awful in the Alpine elevation above
+human things. We do not love Switzerland merely because we associate
+its thought with recollections of holidays and joyfulness. Some of
+the most solemn moments of life are spent high up above among the
+mountains, on the barren tops of rocky passes, where the soul has
+seemed to hear in solitude a low controlling voice. It is almost
+necessary for the development of our deepest affections that some sad
+and sombre moments should be interchanged with hours of merriment and
+elasticity. It is this variety in the woof of daily life which endears
+our home to us; and perhaps none have fully loved the Alps who have
+not spent some days of meditation, or it may be of sorrow, among their
+solitudes. Splendid scenery, like music, has the power to make 'of
+grief itself a fiery chariot for mounting above the sources of grief,'
+to ennoble and refine our passions, and to teach us that our lives
+are merely moments in the years of the eternal Being. There are many,
+perhaps, who, within sight of some great scene among the Alps, upon
+the height of the Stelvio or the slopes of Mürren, or at night in
+the valley of Courmayeur, have felt themselves raised above cares
+and doubts and miseries by the mere recognition of unchangeable
+magnificence; have found a deep peace in the sense of their own
+nothingness. It is not granted to us everyday to stand upon these
+pinnacles of rest and faith above the world. But having once stood
+there, how can we forget the station? How can we fail, amid the
+tumult of our common cares, to feel at times the hush of that far-off
+tranquillity? When our life is most commonplace, when we are ill or
+weary in city streets, we can remember the clouds upon the mountains
+we have seen, the sound of innumerable waterfalls, and the scent of
+countless flowers. A photograph of Bisson's or of Braun's, the name of
+some well-known valley, the picture of some Alpine plant, rouses the
+sacred hunger in our souls, and stirs again the faith in beauty and
+in rest beyond ourselves which no man can take from us. We owe a
+deep debt of gratitude to everything which enables us to rise above
+depressing and enslaving circumstances, which brings us nearer in some
+way or other to what is eternal in the universe, and which makes us
+know that, whether we live or die, suffer or enjoy, life and gladness
+are still strong in the world. On this account, the proper attitude
+of the soul among the Alps is one of silence. It is almost impossible
+without a kind of impiety to frame in words the feelings they inspire.
+Yet there are some sayings, hallowed by long usage, which throng
+the mind through a whole summer's day, and seem in harmony with its
+emotions--some portions of the Psalms or lines of greatest poets,
+inarticulate hymns of Beethoven and Mendelssohn, waifs and strays not
+always apposite, but linked by strong and subtle chains of feeling
+with the grandeur of the mountains. This reverential feeling for
+the Alps is connected with the Pantheistic form of our religious
+sentiments to which I have before alluded. It is a trite remark, that
+even devout men of the present generation prefer temples _not_
+made with hands to churches, and worship God in the fields more
+contentedly than in their pews. What Mr. Ruskin calls 'the instinctive
+sense of the divine presence not formed into distinct belief' lies at
+the root of our profound veneration for the nobler aspects of mountain
+scenery. This instinctive sense has been very variously expressed by
+Goethe in Faust's celebrated confession of faith, by Shelley in the
+stanzas of 'Adonais,' which begin 'He is made one with nature,' by
+Wordsworth in the lines on Tintern Abbey, and lately by Mr. Roden Noel
+in his noble poems of Pantheism. It is more or less strongly felt by
+all who have recognised the indubitable fact that religious belief is
+undergoing a sure process of change from the dogmatic distinctness of
+the past to some at present dimly descried creed of the future. Such
+periods of transition are of necessity full of discomfort, doubt, and
+anxiety, vague, variable, and unsatisfying. The men in whose spirits
+the fermentation of the change is felt, who have abandoned their
+old moorings, and have not yet reached the haven for which they are
+steering, cannot but be indistinct and undecided in their faith. The
+universe of which they form a part becomes important to them in its
+infinite immensity. The principles of beauty, goodness, order and law,
+no longer connected in their minds with definite articles of faith,
+find symbols in the outer world. They are glad to fly at certain
+moments from mankind and its oppressive problems, for which religion
+no longer provides a satisfactory solution, to Nature, where they
+vaguely localise the spirit that broods over us controlling all our
+being. To such men Goethe's hymn is a form of faith, and born of such
+a mood are the following far humbler verses:--
+
+ At Mürren let the morning lead thee out
+ To walk upon the cold and cloven hills,
+ To hear the congregated mountains shout
+ Their pĉan of a thousand foaming rills.
+ Raimented with intolerable light
+ The snow-peaks stand above thee, row on row
+ Arising, each a seraph in his might;
+ An organ each of varied stop doth blow.
+ Heaven's azure dome trembles through all her spheres,
+ Feeling that music vibrate; and the sun
+ Raises his tenor as he upward steers,
+ And all the glory-coated mists that run
+ Below him in the valley, hear his voice,
+ And cry unto the dewy fields, Rejoice!
+
+There is a profound sympathy between music and fine scenery: they both
+affect us in the same way, stirring strong but undefined emotions,
+which express themselves in 'idle tears,' or evoking thoughts 'which
+lie,' as Wordsworth says, 'too deep for tears,' beyond the reach
+of any words. How little we know what multitudes of mingling
+reminiscences, held in solution by the mind, and colouring its fancy
+with the iridescence of variable hues, go to make up the sentiments
+which music or which mountains stir! It is the very vagueness,
+changefulness, and dreamlike indistinctness of these feelings which
+cause their charm; they harmonise with the haziness of our beliefs and
+seem to make our very doubts melodious. For this reason it is obvious
+that unrestrained indulgence in the pleasures of music or of scenery
+may tend to destroy habits of clear thinking, sentimentalise the mind,
+and render it more apt to entertain embryonic fancies than to bring
+ideas to definite perfection.
+
+If hours of thoughtfulness and seclusion are necessary to the
+development of a true love for the Alps, it is no less essential to a
+right understanding of their beauty that we should pass some wet and
+gloomy days among the mountains. The unclouded sunsets and sunrises
+which often follow one another in September in the Alps, have
+something terrible. They produce a satiety of splendour, and oppress
+the mind with a sense of perpetuity. I remember spending such a season
+in one of the Oberland valleys, high up above the pine-trees, in
+a little châlet. Morning after morning I awoke to see the sunbeams
+glittering on the Eiger and the Jungfrau; noon after noon the
+snow-fields blazed beneath a steady fire; evening after evening they
+shone like beacons in the red light of the setting sun. Then peak by
+peak they lost the glow; the soul passed from them, and they stood
+pale yet weirdly garish against the darkened sky. The stars came out,
+the moon shone, but not a cloud sailed over the untroubled heavens.
+Thus day after day for several weeks there was no change, till I was
+seized with an overpowering horror of unbroken calm. I left the valley
+for a time; and when I returned to it in wind and rain, I found that
+the partial veiling of the mountain heights restored the charm which
+I had lost and made me feel once more at home. The landscape takes a
+graver tone beneath the mist that hides the higher peaks, and
+comes drifting, creeping, feeling, through the pines upon their
+slopes--white, silent, blinding vapour-wreaths around the sable
+spires. Sometimes the cloud descends and blots out everything. Again
+it lifts a little, showing cottages and distant Alps beneath its
+skirts. Then it sweeps over the whole valley like a veil, just broken
+here and there above a lonely châlet or a thread of distant dangling
+torrent foam. Sounds, too, beneath the mist are more strange. The
+torrent seems to have a hoarser voice and grinds the stones more
+passionately against its boulders. The cry of shepherds through the
+fog suggests the loneliness and danger of the hills. The bleating
+of penned sheep or goats, and the tinkling of the cowbells, are
+mysteriously distant and yet distinct in the dull dead air. Then,
+again, how immeasurably high above our heads appear the domes and
+peaks of snow revealed through chasms in the drifting cloud; how
+desolate the glaciers and the avalanches in gleams of light that
+struggle through the mist! There is a leaden glare peculiar to clouds,
+which makes the snow and ice more lurid. Not far from the house where
+I am writing, the avalanche that swept away the bridge last winter is
+lying now, dripping away, dank and dirty, like a rotting whale. I can
+see it from my window, green beech-boughs nodding over it, forlorn
+larches bending their tattered branches by its side, splinters of
+broken pine protruding from its muddy caves, the boulders on its
+flank, and the hoarse hungry torrent tossing up its tongues to lick
+the ragged edge of snow. Close by, the meadows, spangled with yellow
+flowers and red and blue, look even more brilliant than if the sun
+were shining on them. Every cup and blade of grass is drinking. But
+the scene changes; the mist has turned into rain-clouds, and the
+steady rain drips down, incessant, blotting out the view. Then, too,
+what a joy it is if the clouds break towards evening with a north
+wind, and a rainbow in the valley gives promise of a bright to-morrow!
+We look up to the cliffs above our heads, and see that they have just
+been powdered with the snow that is a sign of better weather.
+
+Such rainy days ought to be spent in places like Seelisberg and
+Mürren, at the edge of precipices, in front of mountains, or above a
+lake. The cloud-masses crawl and tumble about the valleys like a brood
+of dragons; now creeping along the ledges of the rock with sinuous
+self-adjustment to its turns and twists; now launching out into
+the deep, repelled by battling winds, or driven onward in a coil of
+twisted and contorted serpent curls. In the midst of summer these wet
+seasons often end in a heavy fall of snow. You wake some morning to
+see the meadows which last night were gay with July flowers huddled
+up in snow a foot in depth. But fair weather does not tarry long to
+reappear. You put on your thickest boots and sally forth to find the
+great cups of the gentians full of snow, and to watch the rising of
+the cloud-wreaths under the hot sun. Bad dreams or sickly thoughts,
+dissipated by returning daylight or a friend's face, do not fly away
+more rapidly and pleasantly than those swift glory-coated mists that
+lose themselves we know not where in the blue depths of the sky.
+
+In contrast with these rainy days nothing can be more perfect than
+clear moonlight nights. There is a terrace upon the roof of the inn at
+Courmayeur where one may spend hours in the silent watches, when all
+the world has gone to sleep beneath. The Mont Chétif and the Mont
+de la Saxe form a gigantic portal not unworthy of the pile that lies
+beyond. For Mont Blanc resembles a vast cathedral; its countless
+spires are scattered over a mass like that of the Duomo at Milan,
+rising into one tower at the end. By night the glaciers glitter in the
+steady moon; domes, pinnacles, and buttresses stand clear of clouds.
+Needles of every height and most fantastic shapes rise from the
+central ridge, some solitary, like sharp arrows shot against the sky,
+some clustering into sheaves. On every horn of snow and bank of grassy
+hill stars sparkle, rising, setting, rolling round through the long
+silent night. Moonlight simplifies and softens the landscape. Colours
+become scarcely distinguishable, and forms, deprived of half their
+detail, gain in majesty and size. The mountains seem greater far by
+night than day--higher heights and deeper depths, more snowy pyramids,
+more beetling crags, softer meadows, and darker pines. The whole
+valley is hushed, but for the torrent and the chirping grasshopper and
+the striking of the village clocks. The black tower and the houses of
+Courmayeur in the foreground gleam beneath the moon until she reaches
+the edge of the Cramont, and then sinks quietly away, once more
+to reappear among the pines, then finally to leave the valley dark
+beneath the shadow of the mountain's bulk. Meanwhile the heights of
+snow still glitter in the steady light: they, too, will soon be dark,
+until the dawn breaks, tinging them with rose.
+
+But it is not fair to dwell exclusively upon the more sombre aspect of
+Swiss beauty when there are so many lively scenes of which to speak.
+The sunlight and the freshness and the flowers of Alpine meadows form
+more than half the charm of Switzerland. The other day we walked to a
+pasture called the Col de Checruit, high up the valley of Courmayeur,
+where the spring was still in its first freshness. Gradually we
+climbed, by dusty roads and through hot fields where the grass had
+just been mown, beneath the fierce light of the morning sun. Not a
+breath of air was stirring, and the heavy pines hung overhead upon
+their crags, as if to fence the gorge from every wandering breeze.
+There is nothing more oppressive than these scorching sides of narrow
+rifts, shut in by woods and precipices. But suddenly the valley
+broadened, the pines and larches disappeared, and we found ourselves
+upon a wide green semicircle of the softest meadows. Little rills of
+water went rushing through them, rippling over pebbles, rustling under
+dock leaves, and eddying against their wooden barriers. Far and wide
+'you scarce could see the grass for flowers,' while on every side
+the tinkling of cow-bells, and the voices of shepherds calling to one
+another from the Alps, or singing at their work, were borne across the
+fields. As we climbed we came into still fresher pastures, where the
+snow had scarcely melted. There the goats and cattle were collected,
+and the shepherds sat among them, fondling the kids and calling them
+by name. When they called, the creatures came, expecting salt and
+bread. It was pretty to see them lying near their masters, playing and
+butting at them with their horns, or bleating for the sweet rye-bread.
+The women knitted stockings, laughing among themselves, and singing
+all the while. As soon as we reached them, they gathered round to
+talk. An old herdsman, who was clearly the patriarch of this Arcadia,
+asked us many questions in a slow deliberate voice. We told him who
+we were, and tried to interest him in the cattle-plague, which he
+appeared to regard as an evil very unreal and far away--like the
+murrain upon Pharaoh's herds which one reads about in Exodus. But
+he was courteous and polite, doing the honours of his pasture with
+simplicity and ease. He took us to his châlet and gave us bowls of
+pure cold milk. It was a funny little wooden house, clean and dark.
+The sky peeped through its tiles, and if shepherds were not in the
+habit of sleeping soundly all night long, they might count the setting
+and rising stars without lifting their heads from the pillow. He told
+us how far pleasanter they found the summer season than the long cold
+winter which they have to spend in gloomy houses in Courmayeur. This,
+indeed, is the true pastoral life which poets have described--a happy
+summer holiday among the flowers, well occupied with simple cares, and
+harassed by 'no enemy but winter and rough weather.'
+
+Very much of the charm of Switzerland belongs to simple things--to
+greetings from the herdsmen, the 'Guten Morgen,' and 'Guten Abend,'
+that are invariably given and taken upon mountain paths; to the tame
+creatures, with their large dark eyes, who raise their heads one
+moment from the pasture while you pass; and to the plants that grow
+beneath your feet. The latter end of May is the time when spring
+begins in the high Alps. Wherever sunlight smiles away a patch of
+snow, the brown turf soon becomes green velvet, and the velvet stars
+itself with red and white and gold and blue. You almost see the grass
+and lilies grow. First come pale crocuses and lilac soldanellas. These
+break the last dissolving clods of snow, and stand upon an island,
+with the cold wall they have thawed all round them. It is the fate
+of these poor flowers to spring and flourish on the very skirts
+of retreating winter; they soon wither--the frilled chalice of the
+soldanella shrivels up and the crocus fades away before the grass
+has grown; the sun, which is bringing all the other plants to life,
+scorches their tender petals. Often when summer has fairly come,
+you still may see their pearly cups and lilac bells by the side of
+avalanches, between the chill snow and the fiery sun, blooming and
+fading hour by hour. They have as it were but a Pisgah view of the
+promised land, of the spring which they are foremost to proclaim. Next
+come the clumsy gentians and yellow anemones, covered with soft
+down like fledgling birds. These are among the earliest and hardiest
+blossoms that embroider the high meadows with a diaper of blue and
+gold. About the same time primroses and auriculas begin to tuft the
+dripping rocks, while frail white fleur-de-lis, like flakes of
+snow forgotten by the sun, and golden-balled ranunculuses join with
+forget-me-nots and cranesbill in a never-ending dance upon the grassy
+floor. Happy, too, is he who finds the lilies-of-the-valley clustering
+about the chestnut boles upon the Colma, or in the beechwood by
+the stream at Macugnaga, mixed with garnet-coloured columbines and
+fragrant white narcissus, which the people of the villages call
+'Angiolini.' There, too, is Solomon's seal, with waxen bells and
+leaves expanded like the wings of hovering butterflies. But these
+lists of flowers are tiresome and cold; it would be better to draw
+the portrait of one which is particularly fascinating. I think that
+botanists have called it _Saxifraga cotyledon_; yet, in spite
+of its long name, it is beautiful and poetic. London-pride is the
+commonest of all the saxifrages; but the one of which I speak is as
+different from London-pride as a Plantagenet upon his throne from that
+last Plantagenet who died obscure and penniless some years ago. It is
+a great majestic flower, which plumes the granite rocks of Monte Rosa
+in the spring. At other times of the year you see a little tuft of
+fleshy leaves set like a cushion on cold ledges and dark places of
+dripping cliffs. You take it for a stonecrop--one of those weeds
+doomed to obscurity, and safe from being picked because they are so
+uninviting--and you pass it by incuriously. But about June it puts
+forth its power, and from the cushion of pale leaves there springs a
+strong pink stem, which rises upward for a while, and then curves
+down and breaks into a shower of snow-white blossoms. Far away the
+splendour gleams, hanging like a plume of ostrich-feathers from the
+roof of rock, waving to the wind, or stooping down to touch the water
+of the mountain stream that dashes it with dew. The snow at evening,
+glowing with a sunset flush, is not more rosy-pure than this cascade
+of pendent blossoms. It loves to be alone--inaccessible ledges, chasms
+where winds combat, or moist caverns overarched near thundering falls,
+are the places that it seeks. I will not compare it to a spirit of the
+mountains or to a proud lonely soul, for such comparisons desecrate
+the simplicity of nature, and no simile can add a glory to the flower.
+It seems to have a conscious life of its own, so large and glorious
+it is, so sensitive to every breath of air, so nobly placed upon its
+bending stem, so royal in its solitude. I first saw it years ago on
+the Simplon, feathering the drizzling crags above Isella. Then we
+found it near Baveno, in a crack of sombre cliff beneath the mines.
+The other day we cut an armful opposite Varallo, by the Sesia, and
+then felt like murderers; it was so sad to hold in our hands the
+triumph of those many patient months, the full expansive life of
+the flower, the splendour visible from valleys and hillsides, the
+defenceless creature which had done its best to make the gloomy places
+of the Alps most beautiful.
+
+After passing many weeks among the high Alps it is a pleasure to
+descend into the plains. The sunset, and sunrise, and the stars of
+Lombardy, its level horizons and vague misty distances, are a source
+of absolute relief after the narrow skies and embarrassed prospects of
+a mountain valley. Nor are the Alps themselves ever more imposing than
+when seen from Milan or the church-tower of Chivasso or the terrace
+of Novara, with a foreground of Italian cornfields and old city towers
+and rice-ground, golden-green beneath a Lombard sun. Half veiled
+by clouds, the mountains rise like visionary fortress walls of a
+celestial city--unapproachable, beyond the range of mortal feet.
+But those who know by old experience what friendly châlets, and cool
+meadows, and clear streams are hidden in their folds and valleys,
+send forth fond thoughts and messages, like carrier-pigeons, from the
+marble parapets of Milan, crying, 'Before another sun has set, I too
+shall rest beneath the shadow of their pines!' It is in truth not more
+than a day's journey from Milan to the brink of snow at Macugnaga. But
+very sad it is to _leave_ the Alps, to stand upon the terraces
+of Berne and waft ineffectual farewells. The unsympathising Aar
+rushes beneath; and the snow-peaks, whom we love like friends, abide
+untroubled by the coming and the going of the world. The clouds drift
+over them--the sunset warms them with a fiery kiss. Night comes, and
+we are hurried far away to wake beside the Seine, remembering, with a
+pang of jealous passion, that the flowers on Alpine meadows are still
+blooming, and the rivulets still flowing with a ceaseless song, while
+Paris shops are all we see, and all we hear is the dull clatter of a
+Paris crowd.
+
+
+_THE ALPS IN WINTER_
+
+
+The gradual approach of winter is very lovely in the high Alps. The
+valley of Davos, where I am writing, more than five thousand feet
+above the sea, is not beautiful, as Alpine valleys go, though it has
+scenery both picturesque and grand within easy reach. But when summer
+is passing into autumn, even the bare slopes of the least romantic
+glen are glorified. Golden lights and crimson are cast over the
+grey-green world by the fading of innumerable plants. Then the larches
+begin to put on sallow tints that deepen into orange, burning against
+the solid blue sky like amber. The frosts are severe at night, and the
+meadow grass turns dry and wan. The last lilac crocuses die upon the
+fields. Icicles, hanging from watercourse or mill-wheel, glitter in
+the noonday sunlight. The wind blows keenly from the north, and now
+the snow begins to fall and thaw and freeze, and fall and thaw again.
+The seasons are confused; wonderful days of flawless purity are
+intermingled with storm and gloom. At last the time comes when a great
+snowfall has to be expected. There is hard frost in the early morning,
+and at nine o'clock the thermometer stands at 2°. The sky is clear,
+but it clouds rapidly with films of cirrus and of stratus in the south
+and west. Soon it is covered over with grey vapour in a level sheet,
+all the hill-tops standing hard against the steely heavens. The cold
+wind from the west freezes the moustache to one's pipe-stem. By noon
+the air is thick with a coagulated mist; the temperature meanwhile has
+risen, and a little snow falls at intervals. The valleys are filled
+with a curious opaque blue, from which the peaks rise, phantom-like
+and pallid, into the grey air, scarcely distinguishable from their
+background. The pine-forests on the mountain-sides are of darkest
+indigo. There is an indescribable stillness and a sense of incubation.
+The wind has fallen. Later on, the snow-flakes flutter silently and
+sparely through the lifeless air. The most distant landscape is quite
+blotted out. After sunset the clouds have settled down upon the hills,
+and the snow comes in thick, impenetrable fleeces. At night our hair
+crackles and sparkles when we brush it. Next morning there is a foot
+and a half of finely powdered snow, and still the snow is falling.
+Strangely loom the châlets through the semi-solid whiteness. Yet the
+air is now dry and singularly soothing. The pines are heavy with their
+wadded coverings; now and again one shakes himself in silence, and his
+burden falls in a white cloud, to leave a black-green patch upon the
+hillside, whitening again as the imperturbable fall continues. The
+stakes by the roadside are almost buried. No sound is audible. Nothing
+is seen but the snow-plough, a long raft of planks with a heavy stone
+at its stem and a sharp prow, drawn by four strong horses, and driven
+by a young man erect upon the stem.
+
+So we live through two days and nights, and on the third a north wind
+blows. The snow-clouds break and hang upon the hills in scattered
+fleeces; glimpses of blue sky shine through, and sunlight glints along
+the heavy masses. The blues of the shadows are everywhere intense. As
+the clouds disperse, they form in moulded domes, tawny like sunburned
+marble in the distant south lands. Every châlet is a miracle of
+fantastic curves, built by the heavy hanging snow. Snow lies mounded
+on the roads and fields, writhed into loveliest wreaths, or outspread
+in the softest undulations. All the irregularities of the hills are
+softened into swelling billows like the mouldings of Titanic statuary.
+
+It happened once or twice last winter that such a clearing after
+snowfall took place at full moon. Then the moon rose in a swirl of
+fleecy vapour--clouds above, beneath, and all around. The sky was
+blue as steel, and infinitely deep with mist-entangled stars. The horn
+above which she first appears stood carved of solid black, and through
+the valley's length from end to end yawned chasms and clefts of liquid
+darkness. As the moon rose, the clouds were conquered, and massed into
+rolling waves upon the ridges of the hills. The spaces of open sky
+grew still more blue. At last the silver light came flooding over all,
+and here and there the fresh snow glistened on the crags. There is
+movement, palpitation, life of light through earth and sky. To walk
+out on such a night, when the perturbation of storm is over and the
+heavens are free, is one of the greatest pleasures offered by this
+winter life. It is so light that you can read the smallest print with
+ease. The upper sky looks quite black, shading by violet and sapphire
+into turquoise upon the horizon. There is the colour of ivory upon
+the nearest snow-fields, and the distant peaks sparkle like silver,
+crystals glitter in all directions on the surface of the snow, white,
+yellow, and pale blue. The stars are exceedingly keen, but only a few
+can shine in the intensity of moonlight. The air is perfectly still,
+and though icicles may be hanging from beard and moustache to the furs
+beneath one's chin, there is no sensation of extreme cold.
+
+During the earlier frosts of the season, after the first snows have
+fallen, but when there is still plenty of moisture in the ground,
+the loveliest fern-fronds of pure rime may be found in myriads on the
+meadows. They are fashioned like perfect vegetable structures, opening
+fan-shaped upon crystal stems, and catching the sunbeams with the
+brilliancy of diamonds. Taken at certain angles, they decompose light
+into iridescent colours, appearing now like emeralds, rubies, or
+topazes, and now like Labrador spar, blending all hues in a wondrous
+sheen. When the lake freezes for the first time, its surface is of
+course quite black, and so transparent that it is easy to see the
+fishes swimming in the deep beneath; but here and there, where rime
+has fallen, there sparkle these fantastic flowers and ferns and mosses
+made of purest frost. Nothing, indeed, can be more fascinating than
+the new world revealed by frost. In shaded places of the valley you
+may walk through larches and leafless alder thickets by silent farms,
+all silvered over with hoar spangles--fairy forests, where the flowers
+and foliage are rime. The streams are flowing half-frozen over rocks
+sheeted with opaque green ice. Here it is strange to watch the swirl
+of water freeing itself from these frost-shackles, and to see it
+eddying beneath the overhanging eaves of frailest crystal-frosted
+snow. All is so silent, still, and weird in this white world, that one
+marvels when the spirit of winter will appear, or what shrill voices
+in the air will make his unimaginable magic audible. Nothing happens,
+however, to disturb the charm, save when a sunbeam cuts the chain of
+diamonds on an alder bough, and down they drift in a thin cloud of
+dust. It may be also that the air is full of floating crystals,
+like tiniest most restless fire-flies rising and falling and passing
+crosswise in the sun-illumined shade of tree or mountain-side.
+
+It is not easy to describe these beauties of the winter-world; and yet
+one word must be said about the sunsets. Let us walk out, therefore,
+towards the lake at four o'clock in mid-December. The thermometer is
+standing at 3°, and there is neither breath of wind nor cloud. Venus
+is just visible in rose and sapphire, and the thin young moon is
+beside her. To east and south the snowy ranges burn with yellow fire,
+deepening to orange and crimson hues, which die away and leave a
+greenish pallor. At last, the higher snows alone are livid with a last
+faint tinge of light, and all beneath is quite white. But the tide
+of glory turns. While the west grows momently more pale, the eastern
+heavens flush with afterglow, suffuse their spaces with pink and
+violet. Daffodil and tenderest emerald intermingle; and these colours
+spread until the west again has rose and primrose and sapphire
+wonderfully blent, and from the burning skies a light is cast upon the
+valley--a phantom light, less real, more like the hues of molten
+gems, than were the stationary flames of sunset. Venus and the moon
+meanwhile are silvery clear. Then the whole illumination fades like
+magic.
+
+All the charms of which I have been writing are combined in a
+sledge-drive. With an arrowy gliding motion one passes through the
+snow-world as through a dream. In the sunlight the snow surface
+sparkles with its myriad stars of crystals. In the shadow it ceases
+to glitter, and assumes a blueness scarcely less blue than the sky.
+So the journey is like sailing through alternate tracts of light
+irradiate heavens, and interstellar spaces of the clearest and most
+flawless ether. The air is like the keen air of the highest glaciers.
+As we go, the bells keep up a drowsy tinkling at the horse's head.
+The whole landscape is transfigured--lifted high up out of
+commonplaceness. The little hills are Monte Rosas and Mont Blancs.
+Scale is annihilated, and nothing tells but form. There is hardly
+any colour except the blue of sky and shadow. Everything is traced in
+vanishing tints, passing from the almost amber of the distant sunlight
+through glowing white into pale greys and brighter blues and deep
+ethereal azure. The pines stand in black platoons upon the hillsides,
+with a tinge of red or orange on their sable. Some carry masses of
+snow. Others have shaken their plumes free. The châlets are like fairy
+houses or toys, waist-deep in stores of winter fuel. With their mellow
+tones of madder and umber on the weather-beaten woodwork relieved
+against the white, with fantastic icicles and folds of snow depending
+from their eaves, or curled like coverlids from roof and window-sill,
+they are far more picturesque than in the summer. Colour, wherever it
+is found, whether in these cottages or in a block of serpentine by
+the roadside, or in the golden bulrush blades by the lake shore, takes
+more than double value. It is shed upon the landscape like a spiritual
+and transparent veil. Most beautiful of all are the sweeping lines of
+pure untroubled snow, fold over fold of undulating softness, billowing
+along the skirts of the peaked hills. There is no conveying the
+charm of immaterial, aërial, lucid beauty, the feeling of purity and
+aloofness from sordid things, conveyed by the fine touch on all our
+senses of light, colour, form, and air, and motion, and rare tinkling
+sound. The magic is like a spirit mood of Shelley's lyric verse. And,
+what is perhaps most wonderful, this delicate delight may be enjoyed
+without fear in the coldest weather. It does not matter how low the
+temperature may be, if the sun is shining, the air dry, and the wind
+asleep.
+
+Leaving the horse-sledges on the verge of some high hill-road, and
+trusting oneself to the little hand-sledge which the people of the
+Grisons use, and which the English have christened by the Canadian
+term 'toboggan,' the excitement becomes far greater. The hand-sledge
+is about three feet long, fifteen inches wide, and half a foot above
+the ground, on runners shod with iron. Seated firmly at the back,
+and guiding with the feet in front, the rider skims down precipitous
+slopes and round perilous corners with a rapidity that beats a horse's
+pace. Winding through sombre pine-forests, where the torrent roars
+fitfully among caverns of barbed ice, and the glistening mountains
+tower above in their glory of sun-smitten snow, darting round the
+frozen ledges at the turnings of the road, silently gliding at a speed
+that seems incredible, it is so smooth, he traverses two or three
+miles without fatigue, carried onward by the mere momentum of his
+weight. It is a strange and great joy. The toboggan, under these
+conditions, might be compared to an enchanted boat shooting the rapids
+of a river; and what adds to its fascination is the entire loneliness
+in which the rider passes through those weird and ever-shifting scenes
+of winter radiance. Sometimes, when the snow is drifting up the pass,
+and the world is blank behind, before, and all around, it seems like
+plunging into chaos. The muffled pines loom fantastically through
+the drift as we rush past them, and the wind, ever and anon, detaches
+great masses of snow in clouds from their bent branches. Or again at
+night, when the moon is shining, and the sky is full of flaming
+stars, and the snow, frozen to the hardness of marble, sparkles with
+innumerable crystals, a new sense of strangeness and of joy is given
+to the solitude, the swiftness, and the silence of the exercise.
+No other circumstances invest the poetry of rapid motion with more
+fascination. Shelley, who so loved the fancy of a boat inspired with
+its own instinct of life, would have delighted in the game, and would
+probably have pursued it recklessly. At the same time, as practised
+on a humbler scale nearer home, in company, and on a run selected for
+convenience rather than for picturesqueness, tobogganing is a very
+Bohemian amusement. No one who indulges in it can count on avoiding
+hard blows and violent upsets, nor will his efforts to maintain his
+equilibrium at the dangerous corners be invariably graceful.
+
+Nothing, it might be imagined, could be more monotonous than an Alpine
+valley covered up with snow. And yet to one who has passed many months
+in that seclusion Nature herself presents no monotony; for the changes
+constantly wrought by light and cloud and alternations of weather
+on this landscape are infinitely various. The very simplicity of the
+conditions seems to assist the supreme artist. One day is wonderful
+because of its unsullied purity; not a cloud visible, and the pines
+clothed in velvet of rich green beneath a faultless canopy of light.
+The next presents a fretwork of fine film, wrought by the south wind
+over the whole sky, iridescent with delicate rainbow tints within the
+influences of the sun, and ever-changing shape. On another, when the
+turbulent Föhn is blowing, streamers of snow may be seen flying from
+the higher ridges against a pallid background of slaty cloud, while
+the gaunt ribs of the hills glisten below with fitful gleams of lurid
+light. At sunrise, one morning, stealthy and mysterious vapours clothe
+the mountains from their basement to the waist, while the peaks are
+glistening serenely in clear daylight. Another opens with silently
+falling snow. A third is rosy through the length and breadth of the
+dawn-smitten valley. It is, however, impossible to catalogue the
+indescribable variety of those beauties, which those who love nature
+may enjoy by simply waiting on the changes of the winter in a single
+station of the Alps.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_WINTER NIGHTS AT DAVOS_
+
+
+I
+
+Light, marvellously soft yet penetrating, everywhere diffused,
+everywhere reflected without radiance, poured from the moon high above
+our heads in a sky tinted through all shades and modulations of blue,
+from turquoise on the horizon to opaque sapphire at the zenith--_dolce
+color_. (It is difficult to use the word _colour_ for this scene
+without suggesting an exaggeration. The blue is almost indefinable,
+yet felt. But if possible, the total effect of the night landscape
+should be rendered by careful exclusion of tints from the
+word-palette. The art of the etcher is more needed than that of the
+painter.) Heaven overhead is set with stars, shooting intensely,
+smouldering with dull red in Aldeboran, sparkling diamond-like in
+Sirius, changing from orange to crimson and green in the swart fire of
+yonder double star. On the snow this moonlight falls tenderly, not in
+hard white light and strong black shadow, but in tones of cream and
+ivory, rounding the curves of drift. The mountain peaks alone glisten
+as though they were built of silver burnished by an agate. Far away
+they rise diminished in stature by the all-pervading dimness of bright
+light, that erases the distinctions of daytime. On the path before our
+feet lie crystals of many hues, the splinters of a thousand gems. In
+the wood there are caverns of darkness, alternating with spaces of
+star-twinkled sky, or windows opened between russet stems and solid
+branches for the moony sheen. The green of the pines is felt, although
+invisible, so soft in substance that it seems less like velvet than
+some materialised depth of dark green shadow.
+
+II
+
+Snow falling noiseless and unseen. One only knows that it is falling
+by the blinking of our eyes as the flakes settle on their lids and
+melt. The cottage windows shine red, and moving lanterns of belated
+wayfarers define the void around them. Yet the night is far from dark.
+The forests and the mountain-bulk beyond the valley loom softly large
+and just distinguishable through a pearly haze. The path is purest
+trackless whiteness, almost dazzling though it has no light. This was
+what Dante felt when he reached the lunar sphere:
+
+ Parova a me, che nube ne coprisse
+ Lucida, spessa, solida e pulita.
+
+Walking silent, with insensible footfall, slowly, for the snow is deep
+above our ankles, we wonder what the world would be like if this were
+all. Could the human race be acclimatised to this monotony (we say)
+perhaps emotion would be rarer, yet more poignant, suspended brooding
+on itself, and wakening by flashes to a quintessential mood. Then
+fancy changes, and the thought occurs that even so must be a planet,
+not yet wholly made, nor called to take her place among the sisterhood
+of light and song.
+
+III
+
+Sunset was fading out upon the Rhĉtikon and still reflected from the
+Seehorn on the lake, when we entered the gorge of the Fluela--dense
+pines on either hand, a mounting drift of snow in front, and faint
+peaks, paling from rose to saffron, far above, beyond. There was
+no sound but a tinkling stream and the continual jingle of our
+sledge-bells. We drove at a foot's pace, our horse finding his own
+path. When we left the forest, the light had all gone except for some
+almost imperceptible touches of primrose on the eastern horns. It was
+a moonless night, but the sky was alive with stars, and now and then
+one fell. The last house in the valley was soon passed, and we entered
+those bleak gorges where the wind, fine, noiseless, penetrating like
+an edge of steel, poured slantwise on us from the north. As we rose,
+the stars to west seemed far beneath us, and the Great Bear sprawled
+upon the ridges of the lower hills outspread. We kept slowly moving
+onward, upward, into what seemed like a thin impalpable mist, but
+was immeasurable tracts of snow. The last cembras were left behind,
+immovable upon dark granite boulders on our right. We entered a
+formless and unbillowed sea of greyness, from which there rose dim
+mountain-flanks that lost themselves in air. Up, ever up, and
+still below us westward sank the stars. We were now 7500 feet above
+sea-level, and the December night was rigid with intensity of frost.
+The cold, and movement, and solemnity of space, drowsed every sense.
+
+IV
+
+The memory of things seen and done in moonlight is like the memory of
+dreams. It is as a dream that I recall the night of our tobogganing to
+Klosters, though it was full enough of active energy. The moon was in
+her second quarter, slightly filmed with very high thin clouds, that
+disappeared as night advanced, leaving the sky and stars in all their
+lustre. A sharp frost, sinking to three degrees above zero Fahrenheit,
+with a fine pure wind, such wind as here they call 'the mountain
+breath.' We drove to Wolfgang in a two-horse sledge, four of us
+inside, and our two Christians on the box. Up there, where the Alps of
+Death descend to join the Lakehorn Alps, above the Wolfswalk, there
+is a world of whiteness--frozen ridges, engraved like cameos of aërial
+onyx upon the dark, star-tremulous sky; sculptured buttresses of snow,
+enclosing hollows filled with diaphanous shadow, and sweeping aloft
+into the upland fields of pure clear drift. Then came the swift
+descent, the plunge into the pines, moon-silvered on their frosted
+tops. The battalions of spruce that climb those hills defined the
+dazzling snow from which they sprang, like the black tufts upon an
+ermine robe. At the proper moment we left our sledge, and the big
+Christian took his reins in hand to follow us. Furs and greatcoats
+were abandoned. Each stood forth tightly accoutred, with short coat,
+and clinging cap, and gaitered legs for the toboggan. Off we started
+in line, with but brief interval between, at first slowly, then
+glidingly, and when the impetus was gained, with darting, bounding,
+almost savage swiftness--sweeping round corners, cutting the hard
+snow-path with keen runners, avoiding the deep ruts, trusting to
+chance, taking advantage of smooth places, till the rush and swing and
+downward swoop became mechanical. Space was devoured. Into the massy
+shadows of the forest, where the pines joined overhead, we pierced
+without a sound, and felt far more than saw the great rocks with their
+icicles; and out again, emerging into moonlight, met the valley spread
+beneath our feet, the mighty peaks of the Silvretta and the vast blue
+sky. On, on, hurrying, delaying not, the woods and hills rushed by.
+Crystals upon the snow-banks glittered to the stars. Our souls would
+fain have stayed to drink these marvels of the moon-world, but our
+limbs refused. The magic of movement was upon us, and eight minutes
+swallowed the varying impressions of two musical miles. The village
+lights drew near and nearer, then the sombre village huts, and soon
+the speed grew less, and soon we glided to our rest into the sleeping
+village street.
+
+V
+
+It was just past midnight. The moon had fallen to the western horns.
+Orion's belt lay bar-like on the opening of the pass, and Sirius shot
+flame on the Seehorn. A more crystalline night, more full of fulgent
+stars, was never seen, stars everywhere, but mostly scattered in large
+sparkles on the snow. Big Christian went in front, tugging toboggans
+by their strings, as Gulliver, in some old woodcut, drew the fleets
+of Lilliput. Through the brown wood-châlets of Selfrangr, up to the
+undulating meadows, where the snow slept pure and crisp, he led us.
+There we sat awhile and drank the clear air, cooled to zero, but
+innocent and mild as mother Nature's milk. Then in an instant, down,
+down through the hamlet, with its châlets, stables, pumps, and logs,
+the slumbrous hamlet, where one dog barked, and darkness dwelt upon
+the path of ice, down with the tempest of a dreadful speed, that
+shot each rider upward in the air, and made the frame of the toboggan
+tremble--down over hillocks of hard frozen snow, dashing and bounding,
+to the river and the bridge. No bones were broken, though the race was
+thrice renewed, and men were spilt upon the roadside by some furious
+plunge. This amusement has the charm of peril and the unforeseen. In
+no wise else can colder, keener air be drunken at such furious speed.
+The joy, too, of the engine-driver and the steeplechaser is upon us.
+Alas, that it should be so short! If only roads were better made for
+the purpose, there would be no end to it; for the toboggan cannot lose
+his wind. But the good thing fails at last, and from the silence of
+the moon we pass into the silence of the fields of sleep.
+
+VI
+
+The new stable is a huge wooden building, with raftered lofts to stow
+the hay, and stalls for many cows and horses. It stands snugly in an
+angle of the pine-wood, bordering upon the great horse-meadow. Here
+at night the air is warm and tepid with the breath of kine. Returning
+from my forest walk, I spy one window yellow in the moonlight with a
+lamp. I lift the latch. The hound knows me, and does not bark. I enter
+the stable, where six horses are munching their last meal. Upon the
+corn-bin sits a knecht. We light our pipes and talk. He tells me of
+the valley of Arosa (a hawk's flight westward over yonder hills), how
+deep in grass its summer lawns, how crystal-clear its stream, how blue
+its little lakes, how pure, without a taint of mist, 'too beautiful to
+paint,' its sky in winter! This knecht is an Ardüser, and the valley
+of Arosa lifts itself to heaven above his Langwies home. It is his
+duty now to harness a sleigh for some night-work. We shake hands and
+part--I to sleep, he for the snow.
+
+VII
+
+The lake has frozen late this year, and there are places in it where
+the ice is not yet firm. Little snow has fallen since it froze--about
+three inches at the deepest, driven by winds and wrinkled like the
+ribbed sea-sand. Here and there the ice-floor is quite black and
+clear, reflecting stars, and dark as heaven's own depths. Elsewhere it
+is of a suspicious whiteness, blurred in surface, with jagged cracks
+and chasms, treacherously mended by the hand of frost. Moving slowly,
+the snow cries beneath our feet, and the big crystals tinkle. These
+are shaped like fern-fronds, growing fan-wise from a point, and set
+at various angles, so that the moonlight takes them with capricious
+touch. They flash, and are quenched, and flash again, light darting to
+light along the level surface, while the sailing planets and the stars
+look down complacent at this mimicry of heaven. Everything above,
+around, beneath, is very beautiful--the slumbrous woods, the snowy
+fells, and the far distance painted in faint blue upon the tender
+background of the sky. Everything is placid and beautiful; and yet the
+place is terrible. For, as we walk, the lake groans, with throttled
+sobs, and sudden cracklings of its joints, and sighs that shiver,
+undulating from afar, and pass beneath our feet, and die away in
+distance when they reach the shore. And now and then an upper crust
+of ice gives way; and will the gulfs then drag us down? We are in
+the very centre of the lake. There is no use in thinking or in taking
+heed. Enjoy the moment, then, and march. Enjoy the contrast between
+this circumambient serenity and sweetness, and the dreadful sense of
+insecurity beneath. Is not, indeed, our whole life of this nature?
+A passage over perilous deeps, roofed by infinity and sempiternal
+things, surrounded too with evanescent forms, that like these
+crystals, trodden underfoot, or melted by the Föhn-wind into dew,
+flash, in some lucky moment, with a light that mimics stars! But to
+allegorise and sermonise is out of place here. It is but the expedient
+of those who cannot etch sensation by the burin of their art of words.
+
+VIII
+
+It is ten o'clock upon Sylvester Abend, or New Year's Eve. Herr Buol
+sits with his wife at the head of his long table. His family and
+serving folk are round him. There is his mother, with little Ursula,
+his child, upon her knee. The old lady is the mother of four comely
+daughters and nine stalwart sons, the eldest of whom is now a grizzled
+man. Besides our host, four of the brothers are here to-night; the
+handsome melancholy Georg, who is so gentle in his speech; Simeon,
+with his diplomatic face; Florian, the student of medicine; and
+my friend, colossal-breasted Christian. Palmy came a little later,
+worried with many cares, but happy to his heart's core. No optimist
+was ever more convinced of his philosophy than Palmy. After them,
+below the salt, were ranged the knechts and porters, the marmiton
+from the kitchen, and innumerable maids. The board was tesselated with
+plates of birnen-brod and eier-brod, küchli and cheese and butter; and
+Georg stirred grampampuli in a mighty metal bowl. For the uninitiated,
+it may be needful to explain these Davos delicacies. Birnen-brod
+is what the Scotch would call a 'bun,' or massive cake, composed of
+sliced pears, almonds, spices, and a little flour. Eier-brod is a
+saffron-coloured sweet bread, made with eggs; and küchli is a kind
+of pastry, crisp and flimsy, fashioned into various devices of cross,
+star, and scroll. Grampampuli is simply brandy burnt with sugar, the
+most unsophisticated punch I ever drank from tumblers. The frugal
+people of Davos, who live on bread and cheese and dried meat all the
+year, indulge themselves but once with these unwonted dainties in the
+winter.
+
+The occasion was cheerful, and yet a little solemn. The scene was
+feudal. For these Buols are the scions of a warrior race:
+
+ A race illustrious for heroic deeds;
+ Humbled, but not degraded.
+
+During the six centuries through which they have lived nobles in
+Davos, they have sent forth scores of fighting men to foreign lands,
+ambassadors to France and Venice and the Milanese, governors to
+Chiavenna and Bregaglia and the much-contested Valtelline. Members of
+their house are Counts of Buol-Schauenstein in Austria, Freiherrs of
+Muhlingen and Berenberg in the now German Empire. They keep the patent
+of nobility conferred on them by Henri IV. Their ancient coat--parted
+per pale azure and argent, with a dame of the fourteenth century
+bearing in her hand a rose, all counterchanged--is carved in wood and
+monumental marble on the churches and old houses hereabouts. And from
+immemorial antiquity the Buol of Davos has sat thus on Sylvester Abend
+with family and folk around him, summoned from alp and snowy field to
+drink grampampuli and break the birnen-brod.
+
+These rites performed, the men and maids began to sing--brown arms
+lounging on the table, and red hands folded in white aprons--serious
+at first in hymn-like cadences, then breaking into wilder measures
+with a jodel at the close. There is a measured solemnity in the
+performance, which strikes the stranger as somewhat comic. But the
+singing was good; the voices strong and clear in tone, no hesitation
+and no shirking of the melody. It was clear that the singers enjoyed
+the music for its own sake, with half-shut eyes, as they take dancing,
+solidly, with deep-drawn breath, sustained and indefatigable. But
+eleven struck; and the two Christians, my old friend, and Palmy, said
+we should be late for church. They had promised to take me with them
+to see bell-ringing in the tower. All the young men of the village
+meet, and draw lots in the Stube of the Rathhaus. One party tolls the
+old year out; the other rings the new year in. He who comes last is
+sconced three litres of Veltliner for the company. This jovial fine
+was ours to pay to-night.
+
+When we came into the air, we found a bitter frost; the whole sky
+clouded over; a north wind whirling snow from alp and forest through
+the murky gloom. The benches and broad walnut tables of the Bathhaus
+were crowded with men, in shaggy homespun of brown and grey frieze.
+Its low wooden roof and walls enclosed an atmosphere of smoke, denser
+than the external snow-drift. But our welcome was hearty, and we found
+a score of friends. Titanic Fopp, whose limbs are Michelangelesque in
+length; spectacled Morosani; the little tailor Kramer, with a French
+horn on his knees; the puckered forehead of the Baumeister; the
+Troll-shaped postman; peasants and woodmen, known on far excursions
+upon pass and upland valley. Not one but carried on his face the
+memory of winter strife with avalanche and snow-drift, of horses
+struggling through Fluela whirlwinds, and wine-casks tugged across
+Bernina, and haystacks guided down precipitous gullies at thundering
+speed 'twixt pine and pine, and larches felled in distant glens beside
+the frozen watercourses. Here we were, all met together for one hour
+from our several homes and occupations, to welcome in the year with
+clinked glasses and cries of _Prosit Neujahr!_
+
+The tolling bells above us stopped. Our turn had come. Out into the
+snowy air we tumbled, beneath the row of wolves' heads that adorn the
+pent-house roof. A few steps brought us to the still God's acre,
+where the snow lay deep and cold upon high-mounded graves of many
+generations. We crossed it silently, bent our heads to the low Gothic
+arch, and stood within the tower. It was thick darkness there. But
+far above, the bells began again to clash and jangle confusedly, with
+volleys of demonic joy. Successive flights of ladders, each ending in
+a giddy platform hung across the gloom, climb to the height of some
+hundred and fifty feet; and all their rungs were crusted with frozen
+snow, deposited by trampling boots. For up and down these stairs,
+ascending and descending, moved other than angels--the friezejacketed
+Bürschen, Grisons bears, rejoicing in their exercise, exhilarated with
+the tingling noise of beaten metal. We reached the first room safely,
+guided by firm-footed Christian, whose one candle just defined the
+rough walls and the slippery steps. There we found a band of boys,
+pulling ropes that set the bells in motion. But our destination
+was not reached. One more aërial ladder, perpendicular in darkness,
+brought us swiftly to the home of sound. It is a small square chamber,
+where the bells are hung, filled with the interlacement of enormous
+beams, and pierced to north and south by open windows, from whose
+parapets I saw the village and the valley spread beneath. The fierce
+wind hurried through it, charged with snow, and its narrow space was
+thronged with men. Men on the platform, men on the window-sills,
+men grappling the bells with iron arms, men brushing by to reach the
+stairs, crossing, recrossing, shouldering their mates, drinking
+red wine from gigantic beakers, exploding crackers, firing squibs,
+shouting and yelling in corybantic chorus. They yelled and shouted,
+one could see it by their open mouths and glittering eyes; but not
+a sound from human lungs could reach our ears. The overwhelming
+incessant thunder of the bells drowned all. It thrilled the tympanum,
+ran through the marrow of the spine, vibrated in the inmost entrails.
+Yet the brain was only steadied and excited by this sea of brazen
+noise. After a few moments I knew the place and felt at home in it.
+Then I enjoyed a spectacle which sculptors might have envied. For they
+ring the bells in Davos after this fashion:--The lads below set them
+going with ropes. The men above climb in pairs on ladders to the beams
+from which they are suspended. Two mighty pine-trees, roughly squared
+and built into the walls, extend from side to side across the belfry.
+Another from which the bells hang, connects these massive trunks
+at right angles. Just where the central beam is wedged into the
+two parallel supports, the ladders reach them from each side of the
+belfry, so that, bending from the higher rung of the ladder, and
+leaning over, stayed upon the lateral beam, each pair of men can keep
+one bell in movement with their hands. Each comrade plants one leg
+upon the ladder, and sets the other knee firmly athwart the horizontal
+pine. Then round each other's waist they twine left arm and right. The
+two have thus become one man. Right arm and left are free to grasp the
+bell's horns, sprouting at its crest beneath the beam. With a grave
+rhythmic motion, bending sideward in a close embrace, swaying and
+returning to their centre from the well-knit loins, they drive the
+force of each strong muscle into the vexed bell. The impact is earnest
+at first, but soon it becomes frantic. The men take something from
+each other of exalted enthusiasm. This efflux of their combined
+energies inspires them and exasperates the mighty resonance of metal
+which they rule. They are lost in a trance of what approximates to
+dervish passion--so thrilling is the surge of sound, so potent are the
+rhythms they obey. Men come and tug them by the heels. One grasps
+the starting thews upon their calves. Another is impatient for their
+place. But they strain still, locked together, and forgetful of the
+world. At length they have enough: then slowly, clingingly unclasp,
+turn round with gazing eyes, and are resumed, sedately, into the
+diurnal round of common life. Another pair is in their room upon the
+beam.
+
+The Englishman who saw these things stood looking up, enveloped in his
+ulster with the grey cowl thrust upon his forehead, like a monk. One
+candle cast a grotesque shadow of him on the plastered wall. And when
+his chance came, though he was but a weakling, he too climbed and for
+some moments hugged the beam, and felt the madness of the swinging
+bell. Descending, he wondered long and strangely whether he
+ascribed too much of feeling to the men he watched. But no, that was
+impossible. There are emotions deeply seated in the joy of exercise,
+when the body is brought into play, and masses move in concert, of
+which the subject is but half conscious. Music and dance, and the
+delirium of battle or the chase, act thus upon spontaneous natures.
+The mystery of rhythm and associated energy and blood tingling
+in sympathy is here. It lies at the root of man's most tyrannous
+instinctive impulses.
+
+It was past one when we reached home, and now a meditative man might
+well have gone to bed. But no one thinks of sleeping on Sylvester
+Abend. So there followed bowls of punch in one friend's room, where
+English, French, and Germans blent together in convivial Babel; and
+flasks of old Montagner in another. Palmy, at this period, wore an
+archdeacon's hat, and smoked a churchwarden's pipe; and neither were
+his own, nor did he derive anything ecclesiastical or Anglican from
+the association. Late in the morning we must sally forth, they said,
+and roam the town. For it is the custom here on New Year's night to
+greet acquaintances, and ask for hospitality, and no one may
+deny these self-invited guests. We turned out again into the grey
+snow-swept gloom, a curious Comus--not at all like Greeks, for we had
+neither torches in our hands nor rose-wreaths to suspend upon a lady's
+door-posts. And yet I could not refrain, at this supreme moment
+of jollity, in the zero temperature, amid my Grisons friends, from
+humming to myself verses from the Greek Anthology:--
+
+ The die is cast! Nay, light the torch!
+ I'll take the road! Up, courage, ho!
+ Why linger pondering in the porch?
+ Upon Love's revel we will go!
+
+ Shake off those fumes of wine! Hang care
+ And caution! What has Love to do
+ With prudence? Let the torches flare!
+ Quick, drown the doubts that hampered you!
+
+ Cast weary wisdom to the wind!
+ One thing, but one alone, I know:
+ Love bent e'en Jove and made him blind
+ Upon Love's revel we will go!
+
+And then again:--
+
+ I've drunk sheer madness! Not with wine,
+ But old fantastic tales, I'll arm
+ My heart in heedlessness divine,
+ And dare the road, nor dream of harm!
+
+ I'll join Love's rout! Let thunder break,
+ Let lightning blast me by the way!
+ Invulnerable Love shall shake
+ His ĉgis o'er my head to-day.
+
+This last epigram was not inappropriate to an invalid about to begin
+the fifth act in a roystering night's adventure. And still once
+more:--
+
+ Cold blows the winter wind; 'tis Love,
+ Whose sweet eyes swim with honeyed tears,
+ That bears me to thy doors, my love,
+ Tossed by the storm of hopes and fears.
+
+ Cold blows the blast of aching Love;
+ But be thou for my wandering sail,
+ Adrift upon these waves of love,
+ Safe harbour from the whistling gale!
+
+However, upon this occasion, though we had winter-wind enough, and
+cold enough, there was not much love in the business. My arm was
+firmly clenched in Christian Buol's, and Christian Palmy came
+behind, trolling out songs in Italian dialect, with still recurring
+_canaille_ choruses, of which the facile rhymes seemed mostly
+made on a prolonged _amu-u-u-r_. It is noticeable that Italian
+ditties are specially designed for fellows shouting in the streets at
+night. They seem in keeping there, and nowhere else that I could ever
+see. And these Davosers took to them naturally when the time for Comus
+came. It was between four and five in the morning, and nearly all the
+houses in the place were dark. The tall church-tower and spire loomed
+up above us in grey twilight. The tireless wind still swept thin
+snow from fell and forest. But the frenzied bells had sunk into their
+twelvemonth's slumber, which shall be broken only by decorous tollings
+at less festive times. I wondered whether they were tingling still
+with the heart-throbs and with the pressure of those many arms? Was
+their old age warmed, as mine was, with that gust of life--the young
+men who had clung to them like bees to lily-bells, and shaken all
+their locked-up tone and shrillness into the wild winter air? Alas!
+how many generations of the young have handled them; and they are
+still there, frozen in their belfry; and the young grow middle-aged,
+and old, and die at last; and the bells they grappled in their lust
+of manhood toll them to their graves, on which the tireless wind will,
+winter after winter, sprinkle snow from alps and forests which they
+knew.
+
+'There is a light,' cried Christian, 'up in Anna's window!' 'A light!
+a light!' the Comus shouted. But how to get at the window, which is
+pretty high above the ground, and out of reach of the most ardent
+revellers? We search a neighbouring shed, extract a stable-ladder, and
+in two seconds Palmy has climbed to the topmost rung, while Christian
+and Georg hold it firm upon the snow beneath. Then begins a passage
+from some comic opera of Mozart's or Cimarosa's--an escapade familiar
+to Spanish or Italian students, which recalls the stage. It is an
+episode from 'Don Giovanni,' translated to this dark-etched scene
+of snowy hills, and Gothic tower, and mullioned windows deep embayed
+beneath their eaves and icicles. _Deh vieni alla finestra!_ sings
+Palmy-Leporello; the chorus answers: _Deh vieni! Perchè non vieni
+ancora?_ pleads Leporello; the chorus shouts: _Perchè? Mio
+amu-u-u-r_, sighs Leporello; and Echo cries, _amu-u-u-r!_ All
+the wooing, be it noticed, is conducted in Italian. But the actors
+murmur to each other in Davoser Deutsch, 'She won't come, Palmy! It is
+far too late; she is gone to bed. Come down; you'll wake the village
+with your caterwauling!' But Leporello waves his broad archdeacon's
+hat, and resumes a flood of flexible Bregaglian. He has a shrewd
+suspicion that the girl is peeping from behind the window curtain;
+and tells us, bending down from the ladder, in a hoarse stage-whisper,
+that we must have patience; 'these girls are kittle cattle, who take
+long to draw: but if your lungs last out, they're sure to show.' And
+Leporello is right. Faint heart ne'er won fair lady. From the summit
+of his ladder, by his eloquent Italian tongue, he brings the shy bird
+down at last. We hear the unbarring of the house door, and a comely
+maiden, in her Sunday dress, welcomes us politely to her ground-floor
+sitting-room. The Comus enters, in grave order, with set speeches,
+handshakes, and inevitable _Prosits_! It is a large low chamber,
+with a huge stone stove, wide benches fixed along the walls, and a
+great oval table. We sit how and where we can. Red wine is produced,
+and eier-brod and küchli. Fräulein Anna serves us sedately, holding
+her own with decent self-respect against the inrush of the revellers.
+She is quite alone; but are not her father and mother in bed above,
+and within earshot? Besides, the Comus, even at this abnormal hour and
+after an abnormal night, is well conducted. Things seem slipping into
+a decorous wine-party, when Leporello readjusts the broad-brimmed
+hat upon his head, and very cleverly acts a little love-scene for our
+benefit. Fräulein Anna takes this as a delicate compliment, and the
+thing is so prettily done in truth, that not the sternest taste could
+be offended. Meanwhile another party of night-wanderers, attracted by
+our mirth, break in. More _Prosits_ and clinked glasses follow;
+and with a fair good-morning to our hostess, we retire.
+
+It is too late to think of bed. 'The quincunx of heaven,' as Sir
+Thomas Browne phrased it on a dissimilar occasion, 'runs low.... The
+huntsmen are up in America; and not in America only, for the huntsmen,
+if there are any this night in Graubünden, have long been out upon the
+snow, and the stable-lads are dragging the sledges from their sheds
+to carry down the mails to Landquart. We meet the porters from the
+various hotels, bringing letter-bags and luggage to the post. It is
+time to turn in and take a cup of black coffee against the rising sun.
+
+IX
+
+Some nights, even in Davos, are spent, even by an invalid, in bed.
+A leaflet, therefore, of 'Sleep-chasings' may not inappropriately
+be flung, as envoy to so many wanderings on foot and sledge upon the
+winter snows.
+
+The first is a confused medley of things familiar and things strange.
+I have been dreaming of far-away old German towns, with gabled houses
+deep in snow; dreaming of châlets in forgotten Alpine glens, where
+wood-cutters come plunging into sleepy light from gloom, and sinking
+down beside the stove to shake the drift from their rough shoulders;
+dreaming of vast veils of icicles upon the gaunt black rocks in places
+where no foot of man will pass, and where the snow is weaving eyebrows
+over the ledges of grey whirlwind-beaten precipices; dreaming
+of Venice, forlorn beneath the windy drip of rain, the gas lamps
+flickering on the swimming piazzetta, the barche idle, the gondolier
+wrapped in his thread-bare cloak, alone; dreaming of Apennines, with
+world-old cities, brown, above the brown sea of dead chestnut boughs;
+dreaming of stormy tides, and watchers aloft in lighthouses when day
+is finished; dreaming of dead men and women and dead children in the
+earth, far down beneath the snow-drifts, six feet deep. And then
+I lift my face, awaking, from my pillow; the pallid moon is on the
+valley, and the room is filled with spectral light.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. This is a hospice in an unfrequented
+pass, between sad peaks, beside a little black lake, overdrifted with
+soft snow. I pass into the house-room, gliding silently. An old man
+and an old woman are nodding, bowed in deepest slumber, by the stove.
+A young man plays the zither on a table. He lifts his head, still
+modulating with his fingers on the strings. He looks right through me
+with wide anxious eyes. He does not see me, but sees Italy, I know,
+and some one wandering on a sandy shore.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. This is S. Stephen's Church in Wien.
+Inside, the lamps are burning dimly in the choir. There is fog in the
+aisles; but through the sleepy air and over the red candles flies a
+wild soprano's voice, a boy's soul in its singing sent to heaven.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. From the mufflers in which his
+father, the mountebank, has wrapped the child, to carry him across
+the heath, a little tumbling-boy emerges in soiled tights. He is half
+asleep. His father scrapes the fiddle. The boy shortens his red belt,
+kisses his fingers to us, and ties himself into a knot among the
+glasses on the table.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. I am on the parapet of a huge
+circular tower, hollow like a well, and pierced with windows at
+irregular intervals. The parapet is broad, and slabbed with red
+Verona marble. Around me are athletic men, all naked, in the strangest
+attitudes of studied rest, down-gazing, as I do, into the depths
+below. There comes a confused murmur of voices, and the tower is
+threaded and rethreaded with great cables. Up these there climb to us
+a crowd of young men, clinging to the ropes and flinging their bodies
+sideways on aërial trapezes. My heart trembles with keen joy and
+terror. For nowhere else could plastic forms be seen more beautiful,
+and nowhere else is peril more apparent. Leaning my chin upon the
+utmost verge, I wait. I watch one youth, who smiles and soars to me;
+and when his face is almost touching mine, he speaks, but what he says
+I know not.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. The whole world rocks to its
+foundations. The mountain summits that I know are shaken. They bow
+their bristling crests. They are falling, falling on us, and the earth
+is riven. I wake in terror, shouting: INSOLITIS TREMUERUNT MOTIBUS
+ALPES! An earthquake, slight but real, has stirred the ever-wakeful
+Vesta of the brain to this Virgilian quotation.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. Once more at night I sledge alone
+upon the Klosters road. It is the point where the woods close over it
+and moonlight may not pierce the boughs. There come shrill cries of
+many voices from behind, and rushings that pass by and vanish. Then
+on their sledges I behold the phantoms of the dead who died in Davos,
+longing for their homes; and each flies past me, shrieking in the
+still cold air; and phosphorescent like long meteors, the pageant
+turns the windings of the road below and disappears.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. This is the top of some high
+mountain, where the crags are cruelly tortured and cast in enormous
+splinters on the ledges of cliffs grey with old-world ice. A ravine,
+opening at my feet, plunges down immeasurably to a dim and distant
+sea. Above me soars a precipice embossed with a gigantic ice-bound
+shape. As I gaze thereon, I find the lineaments and limbs of a Titanic
+man chained and nailed to the rock. His beard has grown for centuries,
+and flowed this way and that, adown his breast and over to the stone
+on either side; and the whole of him is covered with a greenish ice,
+ancient beyond the memory of man. 'This is Prometheus,' I whisper to
+myself, 'and I am alone on Caucasus.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+BACCHUS IN GRAUBÜNDEN
+
+
+I
+
+Some years' residence in the Canton of the Grisons made me familiar
+with all sorts of Valtelline wine; with masculine but rough _Inferno_,
+generous _Forzato_, delicate _Sassella_, harsher _Montagner_, the
+raspberry flavour of _Grumello_, the sharp invigorating twang of
+_Villa_. The colour, ranging from garnet to almandine or ruby, told me
+the age and quality of wine; and I could judge from the crust it forms
+upon the bottle, whether it had been left long enough in wood to
+ripen. I had furthermore arrived at the conclusion that the best
+Valtelline can only be tasted in cellars of the Engadine or Davos,
+where this vintage matures slowly in the mountain air, and takes a
+flavour unknown at lower levels. In a word, it had amused my leisure
+to make or think myself a connoisseur. My literary taste was tickled
+by the praise bestowed in the Augustan age on Rhĉtic grapes by Virgil:
+
+ Et quo te carmine dicam,
+ Rhĉtica? nec cellis ideo contende Falernis.
+
+I piqued myself on thinking that could the poet but have drank
+one bottle at Samaden--where Stilicho, by the way, in his famous
+recruiting expedition may perhaps have drank it--he would have been
+less chary in his panegyric. For the point of inferiority on which he
+seems to insist, namely, that Valtelline wine does not keep well
+in cellar, is only proper to this vintage in Italian climate. Such
+meditations led my fancy on the path of history. Is there truth,
+then, in the dim tradition that this mountain land was colonised
+by Etruscans? Is _Ras_ the root of Rhĉtia? The Etruscans were
+accomplished wine-growers, we know. It was their Montepulciano which
+drew the Gauls to Rome, if Livy can be trusted. Perhaps they first
+planted the vine in Valtelline. Perhaps its superior culture in that
+district may be due to ancient use surviving in a secluded Alpine
+valley. One thing is certain, that the peasants of Sondrio and Tirano
+understand viticulture better than the Italians of Lombardy.
+
+Then my thoughts ran on to the period of modern history, when the
+Grisons seized the Valtelline in lieu of war-pay from the Dukes of
+Milan. For some three centuries they held it as a subject province.
+From the Rathhaus at Davos or Chur they sent their nobles--Von
+Salis and Buol, Planta and Sprecher von Bernegg--across the hills as
+governors or podestàs to Poschiavo, Sondrio, Tirano, and Morbegno.
+In those old days the Valtelline wines came duly every winter over
+snow-deep passes to fill the cellars of the Signori Grigioni. That
+quaint traveller Tom Coryat, in his so-called 'Crudities,' notes
+the custom early in the seventeenth century. And as that custom
+then obtained, it still subsists with little alteration. The
+wine-carriers--Weinführer, as they are called--first scaled
+the Bernina pass, halting then as now, perhaps at Poschiavo and
+Pontresina. Afterwards, in order to reach Davos, the pass of the
+Scaletta rose before them--a wilderness of untracked snow-drifts. The
+country-folk still point to narrow, light hand-sledges, on which the
+casks were charged before the last pitch of the pass. Some wine came,
+no doubt, on pack-saddles. A meadow in front of the Dischma-Thal,
+where the pass ends, still bears the name of the Ross-Weid, or
+horse-pasture. It was here that the beasts of burden used for this
+wine-service, rested after their long labours. In favourable weather
+the whole journey from Tirano would have occupied at least four days,
+with scanty halts at night.
+
+The Valtelline slipped from the hands of the Grisons early in this
+century. It is rumoured that one of the Von Salis family negotiated
+matters with Napoleon more for his private benefit than for the
+interests of the state. However this may have been, when the
+Graubünden became a Swiss Canton, after four centuries of sovereign
+independence, the whole Valtelline passed to Austria, and so
+eventually to Italy. According to modern and just notions of
+nationality, this was right. In their period of power, the Grisons
+masters had treated their Italian dependencies with harshness. The
+Valtelline is an Italian valley, connected with the rest of
+the peninsula by ties of race and language. It is, moreover,
+geographically linked to Italy by the great stream of the Adda, which
+takes its rise upon the Stelvio, and after passing through the Lake of
+Como, swells the volume of the Po.
+
+But, though politically severed from the Valtelline, the Engadiners
+and Davosers have not dropped their old habit of importing its best
+produce. What they formerly levied as masters, they now acquire by
+purchase. The Italian revenue derives a large profit from the frontier
+dues paid at the gate between Tirano and Poschiavo on the Bernina
+road. Much of the same wine enters Switzerland by another route,
+travelling from Sondrio to Chiavenna and across the Splügen. But until
+quite recently, the wine itself could scarcely be found outside the
+Canton. It was indeed quoted upon Lombard wine-lists. Yet no one drank
+it; and when I tasted it at Milan, I found it quite unrecognisable.
+The fact seems to be that the Graubündeners alone know how to deal
+with it; and, as I have hinted, the wine requires a mountain climate
+for its full development.
+
+II
+
+The district where the wine of Valtellina is grown extends, roughly
+speaking, from Tirano to Morbegno, a distance of some fifty-four
+miles. The best sorts come from the middle of this region. High up
+in the valley, soil and climate are alike less favourable. Low down
+a coarser, earthier quality springs from fat land where the valley
+broadens. The northern hillsides to a very considerable height above
+the river are covered with vineyards. The southern slopes on the left
+bank of the Adda, lying more in shade, yield but little. Inferno,
+Grumello, and Perla di Sassella are the names of famous vineyards.
+Sassella is the general name for a large tract. Buying an Inferno,
+Grumello, or Perla di Sassella wine, it would be absurd to suppose
+that one obtained it precisely from the eponymous estate. But as each
+of these vineyards yields a marked quality of wine, which is taken
+as standard-giving, the produce of the whole district may be broadly
+classified as approaching more or less nearly to one of these accepted
+types. The Inferno, Grumello, and Perla di Sassella of commerce are
+therefore three sorts of good Valtelline, ticketed with famous names
+to indicate certain differences of quality. Montagner, as the
+name implies, is a somewhat lighter wine, grown higher up in the
+hill-vineyards. And of this class there are many species, some
+approximating to Sassella in delicacy of flavour, others approaching
+the tart lightness of the Villa vintage. This last takes its title
+from a village in the neighbourhood of Tirano, where a table-wine is
+chiefly grown.
+
+Forzato is the strongest, dearest, longest-lived of this whole family
+of wines. It is manufactured chiefly at Tirano; and, as will be
+understood from its name, does not profess to belong to any one of the
+famous localities. Forzato or Sforzato, forced or enforced, is in fact
+a wine which has undergone a more artificial process. In German the
+people call it Strohwein, which also points to the method of its
+preparation. The finest grapes are selected and dried in the sun
+(hence the _Stroh_) for a period of eight or nine weeks. When
+they have almost become raisins, they are pressed. The must is heavily
+charged with sugar, and ferments powerfully. Wine thus made requires
+several years to ripen. Sweet at first, it takes at last a very fine
+quality and flavour, and is rough, almost acid, on the tongue. Its
+colour too turns from a deep rich crimson to the tone of tawny port,
+which indeed it much resembles.
+
+Old Forzato, which has been long in cask, and then perhaps three years
+in bottle, will fetch at least six francs, or may rise to even ten
+francs a flask. The best Sassella rarely reaches more than five
+francs. Good Montagner and Grumello can be had perhaps for four
+francs; and Inferno of a special quality for six francs. Thus the
+average price of old Valtelline wine may be taken as five francs a
+bottle. These, I should observe, are hotel prices.
+
+Valtelline wines bought in the wood vary, of course, according to
+their age and year of vintage. I have found that from 2.50 fr. to 3.50
+fr. per litre is a fair price for sorts fit to bottle. The new wine of
+1881 sold in the following winter at prices varying from 1.05 fr. to
+1.80 fr. per litre.
+
+It is customary for the Graubünden wine-merchants to buy up the whole
+produce of a vineyard from the peasants at the end of the vintage.
+They go in person or depute their agents to inspect the wine, make
+their bargains, and seal the cellars where the wine is stored. Then,
+when the snow has fallen, their own horses with sleighs and trusted
+servants go across the passes to bring it home. Generally they have
+some local man of confidence at Tirano, the starting-point for the
+homeward journey, who takes the casks up to that place and sees them
+duly charged. Merchants of old standing maintain relations with the
+same peasants, taking their wine regularly; so that from Lorenz Gredig
+at Pontresina or Andreas Gredig at Davos Dörfli, from Fanconi at
+Samaden, or from Giacomi at Chiavenna, special qualities of wine, the
+produce of certain vineyards, are to be obtained. Up to the present
+time this wine trade has been conducted with simplicity and honesty by
+both the dealers and the growers. One chief merit of Valtelline wine
+is that it is pure. How long so desirable a state of things will
+survive the slow but steady development of an export business may be
+questioned.
+
+III
+
+With so much practical and theoretical interest in the produce of
+the Valtelline to stimulate my curiosity, I determined to visit the
+district at the season when the wine was leaving it. It was the winter
+of 1881-82, a winter of unparalleled beauty in the high Alps. Day
+succeeded day without a cloud. Night followed night with steady
+stars, gliding across clear mountain ranges and forests of dark pines
+unstirred by wind. I could not hope for a more prosperous season; and
+indeed I made such use of it, that between the months of January and
+March I crossed six passes of the Alps in open sleighs--the Fluela
+Bernina, Splügen, Julier, Maloja, and Albula--with less difficulty and
+discomfort in mid-winter than the traveller may often find on them in
+June.
+
+At the end of January, my friend Christian and I left Davos long
+before the sun was up, and ascended for four hours through the
+interminable snow-drifts of the Fluela in a cold grey shadow. The
+sun's light seemed to elude us. It ran along the ravine through which
+we toiled; dipped down to touch the topmost pines above our heads;
+rested in golden calm upon the Schiahorn at our back; capriciously
+played here and there across the Weisshorn on our left, and made the
+precipices of the Schwartzhorn glitter on our right. But athwart our
+path it never fell until we reached the very summit of the pass.
+Then we passed quietly into the full glory of the winter morning--a
+tranquil flood of sunbeams, pouring through air of crystalline purity,
+frozen and motionless. White peaks and dark brown rocks soared up,
+cutting a sky of almost purple blueness. A stillness that might be
+felt brooded over the whole world; but in that stillness there was
+nothing sad, no suggestion of suspended vitality. It was the stillness
+rather of untroubled health, of strength omnipotent but unexerted.
+
+From the Hochspitz of the Fluela the track plunges at one bound into
+the valley of the Inn, following a narrow cornice carved from the
+smooth bank of snow, and hung, without break or barrier, a
+thousand feet or more above the torrent. The summer road is lost in
+snow-drifts. The galleries built as a protection from avalanches,
+which sweep in rivers from those grim, bare fells above, are blocked
+with snow. Their useless arches yawn, as we glide over or outside
+them, by paths which instinct in our horse and driver traces. As a fly
+may creep along a house-roof, slanting downwards we descend. One whisk
+from the swinged tail of an avalanche would hurl us, like a fly, into
+the ruin of the gaping gorge. But this season little snow has fallen
+on the higher hills; and what still lies there, is hard frozen.
+Therefore we have no fear, as we whirl fast and faster from the
+snow-fields into the black forests of gnarled cembras and wind-wearied
+pines. Then Süss is reached, where the Inn hurries its shallow waters
+clogged with ice-floes through a sleepy hamlet. The stream is pure and
+green; for the fountains of the glaciers are locked by winter frosts;
+and only clear rills from perennial sources swell its tide. At Süss
+we lost the sun, and toiled in garish gloom and silence, nipped by the
+ever-deepening cold of evening, upwards for four hours to Samaden.
+
+The next day was spent in visiting the winter colony at San Moritz,
+where the Kulm Hotel, tenanted by some twenty guests, presented in its
+vastness the appearance of a country-house. One of the prettiest spots
+in the world is the ice-rink, fashioned by the skill of Herr Caspar
+Badrutt on a high raised terrace, commanding the valley of the Inn and
+the ponderous bulwarks of Bernina. The silhouettes of skaters, defined
+against that landscape of pure white, passed to and fro beneath a
+cloudless sky. Ladies sat and worked or read on seats upon the ice.
+Not a breath of wind was astir, and warm beneficent sunlight flooded
+the immeasurable air. Only, as the day declined, some iridescent films
+overspread the west; and just above Maloja the apparition of a
+mock sun--a well-defined circle of opaline light, broken at regular
+intervals by four globes--seemed to portend a change of weather. This
+forecast fortunately proved delusive. We drove back to Samaden across
+the silent snow, enjoying those delicate tints of rose and violet and
+saffron which shed enchantment for one hour over the white monotony of
+Alpine winter.
+
+At half-past eight next morning, the sun was rising from behind Pitz
+Languard, as we crossed the Inn and drove through Pontresina in the
+glorious light, with all its huge hotels quite empty and none but a
+few country-folk abroad. Those who only know the Engadine in summer
+have little conception of its beauty. Winter softens the hard details
+of bare rock, and rounds the melancholy grassless mountain flanks,
+suspending icicles to every ledge and spangling the curved surfaces
+of snow with crystals. The landscape gains in purity, and, what sounds
+unbelievable, in tenderness. Nor does it lose in grandeur. Looking
+up the valley of the Morteratsch that morning, the glaciers were
+distinguishable in hues of green and sapphire through their veil of
+snow; and the highest peaks soared in a transparency of amethystine
+light beneath a blue sky traced with filaments of windy cloud. Some
+storm must have disturbed the atmosphere in Italy, for fan-shaped
+mists frothed out around the sun, and curled themselves above the
+mountains in fine feathery wreaths, melting imperceptibly into air,
+until, when we had risen above the cembras, the sky was one deep solid
+blue.
+
+All that upland wilderness is lovelier now than in the summer; and on
+the morning of which I write, the air itself was far more summery than
+I have ever known it in the Engadine in August. We could scarcely
+bear to place our hands upon the woodwork of the sleigh because of
+the fierce sun's heat. And yet the atmosphere was crystalline with
+windless frost. As though to increase the strangeness of these
+contrasts, the pavement of beaten snow was stained with red drops
+spilt from wine-casks which pass over it.
+
+The chief feature of the Bernina--what makes it a dreary pass enough
+in summer, but infinitely beautiful in winter--is its breadth;
+illimitable undulations of snow-drifts; immensity of open sky;
+unbroken lines of white, descending in smooth curves from glittering
+ice-peaks.
+
+A glacier hangs in air above the frozen lakes, with all its green-blue
+ice-cliffs glistening in intensest light. Pitz Palu shoots aloft
+like sculptured marble, delicately veined with soft aërial shadows of
+translucent blue. At the summit of the pass all Italy seems to burst
+upon the eyes in those steep serried ranges, with their craggy crests,
+violet-hued in noonday sunshine, as though a bloom of plum or grape
+had been shed over them, enamelling their jagged precipices.
+
+The top of the Bernina is not always thus in winter. It has a bad
+reputation for the fury of invading storms, when falling snow
+hurtles together with snow scooped from the drifts in eddies, and the
+weltering white sea shifts at the will of whirlwinds. The Hospice then
+may be tenanted for days together by weather-bound wayfarers; and a
+line drawn close beneath its roof shows how two years ago the whole
+building was buried in one snow-shroud. This morning we lounged about
+the door, while our horses rested and postillions and carters pledged
+one another in cups of new Veltliner.
+
+The road takes an awful and sudden dive downwards, quite irrespective
+of the carefully engineered post-track. At this season the path is
+badly broken into ruts and chasms by the wine traffic. In some places
+it was indubitably perilous: a narrow ledge of mere ice skirting
+thinly clad hard-frozen banks of snow, which fell precipitately
+sideways for hundreds of sheer feet. We did not slip over this
+parapet, though we were often within an inch of doing so. Had our
+horse stumbled, it is not probable that I should have been writing
+this.
+
+When we came to the galleries which defend the road from avalanches,
+we saw ahead of us a train of over forty sledges ascending, all
+charged with Valtelline wine. Our postillions drew up at the inner
+side of the gallery, between massive columns of the purest ice
+dependent from the rough-hewn roof and walls of rock. A sort of open
+_loggia_ on the farther side framed vignettes of the Valtelline
+mountains in their hard cerulean shadows and keen sunlight. Between
+us and the view defiled the wine-sledges; and as each went by, the
+men made us drink out of their _trinketti_. These are oblong,
+hexagonal wooden kegs, holding about fourteen litres, which the carter
+fills with wine before he leaves the Valtelline, to cheer him on the
+homeward journey. You raise it in both hands, and when the bung has
+been removed, allow the liquor to flow stream-wise down your throat.
+It was a most extraordinary Bacchic procession--a pomp which, though
+undreamed of on the banks of the Ilissus, proclaimed the deity of
+Dionysos in authentic fashion. Struggling horses, grappling at the
+ice-bound floor with sharp-spiked shoes; huge, hoarse drivers, some
+clad in sheepskins from Italian valleys, some brown as bears in rough
+Graubünden homespun; casks, dropping their spilth of red wine on the
+snow; greetings, embracings; patois of Bergamo, Romansch, and German
+roaring around the low-browed vaults and tingling ice pillars;
+pourings forth of libations of the new strong Valtelline on breasts
+and beards;--the whole made up a scene of stalwart jollity and
+manful labour such as I have nowhere else in such wild circumstances
+witnessed. Many Davosers were there, the men of Andreas Gredig, Valär,
+and so forth; and all of these, on greeting Christian, forced us to
+drain a _Schluck_ from their unmanageable cruses. Then on they
+went, crying, creaking, struggling, straining through the corridor,
+which echoed deafeningly, the gleaming crystals of those hard Italian
+mountains in their winter raiment building a background of still
+beauty to the savage Bacchanalian riot of the team.
+
+How little the visitors who drink Valtelline wine at S. Moritz or
+Davos reflect by what strange ways it reaches them. A sledge can
+scarcely be laden with more than one cask of 300 litres on the ascent;
+and this cask, according to the state of the road, has many times to
+be shifted from wheels to runners and back again before the journey
+is accomplished. One carter will take charge of two horses, and
+consequently of two sledges and two casks, driving them both by voice
+and gesture rather than by rein. When they leave the Valtelline, the
+carters endeavour, as far as possible, to take the pass in gangs, lest
+bad weather or an accident upon the road should overtake them singly.
+At night they hardly rest three hours, and rarely think of sleeping,
+but spend the time in drinking and conversation. The horses are fed
+and littered; but for them too the night-halt is little better than
+a baiting-time. In fair weather the passage of the mountain is not
+difficult, though tiring. But woe to men and beasts alike if they
+encounter storms! Not a few perish in the passes; and it frequently
+happens that their only chance is to unyoke the horses and leave the
+sledges in a snow-wreath, seeking for themselves such shelter as
+may possibly be gained, frost-bitten, after hours of battling with
+impermeable drifts. The wine is frozen into one solid mass of rosy ice
+before it reaches Pontresina. This does not hurt the young vintage,
+but it is highly injurious to wine of some years' standing. The perils
+of the journey are aggravated by the savage temper of the drivers.
+Jealousies between the natives of rival districts spring up; and there
+are men alive who have fought the whole way down from Fluela Hospice
+to Davos Platz with knives and stones, hammers and hatchets, wooden
+staves and splintered cart-wheels, staining the snow with blood, and
+bringing broken pates, bruised limbs, and senseless comrades home to
+their women to be tended.
+
+Bacchus Alpinus shepherded his train away from us to northward, and we
+passed forth into noonday from the gallery. It then seemed clear that
+both conductor and postillion were sufficiently merry. The plunge they
+took us down those frozen parapets, with shriek and _jauchzen_
+and cracked whips, was more than ever dangerous. Yet we reached La
+Rosa safely. This is a lovely solitary spot, beside a rushing stream,
+among grey granite boulders grown with spruce and rhododendron: a
+veritable rose of Sharon blooming in the desert. The wastes of the
+Bernina stretch above, and round about are leaguered some of the most
+forbidding sharp-toothed peaks I ever saw. Onwards, across the silent
+snow, we glided in immitigable sunshine, through opening valleys and
+pine-woods, past the robber-huts of Pisciadella, until at evenfall we
+rested in the roadside inn at Poschiavo.
+
+IV
+
+The snow-path ended at Poschiavo; and when, as usual, we started on
+our journey next day at sunrise, it was in a carriage upon wheels.
+Yet even here we were in full midwinter. Beyond Le Prese the lake
+presented one sheet of smooth black ice, reflecting every peak and
+chasm of the mountains, and showing the rocks and water-weeds in the
+clear green depths below. The glittering floor stretched away for
+acres of untenanted expanse, with not a skater to explore those dark
+mysterious coves, or strike across the slanting sunlight poured
+from clefts in the impendent hills. Inshore the substance of the
+ice sparkled here and there with iridescence like the plumelets of
+a butterfly's wing under the microscope, wherever light happened to
+catch the jagged or oblique flaws that veined its solid crystal.
+
+From the lake the road descends suddenly for a considerable distance
+through a narrow gorge, following a torrent which rushes among granite
+boulders. Chestnut trees begin to replace the pines. The sunnier
+terraces are planted with tobacco, and at a lower level vines appear
+at intervals in patches. One comes at length to a great red gate
+across the road, which separates Switzerland from Italy, and where the
+export dues on wine are paid. The Italian custom-house is
+romantically perched above the torrent. Two courteous and elegant
+_finanzieri_, mere boys, were sitting wrapped in their military
+cloaks and reading novels in the sun as we drove up. Though they made
+some pretence of examining the luggage, they excused themselves with
+sweet smiles and apologetic eyes--it was a disagreeable duty!
+
+A short time brought us to the first village in the Valtelline,
+where the road bifurcates northward to Bormio and the Stelvio pass,
+southward to Sondrio and Lombardy. It is a little hamlet, known by
+the name of La Madonna di Tirano, having grown up round a pilgrimage
+church of great beauty, with tall Lombard bell-tower, pierced with
+many tiers of pilastered windows, ending in a whimsical spire, and
+dominating a fantastic cupola building of the earlier Renaissance.
+Taken altogether, this is a charming bit of architecture,
+picturesquely set beneath the granite snow-peaks of the Valtelline.
+The church, they say, was raised at Madonna's own command to stay the
+tide of heresy descending from the Engadine; and in the year 1620, the
+bronze statue of S. Michael, which still spreads wide its wings above
+the cupola, looked down upon the massacre of six hundred Protestants
+and foreigners, commanded by the patriot Jacopo Robustelli.
+
+From Madonna the road leads up the valley through a narrow avenue of
+poplar-trees to the town of Tirano. We were now in the district where
+Forzato is made, and every vineyard had a name and history. In Tirano
+we betook ourself to the house of an old acquaintance of the Buol
+family, Bernardo da Campo, or, as the Graubündeners call him, Bernard
+Campbèll. We found him at dinner with his son and grandchildren in a
+vast, dark, bare Italian chamber. It would be difficult to find a more
+typical old Scotchman of the Lowlands than he looked, with his clean
+close-shaven face, bright brown eyes, and snow-white hair escaping
+from a broad-brimmed hat. He might have sat to a painter for some
+Covenanter's portrait, except that there was nothing dour about him,
+or for an illustration to Burns's 'Cotter's Saturday Night.' The air
+of probity and canniness combined with a twinkle of dry humour was
+completely Scotch; and when he tapped his snuff-box, telling stories
+of old days, I could not refrain from asking him about his pedigree.
+It should be said that there is a considerable family of Campèlls or
+Campbèlls in the Graubünden, who are fabled to deduce their stock from
+a Scotch Protestant of Zwingli's time; and this made it irresistible
+to imagine that in our friend Bernardo I had chanced upon a notable
+specimen of atavism. All he knew, however, was, that his first
+ancestor had been a foreigner, who came across the mountains to Tirano
+two centuries ago.[3]
+
+This old gentleman is a considerable wine-dealer. He sent us with his
+son, Giacomo, on a long journey underground through his cellars, where
+we tasted several sorts of Valtelline, especially the new Forzato,
+made a few weeks since, which singularly combines sweetness with
+strength, and both with a slight effervescence. It is certainly the
+sort of wine wherewith to tempt a Polyphemus, and not unapt to turn a
+giant's head.
+
+Leaving Tirano, and once more passing through the poplars by Madonna,
+we descended the valley all along the vineyards of Villa and the vast
+district of Sassella. Here and there, at wayside inns, we stopped to
+drink a glass of some particular vintage; and everywhere it seemed as
+though god Bacchus were at home. The whole valley on the right side of
+the Adda is one gigantic vineyard, climbing the hills in tiers and
+terraces, which justify its Italian epithet of _Teatro di Bacco_. The
+rock is a greyish granite, assuming sullen brown and orange tints
+where exposed to sun and weather. The vines are grown on stakes, not
+trellised over trees or carried across boulders, as is the fashion at
+Chiavenna or Terlan. Yet every advantage of the mountain is adroitly
+used; nooks and crannies being specially preferred, where the sun's
+rays are deflected from hanging cliffs. The soil seems deep, and is of
+a dull yellow tone. When the vines end, brushwood takes up the growth,
+which expires at last in crag and snow. Some alps and chalets, dimly
+traced against the sky, are evidences that a pastoral life prevails
+above the vineyards. Pan there stretches the pine-thyrsus down to
+vine-garlanded Dionysos.
+
+The Adda flows majestically among willows in the midst, and the valley
+is nearly straight. The prettiest spot, perhaps, is at Tresenda or
+S. Giacomo, where a pass from Edolo and Brescia descends from the
+southern hills. But the Valtelline has no great claim to beauty of
+scenery. Its chief town, Sondrio, where we supped and drank some
+special wine called _il vino de' Signori Grigioni_, has been
+modernised in dull Italian fashion.
+
+V
+
+The hotel at Sondrio, La Maddalena, was in carnival uproar of
+masquers, topers, and musicians all night through. It was as much as
+we could do to rouse the sleepy servants and get a cup of coffee
+ere we started in the frozen dawn. 'Verfluchte Maddalena!' grumbled
+Christian as he shouldered our portmanteaus and bore them in hot haste
+to the post. Long experience only confirms the first impression, that,
+of all cold, the cold of an Italian winter is most penetrating. As
+we lumbered out of Sondrio in a heavy diligence, I could have fancied
+myself back once again at Radicofani or among the Ciminian hills. The
+frost was penetrating. Fur-coats would not keep it out; and we longed
+to be once more in open sledges on Bernina rather than enclosed in
+that cold coupé. Now we passed Grumello, the second largest of the
+renowned vine districts; and always keeping the white mass of Monte di
+Disgrazia in sight, rolled at last into Morbegno. Here the Valtelline
+vintage properly ends, though much of the ordinary wine is probably
+supplied from the inferior produce of these fields. It was past
+noon when we reached Colico, and saw the Lake of Como glittering in
+sunlight, dazzling cloaks of snow on all the mountains, which look as
+dry and brown as dead beech-leaves at this season. Our Bacchic journey
+had reached its close; and it boots not here to tell in detail how we
+made our way across the Splügen, piercing its avalanches by low-arched
+galleries scooped from the solid snow, and careering in our sledges
+down perpendicular snow-fields, which no one who has crossed that
+pass from the Italian side in winter will forget. We left the refuge
+station at the top together with a train of wine-sledges, and passed
+them in the midst of the wild descent. Looking back, I saw two of
+their horses stumble in the plunge and roll headlong over. Unluckily
+in one of these somersaults a man was injured. Flung ahead into the
+snow by the first lurch, the sledge and wine-cask crossed him like a
+garden-roller. Had his bed not been of snow, he must have been crushed
+to death; and as it was, he presented a woeful appearance when he
+afterwards arrived at Splügen.
+
+VI
+
+Though not strictly connected with the subject of this paper, I shall
+conclude these notes of winter wanderings in the high Alps with an
+episode which illustrates their curious vicissitudes.
+
+It was late in the month of March, and nearly all the mountain roads
+were open for wheeled vehicles. A carriage and four horses came to
+meet us at the termination of a railway journey in Bagalz. We spent
+one day in visiting old houses of the Grisons aristocracy at Mayenfeld
+and Zizers, rejoicing in the early sunshine, which had spread the
+fields with spring flowers--primroses and oxlips, violets, anemones,
+and bright blue squills. At Chur we slept, and early next morning
+started for our homeward drive to Davos. Bad weather had declared
+itself in the night. It blew violently, and the rain soon changed to
+snow, frozen by a bitter north blast. Crossing the dreary heath of
+Lenz was both magnificent and dreadful. By the time we reached Wiesen,
+all the forests were laden with snow, the roads deep in snow-drifts,
+the whole scene wintrier than it had been the winter through.
+
+At Wiesen we should have stayed, for evening was fast setting in. But
+in ordinary weather it is only a two hours drive from Wiesen to Davos.
+Our coachman made no objections to resuming the journey, and our four
+horses had but a light load to drag. So we telegraphed for supper to
+be prepared, and started between five and six.
+
+A deep gorge has to be traversed, where the torrent cleaves its way
+between jaws of limestone precipices. The road is carried along ledges
+and through tunnels in the rock. Avalanches, which sweep this passage
+annually from the hills above, give it the name of Züge, or the
+Snow-Paths. As we entered the gorge darkness fell, the horses dragged
+more heavily, and it soon became evident that our Tyrolese driver was
+hopelessly drunk. He nearly upset us twice by taking sharp turns in
+the road, banged the carriage against telegraph posts and jutting
+rocks, shaved the very verge of the torrent in places where there
+was no parapet, and, what was worst of all, refused to leave his box
+without a fight. The darkness by this time was all but total, and a
+blinding snow-storm swept howling through the ravine. At length we
+got the carriage to a dead-stop, and floundered out in deep wet
+snow toward some wooden huts where miners in old days made their
+habitation. The place, by a curious, perhaps unconscious irony, is
+called Hoffnungsau, or the Meadow of Hope. Indeed, it is not ill
+named; for many wanderers, escaping, as we did, from the dreadful
+gorge of Avalanches on a stormy night, may have felt, as we now felt,
+their hope reviving when they reached this shelter.
+
+There was no light; nothing above, beneath, around, on any side, but
+tearing tempest and snow whirled through the ravine. The horses
+were taken out of the carriage; on their way to the stable, which
+fortunately in these mountain regions will be always found beside the
+poorest habitation, one of them fell back across a wall and nearly
+broke his spine. Hoffnungsau is inhabited all through the year. In its
+dismal dark kitchen we found a knot of workmen gathered together, and
+heard there were two horses on the premises besides our own. It then
+occurred to us that we might accomplish the rest of the journey with
+such sledges as they bring the wood on from the hills in winter, if
+coal-boxes or boxes of any sort could be provided. These should be
+lashed to the sledges and filled with hay. We were only four persons;
+my wife and a friend should go in one, myself and my little girl in
+the other. No sooner thought of than put into practice. These original
+conveyances were improvised, and after two hours' halt on the Meadow
+of Hope, we all set forth again at half-past eight.
+
+I have rarely felt anything more piercing than the grim cold of that
+journey. We crawled at a foot's pace through changeful snow-drifts.
+The road was obliterated, and it was my duty to keep a petroleum
+stable-lamp swinging to illuminate the untracked wilderness. My little
+girl was snugly nested in the hay, and sound asleep with a deep white
+covering of snow above her. Meanwhile, the drift clave in frozen
+masses to our faces, lashed by a wind so fierce and keen that it
+was difficult to breathe it. My forehead-bone ached, as though with
+neuralgia, from the mere mask of icy snow upon it, plastered on with
+frost. Nothing could be seen but millions of white specks, whirled
+at us in eddying concentric circles. Not far from the entrance to the
+village we met our house-folk out with lanterns to look for us. It was
+past eleven at night when at last we entered warm rooms and refreshed
+ourselves for the tiring day with a jovial champagne supper. Horses,
+carriage, and drunken driver reached home next morning.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+OLD TOWNS OF PROVENCE
+
+
+Travellers journeying southward from Paris first meet with olive-trees
+near Montdragon or Monsélimart--little towns, with old historic names,
+upon the road to Orange. It is here that we begin to feel ourselves
+within the land of Provence, where the Romans found a second Italy,
+and where the autumn of their antique civilisation was followed,
+almost without an intermediate winter of barbarism, by the light and
+delicate springtime of romance. Orange itself is full of Rome. Indeed,
+the ghost of the dead empire seems there to be more real and living
+than the actual flesh and blood of modern time, as represented by
+narrow dirty streets and mean churches. It is the shell of the huge
+theatre, hollowed from the solid hill, and fronted with a wall that
+seems made rather to protect a city than to form a sounding-board for
+a stage, which first tells us that we have reached the old Arausio. Of
+all theatres this is the most impressive, stupendous, indestructible,
+the Colosseum hardly excepted; for in Rome herself we are prepared
+for something gigantic, while in the insignificant Arausio--a sort
+of antique Tewkesbury--to find such magnificence, durability, and
+vastness, impresses one with a nightmare sense that the old lioness
+of Empire can scarcely yet be dead. Standing before the colossal,
+towering, amorphous precipice which formed the background of the
+scena, we feel as if once more the 'heart-shaking sound of Consul
+Romanus' might be heard; as if Roman knights and deputies, arisen from
+the dead, with faces hard and stern as those of the warriors carved on
+Trajan's frieze, might take their seats beneath us in the orchestra,
+and, after proclamation made, the mortmain of imperial Rome be laid
+upon the comforts, liberties, and little gracefulnesses of our modern
+life. Nor is it unpleasant to be startled from such reverie by the
+voice of the old guardian upon the stage beneath, sonorously devolving
+the vacuous Alexandrines with which he once welcomed his ephemeral
+French emperor from Algiers. The little man is dim with distance,
+eclipsed and swallowed up by the shadows and grotesque fragments of
+the ruin in the midst of which he stands. But his voice--thanks to the
+inimitable constructive art of the ancient architect, which, even
+in the desolation of at least thirteen centuries, has not lost its
+cunning-emerges from the pigmy throat, and fills the whole vast hollow
+with its clear, if tiny, sound. Thank heaven, there is no danger of
+Roman resurrection here! The illusion is completely broken, and we
+turn to gather the first violets of February, and to wonder at the
+quaint postures of a praying mantis on the grass grown tiers and
+porches fringed with fern.
+
+The sense of Roman greatness which is so oppressive in Orange and in
+many other parts of Provence, is not felt at Avignon. Here we exchange
+the ghost of Imperial for the phantom of Ecclesiastical Rome. The
+fixed epithet of Avignon is Papal; and as the express train rushes
+over its bleak and wind-tormented plain, the heavy dungeon-walls and
+battlemented towers of its palace fortress seem to warn us off, and
+bid us quickly leave the Babylon of exiled impious Antichrist. Avignon
+presents the bleakest, barest, greyest scene upon a February morning,
+when the incessant mistral is blowing, and far and near, upon desolate
+hillside and sandy plain, the scanty trees are bent sideways, the
+crumbling castle turrets shivering like bleached skeletons in the dry
+ungenial air. Yet inside the town, all is not so dreary. The Papal
+palace, with its terrible Glacière, its chapel painted by Simone
+Memmi, its endless corridors and staircases, its torture-chamber,
+funnel-shaped to drown and suffocate--so runs tradition--the shrieks
+of wretches on the rack, is now a barrack, filled with lively little
+French soldiers, whose politeness, though sorely taxed, is never
+ruffled by the introduction of inquisitive visitors into their
+dormitories, eating-places, and drill-grounds. And strange, indeed,
+it is to see the lines of neat narrow barrack beds, between which the
+red-legged little men are shaving, polishing their guns, or mending
+their trousers, in those vaulted halls of popes and cardinals, those
+vast presence-chambers and audience-galleries, where Urban entertained
+S. Catherine, where Rienzi came, a prisoner, to be stared at. Pass by
+the Glacière with a shudder, for it has still the reek of blood about
+it; and do not long delay in the cheerless dungeon of Rienzi. Time and
+regimental whitewash have swept these lurking-places of old crime very
+bare; but the parable of the seven devils is true in more senses than
+one, and the ghosts that return to haunt a deodorised, disinfected,
+garnished sepulchre are almost more ghastly than those which have
+never been disturbed from their old habitations.
+
+Little by little the eye becomes accustomed to the bareness and
+greyness of this Provençal landscape; and then we find that the
+scenery round Avignon is eminently picturesque. The view from Les
+Doms--which is a hill above the Pope's palace, the Acropolis, as it
+were, of Avignon--embraces a wide stretch of undulating champaign,
+bordered by low hills, and intersected by the flashing waters of the
+majestic Rhone. Across the stream stands Villeneuve, like a castle
+of romance, with its round stone towers fronting the gates and
+battlemented walls of the Papal city. A bridge used to connect the two
+towns, but it is now broken. The remaining fragment is of solid build,
+resting on great buttresses, one of which rises fantastically above
+the bridge into a little chapel. Such, one might fancy, was the
+bridge which Ariosto's Rodomonte kept on horse against the Paladins of
+Charlemagne, when angered by the loss of his love. Nor is it difficult
+to imagine Bradamante spurring up the slope against him with her magic
+lance in rest, and tilting him into the tawny waves beneath.
+
+On a clear October morning, when the vineyards are taking their last
+tints of gold and crimson, and the yellow foliage of the poplars by
+the river mingles with the sober greys of olive-trees and willows,
+every square inch of this landscape, glittering as it does with light
+and with colour, the more beautiful for its subtlety and rarity, would
+make a picture. Out of many such vignettes let us choose one. We are
+on the shore close by the ruined bridge, the rolling muddy Rhone in
+front; beyond it, by the towing-path, a tall strong cypress-tree rises
+beside a little house, and next to it a crucifix twelve feet or more
+in height, the Christ visible afar, stretched upon His red cross;
+arundo donax is waving all around, and willows near; behind, far off,
+soar the peaked hills, blue and pearled with clouds; past the cypress,
+on the Rhone, comes floating a long raft, swift through the stream,
+its rudder guided by a score of men: one standing erect upon the prow
+bends forward to salute the cross; on flies the raft, the tall reeds
+rustle, and the cypress sleeps.
+
+For those who have time to spare in going to or from the south it
+is worth while to spend a day or two in the most comfortable and
+characteristic of old French inns, the Hôtel de l'Europe, at Avignon.
+Should it rain, the museum of the town is worth a visit. It contains
+Horace Vernet's not uncelebrated picture of Mazeppa, and another, less
+famous, but perhaps more interesting, by swollen-cheeked David, the
+'genius in convulsion,' as Carlyle has christened him. His canvas
+is unfinished. Who knows what cry of the Convention made the painter
+fling his palette down and leave the masterpiece he might have
+spoiled? For in its way the picture is a masterpiece. There lies Jean
+Barrad, drummer, aged fourteen, slain in La Vendée, a true patriot,
+who, while his life-blood flowed away, pressed the tricolor cockade
+to his heart, and murmured 'Liberty!' David has treated his subject
+classically. The little drummer-boy, though French enough in feature
+and in feeling, lies, Greek-like, naked on the sand--a very Hyacinth
+of the Republic, La Vendée's Ilioneus. The tricolor cockade and the
+sentiment of upturned patriotic eyes are the only indications of his
+being a hero in his teens, a citizen who thought it sweet to die for
+France.
+
+In fine weather a visit to Vaucluse should by no means be omitted,
+not so much, perhaps, for Petrarch's sake as for the interest of the
+drive, and for the marvel of the fountain of the Sorgues. For some
+time after leaving Avignon you jog along the level country between
+avenues of plane-trees; then comes a hilly ridge, on which the olives,
+mulberries, and vineyards join their colours and melt subtly into
+distant purple. After crossing this we reach L'Isle, an island
+village girdled by the gliding Sorgues, overshadowed with gigantic
+plane-boughs, and echoing to the plash of water dripped from mossy
+fern-tufted millwheels. Those who expect Petrarch's Sorgues to be
+some trickling poet's rill emerging from a damp grotto, may well be
+astounded at the rush and roar of this azure river so close upon
+its fountain-head. It has a volume and an arrow-like rapidity that
+communicate the feeling of exuberance and life. In passing, let it not
+be forgotten that it was somewhere or other in this 'chiaro fondo di
+Sorga,' as Carlyle describes, that Jourdain, the hangman-hero of the
+Glacière, stuck fast upon his pony when flying from his foes, and had
+his accursed life, by some diabolical providence, spared for future
+butcheries. On we go across the austere plain, between fields of
+madder, the red roots of the 'garance' lying in swathes along the
+furrows. In front rise ash-grey hills of barren rock, here and there
+crimsoned with the leaves of the dwarf sumach. A huge cliff stands up
+and seems to bar all passage. Yet the river foams in torrents at our
+side. Whence can it issue? What pass or cranny in that precipice is
+cloven for its escape? These questions grow in interest as we enter
+the narrow defile of limestone rocks which leads to the cliff-barrier,
+and find ourselves among the figs and olives of Vaucluse. Here is the
+village, the little church, the ugly column to Petrarch's memory,
+the inn, with its caricatures of Laura, and its excellent trout, the
+bridge and the many-flashing, eddying Sorgues, lashed by millwheels,
+broken by weirs, divided in its course, channelled and dyked, yet
+flowing irresistibly and undefiled. Blue, purple, greened by moss and
+water-weeds, silvered by snow-white pebbles, on its pure smooth bed
+the river runs like elemental diamond, so clear and fresh. The rocks
+on either side are grey or yellow, terraced into oliveyards, with here
+and there a cypress, fig, or mulberry tree. Soon the gardens cease,
+and lentisk, rosemary, box, and ilex--shrubs of Provence--with here
+and there a sumach out of reach, cling to the hard stone. And so at
+last we are brought face to face with the sheer impassable precipice.
+At its basement sleeps a pool, perfectly untroubled; a lakelet in
+which the sheltering rocks and nestling wild figs are glassed as in a
+mirror--a mirror of blue-black water, like amethyst or fluor-spar--so
+pure, so still, that where it laps the pebbles you can scarcely say
+where air begins and water ends. This, then, is Petrarch's 'grotto;'
+this is the fountain of Vaucluse. Up from its deep reservoirs, from
+the mysterious basements of the mountain, wells the silent stream;
+pauseless and motionless it fills its urn, rises unruffled, glides
+until the brink is reached, then overflows, and foams, and dashes
+noisily, a cataract, among the boulders of the hills. Nothing at
+Vaucluse is more impressive than the contrast between the tranquil
+silence of the fountain and the roar of the released impetuous river.
+Here we can realise the calm clear eyes of sculptured water-gods,
+their brimming urns, their gushing streams, the magic of the
+mountain-born and darkness-cradled flood. Or again, looking up at the
+sheer steep cliff, 800 feet in height, and arching slightly roofwise,
+so that no rain falls upon the cavern of the pool, we seem to see the
+stroke of Neptune's trident, the hoof of Pegasus, the force of Moses'
+rod, which cleft rocks and made water gush forth in the desert. There
+is a strange fascination in the spot. As our eyes follow the white
+pebble which cleaves the surface and falls visibly, until the veil
+of azure is too thick for sight to pierce, we feel as if some glamour
+were drawing us, like Hylas, to the hidden caves. At least, we long to
+yield a prized and precious offering to the spring, to grace the nymph
+of Vaucluse with a pearl of price as token of our reverence and love.
+
+Meanwhile nothing has been said about Petrarch, who himself said much
+about the spring, and complained against those very nymphs to whom we
+have in wish, at least, been scattering jewels, that they broke his
+banks and swallowed up his gardens every winter. At Vaucluse Petrarch
+loved, and lived, and sang. He has made Vaucluse famous, and will
+never be forgotten there. But for the present the fountain is even
+more attractive than the memory of the poet.[4]
+
+The change from Avignon to Nismes is very trying to the latter place;
+for Nismes is not picturesquely or historically interesting. It is a
+prosperous modern French town with two almost perfect Roman
+monuments--Les Arènes and the Maison Carrée. The amphitheatre is a
+complete oval, visible at one glance. Its smooth white stone, even
+where it has not been restored, seems unimpaired by age; and Charles
+Martel's conflagration, when he burned the Saracen hornet's nest
+inside it, has only blackened the outer walls and arches venerably.
+Utility and perfect adaptation of means to ends form the beauty of
+Roman buildings. The science of construction and large intelligence
+displayed in them, their strength, simplicity, solidity, and purpose,
+are their glory. Perhaps there is only one modern edifice--Palladio's
+Palazzo della Ragione at Vicenza--which approaches the dignity and
+loftiness of Roman architecture; and this it does because of its
+absolute freedom from ornament, the vastness of its design, and the
+durability of its material. The temple, called the Maison Carrée, at
+Nismes, is also very perfect, and comprehended at one glance. Light,
+graceful, airy, but rather thin and narrow, it reminds one of the
+temple of Fortuna Virilis at Rome.
+
+But if Nismes itself is not picturesque, its environs contain the
+wonderful Pont du Gard. A two or three hours' drive leads through a
+desolate country to the valley of the Cardon, where suddenly, at a
+turn of the road, one comes upon the aqueduct. It is not within the
+scope of words to describe the impression produced by those vast
+arches, row above row, cutting the deep blue sky. The domed summer
+clouds sailing across them are comprehended in the gigantic span of
+their perfect semicircles, which seem rather to have been described
+by Miltonic compasses of Deity than by merely human mathematics. Yet,
+standing beneath one of the vaults and looking upward, you may read
+Roman numerals in order from I. to X., which prove their human origin
+well enough. Next to their strength, regularity, and magnitude, the
+most astonishing point about this triple tier of arches, piled one
+above the other to a height of 180 feet above a brawling stream
+between two barren hills, is their lightness. The arches are not
+thick; the causeway on the top is only just broad enough for three men
+to walk abreast. So smooth and perpendicular are the supporting walls
+that scarcely a shrub or tuft of grass has grown upon the aqueduct
+in all these years. And yet the huge fabric is strengthened by no
+buttress, has needed no repair. This lightness of structure, combined
+with such prodigious durability, produces the strongest sense of
+science and self-reliant power in the men who designed it. None but
+Romans could have built such a monument, and have set it in such a
+place--a wilderness of rock and rolling hill, scantily covered with
+low brushwood, and browsed over by a few sheep--for such a purpose,
+too, in order to supply Nemausus with pure water. The modern town does
+pretty well without its water; but here subsists the civilisation
+of eighteen centuries past intact: the human labour yet remains,
+the measuring, contriving mind of man, shrinking from no obstacles,
+spanning the air, and in one edifice combining gigantic strength and
+perfect beauty. It is impossible not to echo Rousseau's words in such
+a place, and to say with him: 'Le retentissement de mes pas dans ces
+immenses voûtes me faisait croire entendre la forte voix de ceux
+qui les avaient bâties. Je me perdais comme un insecte dans cette
+immensité. Je sentais, tout en me faisant petit, je ne sais quoi
+qui m'élevait l'âme; et je me disais en soupirant, Que ne suis-je né
+Romain!'
+
+There is nothing at Arles which produces the same deep and indelible
+impression. Yet Arles is a far more interesting town than Nismes,
+partly because of the Rhone delta which begins there, partly because
+of its ruinous antiquity, and partly also because of the strong local
+character of its population. The amphitheatre of Arles is vaster and
+more sublime in its desolation than the tidy theatre at Nismes; the
+crypts, and dens, and subterranean passages suggest all manner of
+speculation as to the uses to which they may have been appropriated;
+while the broken galleries outside, intricate and black and cavernous,
+like Piranesi's etchings of the 'Carceri,' present the wildest
+pictures of greatness in decay, fantastic dilapidation. The ruins of
+the smaller theatre, again, with their picturesquely grouped fragments
+and their standing columns, might be sketched for a frontispiece to
+some dilettante work on classical antiquities. For the rest, perhaps
+the Aliscamps, or ancient Roman burial-ground, is the most interesting
+thing at Arles, not only because of Dante's celebrated lines in the
+canto of 'Farinata:'--
+
+ Si come ad Arli ove 'l Rodano stagna,
+ Fanno i sepolcri tutto 'l loco varo;
+
+but also because of the intrinsic picturesqueness of this avenue of
+sepulchres beneath green trees upon a long soft grassy field.
+
+But as at Avignon and Nismes, so also at Arles, one of the chief
+attractions of the place lies at a distance, and requires a special
+expedition. The road to Les Baux crosses a true Provençal desert where
+one realises the phrase, 'Vieux comme les rochers de Provence,'--a
+wilderness of grey stone, here and there worn into cart-tracks, and
+tufted with rosemary, box, lavender, and lentisk. On the way it passes
+the Abbaye de Mont Majeur, a ruin of gigantic size, embracing all
+periods of architecture; where nothing seems to flourish now but
+henbane and the wild cucumber, or to breathe but a mumble-toothed and
+terrible old hag. The ruin stands above a desolate marsh, its vast
+Italian buildings of Palladian splendour looking more forlorn in their
+decay than the older and austerer mediĉval towers, which rise up proud
+and patient and defiantly erect beneath the curse of time. When at
+length what used to be the castle town of Les Baux is reached, you
+find a naked mountain of yellow sandstone, worn away by nature into
+bastions and buttresses and coigns of vantage, sculptured by ancient
+art into palaces and chapels, battlements and dungeons. Now art and
+nature are confounded in one ruin. Blocks of masonry lie cheek by jowl
+with masses of the rough-hewn rock; fallen cavern vaults are heaped
+round fragments of fan-shaped spandrel and clustered column-shaft; the
+doors and windows of old pleasure-rooms are hung with ivy and wild fig
+for tapestry; winding staircases start midway upon the cliff, and lead
+to vacancy. High overhead suspended in mid-air hang chambers--lady's
+bower or poet's singing-room--now inaccessible, the haunt of hawks and
+swallows. Within this rocky honeycomb--'cette ville en monolithe,'
+as it has been aptly called, for it is literally scooped out of one
+mountain block--live about two hundred poor people, foddering their
+wretched goats at carved piscina and stately sideboards, erecting mud
+beplastered hovels in the halls of feudal princes. Murray is wrong in
+calling the place a mediĉval town in its original state, for anything
+more purely ruinous, more like a decayed old cheese, cannot possibly
+be conceived. The living only inhabit the tombs of the dead. At
+the end of the last century, when revolutionary effervescence was
+beginning to ferment, the people of Arles swept all its feudality
+away, defacing the very arms upon the town gate, and trampling the
+palace towers to dust.
+
+The castle looks out across a vast extent of plain over Arles, the
+stagnant Rhone, the Camargue, and the salt pools of the lingering sea.
+In old days it was the eyrie of an eagle race called Seigneurs of Les
+Baux; and whether they took their title from the rock, or whether,
+as genealogists would have it, they gave the name of Oriental
+Balthazar--their reputed ancestor, one of the Magi--to the rock
+itself, remains a mystery not greatly worth the solving.
+
+Anyhow, here they lived and flourished, these feudal princes, bearing
+for their ensign a silver comet of sixteen rays upon a field of
+gules--themselves a comet race, baleful to the neighbouring lowlands,
+blazing with lurid splendour over wide tracts of country, a burning,
+raging, fiery-souled, swift-handed tribe, in whom a flame unquenchable
+glowed from son to sire through twice five hundred years until, in
+the sixteenth century, they were burned out, and nothing remained but
+cinders--these broken ruins of their eyrie, and some outworn and dusty
+titles. Very strange are the fate and history of these same titles:
+King of Arles, for instance, savouring of troubadour and high romance;
+Prince of Tarentum, smacking of old plays and Italian novels; Prince
+of Orange, which the Nassaus, through the Châlons, seized in all its
+emptiness long after the real principality had passed away, and came
+therewith to sit on England's throne.
+
+The Les Baux in their heyday were patterns of feudal nobility. They
+warred incessantly with Counts of Provence, archbishops and burghers
+of Arles, Queens of Naples, Kings of Aragon. Crusading, pillaging,
+betraying, spending their substance on the sword, and buying it again
+by deeds of valour or imperial acts of favour, tuning troubadour
+harps, presiding at courts of love,--they filled a large page in the
+history of Southern France. The Les Baux were very superstitious. In
+the fulness of their prosperity they restricted the number of their
+dependent towns, or _places baussenques_, to seventy-nine,
+because these numbers in combination were thought to be of good omen
+to their house. Beral des Baux, Seigneur of Marseilles, was one day
+starting on a journey with his whole force to Avignon. He met an old
+woman herb-gathering at daybreak, and said, 'Mother, hast thou seen
+a crow or other bird?' 'Yea,' answered the crone, 'on the trunk of a
+dead willow.' Beral counted upon his fingers the day of the year, and
+turned bridle. With troubadours of name and note they had dealings,
+but not always to their own advantage, as the following story
+testifies. When the Baux and Berengers were struggling for the
+countship of Provence, Raymond Berenger, by his wife's counsel, went,
+attended by troubadours, to meet the Emperor Frederick at Milan.
+There he sued for the investiture and ratification of Provence. His
+troubadours sang and charmed Frederick; and the Emperor, for the joy
+he had in them, wrote his celebrated lines beginning--
+
+ Plas mi cavalier Francez.
+
+And when Berenger made his request he met with no refusal. Hearing
+thereof, the lords of Baux came down in wrath with a clangour of armed
+men. But music had already gained the day; and where the Phoebus of
+Provence had shone, the Ĉolus of storm-shaken Les Baux was powerless.
+Again, when Blacas, a knight of Provence, died, the great Sordello
+chanted one of his most fiery hymns, bidding the princes of
+Christendom flock round and eat the heart of the dead lord. 'Let
+Rambaude des Baux,' cries the bard, with a sarcasm that is clearly
+meant, but at this distance almost unintelligible, 'take also a good
+piece, for she is fair and good and truly virtuous; let her keep it
+well who knows so well to husband her own weal.' But the poets were
+not always adverse to the house of Baux. Fouquet, the beautiful and
+gentle melodist whom Dante placed in paradise, served Adelaisie, wife
+of Berald, with long service of unhappy love, and wrote upon her
+death 'The Complaint of Berald des Baux for Adelaisie.' Guillaume de
+Cabestan loved Berangère des Baux, and was so loved by her that she
+gave him a philtre to drink, whereof he sickened and grew mad. Many
+more troubadours are cited as having frequented the castle of Les
+Baux, and among the members of the princely house were several poets.
+
+Some of them were renowned for beauty. We hear of a Cécile, called
+Passe Rose, because of her exceeding loveliness; also of an unhappy
+François, who, after passing eighteen years in prison, yet won the
+grace and love of Joan of Naples by his charms. But the real temper of
+this fierce tribe was not shown among troubadours, or in the courts of
+love and beauty. The stern and barren rock from which they sprang, and
+the comet of their scutcheon, are the true symbols of their nature.
+History records no end of their ravages and slaughters. It is a
+tedious catalogue of blood--how one prince put to fire and sword the
+whole town of Courthezon; how another was stabbed in prison by his
+wife; how a third besieged the castle of his niece, and sought to
+undermine her chamber, knowing her the while to be in childbed; how a
+fourth was flayed alive outside the walls of Avignon. There is nothing
+terrible, splendid, and savage, belonging to feudal history, of which
+an example may not be found in the annals of Les Baux, as narrated by
+their chronicler, Jules Canonge.
+
+However abrupt may seem the transition from these memories of
+the ancient nobles of Les Baux to mere matters of travel and
+picturesqueness, it would be impossible to take leave of the old
+towns of Provence without glancing at the cathedrals of S. Trophime
+at Arles, and of S. Gilles--a village on the border of the dreary
+flamingo-haunted Camargue. Both of these buildings have porches
+splendidly encrusted with sculptures, half classical, half mediĉval,
+marking the transition from ancient to modern art. But that of S.
+Gilles is by far the richer and more elaborate. The whole façade of
+this church is one mass of intricate decoration; Norman arches
+and carved lions, like those of Lombard architecture, mingling
+fantastically with Greek scrolls of fruit and flowers, with elegant
+Corinthian columns jutting out upon the church steps, and with the old
+conventional wave-border that is called Etruscan in our modern jargon.
+From the midst of florid fret and foliage lean mild faces of saints
+and Madonnas. Symbols of evangelists with half-human, half-animal
+eyes and wings, are interwoven with the leafy bowers of cupids. Grave
+apostles stand erect beneath acanthus wreaths that ought to crisp the
+forehead of a laughing Faun or Bacchus. And yet so full, exuberant,
+and deftly chosen are these various elements, that there remains no
+sense of incongruity or discord. The mediĉval spirit had much trouble
+to disentangle itself from classic reminiscences; and fortunately for
+the picturesqueness of S. Gilles, it did not succeed. How strangely
+different is the result of this transition in the south from those
+severe and rigid forms which we call Romanesque in Germany and
+Normandy and England!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE CORNICE
+
+
+It was a dull afternoon in February when we left Nice, and drove
+across the mountains to Mentone. Over hill and sea hung a thick mist.
+Turbia's Roman tower stood up in cheerless solitude, wreathed round
+with driving vapour, and the rocky nest of Esa seemed suspended in
+a chaos between sea and sky. Sometimes the fog broke and showed us
+Villafranca, lying green and flat in the deep blue below: sometimes a
+distant view of higher peaks swam into sight from the shifting cloud.
+But the whole scene was desolate. Was it for this that we had left our
+English home, and travelled from London day and night? At length we
+reached the edge of the cloud, and jingled down by Roccabruna and the
+olive-groves, till one by one Mentone's villas came in sight, and at
+last we found ourselves at the inn door. That night, and all next day
+and the next night, we heard the hoarse sea beat and thunder on the
+beach. The rain and wind kept driving from the south, but we consoled
+ourselves with thinking that the orange-trees and every kind of flower
+were drinking in the moisture and waiting to rejoice in sunlight which
+would come.
+
+It was a Sunday morning when we woke and found that the rain had gone,
+the sun was shining brightly on the sea, and a clear north wind was
+blowing cloud and mist away. Out upon the hills we went, not caring
+much what path we took; for everything was beautiful, and hill
+and vale were full of garden walks. Through lemon-groves,--pale,
+golden-tender trees,--and olives, stretching their grey boughs against
+the lonely cottage tiles, we climbed, until we reached the pines and
+heath above. Then I knew the meaning of Theocritus for the first time.
+We found a well, broad, deep, and clear, with green herbs growing at
+the bottom, a runlet flowing from it down the rocky steps, maidenhair,
+black adiantum, and blue violets, hanging from the brink and mirrored
+in the water. This was just the well in _Hylas_. Theocritus
+has been badly treated. They call him a court poet, dead to Nature,
+artificial in his pictures. Yet I recognised this fountain by his
+verse, just as if he had showed me the very spot. Violets grow
+everywhere, of every shade, from black to lilac. Their stalks are
+long, and the flowers 'nod' upon them, so that I see how the Greeks
+could make them into chaplets--how Lycidas wore his crown of white
+violets[5] lying by the fireside elbow-deep in withered asphodel,
+watching the chestnuts in the embers, and softly drinking deep healths
+to Ageanax far off upon the waves. It is impossible to go wrong in
+these valleys. They are cultivated to the height of about five hundred
+feet above the sea, in terraces laboriously built up with walls,
+earthed and manured, and irrigated by means of tanks and aqueducts.
+Above this level, where the virgin soil has not been yet reclaimed,
+or where the winds of winter bring down freezing currents from the
+mountains through a gap or gully of the lower hills, a tangled growth
+of heaths and arbutus, and pines, and rosemarys, and myrtles, continue
+the vegetation, till it finally ends in bare grey rocks and peaks some
+thousand feet in height. Far above all signs of cultivation on these
+arid peaks, you still may see villages and ruined castles, built
+centuries ago for a protection from the Moorish pirates. To these
+mountain fastnesses the people of the coast retreated when they
+descried the sails of their foes on the horizon. In Mentone, not very
+long ago, old men might be seen who in their youth were said to have
+been taken captive by the Moors; and many Arabic words have found
+their way into the patois of the people.
+
+There is something strangely fascinating in the sight of these ruins
+on the burning rocks, with their black sentinel cypresses, immensely
+tall and far away. Long years and rain and sunlight have made these
+castellated eyries one with their native stone. It is hard to trace
+in their foundations where Nature's workmanship ends and where man's
+begins. What strange sights the mountain villagers must see! The vast
+blue plain of the unfurrowed deep, the fairy range of Corsica hung
+midway between the sea and sky at dawn or sunset, the stars so close
+above their heads, the deep dew-sprinkled valleys, the green pines! On
+penetrating into one of these hill-fortresses, you find that it is
+a whole village, with a church and castle and piazza, some few feet
+square, huddled together on a narrow platform. We met one day three
+magnates of Gorbio taking a morning stroll backwards and forwards,
+up and down their tiny square. Vehemently gesticulating, loudly
+chattering, they talked as though they had not seen each other for ten
+years, and were but just unloading their budgets of accumulated news.
+Yet these three men probably had lived, eaten, drunk, and talked
+together from the cradle to that hour: so true it is that use
+and custom quicken all our powers, especially of gossiping and
+scandal-mongering. S. Agnese is the highest and most notable of all
+these villages. The cold and heat upon its absolutely barren rock
+must be alike intolerable. In appearance it is not unlike the Etruscan
+towns of Central Italy; but there is something, of course, far more
+imposing in the immense antiquity and the historical associations of
+a Narni, a Fiesole, a Chiusi, or an Orvieto. Sea-life and rusticity
+strike a different note from that of those Apennine-girdled seats of
+dead civilisation, in which nations, arts, and religions have gone by
+and left but few traces,--some wrecks of giant walls, some excavated
+tombs, some shrines, where monks still sing and pray above the relics
+of the founders of once world-shaking, now almost forgotten, orders.
+Here at Mentone there is none of this; the idyllic is the true note,
+and Theocritus is still alive.
+
+We do not often scale these altitudes, but keep along the terraced
+glades by the side of olive-shaded streams. The violets, instead of
+peeping shyly from hedgerows, fall in ripples and cascades over mossy
+walls among maidenhair and spleen-worts. They are very sweet, and the
+sound of trickling water seems to mingle with their fragrance in a
+most delicious harmony. Sound, smell, and hue make up one chord, the
+sense of which is pure and perfect peace. The country-people are
+kind, letting us pass everywhere, so that we make our way along their
+aqueducts and through their gardens, under laden lemon-boughs, the
+pale fruit dangling at our ears, and swinging showers of scented dew
+upon us as we pass. Far better, however, than lemon or orange trees,
+are the olives. Some of these are immensely old, numbering, it is
+said, five centuries, so that Petrarch may almost have rested beneath
+their shade on his way to Avignon. These veterans are cavernous with
+age: gnarled, split, and twisted trunks, throwing out arms that break
+into a hundred branches; every branch distinct, and feathered with
+innumerable sparks and spikelets of white, wavy, greenish light.
+These are the leaves, and the stems are grey with lichens. The sky and
+sea--two blues, one full of sunlight and the other purple--set these
+fountains of perennial brightness like gems in lapis-lazuli. At a
+distance the same olives look hoary and soft--a veil of woven light
+or luminous haze. When the wind blows their branches all one way,
+they ripple like a sea of silver. But underneath their covert, in
+the shade, grey periwinkles wind among the snowy drift of allium. The
+narcissus sends its arrowy fragrance through the air, while, far and
+wide, red anemones burn like fire, with interchange of blue and lilac
+buds, white arums, orchises, and pink gladiolus. Wandering there, and
+seeing the pale flowers, stars white and pink and odorous, we dream
+of Olivet, or the grave Garden of the Agony, and the trees seem always
+whispering of sacred things. How people can blaspheme against the
+olives, and call them imitations of the willow, or complain that they
+are shabby shrubs, I do not know.[6]
+
+This shore would stand for Shelley's Island of Epipsychidion, or
+the golden age which Empedocles describes, when the mild nations
+worshipped Aphrodite with incense and the images of beasts and
+yellow honey, and no blood was spilt upon her altars--when 'the trees
+flourished with perennial leaves and fruit, and ample crops adorned
+their boughs through all the year.' This even now is literally true of
+the lemon-groves, which do not cease to flower and ripen. Everything
+fits in to complete the reproduction of Greek pastoral life. The goats
+eat cytisus and myrtle on the shore; a whole flock gathered round me
+as I sat beneath a tuft of golden green euphorbia the other day, and
+nibbled bread from my hands. The frog still croaks by tank and
+fountain, 'whom the Muses have ordained to sing for aye,' in
+spite of Bion's death. The narcissus, anemone, and hyacinth still tell
+their tales of love and death. Hesper still gazes on the shepherd
+from the mountain-head. The slender cypresses still vibrate, the pines
+murmur. Pan sleeps in noontide heat, and goat-herds and wayfaring
+men lie down to slumber by the roadside, under olive-boughs in which
+cicadas sing. The little villages high up are just as white, the
+mountains just as grey and shadowy when evening falls. Nothing is
+changed--except ourselves. I expect to find a statue of Priapus or
+pastoral Pan, hung with wreaths of flowers--the meal cake, honey, and
+spilt wine upon his altar, and young boys and maidens dancing round.
+Surely, in some far-off glade, by the side of lemon-grove or garden,
+near the village, there must be still a pagan remnant of glad
+Nature-worship. Surely I shall chance upon some Thyrsis piping in the
+pine-tree shade, or Daphne flying from the arms of Phoebus. So I dream
+until I come upon the Calvary set on a solitary hillock, with its
+prayer-steps lending a wide prospect across the olives and the
+orange-trees, and the broad valleys, to immeasurable skies and purple
+seas. There is the iron cross, the wounded heart, the spear, the reed,
+the nails, the crown of thorns, the cup of sacrificial blood, the
+title, with its superscription royal and divine. The other day we
+crossed a brook and entered a lemon-field, rich with blossoms
+and carpeted with red anemones. Everything basked in sunlight and
+glittered with exceeding brilliancy of hue. A tiny white chapel stood
+in a corner of the enclosure. Two iron-grated windows let me
+see inside: it was a bare place, containing nothing but a wooden
+praying-desk, black and worm-eaten, an altar with its candles and no
+flowers, and above the altar a square picture brown with age. On the
+floor were scattered several pence, and in a vase above the holy-water
+vessel stood some withered hyacinths. As my sight became accustomed to
+the gloom, I could see from the darkness of the picture a pale Christ
+nailed to the cross with agonising upward eyes and ashy aureole above
+the bleeding thorns. Thus I stepped suddenly away from the outward
+pomp and bravery of nature to the inward aspirations, agonies,
+and martyrdoms of man--from Greek legends of the past to the real
+Christian present--and I remembered that an illimitable prospect has
+been opened to the world, that in spite of ourselves we must turn our
+eyes heavenward, inward, to the infinite unseen beyond us and within
+our souls. Nothing can take us back to Phoebus or to Pan. Nothing
+can again identify us with the simple natural earth. '_Une immense
+espérance a traversé la terre_,' and these chapels, with their deep
+significances, lurk in the fair landscape like the cares of real life
+among our dreams of art, or like a fear of death and the hereafter in
+the midst of opera music. It is a strange contrast. The worship of men
+in those old times was symbolised by dances in the evening, banquets,
+libations, and mirth-making. 'Euphrosyne' was alike the goddess of
+the righteous mind and of the merry heart. Old withered women telling
+their rosaries at dusk; belated shepherds crossing themselves beneath
+the stars when they pass the chapel; maidens weighed down with
+Margaret's anguish of unhappy love; youths vowing their life to
+contemplation in secluded cloisters,--these are the human forms which
+gather round such chapels; and the motto of the worshippers consists
+in this, 'Do often violence to thy desire.' In the Tyrol we have seen
+whole villages praying together at daybreak before their day's work,
+singing their _Miserere_ and their _Gloria_ and their _Dies Irĉ_, to
+the sound of crashing organs and jangling bells; appealing in the
+midst of Nature's splendour to the Spirit which is above Nature, which
+dwells in darkness rather than light, and loves the yearnings and
+contentions of our soul more than its summer gladness and peace. Even
+the olives here tell more to us of Olivet and the Garden than of the
+oil-press and the wrestling-ground. The lilies carry us to the Sermon
+on the Mount, and teach humility, instead of summoning up some legend
+of a god's love for a mortal. The hillside tanks and running streams,
+and water-brooks swollen by sudden rain, speak of Palestine. We call
+the white flowers stars of Bethlehem. The large sceptre-reed; the
+fig-tree, lingering in barrenness when other trees are full of fruit;
+the locust-beans of the Caruba:--for one suggestion of Greek idylls
+there is yet another, of far deeper, dearer power.
+
+But who can resist the influence of Greek ideas at the Cap S. Martin?
+Down to the verge of the sea stretch the tall, twisted stems of Levant
+pines, and on the caverned limestone breaks the deep blue water.
+Dazzling as marble are these rocks, pointed and honeycombed with
+constant dashing of the restless sea, tufted with corallines and grey
+and purple seaweeds in the little pools, but hard and dry and rough
+above tide level. Nor does the sea always lap them quietly; for the
+last few days it has come tumbling in, roaring and raging on the beach
+with huge waves crystalline in their transparency, and maned with
+fleecy spray. Such were the rocks and such the swell of breakers when
+Ulysses grasped the shore after his long swim. Samphire, very salt and
+fragrant, grows in the rocky honeycomb; then lentisk and beach-loving
+myrtle, both exceeding green and bushy; then rosemary and euphorbia
+above the reach of spray. Fishermen, with their long reeds, sit lazily
+perched upon black rocks above blue waves, sunning themselves as much
+as seeking sport. One distant tip of snow, seen far away behind the
+hills, reminds us of an alien, unremembered winter. While dreaming
+there, this fancy came into my head: Polyphemus was born yonder in
+the Gorbio Valley. There he fed his sheep and goats, and on the hills
+found scanty pasture for his kine. He and his mother lived in the
+white house by the cypress near the stream where tulips grow. Young
+Galatea, nursed in the caverns of these rocks, white as the foam, and
+shy as the sea fishes, came one morning up the valley to pick mountain
+hyacinths, and little Polyphemus led the way. He knew where violets
+and sweet narcissus grew, as well as Galatea where pink coralline
+and spreading sea-flowers with their waving arms. But Galatea, having
+filled her lap with bluebells, quite forgot the leaping kids, and
+piping Cyclops, and cool summer caves, and yellow honey, and black
+ivy, and sweet vine, and water cold as Alpine snow. Down the swift
+streamlet she danced laughingly, and made herself once more bitter
+with the sea. But Polyphemus remained,--hungry, sad, gazing on the
+barren sea, and piping to the mockery of its waves.
+
+Filled with these Greek fancies, it is strange to come upon a little
+sandstone dell furrowed by trickling streams and overgrown with
+English primroses; or to enter the village of Roccabruna, with its
+mediĉval castle and the motto on its walls, _Tempora labuntur
+tacitisque senescimus annis_. A true motto for the town, where the
+butcher comes but once a week, and where men and boys, and dogs, and
+palms, and lemon-trees grow up and flourish and decay in the same
+hollow of the sunny mountain-side. Into the hard conglomerate of the
+hill the town is built; house walls and precipices mortised into one
+another, dovetailed by the art of years gone by, and riveted by
+age. The same plants grow from both alike--spurge, cistus, rue, and
+henbane, constant to the desolation of abandoned dwellings. From the
+castle you look down on roofs, brown tiles and chimney-pots, set one
+above the other like a big card-castle. Each house has its foot on a
+neighbour's neck, and its shoulder set against the native stone. The
+streets meander in and out, and up and down, overarched and balconied,
+but very clean. They swarm with children, healthy, happy, little
+monkeys, who grow fat on salt fish and yellow polenta, with oil and
+sun _ad libitum_.
+
+At night from Roccabruna you may see the flaring gas-lamps of the
+gaming-house at Monaco, that Armida's garden of the nineteenth
+century. It is the sunniest and most sheltered spot of all the coast.
+Long ago Lucan said of Monaco, '_Non Corus in illum jus habet aut
+Zephyrus_;' winter never comes to nip its tangled cactuses, and
+aloes, and geraniums. The air swoons with the scent of lemon-groves;
+tall palm-trees wave their graceful branches by the shore; music of
+the softest and the loudest swells from the palace; cool corridors
+and sunny seats stand ready for the noontide heat or evening calm;
+without, are olive-gardens, green and fresh and full of flowers. But
+the witch herself holds her high court and never-ending festival of
+sin in the painted banquet-halls and among the green tables.
+
+Let us leave this scene and turn with the country-folk of Roccabruna
+to S. Michael's Church at Mentone. High above the sea it stands,
+and from its open doors you look across the mountains with their
+olive-trees. Inside the church is a seething mass of country-folk and
+townspeople, mostly women, and these almost all old, but picturesque
+beyond description; kerchiefs of every colour, wrinkles of every shape
+and depth, skins of every tone of brown and yellow, voices of every
+gruffness, shrillness, strength, and weakness. Wherever an empty
+corner can be found, it is soon filled by tottering babies and
+mischievous children. The country-women come with their large dangling
+earrings of thin gold, wearing pink tulips or lemon-buds in their
+black hair. A low buzz of gossiping and mutual recognition keeps the
+air alive. The whole service seems a holiday--a general enjoyment of
+gala dresses and friendly greetings, very different from the
+silence, immobility, and _noli me tangere_ aspect of an English
+congregation. Over all drones, rattles, snores, and shrieks the organ;
+wailing, querulous, asthmatic, incomplete, its everlasting nasal
+chant--always beginning, never ending, through a range of two or three
+notes ground into one monotony. The voices of the congregation
+rise and sink above it. These southern people, like the Arabs, the
+Apulians, and the Spaniards, seem to find their music in a hurdy-gurdy
+swell of sound. The other day we met a little girl, walking and
+spinning, and singing all the while, whose song was just another
+version of this chant. It has a discontented plaintive wail, as if it
+came from some vast age, and were a cousin of primeval winds.
+
+At first sight, by the side of Mentone, San Remo is sadly prosaic. The
+valleys seem to sprawl, and the universal olives are monotonously grey
+upon their thick clay soil. Yet the wealth of flowers in the fat
+earth is wonderful. One might fancy oneself in a weedy farm flower-bed
+invaded by stray oats and beans and cabbages and garlic from the
+kitchen-garden. The country does not suggest a single Greek idea.
+It has no form or outline--no barren peaks, no spare and difficult
+vegetation. The beauty is rich but tame--valleys green with oats and
+corn, blossoming cherry-trees, and sweet bean-fields, figs coming into
+leaf, and arrowy bay-trees by the side of sparkling streams: here and
+there a broken aqueduct or rainbow bridge hung with maidenhair and
+briar and clematis and sarsaparilla.
+
+In the cathedral church of San Siro on Good Friday they hang the
+columns and the windows with black; they cover the pictures and deface
+the altar; above the high altar they raise a crucifix, and below they
+place a catafalque with the effigy of the dead Christ. To this sad
+symbol they address their prayers and incense, chant their 'litanies
+and lurries,' and clash the rattles, which commemorate their rage
+against the traitor Judas. So far have we already passed away from the
+Greek feeling of Mentone. As I listened to the hideous din, I could
+not but remember the Theocritean burial of Adonis. Two funeral beds
+prepared: two feasts recurring in the springtime of the year. What a
+difference beneath this superficial similarity--[Greek: kalos nekus
+oia katheudôn]--_attritus ĉgrâ macie_. But the fast of Good
+Friday is followed by the festival of Easter. That, after all, is the
+chief difference.
+
+After leaving the cathedral we saw a pretty picture in a dull old
+street of San Remo--three children leaning from a window, blowing
+bubbles. The bubbles floated down the street, of every colour, round
+and trembling, like the dreams of life which children dream. The town
+is certainly most picturesque. It resembles a huge glacier of houses
+poured over a wedge of rock, running down the sides and along the
+ridge, and spreading itself into a fan between two torrents on the
+shore below. House over house, with balcony and staircase, convent
+turret and church tower, palm-trees and olives, roof gardens and
+clinging creepers--this white cataract of buildings streams downward
+from the lazar-house, and sanctuary, and sandstone quarries on the
+hill. It is a mass of streets placed close above each other, and
+linked together with arms and arches of solid masonry, as a protection
+from the earthquakes, which are frequent at San Remo. The walls are
+tall, and form a labyrinth of gloomy passages and treacherous blind
+alleys, where the Moors of old might meet with a ferocious welcome.
+Indeed, San Remo is a fortress as well as a dwelling-place. Over its
+gateways may still be traced the pipes for molten lead, and on its
+walls the eyeloops for arrows, with brackets for the feet of archers.
+Masses of building have been shaken down by earthquakes. The ruins of
+what once were houses gape with blackened chimneys and dark forlorn
+cellars; mazes of fungus and unhealthy weeds among the still secure
+habitations. Hardly a ray of light penetrates the streets; one learns
+the meaning of the Italian word _uggia_ from their cold and
+gloom. During the day they are deserted by every one but babies and
+witchlike old women--some gossiping, some sitting vacant at the house
+door, some spinning or weaving, or minding little children--ugly and
+ancient as are their own homes, yet clean as are the streets. The
+younger population goes afield; the men on mules laden for the hills,
+the women burdened like mules with heavy and disgusting loads. It is
+an exceptionally good-looking race; tall, well-grown, and strong.--But
+to the streets again. The shops in the upper town are few, chiefly
+wine-booths and stalls for the sale of salt fish, eggs, and bread,
+or cobblers' and tinkers' ware. Notwithstanding the darkness of their
+dwellings, the people have a love of flowers; azaleas lean from their
+windows, and vines, carefully protected by a sheath of brickwork,
+climb the six stories, to blossom out into a pergola upon the roof.
+Look at that mass of greenery and colours, dimly seen from beneath,
+with a yellow cat sunning herself upon the parapet! To reach such a
+garden and such sunlight who would not mount six stories and thread
+a labyrinth of passages? I should prefer a room upon the east side of
+the town, looking southward to the Molo and the sea, with a sound
+of water beneath, and a palm soaring up to fan my window with his
+feathery leaves.
+
+The shrines are little spots of brightness in the gloomy streets.
+Madonna with a sword; Christ holding His pierced and bleeding heart;
+l'Eterno Padre pointing to the dead Son stretched upon His knee; some
+souls in torment; S. Roch reminding us of old plagues by the spot upon
+his thigh;--these are the symbols of the shrines. Before them stand
+rows of pots filled with gillyflowers, placed there by pious, simple,
+praying hands--by maidens come to tell their sorrows to our Lady rich
+in sorrow, by old women bent and shrivelled, in hopes of paradise or
+gratitude for happy days, when Madonna kept Cecchino faithful to his
+home, or saved the baby from the fever.
+
+Lower down, between the sea and the hill, is the municipal,
+aristocratic, ecclesiastical quarter of San Remo. There stands the
+Palace Borea--a truly princely pile, built in the last Renaissance
+style of splendour, with sea-nymphs and dolphins, and satyric heads,
+half lips, half leafage, round about its doors and windows. Once it
+formed the dwelling of a feudal family, but now it is a roomy
+anthill of a hundred houses, shops, and offices, the Boreas of to-day
+retaining but a portion of one flat, and making profit of the rest.
+There, too, are the barracks and the syndic's hall; the Jesuits'
+school, crowded with boys and girls; the shops for clothes,
+confectionery, and trinkets; the piazza, with its fountain and
+tasselled planes, and flowery chestnut-trees, a mass of greenery.
+Under these trees the idlers lounge, boys play at leap-frog, men at
+bowls. Women in San Remo work all day, but men and boys play for the
+most part at bowls or toss-penny or leap-frog or morra. San Siro, the
+cathedral, stands at one end of the square. Do not go inside; it has
+a sickly smell of immemorial incense and garlic, undefinable and
+horrible. Far better looks San Siro from the parapet above the
+torrent. There you see its irregular half-Gothic outline across a
+tangle of lemon-trees and olives. The stream rushes by through high
+walls, covered with creepers, spanned by ferny bridges, feathered by
+one or two old tufty palms. And over all rises the ancient turret of
+San Siro, like a Spanish giralda, a minaret of pinnacles and pyramids
+and dome bubbles, with windows showing heavy bells, old clocks, and
+sundials painted on the walls, and a cupola of green and yellow tiles
+like serpent-scales, to crown the whole. The sea lies beyond, and
+the house-roofs break it with grey horizontal lines. Then there are
+convents, legions of them, large white edifices, Jesuitical apparently
+for the most part, clanging importunate bells, leaning rose-blossoms
+and cypress-boughs over their jealous walls.
+
+Lastly, there is the port--the mole running out into the sea, the quay
+planted with plane-trees, and the fishing-boats--by which San Remo is
+connected with the naval glory of the past--with the Riviera that gave
+birth to Columbus--with the Liguria that the Dorias ruled--with the
+great name of Genoa. The port is empty enough now; but from the pier
+you look back on San Remo and its circling hills, a jewelled town
+set in illimitable olive greyness. The quay seems also to be the
+cattle-market. There the small buff cows of North Italy repose after
+their long voyage or march, kneeling on the sandy ground or rubbing
+their sides against the wooden cross awry with age and shorn of all
+its symbols. Lambs frisk among the boats; impudent kids nibble
+the drooping ears of patient mules. Hinds in white jackets and
+knee-breeches made of skins, lead shaggy rams and fiercely bearded
+goats, ready to butt at every barking dog, and always seeking
+opportunities of flight. Farmers and parish priests in black
+petticoats feel the cattle and dispute about the price, or whet their
+bargains with a draught of wine. Meanwhile the nets are brought on
+shore glittering with the fry of sardines, which are cooked like
+whitebait, with cuttlefish--amorphous objects stretching shiny feelers
+on the hot dry sand--and prickly purple eggs of the sea-urchin. Women
+go about their labour through the throng, some carrying stones upon
+their heads, or unloading boats and bearing planks of wood in single
+file, two marching side by side beneath one load of lime, others
+scarcely visible under a stack of oats, another with her baby in its
+cradle fast asleep.
+
+San Remo has an elder brother among the hills, which is called San
+Romolo, after one of the old bishops of Genoa. Who San Remo was is
+buried in remote antiquity; but his town has prospered, while of San
+Romolo nothing remains but a ruined hill-convent among pine-trees. The
+old convent is worth visiting. Its road carries you into the heart of
+the sierra which surrounds San Remo, a hill-country something like
+the Jura, undulating and green to the very top with maritime pines and
+pinasters. Riding up, you hear all manner of Alpine sounds; brawling
+streams, tinkling cowbells, and herdsmen calling to each other on the
+slopes. Beneath you lies San Remo, scarcely visible; and over it the
+great sea rises ever so far into the sky, until the white sails hang
+in air, and cloud and sea-line melt into each other indistinguishably.
+Spanish chestnuts surround the monastery with bright blue gentians,
+hepaticas, forget-me-nots, and primroses about their roots. The house
+itself is perched on a knoll with ample prospect to the sea and to
+the mountains, very near to heaven, within a theatre of noble
+contemplations and soul-stirring thoughts. If Mentone spoke to me of
+the poetry of Greek pastoral life, this convent speaks of mediĉval
+monasticism--of solitude with God, above, beneath, and all around, of
+silence and repose from agitating cares, of continuity in prayer, and
+changelessness of daily life. Some precepts of the _Imitatio_
+came into my mind: 'Be never wholly idle; read or write, pray or
+meditate, or work with diligence for the common needs.' 'Praiseworthy
+is it for the religious man to go abroad but seldom, and to seem to
+shun, and keep his eyes from men.' 'Sweet is the cell when it is often
+sought, but if we gad about, it wearies us by its seclusion.' Then I
+thought of the monks so living in this solitude; their cell windows
+looking across the valley to the sea, through summer and winter, under
+sun and stars. Then would they read or write, what long melodious
+hours! or would they pray, what stations on the pine-clad hills! or
+would they toil, what terraces to build and plant with corn, what
+flowers to tend, what cows to milk and pasture, what wood to cut,
+what fir-cones to gather for the winter fire! or should they yearn for
+silence, silence from their comrades of the solitude, what whispering
+galleries of God, where never human voice breaks loudly, but winds
+and streams and lonely birds disturb the awful stillness! In such a
+hermitage as this, only more wild, lived S. Francis of Assisi, among
+the Apennines.[7] It was there that he learned the tongues of beasts
+and birds, and preached them sermons. Stretched for hours motionless
+on the bare rocks, coloured like them and rough like them in his brown
+peasant's serge, he prayed and meditated, saw the vision of Christ
+crucified, and planned his order to regenerate a vicious age. So still
+he lay, so long, so like a stone, so gentle were his eyes, so kind
+and low his voice, that the mice nibbled breadcrumbs from his wallet,
+lizards ran over him, and larks sang to him in the air. There, too, in
+those long, solitary vigils, the Spirit of God came upon him, and the
+spirit of Nature was even as God's Spirit, and he sang: 'Laudato sia
+Dio mio Signore, con tutte le creature, specialmente messer lo frate
+sole; per suor luna, e per le stelle; per frate vento e per l'aire, e
+nuvolo, e sereno e ogni tempo.' Half the value of this hymn would
+be lost were we to forget how it was written, in what solitudes and
+mountains far from men, or to ticket it with some abstract word
+like Pantheism. Pantheism it is not; but an acknowledgment of that
+brotherhood, beneath the love of God, by which the sun and moon and
+stars, and wind and air and cloud, and clearness and all weather, and
+all creatures, are bound together with the soul of man.
+
+Few, of course, were like S. Francis. Probably no monk of San Romolo
+was inspired with his enthusiasm for humanity, or had his revelation
+of the Divine Spirit inherent in the world. Still fewer can have felt
+the ĉsthetic charm of Nature but most vaguely. It was as much as they
+could boast, if they kept steadily to the rule of their order, and
+attended to the concerns each of his own soul. A terrible selfishness,
+if rightly considered; but one which accorded with the delusion that
+this world is a cave of care, the other world a place of torture or
+undying bliss, death the prime object of our meditation, and lifelong
+abandonment of our fellow-men the highest mode of existence. Why,
+then, should monks, so persuaded of the riddle of the earth, have
+placed themselves in scenes so beautiful? Why rose the Camaldolis and
+Chartreuses over Europe? white convents on the brows of lofty hills,
+among the rustling boughs of Vallombrosas, in the grassy meadows of
+Engelbergs,--always the eyries of Nature's lovers, men smitten with
+the loveliness of earth? There is surely some meaning in these poetic
+stations.
+
+Here is a sentence of the _Imitatio_ which throws some light upon
+the hymn of S. Francis and the sites of Benedictine monasteries, by
+explaining the value of natural beauty for monks who spent their life
+in studying death: 'If thy heart were right, then would every creature
+be to thee a mirror of life, and a book of holy doctrine. There is no
+creature so small and vile that does not show forth the goodness
+of God.' With this sentence bound about their foreheads, walked Fra
+Angelico and S. Francis. To men like them the mountain valleys and the
+skies, and all that they contained, were full of deep significance.
+Though they reasoned '_de conditione humanĉ miseriĉ_,' and '_de
+contemptu mundi_,' yet the whole world was a pageant of God's
+glory, a testimony to His goodness. Their chastened senses, pure
+hearts, and simple wills were as wings by which they soared above the
+things of earth, and sent the music of their souls aloft with every
+other creature in the symphony of praise. To them, as to Blake, the
+sun was no mere blazing disc or ball, but 'an innumerable company
+of the heavenly host singing, "Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God
+Almighty."' To them the winds were brothers, and the streams were
+sisters--brethren in common dependence upon God their Father, brethren
+in common consecration to His service, brethren by blood, brethren by
+vows of holiness. Unquestioning faith rendered this world no puzzle;
+they overlooked the things of sense because the spiritual things
+were ever present, and as clear as day. Yet did they not forget
+that spiritual things are symbolised by things of sense; and so the
+smallest herb of grass was vital to their tranquil contemplations.
+We who have lost sight of the invisible world, who set our affections
+more on things of earth, fancy that because these monks despised the
+world, and did not write about its landscapes, therefore they were
+dead to its beauty. This is mere vanity: the mountains, stars, seas,
+fields, and living things were only swallowed up in the one thought of
+God, and made subordinate to the awfulness of human destinies. We
+to whom hills are hills, and seas are seas, and stars are ponderable
+quantities, speak, write, and reason of them as of objects interesting
+in themselves. The monks were less ostensibly concerned about such
+things, because they only found in them the vestibules and symbols of
+a hidden mystery.
+
+The contrast between the Greek and mediĉval modes of regarding
+Nature is not a little remarkable. Both Greeks and monks, judged by
+nineteenth-century standards, were unobservant of natural beauties.
+They make but brief and general remarks upon landscapes and the like.
+The [Greek: pontiôn te kumatôn anêrithmon gelasma] is very
+rare. But the Greeks stopped at the threshold of Nature; the forces
+they found there, the gods, were inherent in Nature, and distinct.
+They did not, like the monks, place one spiritual power, omnipotent
+and omnipresent, above all, and see in Nature lessons of Divine
+government. We ourselves having somewhat overstrained the latter point
+of view, are now apt to return vaguely to Greek fancies. Perhaps, too,
+we talk so much about scenery because it is scenery to us, and the
+life has gone out of it.
+
+I cannot leave the Cornice without one word about a place which lies
+between Mentone and San Remo. Bordighera has a beauty which is quite
+distinct from both. Palms are its chief characteristics. They lean
+against the garden walls, and feather the wells outside the town,
+where women come with brazen pitchers to draw water. In some of the
+marshy tangles of the plain, they spring from a thick undergrowth of
+spiky leaves, and rear their tall aërial arms against the deep blue
+background of the sea or darker purple of the distant hills. White
+pigeons fly about among their branches, and the air is loud with
+cooings and with rustlings, and the hoarser croaking of innumerable
+frogs. Then, in the olive-groves that stretch along the level shore,
+are labyrinths of rare and curious plants, painted tulips and white
+periwinkles, flinging their light of blossoms and dark glossy leaves
+down the swift channels of the brawling streams. On each side of the
+rivulets they grow, like sister cataracts of flowers instead of spray.
+At night fresh stars come out along the coast, beneath the stars
+of heaven; for you can see the lamps of Ventimiglia and Mentone
+and Monaco, and, far away, the lighthouses upon the promontories of
+Antibes and the Estrelles. At dawn, a vision of Corsica grows from
+the sea. The island lies eighty miles away, but one can trace the
+dark strip of irregular peaks glowing amid the gold and purple of the
+rising sun. If the air is clear and bright, the snows and overvaulting
+clouds which crown its mountains shine all day, and glitter like an
+apparition in the bright blue sky. 'Phantom fair,' half raised above
+the sea, it stands, as unreal and transparent as the moon when seen in
+April sunlight, yet not to be confounded with the shape of any cloud.
+If Mentone speaks of Greek legends, and San Romolo restores the
+monastic past, we feel ourselves at Bordighera transported to the
+East; and lying under its tall palms can fancy ourselves at Tyre or
+Daphne, or in the gardens of a Moslem prince.
+
+ Note.--Dec. 1873. My old impressions are renewed and confirmed
+ by a third visit, after seven years, to this coast. For purely
+ idyllic loveliness, the Cornice is surpassed by nothing in
+ the South. A very few spots in Sicily, the road between
+ Castellammare and Amalfi, and the island of Corfu, are its
+ only rivals in this style of scenery. From Cannes to Sestri is
+ one continuous line of exquisitely modulated landscape beauty,
+ which can only be fully appreciated by travellers in carriage
+ or on foot.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_AJACCIO_
+
+
+It generally happens that visitors to Ajaccio pass over from the
+Cornice coast, leaving Nice at night, and waking about sunrise to find
+themselves beneath the frowning mountains of Corsica. The difference
+between the scenery of the island and the shores which they have
+left is very striking. Instead of the rocky mountains of the Cornice,
+intolerably dry and barren at their summits, but covered at their base
+with villages and ancient towns and olive-fields, Corsica presents a
+scene of solitary and peculiar grandeur. The highest mountain-tops are
+covered with snow, and beneath the snow-level to the sea they are
+as green as Irish or as English hills, but nearly uninhabited and
+uncultivated. Valleys of almost Alpine verdure are succeeded by
+tracts of chestnut wood and scattered pines, or deep and flowery
+brushwood--the 'maquis' of Corsica, which yields shelter to its
+traditional outlaws and bandits. Yet upon these hillsides there
+are hardly any signs of life; the whole country seems abandoned to
+primeval wildness and the majesty of desolation. Nothing can possibly
+be more unlike the smiling Riviera, every square mile of which is
+cultivated like a garden, and every valley and bay dotted over with
+white villages. After steaming for a few hours along this savage
+coast, the rocks which guard the entrance to the bay of Ajaccio,
+murderous-looking teeth and needles ominously christened Sanguinari,
+are passed, and we enter the splendid land-locked harbour, on the
+northern shore of which Ajaccio is built. About three centuries ago
+the town, which used to occupy the extreme or eastern end of the bay,
+was removed to a more healthy point upon the northern coast, so that
+Ajaccio is quite a modern city. Visitors who expect to find in it
+the picturesqueness of Genoa or San Remo, or even of Mentone, will
+be sadly disappointed. It is simply a healthy, well-appointed town of
+recent date, the chief merits of which are, that it has wide streets,
+and is free, externally at least, from the filth and rubbish of most
+southern seaports.
+
+But if Ajaccio itself is not picturesque, the scenery which
+it commands, and in the heart of which it lies, is of the most
+magnificent. The bay of Ajaccio resembles a vast Italian lake--a Lago
+Maggiore, with greater space between the mountains and the shore.
+From the snow-peaks of the interior, huge granite crystals clothed in
+white, to the southern extremity of the bay, peak succeeds peak and
+ridge rises behind ridge in a line of wonderful variety and beauty.
+The atmospheric changes of light and shadow, cloud and colour, on this
+upland country, are as subtle and as various as those which lend their
+beauty to the scenery of the lakes, while the sea below is blue and
+rarely troubled. One could never get tired with looking at this view.
+Morning and evening add new charms to its sublimity and beauty. In the
+early morning Monte d'Oro sparkles like a Monte Rosa with its fresh
+snow, and the whole inferior range puts on the crystal blueness of
+dawn among the Alps. In the evening, violet and purple tints and
+the golden glow of Italian sunset lend a different lustre to the
+fairyland. In fact, the beauties of Switzerland and Italy are
+curiously blended in this landscape.
+
+In soil and vegetation the country round Ajaccio differs much from the
+Cornice. There are very few olive-trees, nor is the cultivated ground
+backed up so immediately by stony mountains; but between the seashore
+and the hills there is plenty of space for pasture-land, and orchards
+of apricot and peach-trees, and orange gardens. This undulating
+champaign, green with meadows and watered with clear streams, is very
+refreshing to the eyes of Northern people, who may have wearied of the
+bareness and greyness of Nice or Mentone. It is traversed by excellent
+roads, recently constructed on a plan of the French Government, which
+intersect the country in all directions, and offer an infinite variety
+of rides or drives to visitors. The broken granite of which these
+roads are made is very pleasant for riding over. Most of the hills
+through which they strike, after starting from Ajaccio, are
+clothed with a thick brushwood of box, ilex, lentisk, arbutus,
+and laurustinus, which stretches down irregularly into vineyards,
+olive-gardens, and meadows. It is, indeed, the native growth of the
+island; for wherever a piece of ground is left untilled, the macchi
+grow up, and the scent of their multitudinous aromatic blossoms is so
+strong that it may be smelt miles out at sea. Napoleon, at S. Helena,
+referred to this fragrance when he said that he should know Corsica
+blindfold by the smell of its soil. Occasional woods of holm oak make
+darker patches on the landscape, and a few pines fringe the side of
+enclosure walls or towers. The prickly pear runs riot in and out
+among the hedges and upon the walls, diversifying the colours of the
+landscape with its strange grey-green masses and unwieldy fans. In
+spring, when peach and almond trees are in blossom, and when the
+roadside is starred with asphodels, this country is most beautiful in
+its gladness. The macchi blaze with cistus flowers of red and silver.
+Golden broom mixes with the dark purple of the great French lavender,
+and over the whole mass of blossom wave plumes of Mediterranean heath
+and sweet-scented yellow coronilla. Under the stems of the ilex peep
+cyclamens, pink and sweet; the hedgerows are a tangle of vetches,
+convolvuluses, lupines, orchises, and alliums, with here and there a
+purple iris. It would be difficult to describe all the rare and lovely
+plants which are found here in a profusion that surpasses even the
+flower-gardens of the Cornice, and reminds one of the most favoured
+Alpine valleys in their early spring.
+
+Since the French occupied Corsica they have done much for the island
+by improving its harbours and making good roads, and endeavouring
+to mitigate the ferocity of the people. But they have many things to
+contend against, and Corsica is still behind the other provinces of
+France. The people are idle, haughty, umbrageous, fiery, quarrelsome,
+fond of gipsy life, and retentive through generations of old feuds and
+prejudices to an almost inconceivable extent. Then the nature of the
+country itself offers serious obstacles to its proper colonisation
+and cultivation. The savage state of the island and its internal feuds
+have disposed the Corsicans to quit the seaboard for their mountain
+villages and fortresses, so that the great plains at the foot of the
+hills are unwholesome for want of tillage and drainage. Again,
+the mountains themselves have in many parts been stripped of their
+forests, and converted into mere wildernesses of macchi stretching
+up and down their slopes for miles and miles of useless desolation.
+Another impediment to proper cultivation is found in the old habit of
+what is called free pasturage. The highland shepherds are allowed
+by the national custom to drive down their flocks and herds to the
+lowlands during the winter, so that fences are broken, young crops
+are browsed over and trampled down, and agriculture becomes a mere
+impossibility. The last and chief difficulty against which the French
+have had to contend, and up to this time with apparent success, is
+brigandage. The Corsican system of brigandage is so very different
+from that of the Italians, Sicilians, and Greeks, that a word may be
+said about its peculiar character. In the first place, it has nothing
+at all to do with robbery and thieving. The Corsican bandit took to a
+free life among the macchi, not for the sake of supporting himself by
+lawless depredation, but because he had put himself under a legal and
+social ban by murdering some one in obedience to the strict code of
+honour of his country. His victim may have been the hereditary foe of
+his house for generations, or else the newly made enemy of yesterday.
+But in either case, if he had killed him fairly, after a due
+notification of his intention to do so, he was held to have fulfilled
+a duty rather than to have committed a crime. He then betook himself
+to the dense tangles of evergreens which I have described, where he
+lived upon the charity of countryfolk and shepherds. In the eyes of
+those simple people it was a sacred duty to relieve the necessities of
+the outlaws, and to guard them from the bloodhounds of justice. There
+was scarcely a respectable family in Corsica who had not one or more
+of its members thus _alla campagna_, as it was euphemistically
+styled. The Corsicans themselves have attributed this miserable state
+of things to two principal causes. The first of these was the ancient
+bad government of the island: under its Genoese rulers no justice was
+administered, and private vengeance for homicide or insult became a
+necessary consequence among the haughty and warlike families of
+the mountain villages. Secondly, the Corsicans have been from time
+immemorial accustomed to wear arms in everyday life. They used to sit
+at their house doors and pace the streets with musket, pistol, dagger,
+and cartouch-box on their persons; and on the most trivial occasion
+of merriment or enthusiasm they would discharge their firearms. This
+habit gave a bloody termination to many quarrels, which might have
+ended more peaceably had the parties been unarmed; and so the seeds
+of _vendetta_ were constantly being sown. Statistics published
+by the French Government present a hideous picture of the state of
+bloodshed in Corsica even during this century. In one period of thirty
+years (between 1821 and 1850) there were 4319 murders in the island.
+Almost every man was watching for his neighbour's life, or seeking how
+to save his own; and agriculture and commerce were neglected for this
+grisly game of hide-and-seek. In 1853 the French began to take strong
+measures, and, under the Prefect Thuillier, they hunted the bandits
+from the macchi, killing between 200 and 300 of them. At the same time
+an edict was promulgated against bearing arms. It is forbidden to sell
+the old Corsican stiletto in the shops, and no one may carry a gun,
+even for sporting purposes, unless he obtains a special licence. These
+licences, moreover, are only granted for short and precisely measured
+periods.
+
+In order to appreciate the stern and gloomy character of the
+Corsicans, it is necessary to leave the smiling gardens of Ajaccio,
+and to visit some of the more distant mountain villages--Vico, Cavro,
+Bastelica, or Bocognano, any of which may easily be reached from the
+capital. Immediately after quitting the seaboard, we enter a country
+austere in its simplicity, solemn without relief, yet dignified by its
+majesty and by the sense of freedom it inspires. As we approach the
+mountains, the macchi become taller, feathering man-high above the
+road, and stretching far away upon the hills. Gigantic masses of
+granite, shaped like buttresses and bastions, seem to guard the
+approaches to these hills; while, looking backward over the green
+plain, the sea lies smiling in a haze of blue among the rocky horns
+and misty headlands of the coast. There is a stateliness about the
+abrupt inclination of these granite slopes, rising from their frowning
+portals by sharp _arêtes_ to the snows piled on their summits,
+which contrasts in a strange way with the softness and beauty of
+the mingling sea and plain beneath. In no landscape are more various
+qualities combined; in none are they so harmonised as to produce so
+strong a sense of majestic freedom and severe power. Suppose that we
+are on the road to Corte, and have now reached Bocognano, the first
+considerable village since we left Ajaccio. Bocognano might be chosen
+as typical of Corsican hill-villages, with its narrow street, and
+tall tower-like houses of five or six stories high, faced with
+rough granite, and pierced with the smallest windows and very narrow
+doorways. These buildings have a mournful and desolate appearance.
+There is none of the grandeur of antiquity about them; no sculptured
+arms or castellated turrets, or balconies or spacious staircases,
+such as are common in the poorest towns of Italy. The signs of warlike
+occupation which they offer, and their sinister aspect of vigilance,
+are thoroughly prosaic. They seem to suggest a state of society in
+which feud and violence were systematised into routine. There is no
+relief to the savage austerity of their forbidding aspect; no signs
+of wealth or household comfort; no trace of art, no liveliness and
+gracefulness of architecture. Perched upon their coigns of vantage,
+these villages seem always menacing, as if Saracen pirates, or Genoese
+marauders, or bandits bent on vengeance, were still for ever on the
+watch. Forests of immensely old chestnut-trees surround Bocognano on
+every side, so that you step from the village streets into the shade
+of woods that seem to have remained untouched for centuries. The
+country-people support themselves almost entirely upon the fruit of
+these chestnuts; and there is a large department of Corsica called
+Castagniccia, from the prevalence of these trees and the sustenance
+which the inhabitants derive from them. Close by the village brawls
+a torrent, such as one may see in the Monte Rosa valleys or the
+Apennines, but very rarely in Switzerland. It is of a pure green
+colour, absolutely like Indian jade, foaming round the granite
+boulders, and gliding over smooth slabs of polished stone, and eddying
+into still, deep pools fringed with fern. Monte d'Oro, one of the
+largest mountains of Corsica, soars above, and from his snows the
+purest water, undefiled by glacier mud or the _débris_ of
+avalanches, melts away. Following the stream, we rise through the
+macchi and the chestnut woods, which grow more sparely by degrees,
+until we reach the zone of beeches. Here the scene seems suddenly
+transferred to the Pyrenees; for the road is carried along abrupt
+slopes, thickly set with gigantic beech-trees, overgrown with pink and
+silver lichens. In the early spring their last year's leaves are still
+crisp with hoar-frost; one morning's journey has brought us from the
+summer of Ajaccio to winter on these heights, where no flowers are
+visible but the pale hellebore and tiny lilac crocuses. Snow-drifts
+stretch by the roadside, and one by one the pioneers of the vast
+pine-woods of the interior appear. A great portion of the pine-forest
+(_Pinus larix_, or Corsican pine, not larch) between Bocognano
+and Corte had recently been burned by accident when we passed by.
+Nothing could be more forlorn than the black leafless stems and
+branches emerging from the snow. Some of these trees were mast-high,
+and some mere saplings. Corte itself is built among the mountain
+fastnesses of the interior. The snows and granite cliffs of Monte
+Rotondo overhang it to the north-west, while two fair valleys lead
+downward from its eyrie to the eastern coast. The rock on which it
+stands rises to a sharp point, sloping southward, and commanding the
+valleys of the Golo and the Tavignano. Remembering that Corte was the
+old capital of Corsica, and the centre of General Paoli's government,
+we are led to compare the town with Innsprück, Meran, or Grenoble.
+In point of scenery and situation it is hardly second to any of these
+mountain-girdled cities; but its poverty and bareness are scarcely
+less striking than those of Bocognano.
+
+The whole Corsican character, with its stern love of justice, its
+furious revengefulness and wild passion for freedom, seems to be
+illustrated by the peculiar elements of grandeur and desolation in
+this landscape. When we traverse the forest of Vico or the rocky
+pasture-lands of Niolo, the history of the Corsican national heroes,
+Giudice della Rocca and Sampiero, becomes intelligible, nor do we fail
+to understand some of the mysterious attraction which led the more
+daring spirits of the island to prefer a free life among the macchi
+and pine-woods to placid lawful occupations in farms and villages.
+The lives of the two men whom I have mentioned are so prominent in
+Corsican history, and are so often still upon the lips of the common
+people, that it may be well to sketch their outlines in the foreground
+of the Salvator Rosa landscape just described. Giudice was the
+governor of Corsica, as lieutenant for the Pisans, at the end of the
+thirteenth century. At that time the island belonged to the republic
+of Pisa, but the Genoese were encroaching on them by land and sea,
+and the whole life of their brave champion was spent in a desperate
+struggle with the invaders, until at last he died, old, blind, and in
+prison, at the command of his savage foes. Giudice was the title which
+the Pisans usually conferred upon their governor, and Della Rocca
+deserved it by right of his own inexorable love of justice. Indeed,
+justice seems to have been with him a passion, swallowing up all other
+feelings of his nature. All the stories which are told of him turn
+upon this point in his character; and though they may not be strictly
+true, they illustrate the stern virtues for which he was celebrated
+among the Corsicans, and show what kind of men this harsh and gloomy
+nation loved to celebrate as heroes. This is not the place either to
+criticise these legends or to recount them at full length. The most
+famous and the most characteristic may, however, be briefly told. On
+one occasion, after a victory over the Genoese, he sent a message
+that the captives in his hands should be released if their wives and
+sisters came to sue for them. The Genoese ladies embarked, and
+arrived in Corsica, and to Giudice's nephew was intrusted the duty
+of fulfilling his uncle's promise. In the course of executing his
+commission, the youth was so smitten with the beauty of one of the
+women that he dishonoured her. Thereupon Giudice had him at once put
+to death. Another story shows the Spartan justice of this hero in
+a less savage light. He was passing by a cowherd's cottage, when he
+heard some young calves bleating. On inquiring what distressed them,
+he was told that the calves had not enough milk to drink after the
+farm people had been served. Then Giudice made it a law that the
+calves throughout the land should take their fill before the cows were
+milked.
+
+Sampiero belongs to a later period of Corsican history. After a long
+course of misgovernment the Genoese rule had become unbearable. There
+was no pretence of administering justice, and private vengeance had
+full sway in the island. The sufferings of the nation were so great
+that the time had come for a new judge or saviour to rise among them.
+Sampiero was the son of obscure parents who lived at Bastelica. But
+his abilities very soon declared themselves, and made a way for him in
+the world. He spent his youth in the armies of the Medici and of the
+French Francis, gaining great renown as a brave soldier. Bayard became
+his friend, and Francis made him captain of his Corsican bands. But
+Sampiero did not forget the wrongs of his native land while thus on
+foreign service. He resolved, if possible, to undermine the power
+of Genoa, and spent the whole of his manhood and old age in one
+long struggle with their great captain, Stephen Doria. Of his stern
+patriotism and Roman severity of virtue the following story is a
+terrible illustration. Sampiero, though a man of mean birth, had
+married an heiress of the noble Corsican house of the Ornani. His
+wife, Vannina, was a woman of timid and flexible nature, who, though
+devoted to her husband, fell into the snares of his enemies. During
+his absence on an embassy to Algiers the Genoese induced her to leave
+her home at Marseilles and to seek refuge in their city, persuading
+her that this step would secure the safety of her child. She was
+starting on her journey when a friend of Sampiero arrested her, and
+brought her back to Aix, in Provence. Sampiero, when he heard of these
+events, hurried to France, and was received by a relative of his,
+who hinted that he had known of Vannina's projected flight. 'E tu hai
+taciuto?' was Sampiero's only answer, accompanied by a stroke of his
+poignard that killed the lukewarm cousin. Sampiero now brought his
+wife from Aix to Marseilles, preserving the most absolute silence on
+the way, and there, on entering his house, he killed her with his own
+hand. It is said that he loved Vannina passionately; and when she was
+dead, he caused her to be buried with magnificence in the church of S.
+Francis. Like Giudice, Sampiero fell at last a prey to treachery. The
+murder of Vannina had made the Ornani his deadly foes. In order to
+avenge her blood, they played into the hands of the Genoese, and laid
+a plot by which the noblest of the Corsicans was brought to death.
+First, they gained over to their scheme a monk of Bastelica, called
+Ambrogio, and Sampiero's own squire and shield-bearer, Vittolo. By
+means of these men, in whom he trusted, he was drawn defenceless and
+unattended into a deeply wooded ravine near Cavro, not very far from
+his birthplace, where the Ornani and their Genoese troops surrounded
+him. Sampiero fired his pistols in vain, for Vittolo had loaded them
+with the shot downwards. Then he drew his sword, and began to lay
+about him, when the same Vittolo, the Judas, stabbed him from
+behind, and the old lion fell dead by his friend's hand. Sampiero was
+sixty-nine when he died, in the year 1567. It is satisfactory to know
+that the Corsicans have called traitors and foes to their country
+Vittoli for ever. These two examples of Corsican patriots are enough;
+we need not add to theirs the history of Paoli--a milder and more
+humane, but scarcely less heroic leader. Paoli, however, in the
+hour of Corsica's extremest peril, retired to England, and died in
+philosophic exile. Neither Giudice nor Sampiero would have acted thus.
+The more forlorn the hope, the more they struggled.
+
+Among the old Corsican customs which are fast dying out, but
+which still linger in the remote valleys of Niolo and Vico, is the
+_vócero_, or funeral chant, improvised by women at funerals over
+the bodies of the dead. Nothing illustrates the ferocious temper and
+savage passions of the race better than these _vóceri_, many of
+which have been written down and preserved. Most of them are songs
+of vengeance and imprecation, mingled with hyperbolical laments and
+utterances of extravagant grief, poured forth by wives and sisters at
+the side of murdered husbands and brothers. The women who sing them
+seem to have lost all milk of human kindness, and to have exchanged
+the virtues of their sex for Spartan fortitude and the rage of furies.
+While we read their turbid lines we are carried in imagination to one
+of the cheerless houses of Bastelica or Bocognano, overshadowed by its
+mournful chestnut-tree, on which the blood of the murdered man is yet
+red. The _gridata_, or wake, is assembled in a dark room. On the
+wooden board, called _tola_, the corpse lies stretched; and round
+it are women, veiled in the blue-black mantle of Corsican costume,
+moaning and rocking themselves upon their chairs. The _pasto_ or
+_conforto_, food supplied for mourners, stands upon a side table,
+and round the room are men with savage eyes and bristling beards,
+armed to the teeth, keen for vengeance. The dead man's musket and
+pocket-pistol lie beside him, and his bloody shirt is hung up at his
+head. Suddenly, the silence, hitherto only disturbed by suppressed
+groans and muttered curses, is broken by a sharp cry. A woman rises:
+it is the sister of the dead man; she seizes his shirt, and holding
+it aloft with Mĉnad gestures and frantic screams, gives rhythmic
+utterance to her grief and rage. 'I was spinning, when I heard a great
+noise: it was a gunshot, which went into my heart, and seemed a voice
+that cried, "Run, thy brother is dying." I ran into the room above;
+I took the blow into my breast; I said, "Now he is dead, there is
+nothing to give me comfort. Who will undertake thy vengeance? When I
+show thy shirt, who will vow to let his beard grow till the murderer
+is slain? Who is there left to do it? A mother near her death? A
+sister? Of all our race there is only left a woman, without kin, poor,
+orphan, and a girl. Yet, O my brother! never fear. For thy vengeance
+thy sister is enough!
+
+ '"Ma per fà la to bindetta,
+ Sta siguru, basta anch ella!
+
+Give me the pistol; I will shoulder the gun; I will away to the
+hills. My brother, heart of thy sister, thou shalt be avenged!"' A
+_vócero_ declaimed upon the bier of Giammatteo and Pasquale,
+two cousins, by the sister of the former, is still fiercer and more
+energetic in its malediction. This Erinnys of revenge prays Christ and
+all the saints to extirpate the murderer's whole race, to shrivel it
+up till it passes from the earth. Then, with a sudden and vehement
+transition to the pathos of her own sorrow, she exclaims:--
+
+ 'Halla mai bista nissunu
+ Tumbà l'omi pe li canti?'
+
+It appears from these words that Giammatteo's enemies had killed him
+because they were jealous of his skill in singing. Shortly after,
+she curses the curate of the village, a kinsman of the murderer, for
+refusing to toll the funeral bells; and at last, all other threads of
+rage and sorrow being twined and knotted into one, she gives loose
+to her raging thirst for blood: 'If only I had a son, to train like
+a sleuth-hound, that he might track the murderer! Oh, if I had a son!
+Oh, if I had a lad!' Her words seem to choke her, and she swoons, and
+remains for a short time insensible. When the Bacchante of revenge
+awakes, it is with milder feelings in her heart: 'O brother mine,
+Matteo! art thou sleeping? Here I will rest with thee and weep till
+daybreak.' It is rare to find in literature so crude and intense
+an expression of fiery hatred as these untranslatable _vóceri_
+present. The emotion is so simple and so strong that it becomes
+sublime by mere force, and affects us with a strange pathos when
+contrasted with the tender affection conveyed in such terms of
+endearment as 'my dove,' 'my flower,' 'my pheasant,' 'my bright
+painted orange,' addressed to the dead. In the _vóceri_ it often
+happens that there are several interlocutors: one friend questions and
+another answers; or a kinswoman of the murderer attempts to justify
+the deed, and is overwhelmed with deadly imprecations. Passionate
+appeals are made to the corpse: 'Arise! Do you not hear the women cry?
+Stand up. Show your wounds, and let the fountains of your blood flow!
+Alas! he is dead; he sleeps; he cannot hear!' Then they turn again to
+tears and curses, feeling that no help or comfort can come from the
+clay-cold form. The intensity of grief finds strange language for its
+utterance. A girl, mourning over her father, cries:--
+
+ 'Mi l'hannu crucifissatu
+ Cume Ghiesu Cristu in croce.'
+
+Once only, in Viale's collection, does any friend of the dead remember
+mercy. It is an old woman, who points to the crucifix above the bier.
+
+But all the _vóceri_ are not so murderous. Several are composed
+for girls who died unwedded and before their time, by their mothers
+or companions. The language of these laments is far more tender and
+ornate. They praise the gentle virtues and beauty of the girl, her
+piety and helpful household ways. The most affecting of these dirges
+is that which celebrates the death of Romana, daughter of Dariola
+Danesi. Here is a pretty picture of the girl: 'Among the best and
+fairest maidens you were like a rose among flowers, like the moon
+among stars; so far more lovely were you than the loveliest. The
+youths in your presence were like lighted torches, but full of
+reverence; you were courteous to all, but with none familiar. In
+church they gazed at you, but you looked at none of them; and after
+mass you said, "Mother, let us go." Oh! who will console me for your
+loss? Why did the Lord so much desire you? But now you rest in heaven,
+all joy and smiles; for the world was not worthy of so fair a face.
+Oh, how far more beautiful will Paradise be now!' Then follows a
+piteous picture of the old bereaved mother, to whom a year will seem
+a thousand years, who will wander among relatives without affection,
+neighbours without love; and who, when sickness comes, will have no
+one to give her a drop of water, or to wipe the sweat from her brow,
+or to hold her hand in death. Yet all that is left for her is to wait
+and pray for the end, that she may join again her darling.
+
+But it is time to return to Ajaccio itself. At present the attractions
+and ornaments of the town consist of a good public library, Cardinal
+Fesch's large but indifferent collection of pictures, two monuments
+erected to Napoleon, and Napoleon's house. It will always be the chief
+pride of Ajaccio that she gave birth to the great emperor. Close to
+the harbour, in a public square by the sea-beach, stands an equestrian
+statue of the conqueror, surrounded by his four brothers on foot. They
+are all attired in Roman fashion, and are turned seaward, to the west,
+as if to symbolise the emigration of this family to subdue Europe.
+There is something ludicrous and forlorn in the stiffness of the
+group--something even pathetic, when we think how Napoleon gazed
+seaward from another island, no longer on horseback, no longer
+laurel-crowned, an unthroned, unseated conqueror, on S. Helena. His
+father's house stands close by. An old Italian waiting-woman, who had
+been long in the service of the Murats, keeps it and shows it. She
+has the manners of a lady, and can tell many stories of the various
+members of the Buonaparte family. Those who fancy that Napoleon was
+born in a mean dwelling of poor parents will be surprised to find so
+much space and elegance in these apartments. Of course his family was
+not rich by comparison with the riches of French or English nobles.
+But for Corsicans they were well-to-do, and their house has an air of
+antique dignity. The chairs of the entrance-saloon have been literally
+stripped of their coverings by enthusiastic visitors; the horse-hair
+stuffing underneath protrudes itself with a sort of comic pride, as
+if protesting that it came to be so tattered in an honourable service.
+Some of the furniture seems new; but many old presses, inlaid with
+marbles, agates, and lapis-lazuli, such as Italian families preserve
+for generations, have an air of respectable antiquity about them. Nor
+is there any doubt that the young Napoleon led his minuets beneath
+the stiff girandoles of the formal dancing-room. There, too, in a
+dark back chamber, is the bed in which he was born. At its foot is a
+photograph of the Prince Imperial sent by the Empress Eugénie, who,
+when she visited the room, wept much _pianse molto_ (to use the
+old lady's phrase)--at seeing the place where such lofty destinies
+began. On the wall of the same room is a portrait of Napoleon himself
+as the young general of the republic--with the citizen's unkempt
+hair, the fierce fire of the Revolution in his eyes, a frown upon his
+forehead, lips compressed, and quivering nostrils; also one of his
+mother, the pastille of a handsome woman, with Napoleonic eyes
+and brows and nose, but with a vacant simpering mouth. Perhaps
+the provincial artist knew not how to seize the expression of this
+feature, the most difficult to draw. For we cannot fancy that Letizia
+had lips without the firmness or the fulness of a majestic nature.
+
+The whole first story of this house belonged to the Buonaparte family.
+The windows look out partly on a little court and partly on narrow
+streets. It was, no doubt, the memory of this home that made Napoleon,
+when emperor, design schemes for the good of Corsica--schemes that
+might have brought him more honour than many conquests, but which
+he had no time or leisure to carry out. On S. Helena his mind often
+reverted to them, and he would speak of the gummy odours of the macchi
+wafted from the hillsides to the seashore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_MONTE GENEROSO_
+
+The long hot days of Italian summer were settling down on plain and
+country when, in the last week of May, we travelled northward from
+Florence and Bologna seeking coolness. That was very hard to find in
+Lombardy. The days were long and sultry, the nights short, without a
+respite from the heat. Milan seemed a furnace, though in the Duomo and
+the narrow shady streets there was a twilight darkness which at least
+looked cool. Long may it be before the northern spirit of improvement
+has taught the Italians to despise the wisdom of their forefathers,
+who built those sombre streets of palaces with overhanging eaves,
+that, almost meeting, form a shelter from the fiercest sun. The lake
+country was even worse than the towns; the sunlight lay all day asleep
+upon the shining waters, and no breeze came to stir their surface or
+to lift the tepid veil of haze, through which the stony mountains,
+with their yet unmelted patches of winter snow, glared as if in
+mockery of coolness.
+
+Then we heard of a new inn, which had just been built by an
+enterprising Italian doctor below the very top of Monte Generoso.
+There was a picture of it in the hotel at Cadenabbia, but this gave
+but little idea of any particular beauty. A big square house,
+with many windows, and the usual ladies on mules, and guides with
+alpenstocks, advancing towards it, and some round bushes growing near,
+was all it showed. Yet there hung the real Monte Generoso above our
+heads, and we thought it must be cooler on its height than by the
+lake-shore. To find coolness was the great point with us just then.
+Moreover, some one talked of the wonderful plants that grew among its
+rocks, and of its grassy slopes enamelled with such flowers as make
+our cottage gardens at home gay in summer, not to speak of others
+rarer and peculiar to the region of the Southern Alps. Indeed, the
+Generoso has a name for flowers, and it deserves it, as we presently
+found.
+
+This mountain is fitted by its position for commanding one of the
+finest views in the whole range of the Lombard Alps. A glance at the
+map shows that. Standing out pre-eminent among the chain of lower
+hills to which it belongs, the lakes of Lugano and Como with their
+long arms enclose it on three sides, while on the fourth the plain of
+Lombardy with its many cities, its rich pasture-lands and cornfields
+intersected by winding river-courses and straight interminable
+roads, advances to its very foot. No place could be better chosen for
+surveying that contrasted scene of plain and mountain, which forms
+the great attraction of the outlying buttresses of the central Alpine
+mass. The superiority of the Monte Generoso to any of the similar
+eminences on the northern outskirts of Switzerland is great. In
+richness of colour, in picturesqueness of suggestion, in sublimity and
+breadth of prospect, its advantages are incontestable. The reasons for
+this superiority are obvious. On the Italian side the transition from
+mountain to plain is far more abrupt; the atmosphere being clearer,
+a larger sweep of distance is within our vision; again, the sunlight
+blazes all day long upon the very front and forehead of the distant
+Alpine chain, instead of merely slanting along it, as it does upon the
+northern side.
+
+From Mendrisio, the village at the foot of the mountain, an easy
+mule-path leads to the hotel, winding first through English-looking
+hollow lanes with real hedges, which are rare in this country,
+and English primroses beneath them. Then comes a forest region of
+luxuriant chestnut-trees, giants with pink boles just bursting into
+late leafage, yellow and tender, but too thin as yet for shade.
+A little higher up, the chestnuts are displaced by wild laburnums
+bending under their weight of flowers. The graceful branches meet
+above our heads, sweeping their long tassels against our faces as we
+ride beneath them, while the air for a good mile is full of fragrance.
+It is strange to be reminded in this blooming labyrinth of the dusty
+suburb roads and villa gardens of London. The laburnum is pleasant
+enough in S. John's Wood or the Regent's Park in May--a tame
+domesticated thing of brightness amid smoke and dust. But it is
+another joy to see it flourishing in its own home, clothing acres of
+the mountain-side in a very splendour of spring-colour, mingling its
+paler blossoms with the golden broom of our own hills, and with
+the silver of the hawthorn and wild cherry. Deep beds of
+lilies-of-the-valley grow everywhere beneath the trees; and in the
+meadows purple columbines, white asphodels, the Alpine spirĉa, tall,
+with feathery leaves, blue scabious, golden hawkweeds, turkscap
+lilies, and, better than all, the exquisite narcissus poeticus, with
+its crimson-tipped cup, and the pure pale lilies of San Bruno, are
+crowded in a maze of dazzling brightness. Higher up the laburnums
+disappear, and flaunting crimson peonies gleam here and there upon
+the rocks, until at length the gentians and white ranunculuses of the
+higher Alps displace the less hardy flowers of Italy.
+
+About an hour below the summit of the mountain we came upon the inn,
+a large clean building, with scanty furniture and snowy wooden floors,
+guiltless of carpets. It is big enough to hold about a hundred guests;
+and Doctor Pasta, who built it, a native of Mendrisio, was gifted
+either with much faith or with a real prophetic instinct.[8] Anyhow he
+deserves commendation for his spirit of enterprise. As yet the house
+is little known to English travellers: it is mostly frequented by
+Italians from Milan, Novara, and other cities of the plain, who call
+it the Italian Righi, and come to it, as cockneys go to Richmond,
+for noisy picnic excursions, or at most for a few weeks'
+_villeggiatura_ in the summer heats. When we were there in May
+the season had scarcely begun, and the only inmates besides ourselves
+were a large party from Milan, ladies and gentlemen in holiday guise,
+who came, stayed one night, climbed the peak at sunrise, and departed
+amid jokes and shouting and half-childish play, very unlike the doings
+of a similar party in sober England. After that the stillness of
+nature descended on the mountain, and the sun shone day after day upon
+that great view which seemed created only for ourselves. And what
+a view it was! The plain stretching up to the high horizon, where a
+misty range of pink cirrus-clouds alone marked the line where earth
+ended and the sky began, was islanded with cities and villages
+innumerable, basking in the hazy shimmering heat. Milan, seen through
+the doctor's telescope, displayed its Duomo perfect as a microscopic
+shell, with all its exquisite fretwork, and Napoleon's arch of triumph
+surmounted by the four tiny horses, as in a fairy's dream. Far off,
+long silver lines marked the lazy course of Po and Ticino, while
+little lakes like Varese and the lower end of Maggiore spread
+themselves out, connecting the mountains with the plain. Five minutes'
+walk from the hotel brought us to a ridge where the precipice fell
+suddenly and almost sheer over one arm of Lugano Lake. Sullenly
+outstretched asleep it lay beneath us, coloured with the tints of
+fluor-spar, or with the changeful green and azure of a peacock's
+breast. The depth appeared immeasurable. San Salvadore had receded
+into insignificance: the houses and churches and villas of Lugano
+bordered the lake-shore with an uneven line of whiteness. And over all
+there rested a blue mist of twilight and of haze, contrasting with the
+clearness of the peaks above. It was sunset when we first came here;
+and, wave beyond wave, the purple Italian hills tossed their crested
+summits to the foot of a range of stormy clouds that shrouded the high
+Alps. Behind the clouds was sunset, clear and golden; but the
+mountains had put on their mantle for the night, and the hem of their
+garment was all we were to see. And yet--over the edge of the topmost
+ridge of cloud, what was that long hard line of black, too solid and
+immovable for cloud, rising into four sharp needles clear and well
+defined? Surely it must be the familiar outline of Monte Rosa itself,
+the form which every one who loves the Alps knows well by heart, which
+picture-lovers know from Ruskin's woodcut in the 'Modern Painters.'
+For a moment only the vision stayed: then clouds swept over it again,
+and from the place where the empress of the Alps had been, a pillar of
+mist shaped like an angel's wing, purple and tipped with gold, shot up
+against the pale green sky. That cloud-world was a pageant in itself,
+as grand and more gorgeous perhaps than the mountains would have been.
+Deep down through the hollows of the Simplon a thunderstorm was
+driving; and we saw forked flashes once and again, as in a distant
+world, lighting up the valleys for a moment, and leaving the darkness
+blacker behind them as the storm blurred out the landscape forty miles
+away. Darkness was coming to us too, though our sky was clear and the
+stars were shining brightly. At our feet the earth was folding itself
+to sleep; the plain was wholly lost; little islands of white mist had
+formed themselves, and settled down upon the lakes and on their marshy
+estuaries; the birds were hushed; the gentian-cups were filling to the
+brim with dew. Night had descended on the mountain and the plain; the
+show was over.
+
+The dawn was whitening in the east next morning, when we again
+scrambled through the dwarf beechwood to the precipice above the lake.
+Like an ink-blot it lay, unruffled, slumbering sadly. Broad sheets of
+vapour brooded on the plain, telling of miasma and fever, of which we
+on the mountain, in the pure cool air, knew nothing. The Alps were
+all there now--cold, unreal, stretching like a phantom line of snowy
+peaks, from the sharp pyramids of Monte Viso and the Grivola in the
+west to the distant Bernina and the Ortler in the east. Supreme among
+them towered Monte Rosa--queenly, triumphant, gazing down in proud
+pre-eminence, as she does when seen from any point of the Italian
+plain. There is no mountain like her. Mont Blanc himself is scarcely
+so regal; and she seems to know it, for even the clouds sweep humbled
+round her base, girdling her at most, but leaving her crown clear and
+free. Now, however, there were no clouds to be seen in all the sky.
+The mountains had a strange unshriven look, as if waiting to be
+blessed. Above them, in the cold grey air, hung a low black arch
+of shadow, the shadow of the bulk of the huge earth, which still
+concealed the sun. Slowly, slowly this dark line sank lower, till,
+one by one, at last, the peaks caught first a pale pink flush; then
+a sudden golden glory flashed from one to the other, as they leapt
+joyfully into life. It is a supreme moment this first burst of life
+and light over the sleeping world, as one can only see it on rare days
+and in rare places like the Monte Generoso. The earth--enough of it at
+least for us to picture to ourselves the whole--lies at our feet; and
+we feel as the Saviour might have felt, when from the top of that
+high mountain He beheld the kingdoms of the world and all the glory of
+them. Strangely and solemnly may we image to our fancy the lives that
+are being lived down in those cities of the plain: how many are waking
+at this very moment to toil and a painful weariness, to sorrow, or to
+'that unrest which men miscall delight;' while we upon our mountain
+buttress, suspended in mid-heaven and for a while removed from daily
+cares, are drinking in the beauty of the world that God has made so
+fair and wonderful. From this same eyrie, only a few years ago, the
+hostile armies of France, Italy, and Austria might have been watched
+moving in dim masses across the plains, for the possession of which
+they were to clash in mortal fight at Solferino and Magenta. All is
+peaceful now. It is hard to picture the waving cornfields trodden
+down, the burning villages and ransacked vineyards, all the horrors of
+real war to which that fertile plain has been so often the prey. But
+now these memories of
+
+ Old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ And battles long ago,
+
+do but add a calm and beauty to the radiant scene that lies before us.
+And the thoughts which it suggests, the images with which it stores
+our mind, are not without their noblest uses. The glory of the world
+sinks deeper into our shallow souls than we well know; and the spirit
+of its splendour is always ready to revisit us on dark and dreary days
+at home with an unspeakable refreshment. Even as I write, I seem to
+see the golden glow sweeping in broad waves over the purple hills
+nearer and nearer, till the lake brightens at our feet, and the
+windows of Lugano flash with sunlight, and little boats creep forth
+across the water like spiders on a pond, leaving an arrowy track of
+light upon the green behind them, while Monte Salvadore with its tiny
+chapel and a patch of the further landscape are still kept in darkness
+by the shadow of the Generoso itself. The birds wake into song as the
+sun's light comes; cuckoo answers cuckoo from ridge to ridge; dogs
+bark; and even the sounds of human life rise up to us: children's
+voices and the murmurs of the market-place ascending faintly from the
+many villages hidden among the chestnut-trees beneath our feet; while
+the creaking of a cart we can but just see slowly crawling along the
+straight road by the lake, is heard at intervals.
+
+The full beauty of the sunrise is but brief. Already the low lakelike
+mists we saw last night have risen and spread, and shaken themselves
+out into masses of summer clouds, which, floating upward, threaten to
+envelop us upon our vantage-ground. Meanwhile they form a changeful
+sea below, blotting out the plain, surging up into the valleys with
+the movement of a billowy tide, attacking the lower heights like the
+advance-guard of a besieging army, but daring not as yet to invade the
+cold and solemn solitudes of the snowy Alps. These, too, in time, when
+the sun's heat has grown strongest, will be folded in their midday
+pall of sheltering vapour.
+
+The very summit of Monte Generoso must not be left without a word of
+notice. The path to it is as easy as the sheep-walks on an English
+down, though cut along grass-slopes descending at a perilously sharp
+angle. At the top the view is much the same, as far as the grand
+features go, as that which is commanded from the cliff by the hotel.
+But the rocks here are crowded with rare Alpine flowers--delicate
+golden auriculas with powdery leaves and stems, pale yellow cowslips,
+imperial purple saxifrages, soldanellas at the edge of lingering
+patches of the winter snow, blue gentians, crocuses, and the frail,
+rosy-tipped ranunculus, called glacialis. Their blooming time is
+brief. When summer comes the mountain will be bare and burned, like
+all Italian hills. The Generoso is a very dry mountain, silent and
+solemn from its want of streams. There is no sound of falling waters
+on its crags; no musical rivulets flow down its sides, led carefully
+along the slopes, as in Switzerland, by the peasants, to keep their
+hay-crops green and gladden the thirsty turf throughout the heat
+and drought of summer. The soil is a Jurassic limestone: the rain
+penetrates the porous rock, and sinks through cracks and fissures, to
+reappear above the base of the mountain in a full-grown stream. This
+is a defect in the Generoso, as much to be regretted as the want of
+shade upon its higher pastures. Here, as elsewhere in Piedmont, the
+forests are cut for charcoal; the beech-scrub, which covers large
+tracts of the hills, never having the chance of growing into trees
+much higher than a man. It is this which makes an Italian mountain
+at a distance look woolly, like a sheep's back. Among the brushwood,
+however, lilies-of-the-valley and Solomon's seals delight to grow;
+and the league-long beds of wild strawberries prove that when the
+laburnums have faded, the mountain will become a garden of feasting.
+
+It was on the crest of Monte Generoso, late one afternoon in May, that
+we saw a sight of great beauty. The sun had yet about an hour before
+it sank behind the peaks of Monte Rosa, and the sky was clear, except
+for a few white clouds that floated across the plain of Lombardy. Then
+as we sat upon the crags, tufted with soldanellas and auriculas,
+we could see a fleecy vapour gliding upward from the hollows of the
+mountain, very thin and pale, yet dense enough to blot the landscape
+to the south and east from sight. It rose with an imperceptible
+motion, as the Oceanides might have soared from the sea to comfort
+Prometheus in the tragedy of Ĉschylus. Already the sun had touched its
+upper edge with gold, and we were expecting to be enveloped in a mist;
+when suddenly upon the outspread sheet before us there appeared two
+forms, larger than life, yet not gigantic, surrounded with haloes of
+such tempered iridescence as the moon half hidden by a summer cloud is
+wont to make. They were the glorified figures of ourselves; and what
+we did, the phantoms mocked, rising or bowing, or spreading wide their
+arms. Some scarce-felt breeze prevented the vapour from passing across
+the ridge to westward, though it still rose from beneath, and kept
+fading away into thin air above our heads. Therefore the vision lasted
+as long as the sun stayed yet above the Alps; and the images with
+their aureoles shrank and dilated with the undulations of the mist.
+I could not but think of that old formula for an anthropomorphic
+Deity--'the Brocken-spectre of the human spirit projected on the mists
+of the Non-ego.' Even like those cloud-phantoms are the gods made in
+the image of man, who have been worshipped through successive ages of
+the world, gods dowered with like passions to those of the races
+who have crouched before them, gods cruel and malignant and lustful,
+jealous and noble and just, radiant or gloomy, the counterparts of men
+upon a vast and shadowy scale. But here another question rose. If
+the gods that men have made and ignorantly worshipped be really
+but glorified copies of their own souls, where is the sun in this
+parallel? Without the sun's rays the mists of Monte Generoso could
+have shown, no shadowy forms. Without some other power than the mind
+of man, could men have fashioned for themselves those ideals that they
+named their gods? Unseen by Greek, or Norseman, or Hindoo, the potent
+force by which alone they could externalise their image, existed
+outside them, independent of their thought. Nor does the trite epigram
+touch the surface of the real mystery. The sun, the human beings on
+the mountain, and the mists are all parts of one material universe:
+the transient phenomenon we witnessed was but the effect of a chance
+combination. Is, then, the anthropomorphic God as momentary and as
+accidental in the system of the world as that vapoury spectre? The
+God in whom we live and move and have our being must be far more
+all-pervasive, more incognisable by the souls of men, who doubt not
+for one moment of His presence and His power. Except for purposes of
+rhetoric the metaphor that seemed so clever fails. Nor, when once such
+thoughts have been stirred in us by such a sight, can we do better
+than repeat Goethe's sublime profession of a philosophic mysticism.
+This translation I made one morning on the Pasterze Gletscher beneath
+the spires of the Gross Glockner:--
+
+ To Him who from eternity, self-stirred,
+ Himself hath made by His creative word!
+ To Him, supreme, who causeth Faith to be,
+ Trust, Hope, Love, Power, and endless Energy!
+ To Him, who, seek to name Him as we will,
+ Unknown within Himself abideth still!
+
+ Strain ear and eye, till sight and sense be dim;
+ Thou'lt find but faint similitudes of Him:
+ Yea, and thy spirit in her flight of flame
+ Still strives to gauge the symbol and the name:
+ Charmed and compelled thou climb'st from height to height,
+ And round thy path the world shines wondrous bright;
+ Time, Space, and Size, and Distance cease to be,
+ And every step is fresh infinity.
+ What were the God who sat outside to scan
+ The spheres that 'neath His finger circling ran?
+ God dwells within, and moves the world and moulds,
+ Himself and Nature in one form enfolds:
+ Thus all that lives in Him and breathes and is,
+ Shall ne'er His puissance, ne'er His spirit miss.
+
+ The soul of man, too, is an universe:
+ Whence follows it that race with race concurs
+ In naming all it knows of good and true
+ God,--yea, its own God; and with homage due
+ Surrenders to His sway both earth and heaven;
+ Fears Him, and loves, where place for love is given.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_LOMBARD VIGNETTES_
+
+
+ON THE SUPERGA
+
+This is the chord of Lombard colouring in May. Lowest in the scale:
+bright green of varied tints, the meadow-grasses mingling with willows
+and acacias, harmonised by air and distance. Next, opaque blue--the
+blue of something between amethyst and lapis-lazuli--that belongs
+alone to the basements of Italian mountains. Higher, the roseate
+whiteness of ridged snow on Alps or Apennines. Highest, the blue of
+the sky, ascending from pale turquoise to transparent sapphire filled
+with light. A mediĉval mystic might have likened this chord to the
+spiritual world. For the lowest region is that of natural life, of
+plant and bird and beast, and unregenerate man; it is the place of
+faun and nymph and satyr, the plain where wars are fought and cities
+built, and work is done. Thence we climb to purified humanity, the
+mountains of purgation, the solitude and simplicity of contemplative
+life not yet made perfect by freedom from the flesh. Higher comes that
+thin white belt, where are the resting places of angelic feet, the
+points whence purged souls take their flight toward infinity. Above
+all is heaven, the hierarchies ascending row on row to reach the light
+of God.
+
+This fancy occurred to me as I climbed the slope of the Superga,
+gazing over acacia hedges and poplars to the mountains bare in morning
+light. The occasional occurrence of bars across this chord--poplars
+shivering in sun and breeze, stationary cypresses as black as night,
+and tall campanili with the hot red shafts of glowing brick--adds just
+enough of composition to the landscape. Without too much straining of
+the allegory, the mystic might have recognised in these aspiring bars
+the upward effort of souls rooted in the common life of earth.
+
+The panorama, unrolling as we ascend, is enough to overpower a lover
+of beauty. There is nothing equal to it for space and breadth and
+majesty. Monte Rosa, the masses of Mont Blanc blent with the Grand
+Paradis, the airy pyramid of Monte Viso, these are the battlements of
+that vast Alpine rampart, in which the vale of Susa opens like a gate.
+To west and south sweep the Maritime Alps and the Apennines. Beneath,
+glides the infant Po; and where he leads our eyes, the plain is only
+limited by pearly mist.
+
+A BRONZE BUST OF CALIGULA AT TURIN
+
+The Albertina bronze is one of the most precious portraits of
+antiquity, not merely because it confirms the testimony of the green
+basalt bust in the Capitol, but also because it supplies an even more
+emphatic and impressive illustration to the narrative of Suetonius.
+
+Caligula is here represented as young and singularly beautiful. It is
+indeed an ideal Roman head, with the powerful square modelling, the
+crisp short hair, low forehead and regular firm features, proper to
+the noblest Roman type. The head is thrown backward from the throat;
+and there is a something of menace or defiance or suffering in the
+suggestion of brusque movement given to the sinews of the neck. This
+attitude, together with the tension of the forehead, and the fixed
+expression of pain and strain communicated by the lines of the
+mouth--strong muscles of the upper lip and abruptly chiselled under
+lip--in relation to the small eyes, deep set beneath their cavernous
+and level brows, renders the whole face a monument of spiritual
+anguish. I remember that the green basalt bust of the Capitol has the
+same anxious forehead, the same troubled and overburdened eyes; but
+the agony of this fretful mouth, comparable to nothing but the mouth
+of Pandolfo Sigismondo Malatesta, and, like that, on the verge
+of breaking into the spasms of delirium, is quite peculiar to the
+Albertina bronze. It is just this which the portrait of the Capitol
+lacks for the completion of Caligula. The man who could be so
+represented in art had nothing wholly vulgar in him. The brutality
+of Caracalla, the overblown sensuality of Nero, the effeminacy of
+Commodus or Heliogabalus, are all absent here. This face idealises
+the torture of a morbid soul. It is withal so truly beautiful that it
+might easily be made the poem of high suffering or noble passion.
+If the bronze were plastic, I see how a great sculptor, by but few
+strokes, could convert it into an agonising Stephen or Sebastian. As
+it is, the unimaginable touch of disease, the unrest of madness, made
+Caligula the genius of insatiable appetite; and his martyrdom was the
+torment of lust and ennui and everlasting agitation. The accident of
+empire tantalised him with vain hopes of satisfying the Charybdis
+of his soul's sick cravings. From point to point he passed of empty
+pleasure and unsatisfying cruelty, for ever hungry; until the malady
+of his spirit, unrestrained by any limitations, and with the right
+medium for its development, became unique--the tragic type of
+pathological desire. What more than all things must have plagued a man
+with that face was probably the unavoidable meanness of his career.
+When we study the chapters of Suetonius, we are forced to feel that,
+though the situation and the madness of Caligula were dramatically
+impressive, his crimes were trivial and, small. In spite of the vast
+scale on which he worked his devilish will, his life presents a total
+picture of sordid vice, differing only from pot-house dissipation and
+schoolboy cruelty in point of size. And this of a truth is the Nemesis
+of evil. After a time, mere tyrannous caprice must become commonplace
+and cloying, tedious to the tyrant, and uninteresting to the student
+of humanity: nor can I believe that Caligula failed to perceive this
+to his own infinite disgust.
+
+Suetonius asserts that he was hideously ugly. How are we to square
+this testimony with the witness of the bronze before us? What changed
+the face, so beautiful and terrible in youth, to ugliness that shrank
+from sight in manhood? Did the murderers find it blurred in its fine
+lineaments, furrowed with lines of care, hollowed with the soul's
+hunger? Unless a life of vice and madness had succeeded in making
+Caligula's face what the faces of some maniacs are--the bloated ruin
+of what was once a living witness to the soul within--I could fancy
+that death may have sanctified it with even more beauty than this
+bust of the self-tormented young man shows. Have we not all seen the
+anguish of thought-fretted faces smoothed out by the hands of the
+Deliverer?
+
+FERRARI AT VERCELLI
+
+It is possible that many visitors to the Cathedral of Como have
+carried away the memory of stately women with abundant yellow hair and
+draperies of green and crimson, in a picture they connect thereafter
+with Gaudenzio Ferrari. And when they come to Milan, they are probably
+both impressed and disappointed by a Martyrdom of S. Catherine in the
+Brera, bearing the same artist's name. If they wish to understand this
+painter, they must seek him at Varallo, at Saronno, and at Vercelli.
+In the Church of S. Cristoforo in Vercelli, Gaudenzio Ferrari at the
+full height of his powers showed what he could do to justify Lomazzo's
+title chosen for him of the Eagle. He has indeed the strong wing and
+the swiftness of the king of birds. And yet the works of few really
+great painters--and among the really great we place Ferrari--leave
+upon the mind a more distressing sense of imperfection. Extraordinary
+fertility of fancy, vehement dramatic passion, sincere study of
+nature, and great command of technical resources are here (as
+elsewhere in Ferrari's frescoes) neutralised by an incurable defect of
+the combining and harmonising faculty, so essential to a masterpiece.
+There is stuff enough of thought and vigour and imagination to make
+a dozen artists. And yet we turn away disappointed from the crowded,
+dazzling, stupefying wilderness of forms and faces on these mighty
+walls.
+
+All that Ferrari derived from actual life--the heads of single
+figures, the powerful movement of men and women in excited action, the
+monumental pose of two praying nuns--is admirably rendered. His angels
+too, in S. Cristoforo as elsewhere, are quite original; not only in
+their type of beauty, which is terrestrial and peculiar to Ferrari,
+without a touch of Correggio's sensuality; but also in the intensity
+of their emotion, the realisation of their vitality. Those which hover
+round the Cross in the fresco of the 'Crucifixion' are as passionate
+as any angels of the Giottesque masters in Assisi. Those again which
+crowd the Stable of Bethlehem in the 'Nativity' yield no point of
+idyllic charm to Gozzoli's in the Riccardi Chapel.
+
+The 'Crucifixion' and the 'Assumption of Madonna' are very tall
+and narrow compositions, audacious in their attempt to fill almost
+unmanageable space with a connected action. Of the two frescoes the
+'Crucifixion,' which has points of strong similarity to the same
+subject at Varallo, is by far the best. Ferrari never painted anything
+at once truer to life and nobler in tragic style than the fainting
+Virgin. Her face expresses the very acme of martyrdom--not exaggerated
+nor spasmodic, but real and sublime--in the suffering of a stately
+matron. In points like this Ferrari cannot be surpassed. Raphael could
+scarcely have done better; besides, there is an air of sincerity, a
+stamp of popular truth, in this episode, which lies beyond Raphael's
+sphere. It reminds us rather of Tintoretto.
+
+After the 'Crucifixion,' I place the 'Adoration of the Magi,' full
+of fine mundane motives and gorgeous costumes; then the 'Sposalizio'
+(whose marriage, I am not certain), the only grandly composed picture
+of the series, and marked by noble heads; then the 'Adoration of
+the Shepherds,' with two lovely angels holding the bambino. The
+'Assumption of the Magdalen'--for which fresco there is a valuable
+cartoon in the Albertina Collection at Turin--must have been a fine
+picture; but it is ruined now. An oil altar-piece in the choir of the
+same church struck me less than the frescoes. It represents Madonna
+and a crowd of saints under an orchard of apple-trees, with cherubs
+curiously flung about almost at random in the air. The motive of the
+orchard is prettily conceived and carried out with spirit.
+
+What Ferrari possessed was rapidity of movement, fulness and richness
+of reality, exuberance of invention, excellent portraiture, dramatic
+vehemence, and an almost unrivalled sympathy with the swift and
+passionate world of angels. What he lacked was power of composition,
+simplicity of total effect, harmony in colouring, control over his
+own luxuriance, the sense of tranquillity. He seems to have sought
+grandeur in size and multitude, richness, éclat, contrast. Being the
+disciple of Lionardo and Raphael, his defects are truly singular. As
+a composer, the old leaven of Giovenone remained in him; but he felt
+the dramatic tendencies of a later age, and in occasional episodes he
+realised them with a force and _furia_ granted to very few of the
+Italian painters.
+
+LANINI AT VERCELLI
+
+The Casa Mariano is a palace which belonged to a family of that name.
+Like many houses of the sort in Italy, it fell to vile uses; and
+its hall of audience was turned into a lumber-room. The Operai of
+Vercelli, I was told, bought the palace a few years ago, restored the
+noble hall, and devoted a smaller room to a collection of pictures
+valuable for students of the early Vercellese style of painting. Of
+these there is no need to speak. The great hall is the gem of the Casa
+Mariano. It has a coved roof, with a large flat oblong space in
+the centre of the ceiling. The whole of this vault and the lunettes
+beneath were painted by Lanini; so runs the tradition of the
+fresco-painter's name; and though much injured by centuries of
+outrage, and somewhat marred by recent restoration, these frescoes
+form a precious monument of Lombard art. The object of the painter's
+design seems to have been the glorification of Music. In the central
+compartment of the roof is an assembly of the gods, obviously borrowed
+from Raphael's 'Marriage of Cupid and Psyche' in the Farnesina
+at Rome. The fusion of Roman composition with Lombard execution
+constitutes the chief charm of this singular work, and makes it, so
+far as I am aware, unique. Single figures of the goddesses, and the
+whole movement of the scene upon Olympus, are transcribed without
+attempt at concealment. And yet the fresco is not a barefaced copy.
+The manner of feeling and of execution is quite different from that of
+Raphael's school. The poetry and sentiment are genuinely Lombard. None
+of Raphael's pupils could have carried out his design with a delicacy
+of emotion and a technical skill in colouring so consummate. What,
+we think, as we gaze upward, would the Master have given for such a
+craftsman? The hardness, coarseness, and animal crudity of the Roman
+School are absent: so also is their vigour. But where the grace of
+form and colour is so soft and sweet, where the high-bred calm of
+good company is so sympathetically rendered, where the atmosphere of
+amorous languor and of melody is so artistically diffused, we cannot
+miss the powerful modelling and rather vulgar _tours de force_ of
+Giulio Romano. The scale of tone is silvery golden. There are no hard
+blues, no coarse red flesh-tints, no black shadows. Mellow lights,
+the morning hues of primrose, or of palest amber, pervade the whole
+society. It is a court of gentle and harmonious souls; and though
+this style of beauty might cloy, at first sight there is something
+ravishing in those yellow-haired white-limbed, blooming deities. No
+movement of lascivious grace as in Correggio, no perturbation of
+the senses as in some of the Venetians, disturbs the rhythm of their
+music; nor is the pleasure of the flesh, though felt by the painter
+and communicated to the spectator, an interruption to their divine
+calm. The white, saffron-haired goddesses are grouped together
+like stars seen in the topaz light of evening, like daffodils half
+smothered in snowdrops, and among them, Diana, with the crescent
+on her forehead, is the fairest. Her dream-like beauty need fear
+no comparison with the Diana of the Camera di S. Paolo. Apollo and
+Bacchus are scarcely less lovely in their bloom of earliest manhood;
+honey-pale, as Greeks would say; like statues of living electron;
+realising Simaetha's picture of her lover and his friend:
+
+[Greek:
+
+ tois d' ên xanthotera men elichrysoio geneias,
+ stêthea de stilbonta poly pleon ê tu Selana.[9]]
+
+It was thus that the almost childlike spirit of the Milanese painters
+felt the antique: how differently from their Roman brethren! It was
+thus that they interpreted the lines of their own poets:--
+
+ E i tuoi capei più volte ho somigliati
+ Di Cerere a le paglie secche o bionde
+ Dintorno crespi al tuo capo legati.[10]
+
+Yet the painter of this hall--whether we are to call him Lanini or
+another--was not a composer. Where he has not robbed the motives and
+the distribution of the figures from Raphael, he has nothing left but
+grace of detail. The intellectual feebleness of his style may be seen
+in many figures of women playing upon instruments of music, ranged
+around the walls. One girl at the organ is graceful; another with a
+tambourine has a sort of Bassarid beauty. But the group of Apollo,
+Pegasus, and a Muse upon Parnassus, is a failure in its meaningless
+frigidity, while few of these subordinate compositions show power of
+conception or vigour of design.
+
+Lanini, like Sodoma, was a native of Vercelli; and though he was
+Ferrari's pupil, there is more in him of Luini or of Sodoma than of
+his master. He does not rise at any point to the height of these
+three great masters, but he shares some of Luini's and Sodoma's fine
+qualities, without having any of Ferrari's force. A visit to the
+mangled remnants of his frescoes in S. Caterina will repay the student
+of art. This was once, apparently, a double church, or a church with
+the hall and chapel of a _confraternita_ appended to it. One portion
+of the building was painted with the history of the Saint; and very
+lovely must this work have been, to judge by the fragments which have
+recently been rescued from whitewash, damp, and ruthless mutilation.
+What wonderful Lombard faces, half obliterated on the broken wall and
+mouldering plaster, smile upon us like drowned memories swimming up
+from the depths of oblivion! Wherever three or four are grouped
+together, we find an exquisite little picture--an old woman and two
+young women in a doorway, for example, telling no story, but touching
+us with simple harmony of form. Nothing further is needed to render
+their grace intelligible. Indeed, knowing the faults of the school, we
+may seek some consolation by telling ourselves that these incomplete
+fragments yield Lanini's best. In the coved compartments of the roof,
+above the windows, ran a row of dancing boys; and these are still most
+beautifully modelled, though the pallor of recent whitewash is upon
+them. All the boys have blonde hair. They are naked, with scrolls or
+ribbons wreathed around them, adding to the airiness of their
+continual dance. Some of the loveliest are in a room used to stow away
+the lumber of the church--old boards and curtains, broken lanterns,
+candle-ends in tin sconces, the musty apparatus of festival
+adornments, and in the midst of all a battered, weather-beaten bier.
+
+THE PIAZZA OF PIACENZA
+
+The great feature of Piacenza is its famous piazza--romantically,
+picturesquely perfect square, surpassing the most daring attempts
+of the scene-painter, and realising a poet's dreams. The space is
+considerable, and many streets converge upon it at irregular angles.
+Its finest architectural feature is the antique Palace of the Commune:
+Gothic arcades of stone below, surmounted by a brick building with
+wonderfully delicate and varied terra-cotta work in the round-arched
+windows. Before this façade, on the marble pavement, prance the bronze
+equestrian statues of two Farnesi--insignificant men, exaggerated
+horses, flying drapery--as _barocco_ as it is possible to be
+in style, but so splendidly toned with verdigris, so superb in their
+_bravura_ attitude, and so happily placed in the line of two
+streets lending far vistas from the square into the town beyond, that
+it is difficult to criticise them seriously. They form, indeed, an
+important element in the pictorial effect, and enhance the terra-cotta
+work of the façade by the contrast of their colour.
+
+The time to see this square is in evening twilight--that wonderful
+hour after sunset--when the people are strolling on the pavement,
+polished to a mirror by the pacing of successive centuries, and
+when the cavalry soldiers group themselves at the angles under the
+lamp-posts or beneath the dimly lighted Gothic arches of the Palace.
+This is the magical mellow hour to be sought by lovers of the
+picturesque in all the towns of Italy, the hour which, by its tender
+blendings of sallow western lights with glimmering lamps, casts the
+veil of half shadow over any crudeness and restores the injuries
+of Time; the hour when all the tints of these old buildings are
+intensified, etherealised, and harmonised by one pervasive glow. When
+I last saw Piacenza, it had been raining all day; and ere sundown a
+clearing had come from the Alps, followed by fresh threatenings of
+thunderstorms. The air was very liquid. There was a tract of yellow
+sunset sky to westward, a faint new moon half swathed in mist above,
+and over all the north a huge towered thundercloud kept flashing
+distant lightnings. The pallid primrose of the West, forced down and
+reflected back from that vast bank of tempest, gave unearthly beauty
+to the hues of church and palace--tender half-tones of violet and
+russet paling into greys and yellows on what in daylight seemed but
+dull red brick. Even the uncompromising façade of S. Francesco helped;
+and the Dukes were like statues of the 'Gran Commendatore,' waiting
+for Don Giovanni's invitation.
+
+MASOLINO AT CASTIGLIONE D'OLONA
+
+Through the loveliest Arcadian scenery of woods and fields and
+rushing waters the road leads downward from Varese to Castiglione.
+The Collegiate Church stands on a leafy hill above the town, with fair
+prospect over groves and waterfalls and distant mountains. Here in the
+choir is a series of frescoes by Masolino da Panicale, the master
+of Masaccio, who painted them about the year 1428. 'Masolinus de
+Florentia pinxit' decides their authorship. The histories of the
+Virgin, S. Stephen and S. Lawrence, are represented: but the injuries
+of time and neglect have been so great that it is difficult to judge
+them fairly. All we feel for certain is that Masolino had not yet
+escaped from the traditional Giottesque mannerism. Only a group of
+Jews stoning Stephen, and Lawrence before the tribunal, remind us by
+dramatic energy of the Brancacci Chapel.
+
+The Baptistery frescoes, dealing with the legend of S. John, show a
+remarkable advance; and they are luckily in better preservation. A
+soldier lifting his two-handed sword to strike off the Baptist's head
+is a vigorous figure, full of Florentine realism. Also in the Baptism
+in Jordan we are reminded of Masaccio by an excellent group of
+bathers--one man taking off his hose, another putting them on again,
+a third standing naked with his back turned, and a fourth shivering
+half-dressed with a look of curious sadness on his face. The nude has
+been carefully studied and well realised. The finest composition of
+this series is a large panel representing a double action--Salome at
+Herod's table begging for the Baptist's head, and then presenting
+it to her mother Herodias. The costumes are quattrocento Florentine,
+exactly rendered. Salome is a graceful slender creature; the two women
+who regard her offering to Herodias with mingled curiosity and horror,
+are well conceived. The background consists of a mountain landscape
+in Masaccio's simple manner, a rich Renaissance villa, and an open
+loggia. The architecture perspective is scientifically accurate, and
+a frieze of boys with garlands on the villa is in the best manner of
+Florentine sculpture. On the mountain side, diminished in scale, is
+a group of elders, burying the body of S. John. These are massed
+together and robed in the style of Masaccio, and have his virile
+dignity of form and action. Indeed this interesting wall-painting
+furnishes an epitome of Florentine art, in its intentions and
+achievements, during the first half of the fifteenth century. The
+colour is strong and brilliant, and the execution solid.
+
+The margin of the Salome panel has been used for scratching the
+Chronicle of Castiglione. I read one date, 1568, several of the
+next century, the record of a duel between two gentlemen, and many
+inscriptions to this effect, 'Erodiana Regina,' 'Omnia praetereunt,'
+&c. A dirty one-eyed fellow keeps the place. In my presence he swept
+the frescoes over with a scratchy broom, flaying their upper surface
+in profound unconsciousness of mischief. The armour of the executioner
+has had its steel colours almost rubbed off by this infernal process.
+Damp and cobwebs are far kinder.
+
+THE CERTOSA
+
+The Certosa of Pavia leaves upon the mind an impression of bewildering
+sumptuousness: nowhere else are costly materials so combined with a
+lavish expenditure of the rarest art. Those who have only once been
+driven round together with the crew of sightseers, can carry little
+away but the memory of lapis-lazuli and bronze-work, inlaid agates and
+labyrinthine sculpture, cloisters tenantless in silence, fair painted
+faces smiling from dark corners on the senseless crowd, trim gardens
+with rows of pink primroses in spring, and of begonia in autumn,
+blooming beneath colonnades of glowing terra-cotta. The striking
+contrast between the Gothic of the interior and the Renaissance
+façade, each in its own kind perfect, will also be remembered; and
+thoughts of the two great houses, Visconti and Sforza, to whose pride
+of power it is a monument, may be blended with the recollection of
+art-treasures alien to their spirit.
+
+Two great artists, Ambrogio Borgognone and Antonio Amadeo, are the
+presiding genii of the Certosa. To minute criticism, based upon the
+accurate investigation of records and the comparison of styles,
+must be left the task of separating their work from that of numerous
+collaborators. But it is none the less certain that the keynote of
+the whole music is struck by them, Amadeo, the master of the Colleoni
+chapel at Bergamo, was both sculptor and architect. If the façade
+of the Certosa be not absolutely his creation, he had a hand in the
+distribution of its masses and the detail of its ornaments. The only
+fault in this otherwise faultless product of the purest quattrocento
+inspiration, is that the façade is a frontispiece, with hardly any
+structural relation to the church it masks: and this, though serious
+from the point of view of architecture, is no abatement of its
+sculpturesque and picturesque refinement. At first sight it seems
+a wilderness of loveliest reliefs and statues--of angel faces,
+fluttering raiment, flowing hair, love-laden youths, and stationary
+figures of grave saints, mid wayward tangles of acanthus and wild vine
+and cupid-laden foliage; but the subordination of these decorative
+details to the main design, clear, rhythmical, and lucid, like a
+chaunt of Pergolese or Stradella, will enrapture one who has the
+sense for unity evoked from divers elements, for thought subduing all
+caprices to the harmony of beauty. It is not possible elsewhere in
+Italy to find the instinct of the earlier Renaissance, so amorous in
+its expenditure of rare material, so lavish in its bestowal of the
+costliest workmanship on ornamental episodes, brought into truer
+keeping with a pure and simple structural effect.
+
+All the great sculptor-architects of Lombardy worked in succession
+on this miracle of beauty; and this may account for the sustained
+perfection of style, which nowhere suffers from the languor of
+exhaustion in the artist or from repetition of motives. It remains the
+triumph of North Italian genius, exhibiting qualities of tenderness
+and self-abandonment to inspiration, which we lack in the severer
+masterpieces of the Tuscan school.
+
+To Borgognone is assigned the painting of the roof in nave and
+choir--exceeding rich, varied, and withal in sympathy with stately
+Gothic style. Borgognone again is said to have designed the saints and
+martyrs worked in _tarsia_ for the choir-stalls. His frescoes are
+in some parts well preserved, as in the lovely little Madonna at the
+end of the south chapel, while the great fresco above the window in
+the south transept has an historical value that renders it interesting
+in spite of partial decay. Borgognone's oil pictures throughout
+the church prove, if such proof were needed after inspection of the
+altar-piece in our National Gallery, that he was one of the most
+powerful and original painters of Italy, blending the repose of the
+earlier masters and their consummate workmanship with a profound
+sensibility to the finest shades of feeling and the rarest forms of
+natural beauty. He selected an exquisite type of face for his young
+men and women; on his old men he bestowed singular gravity and
+dignity. His saints are a society of strong, pure, restful, earnest
+souls, in whom the passion of deepest emotion is transfigured by
+habitual calm. The brown and golden harmonies he loved, are gained
+without sacrifice of lustre: there is a self-restraint in his
+colouring which corresponds to the reserve of his emotion; and though
+a regret sometimes rises in our mind that he should have modelled the
+light and shade upon his faces with a brusque, unpleasing hardness,
+their pallor dwells within our memory as something delicately sought
+if not consummately attained. In a word, Borgognone was a true Lombard
+of the best time. The very imperfection of his flesh-painting repeats
+in colour what the greatest Lombard sculptors sought in stone--a
+sharpness of relief that passes over into angularity. This brusqueness
+was the counterpoise to tenderness of feeling and intensity of fancy
+in these northern artists. Of all Borgognone's pictures in the Certosa
+I should select the altar-piece of S. Siro with S. Lawrence and S.
+Stephen and two Fathers of the Church, for its fusion of this master's
+qualities.
+
+The Certosa is a wilderness of lovely workmanship. From Borgognone's
+majesty we pass into the quiet region of Luini's Christian grace, or
+mark the influence of Lionardo on that rare Assumption of Madonna by
+his pupil, Andrea Solari. Like everything touched by the Lionardesque
+spirit, this great picture was left unfinished: yet Northern Italy
+has nothing finer to show than the landscape, outspread in its
+immeasurable purity of calm, behind the grouped Apostles and the
+ascendant Mother of Heaven. The feeling of that happy region between
+the Alps and Lombardy, where there are many waters--_et tacitos sine
+labe laous sine murmure rivos_--and where the last spurs of the
+mountains sink in undulations to the plain, has passed into this azure
+vista, just as all Umbria is suggested in a twilight background of
+young Raphael or Perugino.
+
+The portraits of the Dukes of Milan and their families carry us into
+a very different realm of feeling. Medallions above the doors of
+sacristy and chancel, stately figures reared aloft beneath gigantic
+canopies, men and women slumbering with folded hands upon their marble
+biers--we read in all those sculptured forms a strange record of human
+restlessness, resolved into the quiet of the tomb. The iniquities of
+Gian Galeazzo Visconti, _il gran Biscione_, the blood-thirst
+of Gian Maria, the dark designs of Filippo and his secret vices,
+Francesco Sforza's treason, Galeazzo Maria's vanities and lusts;
+their tyrants' dread of thunder and the knife; their awful deaths by
+pestilence and the assassin's poignard; their selfishness, oppression,
+cruelty and fraud; the murders of their kinsmen; their labyrinthine
+plots and acts of broken faith;--all is tranquil now, and we can
+say to each what Bosola found for the Duchess of Malfi ere her
+execution:--
+
+ Much you had of land and rent;
+ Your length in clay's now competent:
+ A long war disturbed your mind;
+ Here your perfect peace is signed!
+
+Some of these faces are commonplace, with _bourgeois_ cunning
+written on the heavy features; one is bluff, another stolid, a third
+bloated, a fourth stately. The sculptors have dealt fairly with
+all, and not one has the lineaments of utter baseness. To Cristoforo
+Solari's statues of Lodovico Sforza and his wife, Beatrice d'Este, the
+palm of excellence in art and of historical interest must be awarded.
+Sculpture has rarely been more dignified and true to life than here.
+The woman with her short clustering curls, the man with his strong
+face, are resting after that long fever which brought woe to Italy, to
+Europe a new age, and to the boasted minion of Fortune a slow death
+in the prison palace of Loches. Attired in ducal robes, they lie in
+state; and the sculptor has carved the lashes on their eyelids, heavy
+with death's marmoreal sleep. He at least has passed no judgment
+on their crimes. Let us too bow and leave their memories to the
+historian's pen, their spirits to God's mercy.
+
+After all wanderings in this Temple of Art, we return to Antonio
+Amadeo, to his long-haired seraphs playing on the lutes of Paradise,
+to his angels of the Passion with their fluttering robes and arms
+outspread in agony, to his saints and satyrs mingled on pilasters of
+the marble doorways, his delicate _Lavabo_ decorations, and his
+hymns of piety expressed in noble forms of weeping women and dead
+Christs. Wherever we may pass, this master-spirit of the Lombard style
+enthralls attention. His curious treatment of drapery as though it
+Ĥwere made of crumpled paper, and his trick of enhancing relief by
+sharp angles and attenuated limbs, do not detract from his peculiar
+charm. That is his way, very different from Donatello's, of attaining
+to the maximum of life and lightness in the stubborn vehicle of
+stone. Nor do all the riches of the choir--those multitudes of singing
+angels, those Ascensions and Assumptions, and innumerable
+basreliefs of gleaming marble moulded into softest wax by mastery of
+art--distract our eyes from the single round medallion, not larger
+than a common plate, inscribed by him upon the front of the high
+altar. Perhaps, if one who loved Amadeo were bidden to point out
+his masterpiece, he would lead the way at once to this. The space is
+small: yet it includes the whole tragedy of the Passion. Christ is
+lying dead among the women on his mother's lap, and there are pitying
+angels in the air above. One woman lifts his arm, another makes her
+breast a pillow for his head. Their agony is hushed, but felt in
+every limb and feature; and the extremity of suffering is seen in each
+articulation of the worn and wounded form just taken from the cross.
+It would be too painful, were not the harmony of art so rare, the
+interlacing of those many figures in a simple round so exquisite. The
+noblest tranquillity and the most passionate emotion are here fused in
+a manner of adorable naturalness.
+
+From the church it is delightful to escape into the cloisters, flooded
+with sunlight, where the swallows skim, and the brown hawks circle,
+and the mason bees are at work upon their cells among the carvings.
+The arcades of the two cloisters are the final triumph of Lombard
+terra-cotta. The memory fails before such infinite invention, such
+facility and felicity of execution. Wreaths of cupids gliding round
+the arches among grape-bunches and bird-haunted foliage of vine; rows
+of angels, like rising and setting planets, some smiling and
+some grave, ascending and descending by the Gothic curves; saints
+stationary on their pedestals, and faces leaning from the rounds
+above; crowds of cherubs, and courses of stars, and acanthus leaves in
+woven lines, and ribands incessantly inscribed with Ave Maria! Then,
+over all, the rich red light and purple shadows of the brick, than
+which no substance sympathises more completely with the sky of solid
+blue above, the broad plain space of waving summer grass beneath our
+feet.
+
+It is now late afternoon, and when evening comes, the train will take
+us back to Milan. There is yet a little while to rest tired eyes and
+strained spirits among the willows and the poplars by the monastery
+wall. Through that grey-green leafage, young with early spring,
+the pinnacles of the Certosa leap like flames into the sky. The
+rice-fields are under water, far and wide, shining like burnished
+gold beneath the level light now near to sun-down. Frogs are croaking;
+those persistent frogs, whom the Muses have ordained to sing for aye,
+in spite of Bion and all tuneful poets dead. We sit and watch the
+water-snakes, the busy rats, the hundred creatures swarming in the fat
+well-watered soil. Nightingales here and there, new-comers, tune their
+timid April song: but, strangest of all sounds in such a place, my
+comrade from the Grisons jodels forth an Alpine cowherd's melody.
+_Auf den Alpen droben ist ein herrliches Leben!_
+
+Did the echoes of Gian Galeazzo's convent ever wake to such a tune as
+this before?
+
+SAN MAURIZIO
+
+The student of art in Italy, after mastering the characters of
+different styles and epochs, finds a final satisfaction in the
+contemplation of buildings designed and decorated by one master, or
+by groups of artists interpreting the spirit of a single period. Such
+supreme monuments of the national genius are not very common, and they
+are therefore the more precious. Giotto's Chapel at Padua; the Villa
+Farnesina at Rome, built by Peruzzi and painted in fresco by Raphael
+and Sodoma; the Palazzo del Te at Mantua, Giulio Romano's masterpiece;
+the Scuola di San Rocco, illustrating the Venetian Renaissance at its
+climax, might be cited among the most splendid of these achievements.
+In the church of the Monastero Maggiore at Milan, dedicated to S.
+Maurizio, Lombard architecture and fresco-painting may be studied
+in this rare combination. The monastery itself, one of the oldest in
+Milan, formed a retreat for cloistered virgins following the rule of
+S. Benedict. It may have been founded as early as the tenth century;
+but its church was rebuilt in the first two decades of the sixteenth,
+between 1503 and 1519, and was immediately afterwards decorated with
+frescoes by Luini and his pupils. Gian Giacomo Dolcebono, architect
+and sculptor, called by his fellow-craftsmen _magistro di taliare
+pietre_, gave the design, at once simple and harmonious, which was
+carried out with hardly any deviation from his plan. The church is a
+long parallelogram, divided into two unequal portions, the first and
+smaller for the public, the second for the nuns. The walls are pierced
+with rounded and pilastered windows, ten on each side, four of which
+belong to the outer and six to the inner section. The dividing wall or
+septum rises to the point from which the groinings of the roof spring;
+and round three sides of the whole building, north, east, and south,
+runs a gallery for the use of the convent. The altars of the inner and
+outer church are placed against the septum, back to back, with certain
+differences of structure that need not be described. Simple and
+severe, S. Maurizio owes its architectural beauty wholly and entirely
+to purity of line and perfection of proportion. There is a prevailing
+spirit of repose, a sense of space, fair, lightsome, and adapted
+to serene moods of the meditative fancy in this building, which is
+singularly at variance with the religious mysticism and imaginative
+grandeur of a Gothic edifice. The principal beauty of the church,
+however, is its tone of colour. Every square inch is covered with
+fresco or rich woodwork, mellowed by time into that harmony of tints
+which blends the work of greater and lesser artists in one golden
+hue of brown. Round the arcades of the convent-loggia run delicate
+arabesques with faces of fair female saints--Catherine, Agnes, Lucy,
+Agatha,--gem-like or star-like, gazing from their gallery upon the
+church below. The Luinesque smile is on their lips and in their eyes,
+quiet, refined, as though the emblems of their martyrdom brought back
+no thought of pain to break the Paradise of rest in which they dwell.
+There are twenty-six in all, a sisterhood of stainless souls, the
+lilies of Love's garden planted round Christ's throne. Soldier saints
+are mingled with them in still smaller rounds above the windows,
+chosen to illustrate the virtues of an order which renounced the
+world. To decide whose hand produced these masterpieces of Lombard
+suavity and grace, or whether more than one, would not be easy. Near
+the altar we can perhaps trace the style of Bartolommeo Suardi in an
+Annunciation painted on the spandrils--that heroic style, large and
+noble, known to us by the chivalrous S. Martin and the glorified
+Madonna of the Brera frescoes. It is not impossible that the male
+saints of the loggia may be also his, though a tenderer touch, a
+something more nearly Lionardesque in its quietude, must be discerned
+in Lucy and her sisters. The whole of the altar in this inner church
+belongs to Luini. Were it not for darkness and decay, we should
+pronounce this series of the Passion in nine great compositions, with
+saints and martyrs and torch-bearing genii, to be one of his most
+ambitious and successful efforts. As it is, we can but judge in part;
+the adolescent beauty of Sebastian, the grave compassion of S.
+Rocco, the classical perfection of the cupid with lighted tapers, the
+gracious majesty of women smiling on us sideways from their Lombard
+eyelids--these remain to haunt our memory, emerging from the shadows
+of the vault above.
+
+The inner church, as is fitting, excludes all worldly elements. We
+are in the presence of Christ's agony, relieved and tempered by the
+sunlight of those beauteous female faces. All is solemn here, still as
+the convent, pure as the meditations of a novice. We pass the septum,
+and find ourselves in the outer church appropriated to the laity.
+Above the high altar the whole wall is covered with Luini's loveliest
+work, in excellent light and far from ill preserved. The space divides
+into eight compartments. A Pietà, an Assumption, Saints and Founders
+of the church, group themselves under the influence of Luini's
+harmonising colour into one symphonious whole. But the places of
+distinction are reserved for two great benefactors of the convent,
+Alessandro de' Bentivogli and his wife, Ippolita Sforza. When the
+Bentivogli were expelled from Bologna by the Papal forces, Alessandro
+settled at Milan, where he dwelt, honoured by the Sforzas and allied
+to them by marriage, till his death in 1532. He was buried in the
+monastery by the side of his sister Alessandra, a nun of the order.
+Luini has painted the illustrious exile in his habit as he lived. He
+is kneeling, as though in ever-during adoration of the altar mystery,
+attired in a long black senatorial robe trimmed with furs. In his left
+hand he holds a book; and above his pale, serenely noble face is a
+little black berretta. Saints attend him, as though attesting to his
+act of faith. Opposite kneels Ippolita, his wife, the brilliant queen
+of fashion, the witty leader of society, to whom Bandello dedicated
+his Novelle, and whom he praised as both incomparably beautiful and
+singularly learned. Her queenly form is clothed from head to foot in
+white brocade, slashed and trimmed with gold lace, and on her forehead
+is a golden circlet. She has the proud port of a princess, the beauty
+of a woman past her prime but stately, the indescribable dignity of
+attitude which no one but Luini could have rendered so majestically
+sweet. In her hand is a book; and she, like Alessandro, has her
+saintly sponsors, Agnes and Catherine and S. Scolastica.
+
+Few pictures bring the splendid Milanese Court so vividly before us as
+these portraits of the Bentivogli: they are, moreover, very precious
+for the light they throw on what Luini could achieve in the secular
+style so rarely touched by him. Great, however, as are these frescoes,
+they are far surpassed both in value and interest by his paintings in
+the side chapel of S. Catherine. Here more than anywhere else, more
+even than at Saronno or Lugano, do we feel the true distinction
+of Luini--his unrivalled excellence as a colourist, his power over
+pathos, the refinement of his feeling, and the peculiar beauty of his
+favourite types. The chapel was decorated at the expense of a Milanese
+advocate, Francesco Besozzi, who died in 1529. It is he who is
+kneeling, grey-haired and bareheaded, under the protection of S.
+Catherine of Alexandria, intently gazing at Christ unbound from the
+scourging pillar. On the other side stand S. Lawrence and S. Stephen,
+pointing to the Christ and looking at us, as though their lips were
+framed to say: 'Behold and see if there be any sorrow like unto
+his sorrow.' Even the soldiers who have done their cruel work, seem
+softened. They untie the cords tenderly, and support the fainting
+form, too weak to stand alone. What sadness in the lovely faces of S.
+Catherine and Lawrence! What divine anguish in the loosened limbs
+and bending body of Christ; what piety in the adoring old man! All the
+moods proper to this supreme tragedy of the faith are touched as in
+some tenor song with low accompaniment of viols; for it was Luini's
+special province to feel profoundly and to express musically. The very
+depth of the Passion is there; and yet there is no discord.
+
+Just in proportion to this unique faculty for yielding a melodious
+representation of the most intense moments of stationary emotion, was
+his inability to deal with a dramatic subject. The first episode of S.
+Catherine's execution, when the wheel was broken and the executioners
+struck by lightning, is painted in this chapel without energy and with
+a lack of composition that betrays the master's indifference to his
+subject. Far different is the second episode when Catherine is about
+to be beheaded. The executioner has raised his sword to strike. She,
+robed in brocade of black and gold, so cut as to display the curve of
+neck and back, while the bosom is covered, leans her head above
+her praying hands, and waits the blow in sweetest resignation. Two
+soldiers stand at some distance in a landscape of hill and meadow; and
+far up are seen the angels carrying her body to its tomb upon Mount
+Sinai. I cannot find words or summon courage to describe the beauty
+of this picture; its atmosphere of holy peace, the dignity of its
+composition, the golden richness of its colouring. The most tragic
+situation has here again been alchemised by Luini's magic into a
+pure idyll, without the loss of power, without the sacrifice of
+edification.
+
+S. Catherine in this incomparable fresco is a portrait, the history of
+which so strikingly illustrates the relation of the arts to religion
+on the one hand, and to life on the other, in the age of the
+Renaissance, that it cannot be omitted. At the end of his fourth
+Novella, having related the life of the Contessa di Cellant, Bandello
+says: 'And so the poor woman was beheaded; such was the end of her
+unbridled desires; and he who would fain see her painted to the life,
+let him go to the Church of the Monistero Maggiore, and there will he
+behold her portrait.' The Contessa di Cellant was the only child of a
+rich usurer who lived at Casal Monferrato. Her mother was a Greek;
+and she was a girl of such exquisite beauty, that, in spite of her
+low origin, she became the wife of the noble Ermes Visconti in her
+sixteenth year. He took her to live with him at Milan, where she
+frequented the house of the Bentivogli, but none other. Her husband
+told Bandello that he knew her temper better than to let her visit
+with the freedom of the Milanese ladies. Upon his death, while she
+was little more than twenty, she retired to Casale and led a gay
+life among many lovers. One of these, the Count of Cellant in the Val
+d'Aosta, became her second husband, conquered by her extraordinary
+loveliness. They could not, however, agree together. She left him, and
+established herself at Pavia. Rich with her father's wealth and still
+of most seductive beauty, she now abandoned herself to a life of
+profligacy. Three among her lovers must be named: Ardizzino Valperga,
+Count of Masino; Roberto Sanseverino, of the princely Naples family;
+and Don Pietro di Cardona, a Sicilian. With each of the two first she
+quarrelled, and separately besought each to murder the other. They
+were friends and frustrated her plans by communicating them to one
+another. The third loved her with the insane passion of a very young
+man. What she desired, he promised to do blindly; and she bade him
+murder his two predecessors in her favour. At this time she was living
+at Milan, where the Duke of Bourbon was acting as viceroy for the
+Emperor. Don Pietro took twenty-five armed men of his household, and
+waylaid the Count of Masino, as he was returning with his brother and
+eight or nine servants, late one night from supper. Both the brothers
+and the greater part of their suite were killed: but Don Pietro was
+caught. He revealed the atrocity of his mistress; and she was sent
+to prison. Incapable of proving her innocence, and prevented from
+escaping, in spite of 15,000 golden crowns with which she hoped to
+bribe her jailors, she was finally beheaded. Thus did a vulgar and
+infamous Messalina, distinguished only by rare beauty, furnish Luini
+with a S. Catherine for this masterpiece of pious art! The thing seems
+scarcely credible. Yet Bandello lived in Milan while the Church of
+S. Maurizio was being painted; nor does he show the slightest sign of
+disgust at the discord between the Contessa's life and her artistic
+presentation in the person of a royal martyr.
+
+A HUMANIST'S MONUMENT
+
+In the Sculpture Gallery of the Brera is preserved a fair white marble
+tomb, carved by that excellent Lombard sculptor, Agostino Busti. The
+epitaph runs as follows:--
+
+ En Virtutem Mortis nesciam.
+ Vivet Lancinus Curtius
+ Sĉcula per omnia
+ Quascunque lustrans oras,
+ Tantum possunt Camoenĉ.
+
+'Look here on Virtue that knows nought of Death! Lancinus Curtius
+shall live through all the centuries, and visit every shore of earth.
+Such power have the Muses.' The timeworn poet reclines, as though
+sleeping or resting, ready to be waked; his head is covered with
+flowing hair, and crowned with laurel; it leans upon his left hand. On
+either side of his couch stand cupids or genii with torches turned to
+earth. Above is a group of the three Graces, flanked by winged Pegasi.
+Higher up are throned two Victories with palms, and at the top a naked
+Fame. We need not ask who was Lancinus Curtius. He is forgotten, and
+his virtue has not saved him from oblivion; though he strove in his
+lifetime, _pro virili parte_, for the palm that Busti carved upon
+his grave. Yet his monument teaches in short compass a deep lesson;
+and his epitaph sums up the dream which lured the men of Italy in the
+Renaissance to their doom. We see before us sculptured in this marble
+the ideal of the humanistic poet-scholar's life: Love, Grace, the
+Muse, and Nakedness, and Glory. There is not a single intrusive
+thought derived from Christianity. The end for which the man lived
+was Pagan. His hope was earthly fame. Yet his name survives, if this
+indeed be a survival, not in those winged verses which were to carry
+him abroad across the earth, but in the marble of a cunning craftsman,
+scanned now and then by a wandering scholar's eye in the half-darkness
+of a vault.
+
+THE MONUMENT OF GASTON DE FOIX IN THE BRERA
+
+The hero of Ravenna lies stretched upon his back in the hollow of
+a bier covered with laced drapery; and his head rests on richly
+ornamented cushions. These decorative accessories, together with the
+minute work of his scabbard, wrought in the fanciful mannerism of the
+_cinquecento_, serve to enhance the statuesque simplicity of the
+young soldier's effigy. The contrast between so much of richness in
+the merely subordinate details, and this sublime severity of treatment
+in the person of the hero, is truly and touchingly dramatic. There is
+a smile as of content in death, upon his face; and the features are
+exceedingly beautiful--with the beauty of a boy, almost of a woman.
+The heavy hair is cut straight above the forehead and straight over
+the shoulders, falling in massive clusters. A delicately sculptured
+laurel branch is woven into a victor's crown, and laid lightly on the
+tresses it scarcely seems to clasp. So fragile is this wreath that
+it does not break the pure outline of the boy-conqueror's head. The
+armour is quite plain. So is the surcoat. Upon the swelling bust,
+that seems fit harbour for a hero's heart, there lies the collar of an
+order composed of cockle-shells; and this is all the ornament given
+to the figure. The hands are clasped across a sword laid flat upon the
+breast, and placed between the legs. Upon the chin is a little tuft of
+hair, parted, and curling either way; for the victor of Ravenna, like
+the Hermes of Homer, was [Greek: prôton hypênêtês], 'a youth of
+princely blood, whose beard hath just begun to grow, for whom the
+season of bloom is in its prime of grace.' The whole statue is the
+idealisation of _virtù_--that quality so highly prized by the
+Italians and the ancients, so well fitted for commemoration in the
+arts. It is the apotheosis of human life resolved into undying memory
+because of one great deed. It is the supreme portrait in modern times
+of a young hero, chiselled by artists belonging to a race no longer
+heroic, but capable of comprehending and expressing the ĉsthetic charm
+of heroism. Standing before it, we may say of Gaston what Arrian wrote
+to Hadrian of Achilles:--'That he was a hero, if hero ever lived,
+I cannot doubt; for his birth and blood were noble, and he was
+beautiful, and his spirit was mighty, and he passed in youth's
+prime away from men.' Italian sculpture, under the condition of the
+_cinquecento_, had indeed no more congenial theme than this
+of bravery and beauty, youth and fame, immortal honour and untimely
+death; nor could any sculptor of death have poetised the theme more
+thoroughly than Agostino Busti, whose simple instinct, unlike that of
+Michelangelo, led him to subordinate his own imagination to the pathos
+of reality.
+
+SARONNO
+
+The church of Saronno is a pretty building with a Bramantesque cupola,
+standing among meadows at some distance from the little town. It
+is the object of a special cult, which draws pilgrims from the
+neighbouring country-side; but the concourse is not large enough to
+load the sanctuary with unnecessary wealth. Everything is very quiet
+in the holy place, and the offerings of the pious seem to have been
+only just enough to keep the building and its treasures of art in
+repair. The church consists of a nave, a central cupola, a vestibule
+leading to the choir, the choir itself, and a small tribune behind the
+choir. No other single building in North Italy can boast so much that
+is first-rate of the work of Luini and Gandenzio Ferrari.
+
+The cupola is raised on a sort of drum composed of twelve pieces,
+perforated with round windows and supported on four massive piers. On
+the level of the eye are frescoes by Luini of S. Rocco, S. Sebastian,
+S. Christopher, and S. Antony--by no means in his best style, and
+inferior to all his other paintings in this church. The Sebastian,
+for example, shows an effort to vary the traditional treatment of this
+saint. He is tied in a sprawling attitude to a tree; and little of
+Luini's special pathos or sense of beauty--the melody of idyllic grace
+made spiritual--appears in him. These four saints are on the piers.
+Above are frescoes from the early Bible history by Lanini, painted in
+continuation of Ferrari's medallions from the story of Adam expelled
+from Paradise, which fill the space beneath the cupola, leading the
+eye upward to Ferrari's masterpiece.
+
+The dome itself is crowded with a host of angels singing and playing
+upon instruments of music. At each of the twelve angles of the drum
+stands a coryphĉus of this celestial choir, full length, with waving
+drapery. Higher up, the golden-haired, broad-winged, divine creatures
+are massed together, filling every square inch of the vault with
+colour. Yet there is no confusion. The simplicity of the selected
+motive and the necessities of the place acted like a check on
+Ferrari, who, in spite of his dramatic impulse, could not tell a story
+coherently or fill a canvas with harmonised variety. There is no trace
+of his violence here. Though the motion of music runs through the
+whole multitude like a breeze, though the joy expressed is a real
+_tripudio celeste_, not one of all these angels flings his arms
+abroad or makes a movement that disturbs the rhythm. We feel that they
+are keeping time and resting quietly, each in his appointed seat, as
+though the sphere was circling with them round the throne of God, who
+is their centre and their source of gladness. Unlike Correggio and his
+imitators, Ferrari has introduced no clouds, and has in no case made
+the legs of his angels prominent. It is a mass of noble faces and
+voluminously robed figures, emerging each above the other like flowers
+in a vase. Bach too has specific character, while all are robust and
+full of life, intent upon the service set them. Their instruments
+of music are all the lutes and viols, flutes, cymbals, drums, fifes,
+citherns, organs, and harps that Ferrari's day could show. The scale
+of colour, as usual with Ferrari, is a little heavy; nor are the tints
+satisfactorily harmonised. But the vigour and invention of the whole
+work would atone for minor defects of far greater consequence.
+
+It is natural, beneath this dome, to turn aside and think one
+moment of Correggio at Parma. Before the _macchinisti_ of the
+seventeenth century had vulgarised the motive, Correggio's bold
+attempt to paint heaven in flight from earth--earth left behind in the
+persons of the Apostles standing round the empty tomb, heaven soaring
+upward with a spiral vortex into the abyss of light above--had an
+originality which set at nought all criticism. There is such ecstasy
+of jubilation, such rapturous rapidity of flight, that we who strain
+our eyes from below, feel we are in the darkness of the grave which
+Mary left. A kind of controlling rhythm for the composition is gained
+by placing Gabriel, Madonna, and Christ at three points in the swirl
+of angels. Nevertheless, composition--the presiding all-controlling
+intellect--is just what makes itself felt by absence; and Correggio's
+special qualities of light and colour have now so far vanished
+from the cupola of the Duomo that the, constructive poverty is
+not disguised. Here if anywhere in painting, we may apply Goethe's
+words--_Gefühl ist Alles._
+
+If then we return to Ferrari's angels at Saronno, we find that the
+painter of Varallo chose a safer though a far more modest theme. Nor
+did he expose himself to that most cruel of all degradations which the
+ethereal genius of Correggio has suffered from incompetent imitators.
+To daub a tawdry and superficial reproduction of those Parmese
+frescoes, to fill the cupolas of Italy with veritable _guazzetti
+di rane_, was comparatively easy; and between our intelligence
+and what remains of that stupendous masterpiece of boldness, crowd a
+thousand memories of such ineptitude. On the other hand, nothing but
+solid work and conscientious inspiration could enable any workman,
+however able, to follow Ferrari in the path struck out by him at
+Saronno. His cupola has had no imitator; and its only rival is the
+noble pendant painted at Varallo by his own hand, of angels in adoring
+anguish round the Cross.
+
+In the ante-choir of the sanctuary are Luini's priceless frescoes of
+the 'Marriage of the Virgin,' and the 'Dispute with the Doctors.'[11]
+Their execution is flawless, and they are perfectly preserved. If
+criticism before such admirable examples of so excellent a master
+be permissible, it may be questioned whether the figures are not too
+crowded, whether the groups are sufficiently varied and connected by
+rhythmic lines. Yet the concords of yellow and orange with blue in
+the 'Sposalizio,' and the blendings of dull violet and red in the
+'Disputa,' make up for much of stiffness. Here, as in the Chapel of
+S. Catherine at Milan, we feel that Luini was the greatest colourist
+among _frescanti._ In the 'Sposalizio' the female heads are singularly
+noble and idyllically graceful. Some of the young men too have Luini's
+special grace and abundance of golden hair. In the 'Disputa' the
+gravity and dignity of old men are above all things striking.
+
+Passing into the choir, we find on either hand the 'Adoration
+of the Magi' and the 'Purification of the Virgin,' two of Luini's
+divinest frescoes. Above them in lunettes are four Evangelists and
+four Latin Fathers, with four Sibyls. Time and neglect have done no
+damage here: and here, again, perforce we notice perfect mastery of
+colour in fresco. The blues detach themselves too much, perhaps, from
+the rest of the colouring; and that is all a devil's advocate could
+say. It is possible that the absence of blue makes the S. Catherine
+frescoes in the Monastero Maggiore at Milan surpass all other works of
+Luini. But nowhere else has he shown more beauty and variety in detail
+than here. The group of women led by Joseph, the shepherd carrying
+the lamb upon his shoulder, the girl with a basket of white doves,
+the child with an apple on the altar-steps, the lovely youth in the
+foreground heedless of the scene; all these are idyllic incidents
+treated with the purest, the serenest, the most spontaneous, the
+truest, most instinctive sense of beauty. The landscape includes a
+view of Saronno, and an episodical picture of the 'Flight into Egypt'
+where a white-robed angel leads the way. All these lovely things
+are in the 'Purification,' which is dated _Bernardinus Lovinus
+pinxit_, MDXXV.
+
+The fresco of the 'Magi' is less notable in detail, and in general
+effect is more spoiled by obtrusive blues. There is, however, one
+young man of wholly Lionardesque loveliness, whose divine innocence
+of adolescence, unalloyed by serious thought, unstirred by passions,
+almost forces a comparison with Sodoma. The only painter who
+approaches Luini in what may be called the Lombard, to distinguish it
+from the Venetian idyll, is Sodoma; and the work of his which comes
+nearest to Luini's masterpieces is the legend of S. Benedict, at
+Monte Oliveto, near Siena. Yet Sodoma had not all Luini's innocence or
+_naïveté._ If he added something slightly humorous which has an
+indefinite charm, he lacked that freshness as of 'cool, meek-blooded
+flowers' and boyish voices, which fascinates us in Luini. Sodoma
+was closer to the earth, and feared not to impregnate what he saw
+of beauty with the fiercer passions of his nature. If Luini had felt
+passion, who shall say? It appears nowhere in his work, where life is
+toned to a religious joyousness. When Shelley compared the poetry of
+the Theocritean amourists to the perfume of the tuberose, and that of
+the earlier Greek poets to 'a meadow-gale of June, which mingles
+the fragrance of all the flowers of the field,' he supplied us
+with critical images which may not unfairly be used to point the
+distinction between Sodoma at Monte Oliveto and Luini at Saronno.
+
+THE CASTELLO OF FERRARA
+
+Is it possible that the patron saints of cities should mould the
+temper of the people to their own likeness? S. George, the chivalrous,
+is champion of Ferrara. His is the marble group above the Cathedral
+porch, so feudal in its medieval pomp. He and S. Michael are painted
+in fresco over the south portcullis of the Castle. His lustrous armour
+gleams with Giorgionesque brilliancy from Dossi's masterpiece in
+the Pinacoteca. That Ferrara, the only place in Italy where chivalry
+struck any root, should have had S. George for patron, is at any rate
+significant.
+
+The best preserved relic of princely feudal life in Italy is
+this Castello of the Este family, with its sombre moat, chained
+drawbridges, doleful dungeons, and unnumbered tragedies, each one of
+which may be compared with Parisina's history. I do not want to dwell
+on these things now. It is enough to remember the Castello, built of
+ruddiest brick, time-mellowed with how many centuries of sun and soft
+sea-air, as it appeared upon the close of one tempestuous day. Just
+before evening the rain-clouds parted and the sun flamed out across
+the misty Lombard plain. The Castello burned like a hero's funeral
+pyre, and round its high-built turrets swallows circled in the warm
+blue air. On the moat slept shadows, mixed with flowers of sunset,
+tossed from pinnacle and gable. Then the sky changed. A roof of
+thunder-cloud spread overhead with the rapidity of tempest. The dying
+sun gathered his last strength against it, fretting those steel-blue
+arches with crimson; and all the fierce light, thrown from vault to
+vault of cloud, was reflected back as from a shield, and cast in
+blots and patches on the buildings. The Castle towered up rosy-red
+and shadowy sombre, enshrined, embosomed in those purple clouds; and
+momently ran lightning forks like rapiers through the growing mass.
+Everything around, meanwhile, was quiet in the grass-grown streets.
+The only sound was a high, clear boy's voice chanting an opera tune.
+
+PETRARCH'S TOMB AT ARQUA
+
+The drive from Este along the skirts of the Euganean Hills to Arqua
+takes one through a country which is tenderly beautiful, because of
+its contrast between little peaked mountains and the plain. It is
+not a grand landscape. It lacks all that makes the skirts of Alps
+and Apennines sublime. Its charm is a certain mystery and
+repose--an undefined sense of the neighbouring Adriatic, a pervading
+consciousness of Venice unseen, but felt from far away. From the
+terraces of Arqua the eye ranges across olive-trees, laurels, and
+pomegranates on the southern slopes, to the misty level land that
+melts into the sea, with churches and tall campanili like gigantic
+galleys setting sail for fairyland over 'the foam of perilous seas
+forlorn.' Let a blue-black shadow from a thunder-cloud be cast
+upon this plain, and let one ray of sunlight strike a solitary
+bell-tower;--it burns with palest flame of rose against the steely
+dark, and in its slender shaft and shell-like tint of pink all Venice
+is foreseen.
+
+The village church of Arqua stands upon one of these terraces, with a
+full stream of clearest water flowing by. On the little square before
+the church-door, where the peasants congregate at mass-time--open to
+the skies with all their stars and storms, girdled by the hills,
+and within hearing of the vocal stream--is Petrarch's sepulchre. Fit
+resting-place for what remains to earth of such a poet's clay! It is
+as though archangels, flying, had carried the marble chest and set it
+down here on the hillside, to be a sign and sanctuary for after-men. A
+simple rectilinear coffin, of smooth Verona _mandorlato_, raised
+on four thick columns, and closed by a heavy cippus-cover. Without
+emblems, allegories, or lamenting genii, this tomb of the great poet,
+the great awakener of Europe from mental lethargy, encircled by the
+hills, beneath the canopy of heaven, is impressive beyond the power of
+words. Bending here, we feel that Petrarch's own winged thoughts
+and fancies, eternal and aërial, 'forms more real than living man,
+nurslings of immortality,' have congregated to be the ever-ministering
+and irremovable attendants on the shrine of one who, while he lived,
+was purest spirit in a veil of flesh.
+
+ON A MOUNTAIN
+
+Milan is shining in sunset on those purple fields; and a score of
+cities flash back the last red light, which shows each inequality
+and undulation of Lombardy outspread four thousand feet beneath. Both
+ranges, Alps and Apennines, are clear to view; and all the silvery
+lakes are over-canopied and brought into one picture by flame-litten
+mists. Monte Rosa lifts her crown of peaks above a belt of clouds into
+light of living fire. The Mischabelhörner and the Dom rest stationary
+angel-wings upon the rampart, which at this moment is the wall of
+heaven. The pyramid of distant Monte Viso burns like solid amethyst
+far, far away. Mont Cervin beckons to his brother, the gigantic
+Finsteraarhorn, across tracts of liquid ether. Bells are rising from
+the villages, now wrapped in gloom, between me and the glimmering
+lake. A hush of evening silence falls upon the ridges, cliffs, and
+forests of this billowy hill, ascending into wave-like crests, and
+toppling with awful chasms over the dark waters of Lugano. It is good
+to be alone here at this hour. Yet I must rise and go--passing through
+meadows, where white lilies sleep in silvery drifts, and asphodel is
+pale with spires of faintest rose, and narcissus dreams of his own
+beauty, loading the air with fragrance sweet as some love-music of
+Mozart. These fields want only the white figure of Persephone to make
+them poems: and in this twilight one might fancy that the queen had
+left her throne by Pluto's side, to mourn for her dead youth among the
+flowers uplifted between earth and heaven. Nay, they are poems now,
+these fields; with that unchanging background of history, romance,
+and human life--the Lombard plain, against whose violet breadth the
+blossoms bend their faint heads to the evening air. Downward we
+hurry, on pathways where the beeches meet, by silent farms, by meadows
+honey-scented, deep in dew. The columbine stands tall and still on
+those green slopes of shadowy grass. The nightingale sings now, and
+now is hushed again. Streams murmur through the darkness, where the
+growth of trees, heavy with honeysuckle and wild rose, is thickest.
+Fireflies begin to flit above the growing corn. At last the plain is
+reached, and all the skies are tremulous with starlight. Alas, that
+we should vibrate so obscurely to these harmonies of earth and
+heaven! The inner finer sense of them seems somehow unattainable--that
+spiritual touch of soul evoking soul from nature, which should
+transfigure our dull mood of self into impersonal delight. Man needs
+to be a mytho-poet at some moments, or, better still, to be a mystic
+steeped through half-unconsciousness in the vast wonder of the world.
+Gold and untouched to poetry or piety by scenes that ought to blend
+the spirit in ourselves with spirit in the world without, we can but
+wonder how this phantom show of mystery and beauty will pass away from
+us--how soon--and we be where, see what, use all our sensibilities on
+aught or nought?
+
+SIC GENIUS
+
+In the picture-gallery at Modena there is a masterpiece of Dosso
+Dossi. The frame is old and richly carved; and the painting, bordered
+by its beautiful dull gold, shines with the lustre of an emerald. In
+his happy moods Dosso set colour upon canvas, as no other painter out
+of Venice ever did; and here he is at his happiest. The picture is the
+portrait of a jester, dressed in courtly clothes and with a feathered
+cap upon his head. He holds a lamb in his arms, and carries the
+legend, _Sic Genius_. Behind him is a landscape of exquisite
+brilliancy and depth. His face is young and handsome. Dosso has made
+it one most wonderful laugh. Even so perhaps laughed Yorick. Nowhere
+else have I seen a laugh thus painted: not violent, not loud, although
+the lips are opened to show teeth of dazzling whiteness;--but fine and
+delicate, playing over the whole face like a ripple sent up from the
+depths of the soul within. Who was he? What does the lamb mean? How
+should the legend be interpreted? We cannot answer these questions. He
+may have been the court-fool of Ferrara; and his genius, the spiritual
+essence of the man, may have inclined him to laugh at all things.
+That at least is the value he now has for us. He is the portrait of
+perpetual irony, the spirit of the golden Sixteenth Century which
+delicately laughed at the whole world of thoughts and things, the
+quintessence of the poetry of Ariosto, the wit of Berni, all condensed
+into one incarnation and immortalised by truthfullest art. With the
+Gaul, the Spaniard, and the German at her gates, and in her cities,
+and encamped upon her fields, Italy still laughed; and when the voice
+of conscience sounding through Savonarola asked her why, she only
+smiled--_Sic Genius_.
+
+One evening in May we rowed from Venice to Torcello, and at sunset
+broke bread and drank wine together among the rank grasses just
+outside that ancient church. It was pleasant to sit in the so-called
+chair of Attila and feel the placid stillness of the place. Then there
+came lounging by a sturdy young fellow in brown country clothes, with
+a marvellous old wide-awake upon his head, and across his shoulders a
+bunch of massive church-keys. In strange contrast to his uncouth garb
+he flirted a pink Japanese fan, gracefully disposing it to cool his
+sunburned olive cheeks. This made us look at him. He was not ugly.
+Nay, there was something of attractive in his face--the smooth-curved
+chin, the shrewd yet sleepy eyes, and finely cut thin lips--a curious
+mixture of audacity and meekness blent upon his features. Yet this
+impression was but the prelude to his smile. When that first dawned,
+some breath of humour seeming to stir in him unbidden, the true
+meaning was given to his face. Each feature helped to make a smile
+that was the very soul's life of the man expressed. I broadened,
+showing brilliant teeth, and grew into a noiseless laugh; and then I
+saw before me Dosso's jester, the type of Shakspere's fools, the life
+of that wild irony, now rude, now fine, which once delighted Courts.
+The laughter of the whole world and of all the centuries was silent in
+his face. What he said need not be repeated. The charm was less in his
+words than in his personality; for Momus-philosophy lay deep in every
+look and gesture of the man. The place lent itself to irony: parties
+of Americans and English parsons, the former agape for any
+rubbishy old things, the latter learned in the lore of obsolete
+Church-furniture, had thronged Torcello; and now they were all gone,
+and the sun had set behind the Alps, while an irreverent stranger
+drank his wine in Attila's chair, and nature's jester smiled--_Sic
+Genius_.
+
+When I slept that night I dreamed of an altar-piece in the Temple of
+Folly. The goddess sat enthroned beneath a canopy hung with bells
+and corals. On her lap was a beautiful winged smiling genius, who
+flourished two bright torches. On her left hand stood the man of
+Modena with his white lamb, a new S. John. On her right stood the man
+of Torcello with his keys, a new S. Peter. Both were laughing after
+their all-absorbent, divine, noiseless fashion; and under both was
+written, _Sic Genius_. Are not all things, even profanity,
+permissible in dreams?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+COMO AND IL MEDEGHINO
+
+To which of the Italian lakes should the palm of beauty be accorded?
+This question may not unfrequently have moved the idle minds of
+travellers, wandering through that loveliest region from Orta to
+Garda--from little Orta, with her gemlike island, rosy granite crags,
+and chestnut-covered swards above the Colma; to Garda, bluest of all
+waters, surveyed in majestic length from Desenzano or poetic Sirmione,
+a silvery sleeping haze of hill and cloud and heaven and clear waves
+bathed in modulated azure. And between these extreme points what
+varied lovelinesses lie in broad Maggiore, winding Como, Varese with
+the laughing face upturned to heaven, Lugano overshadowed by the
+crested crags of Monte Generoso, and Iseo far withdrawn among the
+rocky Alps! He who loves immense space, cloud shadows slowly sailing
+over purple slopes, island gardens, distant glimpses of snow-capped
+mountains, breadth, air, immensity, and flooding sunlight, will choose
+Maggiore. But scarcely has he cast his vote for this, the Juno of the
+divine rivals, when he remembers the triple lovelinesses of the
+Larian Aphrodite, disclosed in all their placid grace from Villa
+Serbelloni;--the green blue of the waters, clear as glass, opaque
+through depth; the _millefleurs_ roses clambering into cypresses
+by Cadenabbia; the laburnums hanging their yellow clusters from the
+clefts of Sasso Eancio; the oleander arcades of Varenna; the wild
+white limestone crags of San Martiuo, which he has climbed to feast
+his eyes with the perspective, magical, serene, Lionardesquely
+perfect, of the distant gates of Adda. Then while this modern Paris
+is yet doubting, perhaps a thought may cross his mind of sterner,
+solitary Lake Iseo--the Pallas of the three. She offers her own
+attractions. The sublimity of Monte Adamello, dominating Lovere and
+all the lowland like Hesiod's hill of Virtue reared aloft above the
+plain of common life, has charms to tempt heroic lovers. Nor can
+Varese be neglected. In some picturesque respects, Varese is the most
+perfect of the lakes. Those long lines of swelling hills that lead
+into the level, yield an infinite series of placid foregrounds,
+pleasant to the eye by contrast with the dominant snow-summits, from
+Monte Viso to Monte Leone: the sky is limitless to southward; the low
+horizons are broken by bell-towers and farmhouses; while armaments of
+clouds are ever rolling in the interval of Alps and plain.
+
+Of a truth, to decide which is the queen of the Italian lakes, is but
+an _infinita quĉstio_; and the mere raising of it is folly. Still
+each lover of the beautiful may give his vote; and mine, like that of
+shepherd Paris, is already given to the Larian goddess. Words fail
+in attempting to set forth charms which have to be enjoyed, or can at
+best but lightly be touched with most consummate tact, even as great
+poets have already touched on Como Lake--from Virgil with his 'Lari
+maxume,' to Tennyson and the Italian Manzoni. The threshold of the
+shrine is, however, less consecrated ground; and the Cathedral of Como
+may form a vestibule to the temple where silence is more golden than
+the speech of a describer.
+
+The Cathedral of Como is perhaps the most perfect building in Italy
+for illustrating the fusion of Gothic and Renaissance styles, both of
+a good type and exquisite in their sobriety. The Gothic ends with the
+nave. The noble transepts and the choir, each terminating in a rounded
+tribune of the same dimensions, are carried out in a simple and
+decorous Bramantesque manner. The transition from the one style to the
+other is managed so felicitously, and the sympathies between them are
+so well developed, that there is no discord. What we here call
+Gothic, is conceived in a truly southern spirit, without fantastic
+efflorescence or imaginative complexity of multiplied parts; while
+the Renaissance manner, as applied by Tommaso Rodari, has not yet
+stiffened into the lifeless neo-Latinism of the later _cinquecento_:
+it is still distinguished by delicate inventiveness, and beautiful
+subordination of decorative detail to architectural effect. Under
+these happy conditions we feel that the Gothic of the nave, with its
+superior severity and sombreness, dilates into the lucid harmonies of
+choir and transepts like a flower unfolding. In the one the mind is
+tuned to inner meditation and religious awe; in the other the
+worshipper passes into a temple of the clear explicit faith--as an
+initiated neophyte might be received into the meaning of the
+mysteries.
+
+After the collapse of the Roman Empire the district of Como seems
+to have maintained more vividly than the rest of Northern Italy some
+memory of classic art. _Magistri Comacini_ is a title frequently
+inscribed upon deeds and charters of the earlier middle ages, as
+synonymous with sculptors and architects. This fact may help to
+account for the purity and beauty of the Duomo. It is the work of a
+race in which the tradition of delicate artistic invention had
+never been wholly interrupted. To Tommaso Rodari and his brothers,
+Bernardino and Jacopo, the world owes this sympathetic fusion of the
+Gothic and the Bramantesque styles; and theirs too is the sculpture
+with which the Duomo is so richly decorated. They were natives of
+Maroggia, a village near Mendrisio, beneath the crests of Monte
+Generoso, close to Campione, which sent so many able craftsmen out
+into the world between the years 1300 and 1500. Indeed the name of
+Campionesi would probably have been given to the Rodari, had they left
+their native province for service in Eastern Lombardy. The body of the
+Duomo had been finished when Tommaso Rodari was appointed master of
+the fabric in 1487. To complete the work by the addition of a tribune
+was his duty. He prepared a wooden model and exposed it, after the
+fashion of those times, for criticism in his _bottega_; and
+the usual difference of opinion arose among the citizens of Como
+concerning its merits. Cristoforo Solaro, surnamed Il Gobbo, was
+called in to advise. It may be remembered that when Michelangelo first
+placed his Pietà in S. Peter's, rumour gave it to this celebrated
+Lombard sculptor, and the Florentine was constrained to set his own
+signature upon the marble. The same Solaro carved the monument of
+Beatrice Sforza in the Certosa of Pavia. He was indeed in all
+points competent to criticise or to confirm the design of his
+fellow-craftsman. Il Gobbo disapproved of the proportions chosen by
+Rodari, and ordered a new model to be made; but after much discussion,
+and some concessions on the part of Rodari, who is said to have
+increased the number of the windows and lightened the orders of his
+model, the work was finally entrusted to the master of Maroggia.
+
+Not less creditable than the general design of the tribune is
+the sculpture executed by the brothers. The north side door is a
+master-work of early Renaissance chiselling, combining mixed Christian
+and classical motives with a wealth of floral ornament. Inside, over
+the same door, is a procession of children seeming to represent the
+Triumph of Bacchus, with perhaps some Christian symbolism. Opposite,
+above the south door, is a frieze of fighting Tritons--horsed sea
+deities pounding one another with bunches of fish and splashing the
+water, in Mantegna's spirit. The doorways of the façade are decorated
+with the same rare workmanship; and the canopies, supported by naked
+fauns and slender twisted figures, under which the two Plinies are
+seated, may be reckoned among the supreme achievements of delicate
+Renaissance sculpture. The Plinies are not like the work of the same
+master. They are older, stiffer, and more Gothic. The chief interest
+attaching to them is that they are habited and seated after the
+fashion of Humanists. This consecration of the two Pagan saints beside
+the portals of the Christian temple is truly characteristic of
+the fifteenth century in Italy. Beneath, are little basreliefs
+representing scenes from their respective lives, in the style of
+carved predellas on the altars of saints.
+
+The whole church is peopled with detached statues, among which a
+Sebastian in the Chapel of the Madonna must be mentioned as singularly
+beautiful. It is a finely modelled figure, with the full life and
+exuberant adolescence of Venetian inspiration. A peculiar feature of
+the external architecture is the series of Atlantes, bearing on their
+shoulders urns, heads of lions, and other devices, and standing on
+brackets round the upper cornice just below the roof. They are of all
+sorts; young and old, male and female; classically nude, and boldly
+outlined. These water-conduits, the work of Bernardo Bianco and
+Francesco Rusca, illustrate the departure of the earlier Renaissance
+from the Gothic style. They are gargoyles; but they have lost the
+grotesque element. At the same time the sculptor, while discarding
+Gothic tradition, has not betaken himself yet to a servile imitation
+of the antique. He has used invention, and substituted for grinning
+dragons' heads something wild and bizarre of his own in harmony with
+classic taste.
+
+The pictures in the chapels, chiefly by Luini and Ferrari--an idyllic
+Nativity, with faun-like shepherds and choirs of angels--a sumptuous
+adoration of the Magi--a jewelled Sposalizio with abundance of golden
+hair flowing over draperies of green and crimson--will interest
+those who are as yet unfamiliar with Lombard painting. Yet their
+architectural setting, perhaps, is superior to their intrinsic merit
+as works of art; and their chief value consists in adding rare dim
+flakes of colour to the cool light of the lovely church. More curious,
+because less easily matched, is the gilded woodwork above the altar of
+S. Abondio, attributed to a German carver, but executed for the
+most part in the purest Luinesque manner. The pose of the enthroned
+Madonna, the type and gesture of S. Catherine, and the treatment of
+the Pietà above, are thoroughly Lombard, showing how Luini's ideal of
+beauty could be expressed in carving. Some of the choicest figures in
+the Monastero Maggiore at Milan seem to have descended from the walls
+and stepped into their tabernacles on this altar. Yet the style is not
+maintained consistently. In the reliefs illustrating the life of S.
+Abondio we miss Luini's childlike grace, and find instead a something
+that reminds us of Donatello--a seeking after the classical in dress,
+carriage, and grouping of accessory figures. It may have been that the
+carver, recognising Luini's defective composition, and finding nothing
+in that master's manner adapted to the spirit of relief, had the good
+taste to render what was Luinesquely lovely in his female figures, and
+to fall back on a severer model for his basreliefs.
+
+The building-fund for the Duomo was raised in Como and its districts.
+Boxes were placed in all the churches to receive the alms of those who
+wished to aid the work. The clergy begged in Lent, and preached the
+duty of contributing on special days. Presents of lime and bricks
+and other materials were thankfully received. Bishops, canons, and
+municipal magistrates were expected to make costly gifts on taking
+office. Notaries, under penalty of paying 100 soldi if they neglected
+their engagement, were obliged to persuade testators, _cum bonis
+modis dulciter_, to inscribe the Duomo on their wills. Fines for
+various offences were voted to the building by the city. Each new
+burgher paid a certain sum; while guilds and farmers of the taxes
+bought monopolies and privileges at the price of yearly subsidies.
+A lottery was finally established for the benefit of the fabric.
+Of course each payment to the good work carried with it spiritual
+privileges; and so willingly did the people respond to the call of the
+Church, that during the sixteenth century the sums subscribed amounted
+to 200,000 golden crowns. Among the most munificent donators are
+mentioned the Marchese Giacomo Gallio, who bequeathed 290,000 lire,
+and a Benzi, who gave 10,000 ducats.
+
+While the people of Como were thus straining every nerve to complete
+a pious work, which at the same time is one of the most perfect
+masterpieces of Italian art, their lovely lake was turned into a
+pirate's stronghold, and its green waves stained with slaughter of
+conflicting navies. So curious is this episode in the history of the
+Larian lake that it is worth while to treat of it at some length.
+Moreover, the lives of few captains of adventure offer matter more
+rich in picturesque details and more illustrative of their times than
+that of Gian Giacomo de' Medici, the Larian corsair, long known and
+still remembered as Il Medeghino. He was born in Milan in 1498, at
+the beginning of that darkest and most disastrous period of Italian
+history, when the old fabric of social and political existence went to
+ruin under the impact of conflicting foreign armies. He lived on until
+the year 1555, witnessing and taking part in the dismemberment of the
+Milanese Duchy, playing a game of hazard at high stakes for his own
+profit with the two last Sforzas, the Empire, the French, and the
+Swiss. At the beginning of the century, while he was still a youth,
+the rich valley of the Valtelline, with Bormio and Chiavenna, had
+been assigned to the Grisons. The Swiss Cantons at the same time had
+possessed themselves of Lugano and Bellinzona. By these two acts of
+robbery the mountaineers tore a portion of its fairest territory from
+the Duchy; and whoever ruled in Milan, whether a Sforza, or a Spanish
+viceroy, or a French general, was impatient to recover the lost jewel
+of the ducal crown. So much has to be premised, because the scene of
+our hero's romantic adventures was laid upon the borderland between
+the Duchy and the Cantons. Intriguing at one time with the Duke of
+Milan, at another with his foes the French or Spaniards, Il Medeghino
+found free scope for his peculiar genius in a guerilla warfare,
+carried on with the avowed purpose of restoring the Valtelline to
+Milan. To steer a plain course through that chaos of politics, in
+which the modern student, aided by the calm clear lights of history
+and meditation, cannot find a clue, was of course impossible for an
+adventurer whose one aim was to gratify his passions and exalt himself
+at the expense of others. It is therefore of little use to seek
+motives of statecraft or of patriotism in the conduct of Il Medeghino.
+He was a man shaped according to Machiavelli's standard of political
+morality--self-reliant, using craft and force with cold indifference
+to moral ends, bent only upon wringing for himself the largest share
+of this world's power for men who, like himself, identified virtue
+with unflinching and immitigable egotism.
+
+Il Medeghino's father was Bernardo de' Medici, a Lombard, who neither
+claimed nor could have proved cousinship with the great Medicean
+family of Florence. His mother was Cecilia Serbelloni. The boy was
+educated in the fashionable humanistic studies, nourishing his young
+imagination with the tales of Roman heroes. The first exploit by which
+he proved his _virtù_, was the murder of a man he hated, at the
+age of sixteen. This 'virile act of vengeance,' as it was called,
+brought him into trouble, and forced him to choose the congenial
+profession of arms. At a time when violence and vigour passed for
+manliness, a spirited assassination formed the best of introductions
+to the captains of mixed mercenary troops. Il Medeghino rose in
+favour with his generals, helped to reinstate Francesco Sforza in his
+capital, and, returning himself to Milan, inflicted severe vengeance
+on the enemies who had driven him to exile. It was his ambition, at
+this early period of his life, to be made governor of the Castle of
+Musso, on the Lake of Como. While fighting in the neighbourhood, he
+had observed the unrivalled capacities for defence presented by its
+site; and some pre-vision of his future destinies now urged him to
+acquire it, as the basis for the free marauding life he planned. The
+headland of Musso lies about halfway between Gravedona and Menaggio,
+on the right shore of the Lake of Como. Planted on a pedestal of
+rock, and surmounted by a sheer cliff, there then stood a very ancient
+tower, commanding this promontory on the side of the land. Between it
+and the water the Visconti, in more recent days, had built a square
+fort; and the headland had been further strengthened by the addition
+of connecting walls and bastions pierced for cannon. Combining
+precipitous cliffs, strong towers, and easy access from the lake
+below, this fortress of Musso was exactly the fit station for a
+pirate. So long as he kept the command of the lake, he had little
+to fear from land attacks, and had a splendid basis for aggressive
+operations. Il Medeghino made his request to the Duke of Milan; but
+the foxlike Sforza would not grant him a plain answer. At length he
+hinted that if his suitor chose to rid him of a troublesome subject,
+the noble and popular Astore Visconti, he should receive Musso
+for payment. Crimes of bloodshed and treason sat lightly on the
+adventurer's conscience. In a short time he compassed the young
+Visconti's death, and claimed his reward. The Duke despatched him
+thereupon to Musso, with open letters to the governor, commanding him
+to yield the castle to the bearer. Private advice, also entrusted to
+Il Medeghino, bade the governor, on the contrary, cut the bearer's
+throat. The young man, who had the sense to read the Duke's letter,
+destroyed the secret document, and presented the other, or, as one
+version of the story goes, forged a ducal order in his own favour.[12]
+At any rate, the castle was placed in his hands; and affecting to know
+nothing of the Duke's intended treachery, Il Medeghino took possession
+of it as a trusted servant of the ducal crown.
+
+As soon as he was settled in his castle, the freebooter devoted all
+his energies to rendering it still more impregnable by strengthening
+the walls and breaking the cliffs into more horrid precipices. In this
+work he was assisted by his numerous friends and followers; for Musso
+rapidly became, like ancient Rome, an asylum for the ruffians and
+outlaws of neighbouring provinces. It is even said that his sisters,
+Clarina and Margherita, rendered efficient aid with manual labour. The
+mention of Clarina's name justifies a parenthetical side-glance at Il
+Medeghino's pedigree, which will serve to illustrate the exceptional
+conditions of Italian society during this age. She was married to
+the Count Giberto Borromeo, and became the mother of the pious Carlo
+Borromeo, whose shrine is still adored at Milan in the Duomo. Il
+Medeghino's brother, Giovan Angelo, rose to the Papacy, assuming the
+title of Pius IV. Thus this murderous marauder was the brother of a
+Pope and the uncle of a Saint; and these three persons of one family
+embraced the various degrees and typified the several characters which
+flourished with peculiar lustre in Renaissance Italy--the captain of
+adventure soaked in blood, the churchman unrivalled for intrigue, and
+the saint aflame with holiest enthusiasm. Il Medeghino was short of
+stature, but well made and powerful; broad-chested; with a penetrating
+voice and winning countenance. He dressed simply, like one of his own
+soldiers; slept but little; was insensible to carnal pleasure; and
+though he knew how to win the affection of his men by jovial speech,
+he maintained strict discipline in his little army. In all points he
+was an ideal bandit chief, never happy unless fighting or planning
+campaigns, inflexible of purpose, bold and cunning in the execution of
+his schemes, cruel to his enemies, generous to his followers,
+sacrificing all considerations, human and divine, to the one aim of
+his life, self-aggrandisement by force and intrigue. He knew well how
+to make himself both feared and respected. One instance of his dealing
+will suffice. A gentleman of Bellano, Polidoro Boldoni, in return to
+his advances, coldly replied that he cared for neither amity nor
+relationship with thieves and robbers; whereupon Il Medeghino
+extirpated his family, almost to a man.
+
+Soon after his settlement in Musso, Il Medeghino, wishing to secure
+the gratitude of the Duke, his master, began war with the Grisons.
+From Coire, from the Engadine, and from Davos, the Alpine pikemen were
+now pouring down to swell the troops of Francis I.; and their road lay
+through the Lake of Como. Il Medeghino burned all the boats upon the
+lake, except those which he took into his own service, and thus made
+himself master of the water passage. He then swept the 'length of
+lordly Lario' from Colico to Lecco, harrying the villages upon
+the shore, and cutting off the bands of journeying Switzers at his
+pleasure. Not content with this guerilla, he made a descent upon
+the territory of the Trepievi, and pushed far up towards Chiavenna,
+forcing the Grisons to recall their troops from the Milanese. These
+acts of prowess convinced the Duke that he had found a strong ally
+in the pirate chief. When Francis I. continued his attacks upon the
+Duchy, and the Grisons still adhered to their French paymaster, the
+Sforza formally invested Gian Giacomo de' Medici with the perpetual
+governorship of Musso, the Lake of Como, and as much as he could wrest
+from the Grisons above the lake. Furnished now with a just title for
+his depredations, Il Medeghino undertook the siege of Chiavenna. That
+town is the key to the valleys of the Splügen and Bregaglia. Strongly
+fortified and well situated for defence, the burghers of the Grisons
+well knew that upon its possession depended their power in the Italian
+valleys. To take it by assault was impossible, Il Medeghino used
+craft, entered the castle, and soon had the city at his disposition.
+Nor did he lose time in sweeping Val Bregaglia. The news of this
+conquest recalled the Switzers from the Duchy; and as they hurried
+homeward just before the battle of Pavia, it may be affirmed that Gian
+Giacomo de' Medici was instrumental in the defeat and capture of the
+French King. The mountaineers had no great difficulty in dislodging
+their pirate enemy from Chiavenna, the Valtelline, and Val Bregaglia.
+But he retained his hold on the Trepievi, occupied the Valsassina,
+took Porlezza, and established himself still more strongly in Musso as
+the corsair monarch of the lake.
+
+The tyranny of the Sforzas in Milan was fast going to pieces between
+France and Spain; and in 1526 the Marquis of Pescara occupied the
+capital in the name of Charles V. The Duke, meanwhile, remained a
+prisoner in his Castello. Il Medeghino was now without a master; for
+he refused to acknowledge the Spaniards, preferring to watch events
+and build his own power on the ruins of the dukedom. At the head of
+4,000 men, recruited from the lakes and neighbouring valleys, he
+swept the country far and wide, and occupied the rich champaign of the
+Brianza. He was now lord of the lakes of Como and Lugano, and absolute
+in Lecco and the adjoining valleys. The town of Como itself alone
+belonged to the Spaniards; and even Como was blockaded by the navy of
+the corsair. Il Medeghino had a force of seven big ships, with three
+sails and forty-eight oars, bristling with guns and carrying marines.
+His flagship was a large brigantine, manned by picked rowers, from
+the mast of which floated the red banner with the golden palle of the
+Medicean arms. Besides these larger vessels, he commanded a flotilla
+of countless small boats. It is clear that to reckon with him was a
+necessity. If he could not be put down with force, he might be bought
+over by concessions. The Spaniards adopted the second course, and Il
+Medeghino, judging that the cause of the Sforza family was desperate,
+determined in 1528 to attach himself to the Empire. Charles V.
+invested him with the Castle of Musso and the larger part of Como
+Lake, including the town of Lecco. He now assumed the titles of
+Marquis of Musso and Count of Lecco: and in order to prove his
+sovereignty before the world, he coined money with his own name and
+devices.
+
+It will be observed that Gian Giacomo de' Medici had hitherto acted
+with a single-hearted view to his own interests. At the age of thirty
+he had raised himself from nothing to a principality, which, though
+petty, might compare with many of some name in Italy--with Carpi, for
+example, or Mirandola, or Camerino. Nor did he mean to remain quiet
+in the prime of life. He regarded Como Lake as the mere basis for more
+arduous undertakings. Therefore, when the whirligig of events restored
+Francesco Sforza to his duchy in 1529, Il Medeghino refused to obey
+his old lord. Pretending to move under the Duke's orders, but really
+acting for himself alone, he proceeded to attack his ancient
+enemies, the Grisons. By fraud and force he worked his way into
+their territory, seized Morbegno, and overran the Valtelline. He
+was destined, however, to receive a serious check. Twelve thousand
+Switzers rose against him on the one hand, on the other the Duke of
+Milan sent a force by land and water to subdue his rebel subject,
+while Alessandro Gonzaga marched upon his castles in the Brianza. He
+was thus assailed by formidable forces from three quarters, converging
+upon the Lake of Como, and driving him to his chosen element, the
+water. Hastily quitting the Valtelline, he fell back to the Castle of
+Mandello on the lake, collected his navy, and engaged the ducal ships
+in a battle off Menaggio. In this battle he was worsted. But he did
+not lose his courage. From Bellagio, from Varenna, from Bellano he
+drove forth his enemies, rolled the cannon of the Switzers into the
+lake, regained Lecco, defeated the troops of Alessandro Gonzaga, and
+took the Duke of Mantua prisoner. Had he but held Como, it is probable
+that he might have obtained such terms at this time as would have
+consolidated his tyranny. The town of Como, however, now belonged
+to the Duke of Milan, and formed an excellent basis for operations
+against the pirate. Overmatched, with an exhausted treasury and broken
+forces, Il Medeghino was at last compelled to give in. Yet he retired
+with all the honours of war. In exchange for Musso and the lake, the
+Duke agreed to give him 35,000 golden crowns, together with the feud
+and marquisate of Marignano. A free pardon was promised not only
+to himself and his brothers, but to all his followers; and the Duke
+further undertook to transport his artillery and munitions of war at
+his own expense to Marignano. Having concluded this treaty under the
+auspices of Charles V. and his lieutenant, Il Medeghino, in March
+1532, set sail from Musso, and turned his back upon the lake for
+ever. The Switzers immediately destroyed the towers, forts, walls, and
+bastions of the Musso promontory, leaving in the midst of their ruins
+the little chapel of S. Eufemia.
+
+Gian Giacomo de' Medici, henceforth known to Europe as the Marquis
+of Marignano, now took service under Spain; and through the favour
+of Anton de Leyva, Viceroy for the Duchy, rose to the rank of
+Field Marshal. When the Marquis del Vasto succeeded to the Spanish
+governorship of Milan in 1536, he determined to gratify an old grudge
+against the ex-pirate, and, having invited him to a banquet, made him
+prisoner. II Medeghino was not, however, destined to languish in a
+dungeon. Princes and kings interested themselves in his fate. He
+was released, and journeyed to the court of Charles V. in Spain.
+The Emperor received him kindly, and employed him first in the Low
+Countries, where he helped to repress the burghers of Ghent, and at
+the siege of Landrecy commanded the Spanish artillery against other
+Italian captains of adventure: for, Italy being now dismembered and
+enslaved, her sons sought foreign service where they found best pay
+and widest scope for martial science. Afterwards the Medici ruled
+Bohemia as Spanish Viceroy; and then, as general of the league formed
+by the Duke of Florence, the Emperor, and the Pope to repress the
+liberties of Tuscany, distinguished himself in that cruel war of
+extermination, which turned the fair Contado of Siena into a poisonous
+Maremma. To the last Il Medeghino preserved the instincts and the
+passions of a brigand chief. It was at this time that, acting for the
+Grand Duke of Tuscany, he first claimed open kinship with the Medici
+of Florence. Heralds and genealogists produced a pedigree, which
+seemed to authorise this pretension; he was recognised, together with
+his brother, Pius IV., as an offshoot of the great house which had
+already given Dukes to Florence, Kings to France, and two Popes to
+the Christian world. In the midst of all this foreign service he never
+forgot his old dream of conquering the Valtelline; and in 1547 he
+made proposals to the Emperor for a new campaign against the Grisons.
+Charles V. did not choose to engage in a war, the profits of which
+would have been inconsiderable for the master of half the civilised
+world, and which might have proved troublesome by stirring up the
+tameless Switzers. Il Medeghino was obliged to abandon a project
+cherished from the earliest dawn of his adventurous manhood.
+
+When Gian Giacomo died in 1555, his brother Battista succeeded to his
+claims upon Lecco and the Trepievi. His monument, magnificent with
+five bronze figures, the masterpiece of Leone Lioni, from Menaggio,
+Michelangelesque in style, and of consummate workmanship, still adorns
+the Duomo of Milan. It stands close by the door that leads to the
+roof. This mausoleum, erected to the memory of Gian Giacomo and
+his brother Gabrio, is said to have cost 7800 golden crowns. On the
+occasion of the pirate's funeral the Senate of Milan put on mourning,
+and the whole city followed the great robber, the hero of Renaissance
+_virtù_, to the grave.
+
+Between the Cathedral of Como and the corsair Medeghino there is but
+a slight link. Yet so extraordinary were the social circumstances of
+Renaissance Italy, that almost at every turn, on her seaboard, in her
+cities, from her hill-tops, we are compelled to blend our admiration
+for the loveliest and purest works of art amid the choicest scenes
+of nature with memories of execrable crimes and lawless characters.
+Sometimes, as at Perugia, the _nexus_ is but local. At others,
+one single figure, like that of Cellini, unites both points of view in
+a romance of unparalleled dramatic vividness. Or, again, beneath
+the vaults of the Certosa, near Pavia, a masterpiece of the serenest
+beauty carries our thoughts perforce back to the hideous cruelties
+and snake-like frauds of its despotic founder. This is the excuse
+for combining two such diverse subjects in one study.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_BERGAMO AND BARTOLOMMEO COLLEONI_
+
+
+From the new town of commerce to the old town of history upon the
+hill, the road is carried along a rampart lined, with horse-chestnut
+trees--clumps of massy foliage, and snowy pyramids of bloom, expanded
+in the rapture of a southern spring. Each pair of trees between their
+stems and arch of intermingling leaves includes a space of plain,
+checkered with cloud-shadows, melting blue and green in amethystine
+haze. To right and left the last spurs of the Alps descend, jutting
+like promontories, heaving like islands from the misty breadth below:
+and here and there are towers, half-lost in airy azure; and cities
+dwarfed to blots; and silvery lines where rivers flow; and distant,
+vapour-drowned, dim crests of Apennines. The city walls above us wave
+with snapdragons and iris among fig-trees sprouting from the riven
+stones. There are terraces over-rioted with pergolas of vine, and
+houses shooting forward into balconies and balustrades, from which a
+Romeo might launch himself at daybreak, warned by the lark's song.
+A sudden angle in the road is turned, and we pass from airspace and
+freedom into the old town, beneath walls of dark brown masonry, where
+wild valerians light their torches of red bloom in immemorial shade.
+Squalor and splendour live here side by side. Grand Renaissance
+portals grinning with Satyr masks are flanked by tawdry frescoes
+shamming stonework, or by doorways where the withered bush hangs out
+a promise of bad wine. The Cappella Colleoni is our destination, that
+masterpiece of the sculptor-architect's craft, with its variegated
+marbles,--rosy and white and creamy yellow and jet-black,--in
+patterns, basreliefs, pilasters, statuettes, encrusted on the fanciful
+domed shrine. Upon the façade are mingled, in the true Renaissance
+spirit of genial acceptance, motives Christian and Pagan with supreme
+impartiality. Medallions of emperors and gods alternate with virtues,
+angels and cupids in a maze of loveliest arabesque; and round the
+base of the building are told two stories--the one of Adam from his
+creation to his fall, the other of Hercules and his labours. Italian
+craftsmen of the _quattrocento_ were not averse to setting
+thus together, in one framework, the myths of our first parents and
+Alemena's son: partly perhaps because both subjects gave scope to
+the free treatment of the nude; but partly also, we may venture to
+surmise, because the heroism of Hellas counterbalanced the sin of
+Eden. Here then we see how Adam and Eve were made and tempted and
+expelled from Paradise and set to labour, how Cain killed Abel, and
+Lamech slew a man to his hurt, and Isaac was offered on the mountain.
+The tale of human sin and the promise of redemption are epitomised
+in twelve of the sixteen basreliefs. The remaining four show Hercules
+wrestling with Antĉus, taming the Nemean lion, extirpating the Hydra,
+and bending to his will the bull of Crete. Labour, appointed for a
+punishment to Adam, becomes a title to immortality for the hero.
+The dignity of man is reconquered by prowess for the Greek, as it is
+repurchased for the Christian by vicarious suffering. Many may think
+this interpretation of Amadeo's basreliefs far-fetched; yet, such as
+it is, it agrees with the spirit of Humanism, bent ever on harmonising
+the two great traditions of the past. Of the workmanship little need
+be said, except that it is wholly Lombard, distinguished from the
+similar work of Della Quercia at Bologna and Siena by a more imperfect
+feeling for composition, and a lack of monumental gravity, yet
+graceful, rich in motives, and instinct with a certain wayward
+_improvvisatore_ charm.
+
+This Chapel was built by the great Condottiere Bartolommeo Colleoni,
+to be the monument of his puissance even in the grave. It had been
+the Sacristy of S. Maria Maggiore, which, when the Consiglio della
+Misericordia refused it to him for his half-proud, half-pious purpose,
+he took and held by force. The structure, of costliest materials,
+reared by Gian Antonio Amadeo, cost him 50,000 golden florins. An
+equestrian statue of gilt wood, voted to him by the town of Bergamo,
+surmounts his monument inside the Chapel. This was the work of two
+German masters, called 'Sisto figlio di Enrico Syri da Norimberga'
+and 'Leonardo Tedesco.' The tomb itself is of marble, executed for the
+most part in a Lombard style resembling Amadeo's, but scarcely
+worthy of his genius. The whole effect is disappointing. Five figures
+representing Mars, Hercules, and three sons-in-law of Colleoni, who
+surround the sarcophagus of the buried general, are indeed almost
+grotesque. The angularity and crumpled draperies of the Milanese
+manner, when so exaggerated, produce an impression of caricature. Yet
+many subordinate details--a row of _putti_ in a _cinquecento_ frieze,
+for instance--and much of the low relief work--especially the
+Crucifixion with its characteristic episodes of the fainting Maries
+and the soldiers casting dice--are lovely in their unaffected
+Lombardism.
+
+There is another portrait of Colleoni in a round above the great door,
+executed with spirit, though in a _bravura_ style that curiously
+anticipates the decline of Italian sculpture. Gaunt, hollow-eyed,
+with prominent cheek bones and strong jaws, this animated, half-length
+statue of the hero bears the stamp of a good likeness; but when or by
+whom it was made, I do not know.
+
+Far more noteworthy than Colleoni's own monument is that of his
+daughter Medea. She died young in 1470, and her father caused her
+tomb, carved of Carrara marble, to be placed in the Dominican Church
+of Basella, which he had previously founded. It was not until 1842
+that this most precious masterpiece of Antonio Amadeo's skill was
+transferred to Bergamo. _Hic jacet Medea virgo._ Her hands are
+clasped across her breast. A robe of rich brocade, gathered to the
+waist and girdled, lies in simple folds upon the bier. Her throat,
+exceedingly long and slender, is circled with a string of pearls.
+Her face is not beautiful, for the features, especially the nose,
+are large and prominent; but it is pure and expressive of vivid
+individuality. The hair curls in crisp short clusters, and the ear,
+fine and shaped almost like a Faun's, reveals the scrupulous fidelity
+of the sculptor. Italian art has, in truth, nothing more exquisite
+than this still sleeping figure of the girl, who, when she lived, must
+certainly have been so rare of type and lovable in personality. If
+Busti's Lancinus Curtius be the portrait of a humanist, careworn with
+study, burdened by the laurel leaves that were so dry and dusty--if
+Gaston de Foix in the Brera, smiling at death and beautiful in
+the cropped bloom of youth, idealise the hero of romance--if
+Michelangelo's Penseroso translate in marble the dark broodings of a
+despot's soul--if Della Porta's Julia Farnese be the Roman courtesan
+magnificently throned in nonchalance at a Pope's footstool--if
+Verocchio's Colleoni on his horse at Venice impersonate the pomp
+and circumstance of scientific war--surely this Medea exhales the
+flower-like graces, the sweet sanctities of human life, that even in
+that turbid age were found among high-bred Italian ladies. Such power
+have mighty sculptors, even in our modern world, to make the mute
+stone speak in poems and clasp the soul's life of a century in some
+five or six transcendent forms.
+
+The Colleoni, or Coglioni, family were of considerable antiquity and
+well-authenticated nobility in the town of Bergamo. Two lions' heads
+conjoined formed one of their canting ensigns; another was borrowed
+from the vulgar meaning of their name. Many members of the house held
+important office during the three centuries preceding the birth of the
+famous general, Bartolommeo. He was born in the year 1400 at Solza, in
+the Bergamasque Contado. His father Paolo, or Pùho as he was commonly
+called, was poor and exiled from the city, together with the rest of
+the Guelf nobles, by the Visconti. Being a man of daring spirit, and
+little inclined to languish in a foreign state as the dependent on
+some patron, Pùho formed the bold design of seizing the Castle of
+Trezzo. This he achieved in 1405 by fraud, and afterwards held it as
+his own by force. Partly with the view of establishing himself more
+firmly in his acquired lordship, and partly out of family affection,
+Pùho associated four of his first-cousins in the government of Trezzo.
+They repaid his kindness with an act of treason and cruelty, only too
+characteristic of those times in Italy. One day while he was playing
+at draughts in a room of the Castle, they assaulted him and killed
+him, seized his wife and the boy Bartolommeo, and flung them into
+prison. The murdered Pùho had another son, Antonio, who escaped and
+took refuge with Giorgio Benzone, the tyrant of Crema. After a short
+time the Colleoni brothers found means to assassinate him also;
+therefore Bartolommeo alone, a child of whom no heed was taken,
+remained to be his father's avenger. He and his mother lived together
+in great indigence at Solza, until the lad felt strong enough to enter
+the service of one of the numerous petty Lombard princes, and to
+make himself if possible a captain of adventure. His name alone was a
+sufficient introduction, and the Duchy of Milan, dismembered upon the
+death of Gian Maria Visconti, was in such a state that all the minor
+despots were increasing their forces and preparing to defend by arms
+the fragments they had seized from the Visconti heritage. Bartolommeo
+therefore had no difficulty in recommending himself to Filippo
+d'Arcello, sometime general in the pay of the Milanese, but now the
+new lord of Piacenza. With this master he remained as page for two or
+three years, learning the use of arms, riding, and training himself
+in the physical exercises which were indispensable to a young Italian
+soldier. Meanwhile Filippo Maria Visconti reacquired his hereditary
+dominions; and at the age of twenty, Bartolommeo found it prudent
+to seek a patron stronger than d'Arcello. The two great Condottieri,
+Sforza Attendolo and Braccio, divided the military glories of Italy at
+this period; and any youth who sought to rise in his profession,
+had to enrol himself under the banners of the one or the other.
+Bartolommeo chose Braccio for his master, and was enrolled among his
+men as a simple trooper, or _ragazzo_, with no better prospects
+than he could make for himself by the help of his talents and his
+borrowed horse and armour. Braccio at this time was in Apulia,
+prosecuting the war of the Neapolitan Succession disputed between
+Alfonso of Aragon and Louis of Anjou under the weak sovereignty of
+Queen Joan. On which side of a quarrel a Condottiere fought mattered
+but little: so great was the confusion of Italian politics, and so
+complete was the egotism of these fraudful, violent, and treacherous
+party leaders. Yet it may be mentioned that Braccio had espoused
+Alfonso's cause. Bartolommeo Colleoni early distinguished himself
+among the ranks of the Bracceschi. But he soon perceived that he
+could better his position by deserting to another camp. Accordingly
+he offered his services to Jacopo Caldora, one of Joan's generals, and
+received from him a commission of twenty men-at-arms. It may here
+be parenthetically said that the rank and pay of an Italian captain
+varied with the number of the men he brought into the field. His title
+'Condottiere' was derived from the circumstance that he was said to
+have received a _Condotta di venti cavalli_, and so forth.
+Each _cavallo_ was equal to one mounted man-at-arms and two
+attendants, who were also called _ragazzi_. It was his business
+to provide the stipulated number of men, to keep them in good
+discipline, and to satisfy their just demands. Therefore an Italian
+army at this epoch consisted of numerous small armies varying in
+size, each held together by personal engagements to a captain, and all
+dependent on the will of a general-in-chief, who had made a bargain
+with some prince or republic for supplying a fixed contingent of
+fighting-men. The _Condottiere_ was in other words a contractor
+or _impresario_, undertaking to do a certain piece of work for a
+certain price, and to furnish the requisite forces for the business
+in good working order. It will be readily seen upon this system how
+important were the personal qualities of the captain, and what great
+advantages those Condottieri had, who, like the petty princes
+of Romagna and the March, the Montefeltri, Ordelaffi, Malatesti,
+Manfredi, Orsini, and Vitelli, could rely upon a race of hardy vassals
+for their recruits.
+
+It is not necessary to follow Colleoni's fortunes in the Regno, at
+Aquila, Ancona, and Bologna. He continued in the service of Caldora,
+who was now General of the Church, and had his _Condotta_
+gradually increased. Meanwhile his cousins, the murderers of his
+father, began to dread his rising power, and determined, if possible,
+to ruin him. He was not a man to be easily assassinated; so they sent
+a hired ruffian to Caldora's camp to say that Bartolommeo had taken
+his name by fraud, and that he was himself the real son of Pùho
+Colleoni. Bartolommeo defied the liar to a duel; and this would have
+taken place before the army, had not two witnesses appeared, who knew
+the fathers of both Colleoni and the _bravo_, and who gave such
+evidence that the captains of the army were enabled to ascertain the
+truth. The impostor was stripped and drummed out of the camp.
+
+At the conclusion of a peace between the Pope and the Bolognese,
+Bartolommeo found himself without occupation. He now offered himself
+to the Venetians, and began to fight again under the great Carmagnola
+against Filippo Visconti. His engagement allowed him forty men,
+which, after the judicial murder of Carmagnola at Venice in 1432, were
+increased to eighty. Erasmo da Narni, better known as Gattamelata, was
+now his general-in-chief--a man who had risen from the lowest fortunes
+to one of the most splendid military positions in Italy. Colleoni
+spent the next years of his life, until 1443, in Lombardy, manoeuvring
+against Il Piccinino, and gradually rising in the Venetian service,
+until his Condotta reached the number of 800 men. Upon Gattamelata's
+death at Padua in 1440, Colleoni became the most important of the
+generals who had fought with Caldora in the March. The lordships of
+Romano in the Bergamasque and of Covo and Antegnate in the Cremonese
+had been assigned to him; and he was in a position to make independent
+engagements with princes. What distinguished him as a general, was a
+combination of caution with audacity. He united the brilliant system
+of his master Braccio with the more prudent tactics of the Sforzeschi;
+and thus, though he often surprised his foes by daring stratagems
+and vigorous assaults, he rarely met with any serious check. He was a
+captain who could be relied upon for boldly seizing an advantage,
+no less than for using a success with discretion. Moreover he had
+acquired an almost unique reputation for honesty in dealing with his
+masters, and for justice combined with humane indulgence to his men.
+His company was popular, and he could always bring capital troops into
+the field.
+
+In the year 1443 Colleoni quitted the Venetian service on account of a
+quarrel with Gherardo Dandolo, the Provoditore of the Republic. He
+now took a commission from Filippo Maria Visconti, who received him at
+Milan with great honour, bestowed on him the Castello Adorno at Pavia,
+and sent him into the March of Ancona upon a military expedition. Of
+all Italian tyrants this Visconti was the most difficult to serve.
+Constitutionally timid, surrounded with a crowd of spies and base
+informers, shrinking from the sight of men in the recesses of his
+palace, and controlling the complicated affairs of his Duchy by means
+of correspondents and intelligencers, this last scion of the Milanese
+despots lived like a spider in an inscrutable network of suspicion
+and intrigue. His policy was one of endless plot and counterplot. He
+trusted no man; his servants were paid to act as spies on one another;
+his bodyguard consisted of mutually hostile mercenaries; his captains
+in the field were watched and thwarted by commissioners appointed to
+check them at the point of successful ambition or magnificent victory.
+The historian has a hard task when he tries to fathom the Visconti's
+schemes, or to understand his motives. Half the Duke's time seems to
+have been spent in unravelling the webs that he had woven, in undoing
+his own work, and weakening the hands of his chosen ministers.
+Conscious that his power was artificial, that the least breath might
+blow him back into the nothingness from which he had arisen on the
+wrecks of his father's tyranny, he dreaded the personal eminence of
+his generals above all things. His chief object was to establish a
+system of checks, by means of which no one whom he employed should
+at any moment be great enough to threaten him. The most formidable
+of these military adventurers, Francesco Sforza, had been secured by
+marriage with Bianca Maria Visconti, his master's only daughter, in
+1441; but the Duke did not even trust his son-in-law. The last six
+years of his life were spent in scheming to deprive Sforza of his
+lordships; and the war in the March, on which he employed Colleoni,
+had the object of ruining the principality acquired by this daring
+captain from Pope Eugenius IV. in 1443.
+
+Colleoni was by no means deficient in those foxlike qualities which
+were necessary to save the lion from the toils spread for him by
+Italian intriguers. He had already shown that he knew how to push his
+own interests, by changing sides and taking service with the highest
+bidder, as occasion prompted. Nor, though his character for probity
+and loyalty stood exceptionally high among the men of his profession,
+was he the slave to any questionable claims of honour or of duty. In
+that age of confused politics and extinguished patriotism, there
+was not indeed much scope for scrupulous honesty. But Filippo Maria
+Visconti proved more than a match for him in craft. While Colleoni
+was engaged in pacifying the revolted population of Bologna, the Duke
+yielded to the suggestion of his parasites at Milan, who whispered
+that the general was becoming dangerously powerful. He recalled him,
+and threw him without trial into the dungeons of the Forni at Monza.
+Here Colleoni remained a prisoner more than a year, until the
+Duke's death in 1447, when he made his escape, and profited by the
+disturbance of the Duchy to reacquire his lordships in the Bergamasque
+territory. The true motive for his imprisonment remains still buried
+in obscure conjecture. Probably it was not even known to the Visconti,
+who acted on this, as on so many other occasions, by a mere spasm of
+suspicious jealousy, for which he could have given no account.
+
+From the year 1447 to the year 1455, it is difficult to follow
+Colleoni's movements, or to trace his policy. First, we find
+him employed by the Milanese Republic, during its brief space of
+independence; then he is engaged by the Venetians, with a commission
+for 1500 horse; next, he is in the service of Francesco Sforza; once
+more in that of the Venetians, and yet again in that of the Duke of
+Milan. His biographer relates with pride that, during this period,
+he was three times successful against French troops in Piedmont and
+Lombardy. It appears that he made short engagements, and changed his
+paymasters according to convenience. But all this time he rose in
+personal importance, acquired fresh lordships in the Bergamasque, and
+accumulated wealth. He reached the highest point of his prosperity
+in 1455, when the Republic of S. Mark elected him General-in-Chief of
+their armies, with the fullest powers, and with a stipend of 100,000
+florins. For nearly twenty-one years, until the day of his death, in
+1475, Colleoni held this honourable and lucrative office. In his will
+he charged the Signory of Venice that they should never again commit
+into the hands of a single captain such unlimited control over their
+military resources. It was indeed no slight tribute to Colleoni's
+reputation for integrity, that the jealous Republic, which had
+signified its sense of Carmagnola's untrustworthiness by capital
+punishment, should have left him so long in the undisturbed disposal
+of their army. The Standard and the Bâton of S. Mark were conveyed to
+Colleoni by two ambassadors, and presented to him at Brescia on June
+24, 1455. Three years later he made a triumphal entry into Venice, and
+received the same ensigns of military authority from the hands of the
+new Doge, Pasquale Malipiero. On this occasion his staff consisted of
+some two hundred officers, splendidly armed, and followed by a train
+of serving-men. Noblemen from Bergamo, Brescia, and other cities of
+the Venetian territory, swelled the cortege. When they embarked on the
+lagoons, they found the water covered with boats and gondolas, bearing
+the population of Venice in gala attire, to greet the illustrious
+guest with instruments of music. Three great galleys of the Republic,
+called Bucentaurs, issued from the crowd of smaller craft. On the
+first was the Doge in his state robes, attended by the government in
+office, or the Signoria of S. Mark. On the second were members of the
+Senate and minor magistrates. The third carried the ambassadors of
+foreign powers. Colleoni was received into the first state-galley,
+and placed by the side of the Doge. The oarsmen soon cleared the
+space between the land and Venice, passed the small canals, and
+swept majestically up the Canalozzo among the plaudits of the crowds
+assembled on both sides to cheer their General. Thus they reached the
+piazzetta, where Colleoni alighted between the two great pillars,
+and, conducted by the Doge in person, walked to the Church of S.
+Mark. Here, after Mass had been said, and a sermon had been preached,
+kneeling before the high altar he received the truncheon from the
+Doge's hands. The words of his commission ran as follows:--
+
+'By authority and decree of this most excellent City of Venice, of
+us the Prince, and of the Senate, you are to be Commander and Captain
+General of all our forces and armaments on terra firma. Take from
+our hands this truncheon, with good augury and fortune, as sign and
+warrant of your power. Be it your care and effort, with dignity and
+splendour to maintain and to defend the Majesty, the Loyalty, and the
+Principles of this Empire. Neither provoking, not yet provoked, unless
+at our command, shall you break into open warfare with our enemies.
+Free jurisdiction and lordship over each one of our soldiers, except
+in cases of treason, we hereby commit to you.'
+
+After the ceremony of his reception, Colleoni was conducted with
+no less pomp to his lodgings, and the next ten days were spent in
+festivities of all sorts.
+
+The commandership-in-chief of the Venetian forces was perhaps the
+highest military post in Italy. It placed Colleoni on the pinnacle
+of his profession, and made his camp the favourite school of young
+soldiers. Among his pupils or lieutenants we read of Ercole d'Este,
+the future Duke of Ferrara; Alessandro Sforza, lord of Pesaro;
+Boniface, Marquis of Montferrat; Cicco and Pino Ordelaffi, princes
+of Forli; Astorre Manfredi, the lord of Faenza; three Counts of
+Mirandola; two princes of Carpi; Deifobo, the Count of Anguillara;
+Giovanni Antonio Caldora, lord of Jesi in the March; and many others
+of less name. Honours came thick upon him. When one of the many
+ineffectual leagues against the infidel was formed in 1468, during the
+pontificate of Paul II., he was named Captain-General for the Crusade.
+Pius II. designed him for the leader of the expedition he had planned
+against the impious and savage despot, Sigismondo Malatesta. King René
+of Anjou, by special patent, authorised him to bear his name and
+arms, and made him a member of his family. The Duke of Burgundy, by
+a similar heraldic fiction, conferred upon him his name and armorial
+bearings. This will explain why Colleoni is often styled 'di Andegavia
+e Borgogna.' In the case of René, the honour was but a barren show.
+But the patent of Charles the Bold had more significance. In 1473 he
+entertained the project of employing the great Italian General against
+his Swiss foes; nor does it seem reasonable to reject a statement made
+by Colleoni's biographer, to the effect that a secret compact had been
+drawn up between him and the Duke of Burgundy, for the conquest and
+partition of the Duchy of Milan. The Venetians, in whose service
+Colleoni still remained, when they became aware of this project, met
+it with peaceful but irresistible opposition.
+
+Colleoni had been engaged continually since his earliest boyhood in
+the trade of war. It was not therefore possible that he should have
+gained a great degree of literary culture. Yet the fashion of the
+times made it necessary that a man in his position should seek the
+society of scholars. Accordingly his court and camp were crowded with
+students, in whose wordy disputations he is said to have delighted. It
+will be remembered that his contemporaries, Alfonso the Magnanimous,
+Francesco Sforza, Federigo of Urbino, and Sigismondo Pandolfo
+Malatesta, piqued themselves at least as much upon their patronage of
+letters, as upon their prowess in the field.
+
+Colleoni's court, like that of Urbino, was a model of good manners. As
+became a soldier, he was temperate in food and moderate in slumber. It
+was recorded of him that he had never sat more than one hour at meat
+in his own house, and that he never overslept the sunrise. After
+dinner he would converse with his friends, using commonly his native
+dialect of Bergamo, and entertaining the company now with stories of
+adventure, and now with pithy sayings. In another essential point he
+resembled his illustrious contemporary, the Duke of Urbino; for he was
+sincerely pious in an age which, however it preserved the decencies
+of ceremonial religion, was profoundly corrupt at heart. His principal
+lordships in the Bergamasque territory owed to his munificence their
+fairest churches and charitable institutions. At Martinengo, for
+example, he rebuilt and re-endowed two monasteries, the one dedicated
+to S. Chiara, the other to S. Francis. In Bergamo itself he founded an
+establishment named' La Pieta,' for the good purpose of dowering and
+marrying poor girls. This house he endowed with a yearly income of
+3000 ducats. The Sulphur baths of Trescorio, at some distance from the
+city, were improved and opened to poor patients by a hospital which
+he provided. At Rumano he raised a church to S. Peter, and erected
+buildings of public utility, which on his death he bequeathed to
+the society of the Misericordia in that town. All the places of his
+jurisdiction owed to him such benefits as good water, new walls, and
+irrigation works. In addition to these munificent foundations must
+be mentioned the Basella, or Monastery of Dominican friars, which he
+established not far from Bergamo, upon the river Serio, in memory of
+his beloved daughter Medea. Last, not least, was the Chapel of S. John
+the Baptist, attached to the Church of S. Maria Maggiore, which he
+endowed with fitting maintenance for two priests and deacons.
+
+The one defect acknowledged by his biographer was his partiality
+for women. Early in life he married Tisbe, of the noble house of the
+Brescian Martinenghi, who bore him one daughter, Caterina, wedded to
+Gasparre Martinengo. Two illegitimate daughters, Ursina and Isotta,
+were recognised and treated by him as legitimate. The first he gave in
+marriage to Gherardo Martinengo, and the second to Jacopo of the
+same family. Two other natural children, Doratina and Ricardona, were
+mentioned in his will: he left them four thousand ducats a piece for
+dowry. Medea, the child of his old age (for she was born to him when
+he was sixty), died before her father, and was buried, as we have
+seen, in the Chapel of Basella.
+
+Throughout his life he was distinguished for great physical strength
+and agility. When he first joined the troop of Braccio, he could race,
+with his corselet on, against the swiftest runner of the army; and
+when he was stripped, few horses could beat him in speed. Far on into
+old age he was in the habit of taking long walks every morning for the
+sake of exercise, and delighted in feats of arms and jousting matches.
+'He was tall, straight, and full of flesh, well proportioned, and
+excellently made in all his limbs. His complexion inclined somewhat to
+brown, but was coloured with sanguine and lively carnation. His eyes
+were black; in look and sharpness of light, they were vivid, piercing,
+and terrible. The outlines of his nose and all his countenance
+expressed a certain manly nobleness, combined with goodness and
+prudence.' Such is the portrait drawn of Colleoni by his biographer;
+and it well accords with the famous bronze statue of the general at
+Venice.
+
+Colleoni lived with a magnificence that suited his rank. His favourite
+place of abode was Malpaga, a castle built by him at the distance of
+about an hour's drive from Bergamo. The place is worth a visit, though
+its courts and gates and galleries have now been turned into a monster
+farm, and the southern rooms, where Colleoni entertained his guests,
+are given over to the silkworms. Half a dozen families, employed upon
+a vast estate of the Martinengo family, occupy the still substantial
+house and stables. The moat is planted with mulberry-trees; the upper
+rooms are used as granaries for golden maize; cows, pigs, and horses
+litter in the spacious yard. Yet the walls of the inner court and of
+the ancient state rooms are brilliant with frescoes, executed by some
+good Venetian hand, which represent the chief events of Colleoni's
+life--his battles, his reception by the Signory of Venice,
+his tournaments and hawking parties, and the great series of
+entertainments with which he welcomed Christiern of Denmark. This king
+had made his pilgrimage to Rome and was returning westward, when the
+fame of Colleoni and his princely state at Malpaga induced him to turn
+aside and spend some days as the general's guest. In order to do
+him honour, Colleoni left his castle at the king's disposal and
+established himself with all his staff and servants in a camp at some
+distance from Malpaga. The camp was duly furnished with tents and
+trenches, stockades, artillery, and all the other furniture of war. On
+the king's approach, Colleoni issued with trumpets blowing and banners
+flying to greet his guest, gratifying him thus with a spectacle of the
+pomp and circumstance of war as carried on in Italy. The visit
+was further enlivened by sham fights, feats of arms, and trials of
+strength. When it ended, Colleoni presented the king with one of
+his own suits of armour, and gave to each of his servants a complete
+livery of red and white, his colours. Among the frescoes at Malpaga
+none are more interesting, and none, thanks to the silkworms rather
+than to any other cause, are fortunately in a better state of
+preservation, than those which represent this episode in the history
+of the Castle.
+
+Colleoni died in the year 1475, at the age of seventy-five. Since he
+left no male representative, he constituted the Republic of S. Mark
+his heir-in-chief, after properly providing for his daughters and his
+numerous foundations. The Venetians received under this testament a
+sum of 100,000 ducats, together with all arrears of pay due to him,
+and 10,000 ducats owed him by the Duke of Ferrara. It set forth the
+testator's intention that this money should be employed in defence of
+the Christian faith against the Turk. One condition was attached to
+the bequest. The legatees were to erect a statue to Colleoni on the
+Piazza of S. Mark. This, however, involved some difficulty; for the
+proud Republic had never accorded a similar honour, nor did they
+choose to encumber their splendid square with a monument. They evaded
+the condition by assigning the Campo in front of the Scuola di S.
+Marco, where also stands the Church of S. Zanipolo, to the purpose.
+Here accordingly the finest bronze equestrian statue in Italy, if we
+except the Marcus Aurelius of the Capitol, was reared upon its marble
+pedestal by Andrea Verocchio and Alessandro Leopardi.
+
+Colleoni's liberal expenditure of wealth found its reward in the
+immortality conferred by art. While the names of Braccio, his master
+in the art of war, and of Piccinino, his great adversary, are familiar
+to few but professed students, no one who has visited either Bergamo
+or Venice can fail to have learned something about the founder of the
+Chapel of S. John and the original of Leopardi's bronze. The annals
+of sculpture assign to Verocchio, of Florence, the principal share in
+this statue: but Verocchio died before it was cast; and even granting
+that he designed the model, its execution must be attributed to his
+collaborator, the Venetian Leopardi. For my own part, I am loth to
+admit that the chief credit of this masterpiece belongs to a man whose
+undisputed work at Florence shows but little of its living spirit and
+splendour of suggested motion. That the Tuscan science of Verocchio
+secured conscientious modelling for man and horse may be assumed; but
+I am fain to believe that the concentrated fire which animates them
+both is due in no small measure to the handling of his northern
+fellow-craftsman.
+
+While immersed in the dreary records of crimes, treasons, cruelties,
+and base ambitions, which constitute the bulk of fifteenth-century
+Italian history, it is refreshing to meet with a character so frank
+and manly, so simply pious and comparatively free from stain, as
+Colleoni. The only general of his day who can bear comparison with
+him for purity of public life and decency in conduct, was Federigo di
+Montefeltro. Even here, the comparison redounds to Colleoni's credit;
+for he, unlike the Duke of Urbino, rose to eminence by his own
+exertion in a profession fraught with peril to men of ambition and
+energy. Federigo started with a principality sufficient to satisfy
+his just desires for power. Nothing but his own sense of right and
+prudence restrained Colleoni upon the path which brought Francesco
+Sforza to a duchy by dishonourable dealings, and Carmagnola to the
+scaffold by questionable practice against his masters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_CREMA AND THE CRUCIFIX_
+
+
+Few people visit Crema. It is a little country town of Lombardy,
+between Cremona and Treviglio, with no historic memories but very
+misty ones belonging to the days of the Visconti dynasty. On every
+side around the city walls stretch smiling vineyards and rich meadows,
+where the elms are married to the mulberry-trees by long festoons of
+foliage hiding purple grapes, where the sunflowers droop their heavy
+golden heads among tall stems of millet and gigantic maize, and here
+and there a rice-crop ripens in the marshy loam. In vintage time
+the carts, drawn by their white oxen, come creaking townward in
+the evening, laden with blue bunches. Down the long straight roads,
+between rows of poplars, they creep on; and on the shafts beneath
+the pyramid of fruit lie contadini stained with lees of wine. Far off
+across that 'waveless sea' of Lombardy, which has been the battlefield
+of countless generations, rise the dim grey Alps, or else pearled
+domes of thunder-clouds in gleaming masses over some tall solitary
+tower. Such backgrounds, full of peace, suggestive of almost infinite
+distance, and dignified with colours of incomparable depth and
+breadth, the Venetian painters loved. No landscape in Europe is more
+wonderful than this--thrice wonderful in the vastness of its arching
+heavens, in the stillness of its level plain, and in the bulwark of
+huge crested mountains, reared afar like bastions against the northern
+sky. The little town is all alive in this September weather. At every
+corner of the street, under rustling abeles and thick-foliaged planes,
+at the doors of palaces and in the yards of inns, men, naked from the
+thighs downward, are treading the red must into vats and tuns; while
+their mild-eyed oxen lie beneath them in the road, peaceably chewing
+the cud between one journey to the vineyard and another. It must not
+be imagined that the scene of Alma Tadema's 'Roman Vintage,' or what
+we fondly picture to our fancy of the Athenian Lenaea, is repeated in
+the streets of Crema. This modern treading of the wine-press is a
+very prosaic affair. The town reeks with a sour smell of old casks and
+crushed grape-skins, and the men and women at work bear no resemblance
+whatever to Bacchus and his crew. Yet even as it is, the Lombard
+vintage, beneath floods of sunlight and a pure blue sky, is beautiful;
+and he who would fain make acquaintance with Crema, should time his
+entry into the old town, if possible, on some still golden afternoon
+of autumn. It is then, if ever, that he will learn to love the glowing
+brickwork of its churches and the quaint terra-cotta traceries that
+form its chief artistic charm.
+
+How the unique brick architecture of the Lombard cities took its
+origin--whether from the precepts of Byzantine aliens in the earliest
+middle ages, or from the native instincts of a mixed race composed of
+Gallic, Ligurian, Roman, and Teutonic elements, under the leadership
+of Longobardic rulers--is a question for antiquarians to decide.
+There can, however, be no doubt that the monuments of the Lombard
+style, as they now exist, are no less genuinely local, no less
+characteristic of the country they adorn, no less indigenous to the
+soil they sprang from, than the Attic colonnades of Mnesicles and
+Ictinus. What the marble quarries of Pentelicus were to the Athenian
+builders, the clay beneath their feet was to those Lombard craftsmen.
+From it they fashioned structures as enduring, towers as majestic, and
+cathedral aisles as solemn, as were ever wrought from chiselled stone.
+There is a true sympathy between those buildings and the Lombard
+landscape, which by itself might suffice to prove the originality
+of their almost unknown architects. The rich colour of the baked
+clay--finely modulated from a purplish red, through russet, crimson,
+pink, and orange, to pale yellow and dull grey--harmonises with the
+brilliant greenery of Lombard vegetation and with the deep azure
+of the distant Alpine range. Reared aloft above the flat expanse of
+plain, those square _torroni_, tapering into octagons and
+crowned with slender cones, break the long sweeping lines and
+infinite horizons with a contrast that affords relief, and yields a
+resting-place to tired eyes; while, far away, seen haply from some
+bridge above Ticino, or some high-built palace loggia, they gleam like
+columns of pale rosy fire against the front of mustering storm-clouds
+blue with rain. In that happy orchard of Italy, a pergola of vines
+in leaf, a clump of green acacias, and a campanile soaring above its
+church roof, brought into chance combination with the reaches of the
+plain and the dim mountain range, make up a picture eloquent in its
+suggestive beauty.
+
+Those ancient builders wrought cunningly with their material. The
+bricks are fashioned and fixed to last for all time. Exposed to the
+icy winds of a Lombard winter, to the fierce fire of a Lombard summer,
+and to the moist vapours of a Lombard autumn; neglected by unheeding
+generations; with flowers clustering in their crannies, and birds
+nesting in their eaves, and mason-bees filling the delicate network of
+their traceries--they still present angles as sharp as when they were
+but finished, and joints as nice as when the mortar dried in the first
+months of their building. This immunity from age and injury they owe
+partly to the imperishable nature of baked clay; partly to the care of
+the artists who selected and mingled the right sorts of earth, burned
+them with scrupulous attention, and fitted them together with a
+patience born of loving service. Each member of the edifice was
+designed with a view to its ultimate place. The proper curve was
+ascertained for cylindrical columns and for rounded arches. Larger
+bricks were moulded for the supporting walls, and lesser pieces were
+adapted to the airy vaults and lanterns. In the brickfield and the
+kiln the whole church was planned and wrought out in its details,
+before the hands that made a unity of all these scattered elements
+were set to the work of raising it in air. When they came to put the
+puzzle together, they laid each brick against its neighbour, filling
+up the almost imperceptible interstices with liquid cement composed
+of quicklime and fine sand in water. After five centuries the seams
+between the layers of bricks that make the bell-tower of S. Gottardo
+at Milan, yield no point of vantage to the penknife or the chisel.
+
+Nor was it in their welding of the bricks alone that these craftsmen
+showed their science. They were wont to enrich the surface with
+marble, sparingly but effectively employed--as in those slender
+detached columns, which add such beauty to the octagon of S. Gottardo,
+or in the string-courses of strange beasts and reptiles that adorn the
+church fronts of Pavia. They called to their aid the _mandorlato_
+of Verona, supporting their porch pillars on the backs of couchant
+lions, inserting polished slabs on their façades, and building huge
+sarcophagi into their cloister alleys. Between terra-cotta and this
+marble of Verona there exists a deep and delicate affinity. It took
+the name of _mandorlato_, I suppose, from a resemblance to almond
+blossoms. But it is far from having the simple beauty of a single hue.
+Like all noble veined stones, it passes by a series of modulations and
+gradations through a gamut of associated rather than contrasted tints.
+Not the pink of the almond blossom only, but the creamy whiteness of
+the almond kernel, and the dull yellow of the almond nut may be found
+in it; and yet these colours are so blent and blurred to all-pervading
+mellowness, that nowhere is there any shock of contrast or violence of
+a preponderating tone. The veins which run in labyrinths of crossing,
+curving, and contorted lines all over its smooth surface add, no
+doubt, to this effect of unity. The polish, lastly, which it takes,
+makes the _mandorlato_ shine like a smile upon the sober face
+of the brickwork: for, serviceable as terra-cotta is for nearly all
+artistic purposes, it cannot reflect light or gain the illumination
+which comes from surface brightness.
+
+What the clay can do almost better than any crystalline material, may
+be seen in the mouldings so characteristic of Lombard architecture.
+Geometrical patterns of the rarest and most fanciful device; scrolls
+of acanthus foliage, and traceries of tendrils; Cupids swinging in
+festoons of vines; angels joining hands in dance, with fluttering
+skirts and windy hair, and mouths that symbol singing; grave faces of
+old men and beautiful profiles of maidens leaning from medallions;
+wide-winged genii filling the spandrils of cloister arches, and
+cherubs clustered in the rondure of rose-windows--ornaments like
+these, wrought from the plastic clay, and adapted with true taste to
+the requirements of the architecture, are familiar to every one who
+has studied the church front of Crema, the cloisters of the Certosa,
+the courts of the Ospedale Maggiore at Milan, or the public palace of
+Cremona.
+
+If the _mandorlato_ gives a smile to those majestic Lombard
+buildings, the terra-cotta decorations add the element of life
+and movement. The thought of the artist in its first freshness
+and vivacity is felt in them. They have all the spontaneity of
+improvisation, the seductive melody of unpremeditated music.
+Moulding the supple earth with 'hand obedient to the brain,' the
+_plasticatore_ has impressed his most fugitive dreams of beauty
+on it without effort; and what it cost him but a few fatigueless
+hours to fashion, the steady heat of the furnace has gifted with
+imperishable life. Such work, no doubt, has the defects of its
+qualities. As there are few difficulties to overcome, it suffers
+from a fatal facility--_nec pluteum coedit nec demorsos sapit
+ungues_. It is therefore apt to be unequal, touching at times the
+highest point of inspiration, as in the angels of Guccio at Perugia,
+and sinking not unfrequently into the commonplace of easygoing
+triviality, as in the common floral traceries of Milanese windows.
+But it is never laboured, never pedantic, never dulled by the painful
+effort to subdue an obstinate material to the artist's will. If marble
+is required to develop the strength of the few supreme sculptors,
+terra-cotta saves intact the fancies of a crowd of lesser men.
+
+When we reflect that all the force, solemnity, and beauty of the
+Lombard buildings was evoked from clay, we learn from them this
+lesson: that the thought of man needs neither precious material nor
+yet stubborn substance for the production of enduring masterpieces.
+The red earth was enough for God when He made man in His own image;
+and mud dried in the sun suffices for the artist, who is next to God
+in his creative faculty--since _non merita nome di creatore se
+non Iddio ed il poeta_. After all, what is more everlasting than
+terra-cotta? The hobnails of the boys who ran across the brickfields
+in the Roman town of Silchester, may still be seen, mingled with
+the impress of the feet of dogs and hoofs of goats, in the tiles
+discovered there. Such traces might serve as a metaphor for the
+footfall of artistic genius, when the form-giver has stamped his
+thought upon the moist clay, and fire has made that imprint permanent.
+
+Of all these Lombard edifices, none is more beautiful than the
+Cathedral of Crema, with its delicately finished campanile, built
+of choicely tinted yellow bricks, and ending in a lantern of the
+gracefullest, most airily capricious fancy. This bell-tower does not
+display the gigantic force of Cremona's famous torrazzo, shooting
+396 feet into blue ether from the city square; nor can it rival the
+octagon of S. Gottardo for warmth of hue. Yet it has a character of
+elegance, combined with boldness of invention, that justifies the
+citizens of Crema in their pride. It is unique; and he who has not
+seen it does not know the whole resources of the Lombard style. The
+façade of the Cathedral displays that peculiar blending of Byzantine
+or Romanesque round arches with Gothic details in the windows,
+and with the acute angle of the central pitch, which forms the
+characteristic quality of the late _trecento_ Lombard manner. In
+its combination of purity and richness it corresponds to the best age
+of decorated work in English Gothic. What, however, strikes a Northern
+observer is the strange detachment of this elaborate façade from the
+main structure of the church. Like a frontispiece cut out of cardboard
+and pierced with ornamental openings, it shoots far above the low
+roof of the nave; so that at night the moon, rising above the southern
+aisle, shines through its topmost window, and casts the shadow of
+its tracery upon the pavement of the square. This is a constructive
+blemish to which the Italians in no part of the peninsula were
+sensitive. They seem to have regarded their church fronts as
+independent of the edifice, capable of separate treatment, and worthy
+in themselves of being made the subject of decorative skill.
+
+In the so-called Santuario of Crema--a circular church dedicated to
+S. Maria della Croce, outside the walls--the Lombard style has been
+adapted to the manner of the Mid-Renaissance. This church was raised
+in the last years of the fifteenth century by Gian Battista Battagli,
+an architect of Lodi, who followed the pure rules of taste, bequeathed
+to North Italian builders by Bramante. The beauty of the edifice
+is due entirely to its tranquil dignity and harmony of parts, the
+lightness of its circling loggia, and the just proportion maintained
+between the central structure and the four projecting porticoes. The
+sharp angles of these vestibules afford a contrast to the simplicity
+of the main building, while their clustered cupolas assist the general
+effect of roundness aimed at by the architect. Such a church as
+this proves how much may be achieved by the happy distribution of
+architectural masses. It was the triumph of the best Renaissance style
+to attain lucidity of treatment, and to produce beauty by geometrical
+proportion. When Leo Battista Alberti complained to his friend, Matteo
+di Bastia, that a slight alteration of the curves in his design for
+S. Francesco at Rimini would 'spoil his music,' _ciò che tu muti
+discorda tutta quella musica_, this is what he meant. The melody
+of lines and the harmony of parts made a symphony to his eyes no less
+agreeable than a concert of tuned lutes and voices to his ears; and to
+this concord he was so sensitive that any deviation was a discord.
+
+After visiting the churches of Crema and sauntering about the streets
+awhile, there is nothing left to do but to take refuge in the old
+Albergo del Pozzo. This is one of those queer Italian inns, which
+carry you away at once into a scene of Goldoni. It is part of some
+palace, where nobles housed their _bravi_ in the sixteenth
+century, and which the lesser people of to-day have turned into a
+dozen habitations. Its great stone staircase leads to a saloon upon
+which the various bedchambers open; and round its courtyard runs an
+open balcony, and from the court grows up a fig-tree poking ripe fruit
+against a bedroom window. Oleanders in tubs and red salvias in pots,
+and kitchen herbs in boxes, flourish on the pavement, where the ostler
+comes to wash his carriages, and where the barber shaves the poodle of
+the house. Visitors to the Albergo del Pozzo are invariably asked if
+they have seen the Museo; and when they answer in the negative, they
+are conducted with some ceremony to a large room on the ground-floor
+of the inn, looking out upon the courtyard and the fig-tree. It was
+here that I gained the acquaintance of Signor Folcioni, and became
+possessor of an object that has made the memory of Crema doubly
+interesting to me ever since.
+
+When we entered the Museo, we found a little old man, gentle, grave,
+and unobtrusive, varnishing the ugly portrait of some Signor of the
+_cinquecento_. Round the walls hung pictures, of mediocre value,
+in dingy frames; but all of them bore sounding titles. Titians,
+Lionardos, Guido Renis, and Luinis, looked down and waited for a
+purchaser. In truth this museum was a _bric-à-brac_ shop of a
+sort that is common enough in Italy, where treasures of old lace,
+glass, armour, furniture, and tapestry, may still be met with. Signor
+Folcioni began by pointing out the merits of his pictures; and after
+making due allowance for his zeal as amateur and dealer, it was
+possible to join in some of his eulogiums. A would-be Titian, for
+instance, bought in Verona from a noble house in ruins, showed
+Venetian wealth of colour in its gemmy greens and lucid crimsons
+shining from a background deep and glowing. Then he led us to a
+walnut-wood bureau of late Renaissance work, profusely carved with
+nymphs and Cupids, and armed men, among festoons of fruits embossed
+in high relief. Deeply drilled worm-holes set a seal of antiquity upon
+the blooming faces and luxuriant garlandslike the touch of Time who
+'delves the parallels in beauty's brow.' On the shelves of an ebony
+cabinet close by he showed us a row of cups cut out of rock-crystal
+and mounted in gilt silver, with heaps of engraved gems, old
+snuff-boxes, coins, medals, sprays of coral, and all the indescribable
+lumber that one age flings aside as worthless for the next to pick
+up from the dust-heap and regard as precious. Surely the genius of
+culture in our century might be compared to a chiffonnier of Paris,
+who, when the night has fallen, goes into the streets, bag on back
+and lantern in hand, to rake up the waifs and strays a day of whirling
+life has left him.
+
+The next curiosity was an ivory carving of S. Anthony preaching to the
+fishes, so fine and small you held it on your palm, and used a lens
+to look at it. Yet there stood the Santo gesticulating, and there
+were the fishes in rows--the little fishes first, and then the
+middle-sized, and last of all the great big fishes almost out at sea,
+with their heads above the water and their mouths wide open, just as
+the _Fioretti di San Francesco_ describes them. After this
+came some original drawings of doubtful interest, and then a case of
+fifty-two _nielli_. These were of unquestionable value; for has
+not Cicognara engraved them on a page of his classic monograph?
+The thin silver plates, over which once passed the burin of Maso
+Finiguerra, cutting lines finer than hairs, and setting here a shadow
+in dull acid-eaten grey, and there a high light of exquisite polish,
+were far more delicate than any proofs impressed from them. These
+frail masterpieces of Florentine art--the first beginnings of line
+engraving--we held in our hands while Signor Folcioni read out
+Cicognara's commentary in a slow impressive voice, breaking off now
+and then to point at the originals before us.
+
+The sun had set, and the room was almost dark, when he laid his book
+down, and said: 'I have not much left to show--yet stay! Here are
+still some little things of interest.' He then opened the door
+into his bedroom, and took down from a nail above his bed a
+wooden Crucifix. Few things have fascinated me more than this
+Crucifix--produced without parade, half negligently, from the dregs of
+his collection by a dealer in old curiosities at Crema. The cross was,
+or is--for it is lying on the table now before me--twenty-one inches
+in length, made of strong wood, covered with coarse yellow parchment,
+and shod at the four ends with brass. The Christ is roughly hewn in
+reddish wood, coloured scarlet, where the blood streams from the five
+wounds. Over the head an oval medallion, nailed into the cross, serves
+as framework to a miniature of the Madonna, softly smiling with a
+Correggiesque simper. The whole Crucifix is not a work of art, but
+such as may be found in every convent. Its date cannot be earlier than
+the beginning of the eighteenth century. As I held it in my hand, I
+thought--perhaps this has been carried to the bedside of the sick
+and dying; preachers have brandished it from the pulpit over
+conscience-stricken congregations; monks have knelt before it on the
+brick floor of their cells, and novices have kissed it in the vain
+desire to drown their yearnings after the relinquished world; perhaps
+it has attended criminals to the scaffold, and heard the secrets
+of repentant murderers; but why should it be shown me as a thing of
+rarity? These thoughts passed through my mind, while Signor Folcioni
+quietly remarked: 'I bought this Cross from the Frati when their
+convent was dissolved in Crema.' Then he bade me turn it round, and
+showed a little steel knob fixed into the back between the arms. This
+was a spring. He pressed it, and the upper and lower parts of the
+cross came asunder; and holding the top like a handle, I drew out as
+from a scabbard a sharp steel blade, concealed in the thickness of the
+wood, behind the very body of the agonising Christ. What had been a
+crucifix became a deadly poniard in my grasp, and the rust upon it in
+the twilight looked like blood. 'I have often wondered,' said Signor
+Folcioni, 'that the Frati cared to sell me this.'
+
+There is no need to raise the question of the genuineness of this
+strange relic, though I confess to having had my doubts about it,
+or to wonder for what nefarious purposes the impious weapon was
+designed--whether the blade was inserted by some rascal monk who never
+told the tale, or whether it was used on secret service by the
+friars. On its surface the infernal engine carries a dark certainty of
+treason, sacrilege, and violence. Yet it would be wrong to incriminate
+the Order of S. Francis by any suspicion, and idle to seek the actual
+history of this mysterious weapon. A writer of fiction could indeed
+produce some dark tale in the style of De Stendhal's 'Nouvelles,' and
+christen it 'The Crucifix of Crema.' And how delighted would Webster
+have been if he had chanced to hear of such a sword-sheath! He might
+have placed it in the hands of Bosola for the keener torment of his
+Duchess. Flamineo might have used it; or the disguised friars, who
+made the deathbed of Bracciano hideous, might have plunged it in the
+Duke's heart after mocking his eyes with the figure of the suffering
+Christ. To imagine such an instrument of moral terror mingled with
+material violence, lay within the scope of Webster's sinister and
+powerful genius. But unless he had seen it with his eyes, what poet
+would have ventured to devise the thing and display it even in the
+dumb show of a tragedy? Fact is more wonderful than romance. No
+apocalypse of Antichrist matches what is told of Roderigo Borgia; and
+the crucifix of Crema exceeds the sombre fantasy of Webster.
+
+Whatever may be the truth about this cross, it has at any rate the
+value of a symbol or a metaphor. The idea which it materialises, the
+historical events of which it is a sign, may well arrest attention. A
+sword concealed in the crucifix--what emblem brings more forcibly
+to mind than this that two-edged glaive of persecution which Dominic
+unsheathed to mow down the populations of Provence and to make Spain
+destitute of men? Looking upon the crucifix of Crema, we may seem
+to see pestilence-stricken multitudes of Moors and Jews dying on the
+coasts of Africa and Italy. The Spaniards enter Mexico; and this is
+the cross they carry in their hands. They take possession of Peru; and
+while the gentle people of the Incas come to kiss the bleeding brows
+of Christ, they plunge this dagger in their sides. What, again, was
+the temporal power of the Papacy but a sword embedded in a cross?
+Each Papa Rè, when he ascended the Holy Chair, was forced to take the
+crucifix of Crema and to bear it till his death. A long procession of
+war-loving Pontiffs, levying armies and paying captains with the pence
+of S. Peter, in order to keep by arms the lands they had acquired by
+fraud, defiles before our eyes. First goes the terrible Sixtus IV.,
+who died of grief when news was brought him that the Italian princes
+had made peace. He it was who sanctioned the conspiracy to murder
+the Medici in church, at the moment of the elevation of the Host.
+The brigands hired to do this work refused at the last moment. The
+sacrilege appalled them. 'Then,' says the chronicler, 'was found a
+priest, who, being used to churches, had no scruple.' The poignard
+this priest carried was this crucifix of Crema. After Sixtus came the
+blood-stained Borgia; and after him Julius II., whom the Romans
+in triumphal songs proclaimed a second Mars, and who turned, as
+Michelangelo expressed it, the chalices of Rome into swords and helms.
+Leo X., who dismembered Italy for his brother and nephew; and Clement
+VII., who broke the neck of Florence and delivered the Eternal City to
+the spoiler, follow. Of the antinomy between the Vicariate of Christ
+and an earthly kingdom, incarnated by these and other Holy Fathers,
+what symbol could be found more fitting than a dagger with a crucifix
+for case and covering?
+
+It is not easy to think or write of these matters without rhetoric.
+When I laid my head upon my pillow that night in the Albergo del Pozzo
+at Crema, it was full of such thoughts; and when at last sleep came,
+it brought with it a dream begotten doubtless by the perturbation of
+my fancy. For I thought that a brown Franciscan, with hollow cheeks,
+and eyes aflame beneath his heavy cowl, sat by my bedside, and, as he
+raised the crucifix in his lean quivering hands, whispered a tale of
+deadly passion and of dastardly revenge. His confession carried me
+away to a convent garden of Palermo; and there was love in the story,
+and hate that is stronger than love, and, for the ending of the whole
+matter, remorse which dies not even in the grave. Each new possessor
+of the crucifix of Crema, he told me, was forced to hear from him in
+dreams his dreadful history. But, since it was a dream and nothing
+more, why should I repeat it? I have wandered far enough already
+from the vintage and the sunny churches of the little Lombard town.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_CHERUBINO AT THE SCALA THEATRE_
+
+
+I
+
+It was a gala night. The opera-house of Milan was one blaze of light
+and colour. Royalty in field-marshal's uniform and diamonds, attended
+by decorated generals and radiant ladies of the court, occupied the
+great box opposite the stage. The tiers from pit to gallery were
+filled with brilliantly dressed women. From the third row, where we
+were fortunately placed, the curves of that most beautiful of theatres
+presented to my gaze a series of retreating and approaching lines,
+composed of noble faces, waving feathers, sparkling jewels, sculptured
+shoulders, uniforms, robes of costly stuffs and every conceivable
+bright colour. Light poured from the huge lustre in the centre of the
+roof, ran along the crimson velvet cushions of the boxes, and flashed
+upon the gilded frame of the proscenium--satyrs and acanthus scrolls
+carved in the manner of a century ago. Pit and orchestra scarcely
+contained the crowd of men who stood in lively conversation, their
+backs turned to the stage, their lorgnettes raised from time to time
+to sweep the boxes. This surging sea of faces and sober costumes
+enhanced by contrast the glitter, variety, and luminous tranquillity
+of the theatre above it.
+
+No one took much thought of the coming spectacle, till the conductor's
+rap was heard upon his desk, and the orchestra broke into the overture
+to Mozart's _Nozze_. Before they were half through, it was clear
+that we should not enjoy that evening the delight of perfect music
+added to the enchantment of so brilliant a scene. The execution of the
+overture was not exactly bad. But it lacked absolute precision, the
+complete subordination of all details to the whole. In rendering
+German music Italians often fail through want of discipline, or
+through imperfect sympathy with a style they will not take the pains
+to master. Nor, when the curtain lifted and the play began, was the
+vocalisation found in all parts satisfactory. The Contessa had a
+meagre _mezza voce_. Susanna, though she did not sing false,
+hovered on the verge of discords, owing to the weakness of an organ
+which had to be strained in order to make any effect on that enormous
+stage. On the other hand, the part of Almaviva was played with
+dramatic fire, and Figaro showed a truly Southern sense of comic
+fun. The scenes were splendidly mounted, and something of a princely
+grandeur--the largeness of a noble train of life--was added to the
+drama by the vast proportions of the theatre. It was a performance
+which, in spite of drawbacks, yielded pleasure.
+
+And yet it might have left me frigid but for the artist who played
+Cherubino. This was no other than Pauline Lucca, in the prime of youth
+and petulance. From her first appearance to the last note she sang,
+she occupied the stage. The opera seemed to have been written for her.
+The mediocrity of the troupe threw her commanding merits--the richness
+of her voice, the purity of her intonation, her vivid conception of
+character, her indescribable brusquerie of movement and emotion--into
+that relief which a sapphire gains from a setting of pearls. I can see
+her now, after the lapse of nearly twenty years, as she stood there
+singing in blue doublet and white mantle, with the slouched Spanish
+hat and plume of ostrich feathers, a tiny rapier at her side, and blue
+rosettes upon her white silk shoes! The _Nozze di Figaro_ was
+followed by a Ballo. This had for its theme the favourite legend of
+a female devil sent from the infernal regions to ruin a young man.
+Instead of performing the part assigned her, Satanella falls in love
+with the hero, sacrifices herself, and is claimed at last by the
+powers of goodness. _Quia multum amavit_, her lost soul is saved.
+If the opera left much to be desired, the Ballo was perfection. That
+vast stage of the Scala Theatre had almost overwhelmed the actors
+of the play. Now, thrown open to its inmost depths, crowded with
+glittering moving figures, it became a fairyland of fantastic
+loveliness. Italians possess the art of interpreting a serious
+dramatic action by pantomime. A Ballo with them is no mere affair of
+dancing--fine dresses, evolutions performed by brigades of pink-legged
+women with a fixed smile on their faces. It takes the rank of high
+expressive art. And the motive of this Ballo was consistently worked
+out in an intelligible sequence of well-ordered scenes. To moralise
+upon its meaning would be out of place. It had a conflict of passions,
+a rhythmical progression of emotions, a tragic climax in the triumph
+of good over evil.
+
+II
+
+At the end of the performance there were five persons in our box--the
+beautiful Miranda, and her husband, a celebrated English man of
+letters; a German professor of biology; a young Milanese gentleman,
+whom we called Edoardo; and myself. Edoardo and the professor had
+joined us just before the ballet. I had occupied a seat behind Miranda
+and my friend the critic from the commencement. We had indeed dined
+together first at their hotel, the Rebecchino; and they now proposed
+that we should all adjourn together there on foot for supper. From the
+Scala Theatre to the Rebecchino is a walk of some three minutes.
+
+When we were seated at the supper-table and had talked some while upon
+indifferent topics, the enthusiasm roused in me by Pauline Lucca burst
+out. I broke a moment's silence by exclaiming, 'What a wonder-world
+music creates! I have lived this evening in a sphere of intellectual
+enjoyment raised to rapture. I never lived so fast before!' 'Do
+you really think so?' said Miranda. She had just finished a
+_beccafico_, and seemed disposed for conversation. 'Do you really
+think so? For my part, music is in a wholly different region from
+experience, thought, or feeling. What does it communicate to you?' And
+she hummed to herself the _motif_ of Cherubino's 'Non so più
+cosa son cosa faccio.'--'What does it teach me?' I broke in upon the
+melody. 'Why, to-night, when I heard the music, and saw her there, and
+felt the movement of the play, it seemed to me that a new existence
+was revealed. For the first time I understood what love might be in
+one most richly gifted for emotion.' Miranda bent her eyes on the
+table-cloth and played with her wineglass. 'I don't follow you at all.
+I enjoyed myself to-night. The opera, indeed, might have been better
+rendered. The ballet, I admit, was splendid. But when I remember the
+music--even the best of it--even Pauline Lucca's part'--here she
+looked up, and shot me a quick glance across the table--'I have mere
+music in my ears. Nothing more. Mere music!' The professor of
+biology, who was gifted with, a sense of music and had studied it
+scientifically, had now crunched his last leaf of salad. Wiping his
+lips with his napkin, he joined our _tête-à-tête_. 'Gracious
+madam, I agree with you. He who seeks from music more than music
+gives, is on the quest--how shall I put it?--of the Holy Grail.' 'And
+what,' I struck in, 'is this minimum or maximum that music gives?'
+'Dear young friend,' replied the professor, 'music gives melodies,
+harmonies, the many beautiful forms to which sound shall be fashioned.
+Just as in the case of shells and fossils, lovely in themselves,
+interesting for their history and classification, so is it with
+music. You must not seek an intellectual meaning. No; there is no
+_Inhalt_ in music' And he hummed contentedly the air of 'Voi
+che sapete.' While he was humming, Miranda whispered to me across the
+table, 'Separate the Lucca from the music.' 'But,' I answered rather
+hotly, for I was nettled by Miranda's argument _ad hominem_, 'But
+it is not possible in an opera to divide the music from the words, the
+scenery, the play, the actor. Mozart, when he wrote the score to Da
+Ponte's libretto, was excited to production by the situations. He did
+not conceive his melodies out of connection with a certain cast of
+characters, a given ethical environment.' 'I do not know, my dear
+young friend,' responded the professor, 'whether you have read
+Mozart's Life and letters. It is clearly shown in them how he composed
+airs at times and seasons when he had no words to deal with. These he
+afterwards used as occasion served. Whence I conclude that music was
+for him a free and lovely play of tone. The words of our excellent
+Da Ponte were a scaffolding to introduce his musical creations to the
+public. But without that carpenter's work, the melodies of Cherubino
+are _Selbst-ständig_, sufficient in themselves to vindicate their
+place in art. Do I interpret your meaning, gracious lady?' This he
+said bending to Miranda. 'Yes,' she replied. But she still played with
+her wineglass, and did not look as though she were quite satisfied.
+I meanwhile continued: 'Of course I have read Mozart's Life, and know
+how he went to work. But Mozart was a man of feeling, of experience,
+of ardent passions. How can you prove to me that the melodies he gave
+to Cherubino had not been evolved from situations similar to those
+in which Cherubino finds himself? How can you prove he did not feel
+a natural appropriateness in the _motifs_ he selected from his
+memory for Cherubino? How can you be certain that the part itself did
+not stimulate his musical faculty to fresh and still more appropriate
+creativeness? And if we must fall back on documents, do you remember
+what he said himself about the love-music in _Die Entführung?_ I
+think he tells us that he meant it to express his own feeling for the
+woman who had just become his wife.' Miranda looked up as though she
+were almost half-persuaded. Yet she hummed again 'Non so più,' then
+said to herself, 'Yes, it is wiser to believe with the professor that
+these are sequences of sounds, and nothing more.' Then she sighed. In
+the pause which followed, her husband, the famous critic, filled his
+glass, stretched his legs out, and began: 'You have embarked, I see,
+upon the ocean of ĉsthetics. For my part, to-night I was thinking
+how much better fitted for the stage Beaumarchais' play was than this
+musical mongrel--this operatic adaptation. The wit, observe, is lost.
+And Cherubino--that sparkling little _enfant terrible_--becomes a
+sentimental fellow--a something I don't know what--between a girl and
+a boy--a medley of romance and impudence--anyhow a being quite unlike
+the sharply outlined playwright's page. I confess I am not a musician;
+the drama is my business, and I judge things by their fitness for
+the stage. My wife agrees with me to differ. She likes music, I like
+plays. To-night she was better pleased than I was; for she got good
+music tolerably well rendered, while I got nothing but a mangled
+comedy.'
+
+We bore the critic's monologue with patience. But once again the
+spirit, seeking after something which neither Miranda, nor her
+husband, nor the professor could be got to recognise, moved within me.
+I cried out at a venture, 'People who go to an opera must forget
+music pure and simple, must forget the drama pure and simple. You
+must welcome a third species of art, in which the play, the music, the
+singers with their voices, the orchestra with its instruments--Pauline
+Lucca, if you like, with her fascination' (and here I shot a
+side-glance at Miranda), 'are so blent as to create a world beyond the
+scope of poetry or music or acting taken by themselves. I give Mozart
+credit for having had insight into this new world, for having brought
+it near to us. And I hold that every fresh representation of his work
+is a fresh revelation of its possibilities.'
+
+To this the critic answered, 'You now seem to me to be confounding the
+limits of the several arts.' 'What!' I continued, 'is the drama but
+emotion presented in its most external forms as action? And what is
+music but emotion, in its most genuine essence, expressed by sound?
+Where then can a more complete artistic harmony be found than in the
+opera?'
+
+'The opera,' replied our host, 'is a hybrid. You will probably learn
+to dislike artistic hybrids, if you have the taste and sense I give
+you credit for. My own opinion has been already expressed. In the
+_Nozze_, Beaumarchais' _Mariage de Figaro_ is simply spoiled. My
+friend the professor declares Mozart's music to be sufficient by
+itself, and the libretto to be a sort of machinery for its display.
+Miranda, I think, agrees with him. You plead eloquently for the
+hybrid. You have a right to your own view. These things are matters,
+in the final resort, of individual taste rather than of demonstrable
+principles. But I repeat that you are very young.' The critic drained
+his Lambrusco, and smiled at me.
+
+'Yes, he is young,' added Miranda. 'He must learn to distinguish
+between music, his own imagination, and a pretty woman. At present he
+mixes them all up together. It is a sort of transcendental omelette.
+But I think the pretty woman has more to do with it than metaphysics!'
+
+All this while Edoardo had bestowed devout attention on his supper.
+But it appeared that the drift of our discourse had not been lost by
+him. 'Well,' he said, 'you finely fibred people dissect and analyse.
+I am content with the _spettacolo_. That pleases. What does a man
+want more? The _Nozze_ is a comedy of life and manners. The music
+is adorable. To-night the women were not bad to look at--the Lucca
+was divine; the scenes--ingenious. I thought but little. I came away
+delighted. You could have a better play, Caro Signore!' (with a bow
+to our host). 'That is granted. You might have better music, Cara
+Signora!' (with a bow to Miranda). 'That too is granted. But when the
+play and the music come together--how shall I say?--the music helps
+the play, and the play helps the music; and we--well we, I suppose,
+must help both!'
+
+Edoardo's little speech was so ingenuous, and, what is more, so true
+to his Italian temperament, that it made us all laugh and leave the
+argument just where we found it. The bottles of Lambrusco supplied us
+each with one more glass; and while we were drinking them, Miranda,
+woman-like, taking the last word, but contradicting herself, softly
+hummed 'Non so più cosa son,' and 'Ah!' she said, 'I shall dream of
+love to-night!'
+
+We rose and said good-night. But when I had reached my bedroom in the
+Hôtel de la Ville, I sat down, obstinate and unconvinced, and penned
+this rhapsody, which I have lately found among papers of nearly twenty
+years ago. I give it as it stands.
+
+III
+
+Mozart has written the two melodramas of love--the one a melo-tragedy,
+the other a melo-comedy. But in really noble art, Comedy and Tragedy
+have faces of equal serenity and beauty. In the Vatican there
+are marble busts of the two Muses, differing chiefly in their
+head-dresses: that of Tragedy is an elaborately built-up structure of
+fillets and flowing hair, piled high above the forehead and descending
+in long curls upon the shoulders; while Comedy wears a similar
+adornment, with the addition of a wreath of vine-leaves and
+grape-bunches. The expression of the sister goddesses is no less
+finely discriminated. Over the mouth of Comedy plays a subtle smile,
+and her eyes are relaxed in a half-merriment. A shadow rests upon
+the slightly heavier brows of Tragedy, and her lips, though not
+compressed, are graver. So delicately did the Greek artist indicate
+the division between two branches of one dramatic art. And since all
+great art is classical, Mozart's two melodramas, _Don Giovanni_
+and the _Nozze di Figaro_, though the one is tragic and the other
+comic, are twin-sisters, similar in form and feature.
+
+The central figure of the melo-tragedy is Don Juan, the hero
+of unlimited desire, pursuing the unattainable through tortuous
+interminable labyrinths, eager in appetite yet never satisfied, 'for
+ever following and for ever foiled.' He is the incarnation of lust
+that has become a habit of the soul--rebellious, licentious, selfish,
+even cruel. His nature, originally noble and brave, has assumed the
+qualities peculiar to lust--rebellion, license, cruelty, defiant
+egotism. Yet, such as he is, doomed to punishment and execration,
+Don Juan remains a fit subject for poetry and music, because he is
+complete, because he is impelled by some demonic influence, spurred on
+by yearnings after an unsearchable delight. In his death, the spirit
+of chivalry survives, metamorphosed, it is true, into the spirit of
+revolt, yet still tragic, such as might animate the desperate sinner
+of a haughty breed.
+
+The central figure of the melo-comedy is Cherubino, the genius of
+love, no less insatiable, but undetermined to virtue or to vice. This
+is the point of Cherubino, that the ethical capacities in him are
+still potential. His passion still hovers on the borderland of good
+and bad. And this undetermined passion is beautiful because of extreme
+freshness; of infinite, immeasurable expansibility. Cherubino is the
+epitome of all that belongs to the amorous temperament in a state of
+still ascendant adolescence. He is about sixteen years of age--a boy
+yesterday, a man to-morrow--to-day both and neither--something
+beyond boyhood, but not yet limited by man's responsibility and man's
+absorbing passions. He partakes of both ages in the primal awakening
+to self-consciousness. Desire, which in Don Juan has become a fiend,
+hovers before him like a fairy. His are the sixteen years, not of a
+Northern climate, but of Spain or Italy, where manhood appears in a
+flash, and overtakes the child with sudden sunrise of new faculties.
+_Nondum amabam, sed amare amabam, quaerebam quod amarem, amans
+amare_--'I loved not yet, but was in love with loving; I sought
+what I should love, being in love with loving.' That sentence, penned
+by S. Augustine and consecrated by Shelley, describes the mood of
+Cherubino. He loves at every moment of his life, with every pulse of
+his being. His object is not a beloved being, but love itself--the
+satisfaction of an irresistible desire, the paradise of bliss which
+merely loving has become for him. What love means he hardly knows. He
+only knows that he must love. And women love him--half as a plaything
+to be trifled with, half as a young god to be wounded by. This rising
+of the star of love as it ascends into the heaven of youthful fancy,
+is revealed in the melodies Mozart has written for him. How shall we
+describe their potency? Who shall translate those curiously perfect
+words to which tone and rhythm have been indissolubly wedded? _E
+pur mi piace languir cosi.... E se non ho chi m' oda, parlo d'amor con
+me._
+
+But if this be so, it may be asked, Who shall be found worthy to act
+Cherubino on the stage? You cannot have seen and heard Pauline Lucca,
+or you would not ask this question.
+
+Cherubino is by no means the most important person in the plot of the
+_Nozze_. But he strikes the keynote of the opera. His love is the
+standard by which we measure the sad, retrospective, stately love of
+the Countess, who tries to win back an alienated husband. By Cherubino
+we measure the libertine love of the Count, who is a kind of Don Juan
+without cruelty, and the humorous love of Figaro and his sprightly
+bride Susanna. Each of these characters typifies one of the many
+species of love. But Cherubino anticipates and harmonises all. They
+are conscious, experienced, world-worn, disillusioned, trivial. He is
+all love, foreseen, foreshadowed in a dream of life to be; all love,
+diffused through brain and heart and nerves like electricity; all
+love, merging the moods of ecstasy, melancholy, triumph, regret,
+jealousy, joy, expectation, in a hazy sheen, as of some Venetian
+sunrise. What will Cherubino be after three years? A Romeo, a
+Lovelace, a Lothario, a Juan? a disillusioned rake, a sentimentalist,
+an effete fop, a romantic lover? He may become any one of these, for
+he contains the possibilities of all. As yet, he is the dear glad
+angel of the May of love, the nightingale of orient emotion.
+This moment in the unfolding of character Mozart has arrested and
+eternalised for us in Cherubino's melodies; for it is the privilege of
+art to render things most fugitive and evanescent fixed imperishably
+in immortal form.
+
+IV
+
+This is indeed a rhapsodical production. Miranda was probably right.
+Had it not been for Pauline Lucca, I might not have philosophised the
+_Nozze_ thus. Yet, in the main, I believe that my instinct was
+well grounded. Music, especially when wedded to words, more especially
+when those words are dramatic, cannot separate itself from emotion. It
+will not do to tell us that a melody is a certain sequence of sounds;
+that the composer chose it for its beauty of rhythm, form, and tune,
+and only used the words to get it vocalised. We are forced to go
+farther back, and ask ourselves, What suggested it in the first place
+to the composer? why did he use it precisely in connection with
+this dramatic situation? How can we answer these questions except by
+supposing that music was for him the utterance through art of some
+emotion? The final fact of human nature is emotion, crystallising
+itself in thought and language, externalising itself in action and
+art. 'What,' said Novalis, 'are thoughts but pale dead feelings?'
+Admitting this even in part, we cannot deny to music an emotional
+content of some kind. I would go farther, and assert that, while a
+merely mechanical musician may set inappropriate melodies to words,
+and render music inexpressive of character, what constitutes a musical
+dramatist is the conscious intention of fitting to the words of his
+libretto such melody as shall interpret character, and the power to do
+this with effect.
+
+That the Cherubino of Mozart's _Nozze_ is quite different from
+Beaumarchais' Cherubin does not affect this question. He is a new
+creation, just because Mozart could not, or would not, conceive the
+character of the page in Beaumarchais' sprightly superficial spirit.
+He used the part to utter something unutterable except by music about
+the soul of the still adolescent lover. The libretto-part and the
+melodies, taken together, constitute a new romantic ideal, consistent
+with experience, but realised with the intensity and universality
+whereby art is distinguished from life. Don Juan was a myth before
+Mozart touched him with the magic wand of music. Cherubino became
+a myth by the same Prospero's spell. Both characters have the
+universality, the symbolic potency, which belongs to legendary beings.
+That there remains a discrepancy between the boy-page and the music
+made for him, can be conceded without danger to my theory; for
+the music made for Cherubino is meant to interpret his psychical
+condition, and is independent of his boyishness of conduct.
+
+This further explains why there may be so many renderings of
+Cherubino's melodies. Mozart idealised an infinite emotion. The
+singer is forced to define; the actor also is forced to define. Each
+introduces his own limit on the feeling. When the actor and the singer
+meet together in one personality, this definition of emotion becomes
+of necessity doubly specific. The condition of all music is that it
+depends in a great measure on the temperament of the interpreter for
+its momentary shade of expression, and this dependence is of course
+exaggerated when the music is dramatic. Furthermore, the subjectivity
+of the audience enters into the problem as still another element of
+definition. It may therefore be fairly said that, in estimating any
+impression produced by Cherubino's music, the original character of
+the page, transplanted from French comedy to Italian opera, Mozart's
+conception of that character, Mozart's specific quality of emotion
+and specific style of musical utterance, together with the contralto's
+interpretation of the character and rendering of the music, according
+to her intellectual capacity, artistic skill, and timbre of voice,
+have collaborated with the individuality of the hearer. Some of the
+constituents of the ever-varying product--a product which is new each
+time the part is played--are fixed. Da Ponte's Cherubino and Mozart's
+melodies remain unalterable. All the rest is undecided; the singer and
+the listener change on each occasion.
+
+To assert that the musician Mozart meant nothing by his music, to
+assert that he only cared about it _quâ_ music, is the same as
+to say that the painter Tintoretto, when he put the Crucifixion upon
+canvas, the sculptor Michelangelo, when he carved Christ upon the lap
+of Mary, meant nothing, and only cared about the beauty of their
+forms and colours. Those who take up this position prove, not that the
+artist has no meaning to convey, but that for them the artist's nature
+is unintelligible, and his meaning is conveyed in an unknown tongue.
+It seems superfluous to guard against misinterpretation by saying that
+to expect clear definition from music--the definition which belongs
+to poetry--would be absurd. The sphere of music is in sensuous
+perception; the sphere of poetry is in intelligence. Music, dealing
+with pure sound, must always be vaguer in significance than poetry,
+dealing with words. Nevertheless, its effect upon the sentient subject
+may be more intense and penetrating for this very reason. We cannot
+fail to understand what words are intended to convey; we may very
+easily interpret in a hundred different ways the message of sound.
+But this is not because words are wider in their reach and more alive;
+rather because they are more limited, more stereotyped, more dead.
+They symbolise something precise and unmistakable; but this precision
+is itself attenuation of the something symbolised. The exact value of
+the counter is better understood when it is a word than when it is a
+chord, because all that a word conveys has already become a thought,
+while all that musical sounds convey remains within the region of
+emotion which has not been intellectualised. Poetry touches emotion
+through the thinking faculty. If music reaches the thinking faculty at
+all, it is through fibres of emotion. But emotion, when it has become
+thought, has already lost a portion of its force, and has taken to
+itself a something alien to its nature. Therefore the message of music
+can never rightly be translated into words. It is the very largeness
+and vividness of the sphere of simple feeling which makes its
+symbolical counterpart in sound so seeming vague. But in spite of this
+incontestable defect of seeming vagueness, emotion expressed by music
+is nearer to our sentient self, if we have ears to take it in, than
+the same emotion limited by language. It is intenser, it is more
+immediate, as compensation for being less intelligible, less
+unmistakable in meaning. It is an infinite, an indistinct, where each
+consciousness defines and sets a limitary form.
+
+V
+
+A train of thought which begins with the concrete not unfrequently
+finds itself finishing, almost against its will, in abstractions. This
+is the point to which the performance of Cherubino's part by Pauline
+Lucca at the Scala twenty years ago has led me--that I have to settle
+with myself what I mean by art in general, and what I take to be the
+proper function of music as one of the fine arts.
+
+'Art,' said Goethe, 'is but form-giving.' We might vary this
+definition, and say, 'Art is a method of expression or presentation.'
+Then comes the question: If art gives form, if it is a method of
+expression or presentation, to what does it give form, what does it
+express or present? The answer certainly must be: Art gives form to
+human consciousness; expresses or presents the feeling or the thought
+of man. Whatever else art may do by the way, in the communication
+of innocent pleasures, in the adornment of life and the softening of
+manners, in the creation of beautiful shapes and sounds, this, at all
+events, is its prime function.
+
+While investing thought, the spiritual subject-matter of all art, with
+form, or finding for it proper modes of presentation, each of the arts
+employs a special medium, obeying the laws of beauty proper to that
+medium. The vehicles of the arts, roughly speaking, are material
+substances (like stone, wood, metal), pigments, sounds, and words.
+The masterly handling of these vehicles and the realisation of
+their characteristic types of beauty have come to be regarded as the
+craftsman's paramount concern. And in a certain sense this is a right
+conclusion; for dexterity in the manipulation of the chosen vehicle
+and power to create a beautiful object, distinguish the successful
+artist from the man who may have had like thoughts and feelings. This
+dexterity, this power, are the properties of the artist _quâ_
+artist. Yet we must not forget that the form created by the artist
+for the expression of a thought or feeling is not the final end of art
+itself. That form, after all, is but the mode of presentation through
+which the spiritual content manifests itself. Beauty, in like manner,
+is not the final end of art, but is the indispensable condition under
+which the artistic manifestation of the spiritual content must he
+made. It is the business of art to create an ideal world, in which
+perception, emotion, understanding, action, all elements of human life
+sublimed by thought, shall reappear in concrete forms as beauty. This
+being so, the logical criticism of art demands that we should not
+only estimate the technical skill of artists and their faculty for
+presenting beauty to the ĉsthetic sense, but that we should also ask
+ourselves what portion of the human spirit he has chosen to invest
+with form, and how he has conceived his subject. It is not necessary
+that the ideas embodied in a work of art should be the artist's
+own. They may be common to the race and age: as, for instance, the
+conception of sovereign deity expressed in the Olympian Zeus of
+Pheidias, or the conception of divine maternity expressed in Raphael's
+'Madonna di San Sisto.' Still the personality of the artist, his
+own intellectual and moral nature, his peculiar way of thinking and
+feeling, his individual attitude towards the material given to him in
+ideas of human consciousness, will modify his choice of subject and
+of form, and will determine his specific type of beauty. To take an
+example: supposing that an idea, common to his race and age, is given
+to the artist for treatment; this will be the final end of the work
+of art which he produces. But his personal qualities and technical
+performance determine the degree of success or failure to which he
+attains in presenting that idea and in expressing it with beauty.
+Signorelli fails where Perugino excels, in giving adequate and lovely
+form to the religious sentiment. Michelangelo is sure of the sublime,
+and Raphael of the beautiful.
+
+Art is thus the presentation of the human spirit by the artist to his
+fellow-men. The subject-matter of the arts is commensurate with what
+man thinks and feels and does. It is as deep as religion, as wide as
+life. But what distinguishes art from religion or from life is, that
+this subject-matter must assume beautiful form, and must be presented
+directly or indirectly to the senses. Art is not the school or the
+cathedral, but the playground, the paradise of humanity. It does not
+teach, it does not preach. Nothing abstract enters into art's domain.
+Truth and goodness are transmuted into beauty there, just as in
+science beauty and goodness assume the shape of truth, and in
+religion truth and beauty become goodness. The rigid definitions, the
+unmistakable laws of science, are not to be found in art. Whatever art
+has touched acquires a concrete sensuous embodiment, and thus ideas
+presented to the mind in art have lost a portion of their pure
+thought-essence. It is on this account that the religious conceptions
+of the Greeks were so admirably fitted for the art of sculpture, and
+certain portions of the mediĉval Christian mythology lent themselves
+so well to painting. For the same reason the metaphysics of
+ecclesiastical dogma defy the artist's plastic faculty. Art, in a
+word, is a middle term between reason and the senses. Its secondary
+aim, after the prime end of presenting the human spirit in beautiful
+form has been accomplished, is to give tranquil and innocent
+enjoyment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From what has gone before it will be seen that no human being can
+make or mould a beautiful form without incorporating in that form some
+portion of the human mind, however crude, however elementary. In other
+words, there is no work of art without a theme, without a motive,
+without a subject. The presentation of that theme, that motive, that
+subject, is the final end of art. The art is good or bad according as
+the subject has been well or ill presented, consistently with the laws
+of beauty special to the art itself. Thus we obtain two standards
+for ĉsthetic criticism. We judge a statue, for example, both by
+the sculptor's intellectual grasp upon his subject, and also by his
+technical skill and sense of beauty. In a picture of the Last Judgment
+by Fra Angelico we say that the bliss of the righteous has been more
+successfully treated than the torments of the wicked, because the
+former has been better understood, although the painter's skill in
+each is equal. In the Perseus of Cellini we admire the sculptor's
+spirit, finish of execution, and originality of design, while we
+deplore that want of sympathy with the heroic character which makes
+his type of physical beauty slightly vulgar and his facial expression
+vacuous. If the phrase 'Art for art's sake' has any meaning, this
+meaning is simply that the artist, having chosen a theme, thinks
+exclusively in working at it of technical dexterity or the quality of
+beauty. There are many inducements for the artist thus to narrow his
+function, and for the critic to assist him by applying the canons of
+a soulless connoisseurship to his work; for the conception of the
+subject is but the starting-point in art-production, and the artist's
+difficulties and triumphs as a craftsman lie in the region of
+technicalities. He knows, moreover, that, however deep or noble his
+idea may be, his work of art will be worthless if it fail in skill
+or be devoid of beauty. What converts a thought into a statue or
+a picture, is the form found for it; and so the form itself seems
+all-important. The artist, therefore, too easily imagines that he may
+neglect his theme; that a fine piece of colouring, a well-balanced
+composition, or, as Cellini put it, 'un bel corpo ignudo,' is enough.
+And this is especially easy in an age which reflects much upon the
+arts, and pursues them with enthusiasm, while its deeper thoughts and
+feelings are not of the kind which translate themselves readily
+into artistic form. But, after all, a fine piece of colouring, a
+well-balanced composition, a sonorous stanza, a learned essay in
+counterpoint, are not enough. They are all excellent good things,
+yielding delight to the artistic sense and instruction to the student.
+Yet when we think of the really great statues, pictures, poems, music
+of the world, we find that these are really great because of something
+more--and that more is their theme, their presentation of a noble
+portion of the human soul. Artists and art-students may be satisfied
+with perfect specimens of a craftsman's skill, independent of his
+theme; but the mass of men will not be satisfied; and it is as wrong
+to suppose that art exists for artists and art-students, as to talk
+of art for art's sake. Art exists for humanity. Art transmutes thought
+and feeling into terms of beautiful form. Art is great and lasting
+in proportion as it appeals to the human consciousness at large,
+presenting to it portions of itself in adequate and lovely form.
+
+VI
+
+It was necessary in the first place firmly to apprehend the truth that
+the final end of all art is the presentation of a spiritual content;
+it is necessary in the next place to remove confusions by considering
+the special circumstances of the several arts.
+
+Each art has its own vehicle of presentation. What it can present and
+how it must present it, depends upon the nature of this vehicle. Thus,
+though architecture, sculpture, painting, music, poetry, meet upon
+the common ground of spiritualised experience--though the works of art
+produced by the architect, sculptor, painter, musician, poet, emanate
+from the spiritual nature of the race, are coloured by the spiritual
+nature of the men who make them, and express what is spiritual in
+humanity under concrete forms invented for them by the artist--yet it
+is certain that all of these arts do not deal exactly with the same
+portions of this common material in the same way or with the same
+results. Each has its own department. Each exhibits qualities of
+strength and weakness special to itself. To define these several
+departments, to explain the relation of these several vehicles
+of presentation to the common subject-matter, is the next step in
+criticism.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of the fine arts, architecture alone subserves utility. We build for
+use. But the geometrical proportions which the architect observes,
+contain the element of beauty and powerfully influence the soul. Into
+the language of arch and aisle and colonnade, of cupola and façade and
+pediment, of spire and vault, the architect translates emotion, vague
+perhaps but deep, mute but unmistakable. When we say that a building
+is sublime or graceful, frivolous or stern, we mean that sublimity
+or grace, frivolity or sternness, is inherent in it. The emotions
+connected with these qualities are inspired in us when we contemplate
+it, and are presented to us by its form. Whether the architect
+deliberately aimed at the sublime or graceful--whether the dignified
+serenity of the Athenian genius sought to express itself in the
+Parthenon, and the mysticism of mediĉval Christianity in the gloom of
+Chartres Cathedral--whether it was Renaissance paganism which gave its
+mundane pomp and glory to S. Peter's, and the refined selfishness of
+royalty its specious splendour to the palace of Versailles--need not
+be curiously questioned. The fact that we are impelled to raise these
+points, that architecture more almost than any art connects itself
+indissolubly with the life, the character, the moral being of a nation
+and an epoch, proves that we are justified in bringing it beneath
+our general definition of the arts. In a great measure because it
+subserves utility, and is therefore dependent upon the necessities of
+life, does architecture present to us through form the human spirit.
+Comparing the palace built by Giulio Romano for the Dukes of Mantua
+with the contemporary castle of a German prince, we cannot fail at
+once to comprehend the difference of spiritual conditions, as these
+displayed themselves in daily life, which then separated Italy from
+the Teutonic nations. But this is not all. Spiritual quality in
+the architect himself finds clear expression in his work. Coldness
+combined with violence marks Brunelleschi's churches; a certain
+suavity and well-bred taste the work of Bramante; while Michelangelo
+exhibits wayward energy in his Library of S. Lorenzo, and Amadeo
+self-abandonment to fancy in his Lombard chapels. I have chosen
+examples from one nation and one epoch in order that the point I seek
+to make, the demonstration of a spiritual quality in buildings, may be
+fairly stated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sculpture and painting distinguish themselves from the other fine
+arts by the imitation of concrete existences in nature. They copy the
+bodies of men and animals, the aspects of the world around us, and the
+handiwork of men. Yet, in so far as they are rightly arts, they do
+not make imitation an object in itself. The grapes of Zeuxis at which
+birds pecked, the painted dog at which a cat's hair bristles--if such
+grapes or such a dog were ever put on canvas--are but evidences of the
+artist's skill, not of his faculty as artist. These two plastic, or,
+as I prefer to call them, figurative arts, use their imitation of
+the external world for the expression, the presentation of internal,
+spiritual things. The human form is for them the outward symbol of the
+inner human spirit, and their power of presenting spirit is limited by
+the means at their disposal.
+
+Sculpture employs stone, wood, clay, the precious metals, to model
+forms, detached and independent, or raised upon a flat surface
+in relief. Its domain is the whole range of human character and
+consciousness, in so far as these can be indicated by fixed facial
+expression, by physical type, and by attitude. If we dwell for an
+instant on the greatest historical epoch of sculpture, we shall
+understand the domain of this art in its range and limitation. At a
+certain point of Greek development the Hellenic Pantheon began to be
+translated by the sculptors into statues; and when the genius of the
+Greeks expired in Rome, the cycle of their psychological conceptions
+had been exhaustively presented through this medium. During that long
+period of time, the most delicate gradations of human personality,
+divinised, idealised, were presented to the contemplation of the
+consciousness which gave them being, in appropriate types. Strength
+and swiftness, massive force and airy lightness, contemplative repose
+and active energy, voluptuous softness and refined grace, intellectual
+sublimity and lascivious seductiveness--the whole rhythm of qualities
+which can be typified by bodily form--were analysed, selected,
+combined in various degrees, to incarnate the religious conceptions of
+Zeus, Aphrodite, Herakles, Dionysus, Pallas, Fauns and Satyrs, Nymphs
+of woods and waves, Tritons, the genius of Death, heroes and hunters,
+lawgivers and poets, presiding deities of minor functions, man's
+lustful appetites and sensual needs. All that men think, or do, or
+are, or wish for, or imagine in this world, had found exact corporeal
+equivalents. Not physiognomy alone, but all the portions of the body
+upon which the habits of the animating soul are wont to stamp
+themselves, were studied and employed as symbolism. Uranian Aphrodite
+was distinguished from her Pandemic sister by chastened lust-repelling
+loveliness. The muscles of Herakles were more ponderous than the tense
+sinews of Achilles. The Hermes of the palĉstra bore a torso of
+majestic depth; the Hermes, who carried messages from heaven, had
+limbs alert for movement. The brows of Zeus inspired awe; the breasts
+of Dionysus breathed delight.
+
+A race accustomed, as the Greeks were, to read this symbolism,
+accustomed, as the Greeks were, to note the individuality of naked
+form, had no difficulty in interpreting the language of sculpture.
+Nor is there now much difficulty in the task. Our surest guide to
+the subject of a basrelief or statue is study of the physical type
+considered as symbolical of spiritual quality. From the fragment of
+a torso the true critic can say whether it belongs to the athletic or
+the erotic species. A limb of Bacchus differs from a limb of Poseidon.
+The whole psychological conception of Aphrodite Pandemos enters into
+every muscle, every joint, no less than into her physiognomy, her
+hair, her attitude.
+
+There is, however, a limit to the domain of sculpture. This art deals
+most successfully with personified generalities. It is also strong in
+the presentation of incarnate character. But when it attempts to tell
+a story, we often seek in vain its meaning. Battles of Amazons or
+Centaurs upon basreliefs, indeed, are unmistakable. The subject is
+indicated here by some external sign. The group of Laocoon appeals
+at once to a reader of Virgil, and the divine vengeance of Leto's
+children upon Niobe is manifest in the Uffizzi marbles. But who are
+the several heroes of the Ĉginetan pediment, and what was the subject
+of the Pheidian statues on the Parthenon? Do the three graceful
+figures of a basrelief which exists at Naples and in the Villa Albani,
+represent Orpheus, Hermes, and Eurydice, or Antiope and her two sons?
+Was the winged and sworded genius upon the Ephesus column meant for a
+genius of Death or a genius of Love?
+
+This dimness of significance indicates the limitation of sculpture,
+and inclines some of those who feel its charm to assert that the
+sculptor seeks to convey no intellectual meaning, that he is satisfied
+with the creation of beautiful form. There is sense in this revolt
+against the faith which holds that art is nothing but a mode of
+spiritual presentation. Truly the artist aims at producing beauty, is
+satisfied if he conveys delight. But it is impossible to escape from
+the certainty that, while he is creating forms of beauty, he means
+something; and that something, that theme for which he finds the form,
+is part of the world's spiritual heritage. Only the crudest works of
+plastic art, capricci and arabesques, have no intellectual content;
+and even these are good in so far as they convey the playfulness of
+fancy.
+
+Painting employs colours upon surfaces--walls, panels, canvas. What
+has been said about sculpture will apply in a great measure to this
+art. The human form, the world around us, the works of man's hands,
+are represented in painting, not for their own sake merely, but with
+a view to bringing thought, feeling, action, home to the consciousness
+of the spectator from the artist's consciousness on which they have
+been impressed. Painting can tell a story better than sculpture, can
+represent more complicated feelings, can suggest thoughts of a subtler
+intricacy. Through colour, it can play, like music, directly on
+powerful but vague emotion. It is deficient in fulness and roundness
+of concrete reality. A statue stands before us, the soul incarnate in
+ideal form, fixed and frozen for eternity. The picture is a reflection
+cast upon a magic glass; not less permanent, but reduced to a shadow
+of reality. To follow these distinctions farther would be alien from
+the present purpose. It is enough to repeat that, within their several
+spheres, according to their several strengths and weaknesses, both
+sculpture and painting present the spirit to us only as the spirit
+shows itself immersed in things of sense. The light of a lamp enclosed
+within an alabaster vase is still lamplight, though shorn of lustre
+and toned to coloured softness. Even thus the spirit, immersed in
+things of sense presented to us by the figurative arts, is still
+spirit, though diminished in its intellectual clearness and invested
+with hues not its own. To fashion that alabaster form of art with
+utmost skill, to make it beautiful, to render it transparent, is the
+artist's function. But he will have failed of the highest if the
+light within burns dim, or if he gives the world a lamp in which no
+spiritual flame is lighted.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Music transports us to a different region. It imitates nothing. It
+uses pure sound, and sound of the most wholly artificial kind--so
+artificial that the musical sounds of one race are unmusical, and
+therefore unintelligible, to another. Like architecture, music relies
+upon mathematical proportions. Unlike architecture, music serves no
+utility. It is the purest art of pleasure--the truest paradise and
+playground of the spirit. It has less power than painting, even less
+power than sculpture, to tell a story or to communicate an idea. For
+we must remember that when music is married to words, the words, and
+not the music, reach our thinking faculty. And yet, in spite of all,
+music presents man's spirit to itself through form. The domain of the
+spirit over which music reigns, is emotion--not defined emotion, not
+feeling even so defined as jealousy or anger--but those broad bases of
+man's being out of which emotions spring, defining themselves through
+action into this or that set type of feeling. Architecture, we have
+noticed, is so connected with specific modes of human existence, that
+from its main examples we can reconstruct the life of men who used
+it. Sculpture and painting, by limiting their presentation to the
+imitation of external things, have all the help which experience
+and, association render. The mere artificiality of music's vehicle
+separates it from life and makes its message untranslatable. Yet, as I
+have already pointed out, this very disability under which it labours
+is the secret of its extraordinary potency. Nothing intervenes between
+the musical work of art and the fibres of the sentient being it
+immediately thrills. We do not seek to say what music means. We feel
+the music. And if a man should pretend that the music has not passed
+beyond his ears, has communicated nothing but a musical delight, he
+simply tells us that he has not felt music. The ancients on this point
+were wiser than some moderns when, without pretending to assign an
+intellectual significance to music, they held it for an axiom that
+one type of music bred one type of character, another type another.
+A change in the music of a state, wrote Plato, will be followed by
+changes in its constitution. It is of the utmost importance, said
+Aristotle, to provide in education for the use of the ennobling and
+the fortifying moods. These philosophers knew that music creates a
+spiritual world, in which the spirit cannot live and move without
+contracting habits of emotion. In this vagueness of significance but
+intensity of feeling lies the magic of music. A melody occurs to the
+composer, which he certainly connects with no act of the reason, which
+he is probably unconscious of connecting with any movement of his
+feeling, but which nevertheless is the form in sound of an emotional
+mood. When he reflects upon the melody secreted thus impromptu, he
+is aware, as we learn from his own lips, that this work has
+correspondence with emotion. Beethoven calls one symphony Heroic,
+another Pastoral; of the opening of another he says, 'Fate knocks at
+the door.' Mozart sets comic words to the mass-music of a friend, in
+order to mark his sense of its inaptitude for religious sentiment. All
+composers use phrases like Maestoso, Pomposo, Allegro, Lagrimoso, Con
+Fuoco, to express the general complexion of the mood their music ought
+to represent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Before passing to poetry, it may be well to turn aside and consider
+two subordinate arts, which deserve a place in any system of
+ĉsthetics. These are dancing and acting. Dancing uses the living human
+form, and presents feeling or action, the passions and the deeds of
+men, in artificially educated movements of the body. The element of
+beauty it possesses, independently of the beauty of the dancer, is
+rhythm. Acting or the art of mimicry presents the same subject-matter,
+no longer under the conditions of fixed rhythm but as an ideal
+reproduction of reality. The actor is what he represents, and the
+element of beauty in his art is perfection of realisation. It is his
+duty as an artist to show us Orestes or Othello, not perhaps exactly
+as Othello and Orestes were, but as the essence of their tragedies,
+ideally incorporate in action, ought to be. The actor can do this
+in dumb show. Some of the greatest actors of the ancient world were
+mimes. But he usually interprets a poet's thought, and attempts to
+present an artistic conception in a secondary form of art, which has
+for its advantage his own personality in play.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The last of the fine arts is literature; or, in the narrower sphere
+of which it will be well to speak here only, is poetry. Poetry employs
+words in fixed rhythms, which we call metres. Only a small portion of
+its effect is derived from the beauty of its sound. It appeals to the
+sense of hearing far less immediately than music does. It makes no
+appeal to the eyesight, and takes no help from the beauty of colour.
+It produces no tangible object. But language being the storehouse
+of all human experience, language being the medium whereby spirit
+communicates with spirit in affairs of life, the vehicle which
+transmits to us the thoughts and feelings of the past, and on which we
+rely for continuing our present to the future, it follows that, of all
+the arts, poetry soars highest, flies widest, and is most at home in
+the region of the spirit. What poetry lacks of sensuous fulness, it
+more than balances by intellectual intensity. Its significance is
+unmistakable, because it employs the very material men use in their
+exchange of thoughts and correspondence of emotions. To the bounds of
+its empire there is no end. It embraces in its own more abstract
+being all the arts. By words it does the work in turn of architecture,
+sculpture, painting, music. It is the metaphysic of the fine arts.
+Philosophy finds place in poetry; and life itself, refined to its last
+utterance, hangs trembling on this thread which joins our earth
+to heaven, this bridge between experience and the realms where
+unattainable and imperceptible will have no meaning.
+
+If we are right in defining art as the manifestation of the human
+spirit to man by man in beautiful form, poetry, more incontestably
+than any other art, fulfils this definition and enables us to gauge
+its accuracy. For words are the spirit, manifested to itself in
+symbols with no sensual alloy. Poetry is therefore the presentation,
+through words, of life and all that life implies. Perception, emotion,
+thought, action, find in descriptive, lyrical, reflective, dramatic,
+and epical poetry their immediate apocalypse. In poetry we are no
+longer puzzled with problems as to whether art has or has not of
+necessity a spiritual content. There cannot be any poetry whatsoever
+without a spiritual meaning of some sort: good or bad, moral,
+immoral, or non-moral, obscure or lucid, noble or ignoble, slight or
+weighty--such distinctions do not signify. In poetry we are not met by
+questions whether the poet intended to convey a meaning when he made
+it. Quite meaningless poetry (as some critics would fain find melody
+quite meaningless, or a statue meaningless, or a Venetian picture
+meaningless) is a contradiction in terms. In poetry, life, or a
+portion of life, lives again, resuscitated and presented to our mental
+faculty through art. The best poetry is that which reproduces the most
+of life, or its intensest moments. Therefore the extensive species of
+the drama and the epic, the intensive species of the lyric, have been
+ever held in highest esteem. Only a half-crazy critic flaunts the
+paradox that poetry is excellent in so far as it assimilates the
+vagueness of music, or estimates a poet by his power of translating
+sense upon the borderland of nonsense into melodious words. Where
+poetry falls short in the comparison with other arts, is in the
+quality of form-giving, in the quality of sensuous concreteness.
+Poetry can only present forms to the mental eye and to the
+intellectual sense, stimulate the physical senses by indirect
+suggestion. Therefore dramatic poetry, the most complicated kind of
+poetry, relies upon the actor; and lyrical poetry, the intensest kind
+of poetry, seeks the aid of music. But these comparative deficiencies
+are overbalanced, for all the highest purposes of art, by the
+width and depth, the intelligibility and power, the flexibility and
+multitudinous associations, of language. The other arts are limited in
+what they utter. There is nothing which has entered into the life of
+man which poetry cannot express. Poetry says everything in man's own
+language to the mind. The other arts appeal imperatively, each in its
+own region, to man's senses; and the mind receives art's message
+by the help of symbols from the world of sense. Poetry lacks this
+immediate appeal to sense. But the elixir which it offers to the mind,
+its quintessence extracted from all things of sense, reacts through
+intellectual perception upon all the faculties that make men what they
+are.
+
+VII
+
+I used a metaphor in one of the foregoing paragraphs to indicate the
+presence of the vital spirit, the essential element of thought or
+feeling, in the work of art. I said it radiated through the form, as
+lamplight through an alabaster vase. Now the skill of the artist is
+displayed in modelling that vase, in giving it shape, rich and rare,
+and fashioning its curves with subtlest workmanship. In so far as he
+is a craftsman, the artist's pains must be bestowed upon this precious
+vessel of the animating theme. In so far as he has power over beauty,
+he must exert it in this plastic act. It is here that he displays
+dexterity; here that he creates; here that he separates himself from
+other men who think and feel. The poet, more perhaps than any other
+artist, needs to keep this steadily in view; for words being our daily
+vehicle of utterance, it may well chance that the alabaster vase of
+language should be hastily or trivially modelled. This is the true
+reason why 'neither gods nor men nor the columns either suffer
+mediocrity in singers.' Upon the poet it is specially incumbent to see
+that he has something rare to say and some rich mode of saying it. The
+figurative arts need hardly be so cautioned. They run their risk in
+quite a different direction. For sculptor and for painter, the danger
+is lest he should think that alabaster vase his final task. He may too
+easily be satisfied with moulding a beautiful but empty form.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The last word on the topic of the arts is given in one sentence. Let
+us remember that every work of art enshrines a spiritual subject, and
+that the artist's power is shown in finding for that subject a form of
+ideal loveliness. Many kindred points remain to be discussed; as what
+we mean by beauty, which is a condition indispensable to noble art;
+and what are the relations of the arts to ethics. These questions
+cannot now be raised. It is enough in one essay to have tried to
+vindicate the spirituality of art in general.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_A VENETIAN MEDLEY_
+
+
+I.--FIRST IMPRESSIONS AND FAMILIARITY
+
+It is easy to feel and to say something obvious about Venice. The
+influence of this sea-city is unique, immediate, and unmistakable. But
+to express the sober truth of those impressions which remain when the
+first astonishment of the Venetian revelation has subsided, when the
+spirit of the place has been harmonised through familiarity with our
+habitual mood, is difficult.
+
+Venice inspires at first an almost Corybantic rapture. From our
+earliest visits, if these have been measured by days rather than
+weeks, we carry away with us the memory of sunsets emblazoned in gold
+and crimson upon cloud and water; of violet domes and bell-towers
+etched against the orange of a western sky; of moonlight silvering
+breeze-rippled breadths of liquid blue; of distant islands shimmering
+in sun-litten haze; of music and black gliding boats; of labyrinthine
+darkness made for mysteries of love and crime; of statue-fretted
+palace fronts; of brazen clangour and a moving crowd; of pictures by
+earth's proudest painters, cased in gold on walls of council chambers
+where Venice sat enthroned a queen, where nobles swept the floors with
+robes of Tyrian brocade. These reminiscences will be attended by an
+ever-present sense of loneliness and silence in the world around; the
+sadness of a limitless horizon, the solemnity of an unbroken arch of
+heaven, the calm and greyness of evening on the lagoons, the pathos of
+a marble city crumbling to its grave in mud and brine.
+
+These first impressions of Venice are true. Indeed they are
+inevitable. They abide, and form a glowing background for all
+subsequent pictures, toned more austerely, and painted in more lasting
+hues of truth upon the brain. Those have never felt Venice at all who
+have not known this primal rapture, or who perhaps expected more of
+colour, more of melodrama, from a scene which nature and the art of
+man have made the richest in these qualities. Yet the mood engendered
+by this first experience is not destined to be permanent. It contains
+an element of unrest and unreality which vanishes upon familiarity.
+From the blare of that triumphal bourdon of brass instruments emerge
+the delicate voices of violin and clarinette. To the contrasted
+passions of our earliest love succeed a multitude of sweet and
+fanciful emotions. It is my present purpose to recapture some of the
+impressions made by Venice in more tranquil moods. Memory might
+be compared to a kaleidoscope. Far away from Venice I raise the
+wonder-working tube, allow the glittering fragments to settle as they
+please, and with words attempt to render something of the patterns I
+behold.
+
+II.--A LODGING IN SAN VIO
+
+I have escaped from the hotels with their bustle of tourists and
+crowded _tables-d'hôte_. My garden stretches down to the Grand
+Canal, closed at the end with a pavilion, where I lounge and smoke and
+watch the cornice of the Prefettura fretted with gold in sunset light.
+My sitting-room and bed-room face the southern sun. There is a canal
+below, crowded with gondolas, and across its bridge the good folk
+of San Vio come and go the whole day long--men in blue shirts with
+enormous hats, and jackets slung on their left shoulder; women in
+kerchiefs of orange and crimson. Barelegged boys sit upon the parapet,
+dangling their feet above the rising tide. A hawker passes, balancing
+a basket full of live and crawling crabs. Barges filled with Brenta
+water or Mirano wine take up their station at the neighbouring steps,
+and then ensues a mighty splashing and hurrying to and fro of men with
+tubs upon their heads. The brawny fellows in the wine-barge are red
+from brows to breast with drippings of the vat. And now there is a
+bustle in the quarter. A _barca_ has arrived from S. Erasmo, the
+island of the market-gardens. It is piled with gourds and pumpkins,
+cabbages and tomatoes, pomegranates and pears--a pyramid of gold and
+green and scarlet. Brown men lift the fruit aloft, and women bending
+from the pathway bargain for it. A clatter of chaffering tongues, a
+ring of coppers, a Babel of hoarse sea-voices, proclaim the sharpness
+of the struggle. When the quarter has been served, the boat sheers
+off diminished in its burden. Boys and girls are left seasoning their
+polenta with a slice of _zucca_, while the mothers of a score of
+families go pattering up yonder courtyard with the material for their
+husbands' supper in their handkerchiefs. Across the canal, or more
+correctly the _Rio_, opens a wide grass-grown court. It is
+lined on the right hand by a row of poor dwellings, swarming with
+gondoliers' children. A garden wall runs along the other side, over
+which I can see pomegranate-trees in fruit and pergolas of vines. Far
+beyond are more low houses, and then the sky, swept with sea-breezes,
+and the masts of an ocean-going ship against the dome and turrets of
+Palladio's Redentore.
+
+This is my home. By day it is as lively as a scene in
+_Masaniello_. By night, after nine o'clock, the whole stir of the
+quarter has subsided. Far away I hear the bell of some church tell
+the hours. But no noise disturbs my rest, unless perhaps a belated
+gondolier moors his boat beneath the window. My one maid, Catina,
+sings at her work the whole day through. My gondolier, Francesco,
+acts as valet. He wakes me in the morning, opens the shutters, brings
+sea-water for my bath, and takes his orders for the day. 'Will it do
+for Chioggia, Francesco?' 'Sissignore! The Signorino has set off in
+his _sandolo_ already with Antonio. The Signora is to go with us
+in the gondola.' 'Then get three more men, Francesco, and see that all
+of them can sing.'
+
+III.--TO CHIOGGIA WITH OAR AND SAIL
+
+The _sandolo_ is a boat shaped like the gondola, but smaller
+and lighter, without benches, and without the high steel prow or
+_ferro_ which distinguishes the gondola. The gunwale is only just
+raised above the water, over which the little craft skims with a rapid
+bounding motion, affording an agreeable variation from the stately
+swanlike movement of the gondola. In one of these boats--called by
+him the _Fisolo_ or Seamew--my friend Eustace had started with
+Antonio, intending to row the whole way to Chioggia, or, if the breeze
+favoured, to hoist a sail and help himself along. After breakfast,
+when the crew for my gondola had been assembled, Francesco and I
+followed with the Signora. It was one of those perfect mornings which
+occur as a respite from broken weather, when the air is windless and
+the light falls soft through haze on the horizon. As we broke into the
+lagoon behind the Redentore, the islands in front of us, S. Spirito,
+Poveglia, Malamocco, seemed as though they were just lifted from the
+sea-line. The Euganeans, far away to westward, were bathed in mist,
+and almost blent with the blue sky. Our four rowers put their backs
+into their work; and soon we reached the port of Malamocco, where a
+breeze from the Adriatic caught us sideways for a while. This is
+the largest of the breaches in the Lidi, or raised sand-reefs, which
+protect Venice from the sea: it affords an entrance to vessels of
+draught like the steamers of the Peninsular and Oriental Company. We
+crossed the dancing wavelets of the port; but when we passed under the
+lee of Pelestrina, the breeze failed, and the lagoon was once again a
+sheet of undulating glass. At S. Pietro on this island a halt was made
+to give the oarsmen wine, and here we saw the women at their cottage
+doorways making lace. The old lace industry of Venice has recently
+been revived. From Burano and Pelestrina cargoes of hand-made
+imitations of the ancient fabrics are sent at intervals to Jesurun's
+magazine at S. Marco. He is the chief _impresario_ of the trade,
+employing hundreds of hands, and speculating for a handsome profit in
+the foreign market on the price he gives his workwomen.
+
+Now we are well lost in the lagoons--Venice no longer visible behind;
+the Alps and Euganeans shrouded in a noonday haze; the lowlands at the
+mouth of Brenta marked by clumps of trees ephemerally faint in silver
+silhouette against the filmy, shimmering horizon. Form and colour
+have disappeared in light-irradiated vapour of an opal hue. And yet
+instinctively we know that we are not at sea; the different quality
+of the water, the piles emerging here and there above the surface, the
+suggestion of coast-lines scarcely felt in this infinity of lustre,
+all remind us that our voyage is confined to the charmed limits of an
+inland lake. At length the jutting headland of Pelestrina was reached.
+We broke across the Porto di Chioggia, and saw Chioggia itself
+ahead--a huddled mass of houses low upon the water. One by one, as
+we rowed steadily, the fishing-boats passed by, emerging from their
+harbour for a twelve hours' cruise upon the open sea. In a long
+line they came, with variegated sails of orange, red, and saffron,
+curiously chequered at the corners, and cantled with devices in
+contrasted tints. A little land-breeze carried them forward. The
+lagoon reflected their deep colours till they reached the port. Then,
+slightly swerving eastward on their course, but still in single file,
+they took the sea and scattered, like beautiful bright-plumaged birds,
+who from a streamlet float into a lake, and find their way at large
+according as each wills.
+
+The Signorino and Antonio, though want of wind obliged them to row the
+whole way from Venice, had reached Chioggia an hour before, and stood
+waiting to receive us on the quay. It is a quaint town this Chioggia,
+which has always lived a separate life from that of Venice. Language
+and race and customs have held the two populations apart from those
+distant years when Genoa and the Republic of S. Mark fought their duel
+to the death out in the Chioggian harbours, down to these days, when
+your Venetian gondolier will tell you that the Chioggoto loves his
+pipe more than his _donna_ or his wife. The main canal is lined
+with substantial palaces, attesting to old wealth and comfort. But
+from Chioggia, even more than from Venice, the tide of modern luxury
+and traffic has retreated. The place is left to fishing folk and
+builders of the fishing craft, whose wharves still form the liveliest
+quarter. Wandering about its wide deserted courts and _calli_,
+we feel the spirit of the decadent Venetian nobility. Passages from
+Goldoni's and Casanova's Memoirs occur to our memory. It seems easy to
+realise what they wrote about the dishevelled gaiety and lawless
+license of Chioggia in the days of powder, sword-knot, and _soprani_.
+Baffo walks beside us in hypocritical composure of bag-wig and
+senatorial dignity, whispering unmentionable sonnets in his dialect of
+_Xe_ and _Ga_. Somehow or another that last dotage of S. Mark's
+decrepitude is more recoverable by our fancy than the heroism of
+Pisani in the fourteenth century. From his prison in blockaded Venice
+the great admiral was sent forth on a forlorn hope, and blocked
+victorious Doria here with boats on which the nobles of the Golden
+Book had spent their fortunes. Pietro Doria boasted that with his own
+hands he would bridle the bronze horses of S. Mark. But now he found
+himself between the navy of Carlo Zeno in the Adriatic and the
+flotilla led by Vittore Pisani across the lagoon. It was in vain that
+the Republic of S. George strained every nerve to send him succour
+from the Ligurian sea; in vain that the lords of Padua kept opening
+communications with him from the mainland. From the 1st of January
+1380 till the 21st of June the Venetians pressed the blockade ever
+closer, grappling their foemen in a grip that if relaxed one moment
+would have hurled him at their throats. The long and breathless
+struggle ended in the capitulation at Chioggia of what remained of
+Doria's forty-eight galleys and fourteen thousand men.
+
+These great deeds are far away and hazy. The brief sentences of
+mediĉval annalists bring them less near to us than the _chroniques
+scandaleuses_ of good-for-nothing scoundrels, whose vulgar adventures
+might be revived at the present hour with scarce a change of setting.
+Such is the force of _intimité_ in literature. And yet Baffo and
+Casanova are as much of the past as Doria and Pisani. It is only
+perhaps that the survival of decadence in all we see around us, forms
+a fitting framework for our recollections of their vividly described
+corruption.
+
+Not far from the landing-place a balustraded bridge of ample breadth
+and large bravura manner spans the main canal. Like everything at
+Chioggia, it is dirty and has fallen from its first estate. Yet
+neither time nor injury can obliterate style or wholly degrade marble.
+Hard by the bridge there are two rival inns. At one of these we
+ordered a seadinner--crabs, cuttlefishes, soles, and turbots--which
+we ate at a table in the open air. Nothing divided us from the street
+except a row of Japanese privet-bushes in hooped tubs. Our banquet
+soon assumed a somewhat unpleasant similitude to that of Dives; for
+the Chioggoti, in all stages of decrepitude and squalor, crowded round
+to beg for scraps--indescribable old women, enveloped in their own
+petticoats thrown over their heads; girls hooded with sombre black
+mantles; old men wrinkled beyond recognition by their nearest
+relatives; jabbering, half-naked boys; slow, slouching fishermen with
+clay pipes in their mouths and philosophical acceptance on their sober
+foreheads.
+
+That afternoon the gondola and sandolo were lashed together side
+by side. Two sails were raised, and in this lazy fashion we stole
+homewards, faster or slower according as the breeze freshened or
+slackened, landing now and then on islands, sauntering along the
+sea-walls which bulwark Venice from the Adriatic, and singing--those
+at least of us who had the power to sing. Four of our Venetians had
+trained voices and memories of inexhaustible music. Over the level
+water, with the ripple plashing at our keel, their songs went abroad,
+and mingled with the failing day. The barcaroles and serenades
+peculiar to Venice were, of course, in harmony with the occasion.
+But some transcripts from classical operas were even more attractive,
+through the dignity with which these men invested them. By the
+peculiarity of their treatment the _recitativo_ of the stage
+assumed a solemn movement, marked in rhythm, which removed it from
+the commonplace into antiquity, and made me understand how cultivated
+music may pass back by natural, unconscious transition into the realm
+of popular melody.
+
+The sun sank, not splendidly, but quietly in banks of clouds above
+the Alps. Stars came out, uncertainly at first, and then in strength,
+reflected on the sea. The men of the Dogana watch-boat challenged us
+and let us pass. Madonna's lamp was twinkling from her shrine upon the
+harbour-pile. The city grew before us. Stealing into Venice in that
+calm--stealing silently and shadowlike, with scarce a ruffle of the
+water, the masses of the town emerging out of darkness into twilight,
+till San Giorgio's gun boomed with a flash athwart our stern, and the
+gas-lamps of the Piazzetta swam into sight; all this was like a long
+enchanted chapter of romance. And now the music of our men had sunk to
+one faint whistling from Eustace of tunes in harmony with whispers at
+the prow.
+
+Then came the steps of the Palazzo Venier and the deep-scented
+darkness of the garden. As we passed through to supper, I plucked a
+spray of yellow Banksia rose, and put it in my buttonhole. The dew was
+on its burnished leaves, and evening had drawn forth its perfume.
+
+IV.--MORNING RAMBLES
+
+A story is told of Poussin, the French painter, that when he was asked
+why he would not stay in Venice, he replied, 'If I stay here, I
+shall become a colourist!' A somewhat similar tale is reported of a
+fashionable English decorator. While on a visit to friends in Venice,
+he avoided every building which contains a Tintoretto, averring that
+the sight of Tintoretto's pictures would injure his carefully trained
+taste. It is probable that neither anecdote is strictly true. Yet
+there is a certain epigrammatic point in both; and I have often
+speculated whether even Venice could have so warped the genius of
+Poussin as to shed one ray of splendour on his canvases, or whether
+even Tintoretto could have so sublimed the prophet of Queen Anne as to
+make him add dramatic passion to a London drawing-room. Anyhow, it is
+exceedingly difficult to escape from colour in the air of Venice, or
+from Tintoretto in her buildings. Long, delightful mornings may be
+spent in the enjoyment of the one and the pursuit of the other by folk
+who have no classical or pseudo-mediĉval theories to oppress them.
+
+Tintoretto's house, though changed, can still be visited. It formed
+part of the Fondamenta dei Mori, so called from having been the
+quarter assigned to Moorish traders in Venice. A spirited carving of a
+turbaned Moor leading a camel charged with merchandise, remains above
+the waterline of a neighbouring building; and all about the crumbling
+walls sprout flowering weeds--samphire and snapdragon and the spiked
+campanula, which shoots a spire of sea-blue stars from chinks of
+Istrian stone.
+
+The house stands opposite the Church of Santa Maria dell' Orto, where
+Tintoretto was buried, and where four of his chief masterpieces are
+to be seen. This church, swept and garnished, is a triumph of modern
+Italian restoration. They have contrived to make it as commonplace as
+human ingenuity could manage. Yet no malice of ignorant industry can
+obscure the treasures it contains--the pictures of Cima, Gian Bellini,
+Palma, and the four Tintorettos, which form its crowning glory. Here
+the master may be studied in four of his chief moods: as the painter
+of tragic passion and movement, in the huge 'Last Judgment;' as the
+painter of impossibilities, in the 'Vision of Moses upon Sinai;'
+as the painter of purity and tranquil pathos, in the 'Miracle of S.
+Agnes;' as the painter of Biblical history brought home to daily life,
+in the 'Presentation of the Virgin.' Without leaving the Madonna dell'
+Orto, a student can explore his genius in all its depth and breadth;
+comprehend the enthusiasm he excites in those who seek, as the
+essentials of art, imaginative boldness and sincerity; understand what
+is meant by adversaries who maintain that, after all, Tintoretto was
+but an inspired Gustave Doré. Between that quiet canvas of the
+'Presentation,' so modest in its cool greys and subdued gold, and the
+tumult of flying, running? doesn't make much sense, but can't figure
+out a plausible alternative, ascending figures in the 'Judgment,' what
+an interval there is! How strangely the white lamb-like maiden,
+kneeling beside her lamb in the picture of S. Agnes, contrasts with
+the dusky gorgeousness of the Hebrew women despoiling themselves of
+jewels for the golden calf! Comparing these several manifestations of
+creative power, we feel ourselves in the grasp of a painter who was
+essentially a poet, one for whom his art was the medium for expressing
+before all things thought and passion. Each picture is executed in the
+manner suited to its tone of feeling, the key of its conception.
+
+Elsewhere than in the Madonna dell' Orto there are more distinguished
+single examples of Tintoretto's realising faculty. The 'Last Supper'
+in San Giorgio, for instance, and the 'Adoration of the Shepherds'
+in the Scuola di San Rocco illustrate his unique power of presenting
+sacred history in a novel, romantic framework of familiar things.
+The commonplace circumstances of ordinary life have been employed to
+portray in the one case a lyric of mysterious splendour; in the other,
+an idyll of infinite sweetness. Divinity shines through the rafters
+of that upper chamber, where round a low large table the Apostles
+are assembled in a group translated from the social customs of the
+painter's days. Divinity is shed upon the straw-spread manger, where
+Christ lies sleeping in the loft, with shepherds crowding through the
+room beneath.
+
+A studied contrast between the simplicity and repose of the central
+figure and the tumult of passions in the multitude around, may be
+observed in the 'Miracle of S. Agnes.' It is this which gives dramatic
+vigour to the composition. But the same effect is carried to its
+highest fulfilment, with even a loftier beauty, in the episode of
+Christ before the judgment-seat of Pilate, at San Rocco. Of all
+Tintoretto's religious pictures, that is the most profoundly felt, the
+most majestic. No other artist succeeded as he has here succeeded in
+presenting to us God incarnate. For this Christ is not merely the
+just man, innocent, silent before his accusers. The stationary,
+white-draped figure, raised high above the agitated crowd, with
+tranquil forehead slightly bent, facing his perplexed and fussy judge,
+is more than man. We cannot say perhaps precisely why he is divine.
+But Tintoretto has made us feel that he is. In other words, his
+treatment of the high theme chosen by him has been adequate.
+
+We must seek the Scuola di San Rocco for examples of Tintoretto's
+liveliest imagination. Without ceasing to be Italian in his attention
+to harmony and grace, he far exceeded the masters of his nation in the
+power of suggesting what is weird, mysterious, upon the borderland
+of the grotesque. And of this quality there are three remarkable
+instances in the Scuola. No one but Tintoretto could have evoked
+the fiend in his 'Temptation of Christ.' It is an indescribable
+hermaphroditic genius, the genius of carnal fascination, with
+outspread downy rose-plumed wings, and flaming bracelets on the full
+but sinewy arms, who kneels and lifts aloft great stones, smiling
+entreatingly to the sad, grey Christ seated beneath a rugged
+pent-house of the desert. No one again but Tintoretto could have
+dashed the hot lights of that fiery sunset in such quivering flakes
+upon the golden flesh of Eve, half hidden among laurels, as she
+stretches forth the fruit of the Fall to shrinking Adam. No one but
+Tintoretto, till we come to Blake, could have imagined yonder Jonah,
+summoned by the beck of God from the whale's belly. The monstrous
+fish rolls over in the ocean, blowing portentous vapour from his
+trump-shaped nostril. The prophet's beard descends upon his naked
+breast in hoary ringlets to the girdle. He has forgotten the past
+peril of the deep, although the whale's jaws yawn around him. Between
+him and the outstretched finger of Jehovah calling him again to life,
+there runs a spark of unseen spiritual electricity.
+
+To comprehend Tintoretto's touch upon the pastoral idyll we must turn
+our steps to San Giorgio again, and pace those meadows by the
+running river in company with his Manna-Gatherers. Or we may seek the
+Accademia, and notice how he here has varied the 'Temptation of Adam
+by Eve,' choosing a less tragic motive of seduction than the one so
+powerfully rendered at San Rocco. Or in the Ducal Palace we may
+take our station, hour by hour, before the 'Marriage of Bacchus and
+Ariadne.' It is well to leave the very highest achievements of art
+untouched by criticism, undescribed. And in this picture we have the
+most perfect of all modern attempts to realise an antique myth--more
+perfect than Raphael's 'Galatea,' or Titian's 'Meeting of Bacchus
+with Ariadne,' or Botticelli's 'Birth of Venus from the Sea.' It may
+suffice to marvel at the slight effect which melodies so powerful and
+so direct as these produce upon the ordinary public. Sitting, as is my
+wont, one Sunday morning, opposite the 'Bacchus,' four Germans with a
+cicerone sauntered by. The subject was explained to them. They waited
+an appreciable space of time. Then the youngest opened his lips and
+spake: 'Bacchus war der Wein-Gott.' And they all moved heavily away.
+_Bos locutus est_. 'Bacchus was the wine-god!' This, apparently,
+is what a picture tells to one man. To another it presents divine
+harmonies, perceptible indeed in nature, but here by the painter-poet
+for the first time brought together and cadenced in a work of art. For
+another it is perhaps the hieroglyph of pent-up passions and desired
+impossibilities. For yet another it may only mean the unapproachable
+inimitable triumph of consummate craft.
+
+Tintoretto, to be rightly understood, must be sought all over
+Venice--in the church as well as the Scuola di San Rocco; in
+the 'Temptation of S. Anthony' at S. Trovaso no less than in the
+Temptations of Eve and Christ; in the decorative pomp of the Sala del
+Senato, and in the Paradisal vision of the Sala del Gran Consiglio.
+Yet, after all, there is one of his most characteristic moods, to
+appreciate which fully we return to the Madonna dell' Orto. I have
+called him 'the painter of impossibilities.' At rare moments he
+rendered them possible by sheer imaginative force. If we wish to
+realise this phase of his creative power, and to measure our own
+subordination to his genius in its most hazardous enterprise, we
+must spend much time in the choir of this church. Lovers of art who
+mistrust this play of the audacious fancy--aiming at sublimity in
+supersensual regions, sometimes attaining to it by stupendous effort
+or authentic revelation, not seldom sinking to the verge of bathos,
+and demanding the assistance of interpretative sympathy in the
+spectator--such men will not take the point of view required of them
+by Tintoretto in his boldest flights, in the 'Worship of the Golden
+Calf' and in the 'Destruction of the World by Water.' It is for them
+to ponder well the flying archangel with the scales of judgment in his
+hand, and the seraph-charioted Jehovah enveloping Moses upon Sinai in
+lightnings.
+
+The gondola has had a long rest. Were Francesco but a little more
+impatient, he might be wondering what had become of the padrone. I bid
+him turn, and we are soon gliding into the Sacca della Misericordia.
+This is a protected float, where the wood which comes from Cadore
+and the hills of the Ampezzo is stored in spring. Yonder square white
+house, standing out to sea, fronting Murano and the Alps, they call
+the Oasa degli Spiriti. No one cares to inhabit it; for here, in old
+days, it was the wont of the Venetians to lay their dead for a night's
+rest before their final journey to the graveyard of S. Michele. So
+many generations of dead folk had made that house their inn, that it
+is now no fitting home for living men. San Michele is the island close
+before Murano, where the Lombardi built one of their most romantically
+graceful churches of pale Istrian stone, and where the Campo Santo has
+for centuries received the dead into its oozy clay. The cemetery is at
+present undergoing restoration. Its state of squalor and abandonment
+to cynical disorder makes one feel how fitting for Italians would be
+the custom of cremation. An island in the lagoons devoted to funeral
+pyres is a solemn and ennobling conception. This graveyard, with
+its ruinous walls, its mangy riot of unwholesome weeds, its corpses
+festering in slime beneath neglected slabs in hollow chambers, and the
+mephitic wash of poisoned waters that surround it, inspires the horror
+of disgust.
+
+The morning has not lost its freshness. Antelao and Tofana, guarding
+the vale above Cortina, show faint streaks of snow upon their
+amethyst. Little clouds hang in the still autumn sky. There are men
+dredging for shrimps and crabs through shoals uncovered by the ebb.
+Nothing can be lovelier, more resting to eyes tired with pictures than
+this tranquil, sunny expanse of the lagoon. As we round the point of
+the Bersaglio, new landscapes of island and Alp and low-lying mainland
+move into sight at every slow stroke of the oar. A luggage-train
+comes lumbering along the railway bridge, puffing white smoke into
+the placid blue. Then we strike down Cannaregio, and I muse upon
+processions of kings and generals and noble strangers, entering Venice
+by this water-path from Mestre, before the Austrians built their
+causeway for the trains. Some of the rare scraps of fresco upon house
+fronts, still to be seen in Venice, are left in Cannaregio. They
+are chiaroscuro allegories in a bold bravura manner of the sixteenth
+century. From these and from a few rosy fragments on the Fondaco
+dei Tedeschi, the Fabbriche Nuove, and precious fading figures in a
+certain courtyard near San Stefano, we form some notion how Venice
+looked when all her palaces were painted. Pictures by Gentile Bellini,
+Mansueti, and Carpaccio help the fancy in this work of restoration.
+And here and there, in back canals, we come across coloured sections
+of old buildings, capped by true Venetian chimneys, which for a moment
+seem to realise our dream.
+
+A morning with Tintoretto might well be followed by a morning with
+Carpaccio or Bellini. But space is wanting in these pages. Nor would
+it suit the manner of this medley to hunt the Lombardi through palaces
+and churches, pointing out their singularities of violet and yellow
+panellings in marble, the dignity of their wide-opened arches, or the
+delicacy of their shallow chiselled traceries in cream-white
+Istrian stone. It is enough to indicate the goal of many a pleasant
+pilgrimage: warrior angels of Vivarini and Basaiti hidden in a dark
+chapel of the Frari; Fra Francesco's fantastic orchard of fruits and
+flowers in distant S. Francesco della Vigna; the golden Gian Bellini
+in S. Zaccaria; Palma's majestic S. Barbara in S. Maria Formosa; San
+Giobbe's wealth of sculptured frieze and floral scroll; the Ponte
+di Paradiso, with its Gothic arch; the painted plates in the Museo
+Civico; and palace after palace, loved for some quaint piece of
+tracery, some moulding full of mediĉval symbolism, some fierce
+impossible Renaissance freak of fancy.
+
+Bather than prolong this list, I will tell a story which drew me one
+day past the Public Gardens to the metropolitan Church of Venice, San
+Pietro di Castello. The novella is related by Bandello. It has, as
+will be noticed, points of similarity to that of 'Romeo and Juliet.'
+
+V.--A VENETIAN NOVELLA
+
+At the time when Carpaccio and Gentile Bellini were painting those
+handsome youths in tight jackets, parti-coloured hose, and little
+round caps placed awry upon their shocks of well-combed hair, there
+lived in Venice two noblemen, Messer Pietro and Messer Paolo, whose
+palaces fronted each other on the Grand Canal. Messer Paolo was a
+widower, with one married daughter, and an only son of twenty years or
+thereabouts, named Gerardo. Messer Pietro's wife was still living; and
+this couple had but one child, a daughter, called Elena, of exceeding
+beauty, aged fourteen. Gerardo, as is the wont of gallants, was paying
+his addresses to a certain lady; and nearly every day he had to cross
+the Grand Canal in his gondola, and to pass beneath the house of Elena
+on his way to visit his Dulcinea; for this lady lived some distance
+up a little canal on which the western side of Messer Pietro's palace
+looked.
+
+Now it so happened that at the very time when the story opens, Messer
+Pietro's wife fell ill and died, and Elena was left alone at home with
+her father and her old nurse. Across the little canal of which I spoke
+there dwelt another nobleman, with four daughters, between the years
+of seventeen and twenty-one. Messer Pietro, desiring to provide
+amusement for poor little Elena, besought this gentleman that his
+daughters might come on feast-days to play with her. For you must know
+that, except on festivals of the Church, the custom of Venice required
+that gentlewomen should remain closely shut within the private
+apartments of their dwellings. His request was readily granted; and on
+the next feast-day the five girls began to play at ball together for
+forfeits in the great saloon, which opened with its row of Gothic
+arches and balustraded balcony upon the Grand Canal. The four sisters,
+meanwhile, had other thoughts than for the game. One or other of them,
+and sometimes three together, would let the ball drop, and run to the
+balcony to gaze upon their gallants, passing up and down in gondolas
+below; and then they would drop flowers or ribands for tokens. Which
+negligence of theirs annoyed Elena much; for she thought only of the
+game. Wherefore she scolded them in childish wise, and one of them
+made answer, 'Elena, if you only knew how pleasant it is to play as we
+are playing on this balcony, you would not care so much for ball and
+forfeits!'
+
+On one of those feast-days the four sisters were prevented from
+keeping their little friend company. Elena, with nothing to do, and
+feeling melancholy, leaned upon the window-sill which overlooked the
+narrow canal. And it chanced that just then Gerardo, on his way to
+Dulcinea, went by; and Elena looked down at him, as she had seen those
+sisters look at passers-by. Gerardo caught her eye, and glances passed
+between them, and Gerardo's gondolier, bending from the poop, said
+to his master, 'O master! methinks that gentle maiden is better worth
+your wooing than Dulcinea.' Gerardo pretended to pay no heed to these
+words; but after rowing a little way, he bade the man turn, and they
+went slowly back beneath the window. This time Elena, thinking to play
+the game which her four friends had played, took from her hair a clove
+carnation and let it fall close to Gerardo on the cushion of the
+gondola. He raised the flower and put it to his lips, acknowledging
+the courtesy with a grave bow. But the perfume of the clove and the
+beauty of Elena in that moment took possession of his heart together,
+and straightway he forgot Dulcinea.
+
+As yet he knew not who Elena was. Nor is this wonderful; for the
+daughters of Venetian nobles were but rarely seen or spoken of.
+But the thought of her haunted him awake and sleeping; and every
+feast-day, when there was the chance of seeing her, he rowed his
+gondola beneath her windows. And there she appeared to him in company
+with her four friends; the five girls clustering together like sister
+roses beneath the pointed windows of the Gothic balcony. Elena, on her
+side, had no thought of love; for of love she had heard no one speak.
+But she took pleasure in the game those friends had taught her, of
+leaning from the balcony to watch Gerardo. He meanwhile grew love-sick
+and impatient, wondering how he might declare his passion. Until one
+day it happened that, talking through a lane or _calle_ which
+skirted Messer Pietro'a palace, he caught sight of Elena's nurse, who
+was knocking at the door, returning from some shopping she had
+made. This nurse had been his own nurse in childhood; therefore he
+remembered her, and cried aloud, 'Nurse, Nurse!' But the old woman did
+not hear him, and passed into the house and shut the door behind her.
+Whereupon Gerardo, greatly moved, still called to her, and when he
+reached the door, began to knock upon it violently. And whether it
+was the agitation of finding himself at last so near the wish of his
+heart, or whether the pains of waiting for his love had weakened him,
+I know not; but, while he knocked, his senses left him, and he fell
+fainting in the doorway. Then the nurse recognised the youth to whom
+she had given suck, and brought him into the courtyard by the help of
+handmaidens, and Elena came down and gazed upon him. The house was now
+full of bustle, and Messer Pietro heard the noise, and seeing the son
+of his neighbour in so piteous a plight, he caused Gerardo to be laid
+upon a bed. But for all they could do with him, he recovered not from
+his swoon. And after a while force was that they should place him in
+a gondola and ferry him across to his father's house. The nurse went
+with him, and informed Messer Paolo of what had happened. Doctors were
+sent for, and the whole family gathered round Gerardo's bed. After
+a while he revived a little; and thinking himself still upon the
+doorstep of Pietro's palace, called again, 'Nurse, Nurse!' She was
+near at hand, and would have spoken to him. But while he summoned his
+senses to his aid, he became gradually aware of his own kinsfolk
+and dissembled the secret of his grief. They beholding him in better
+cheer, departed on their several ways, and the nurse still sat alone
+beside him. Then he explained to her what he had at heart, and how he
+was in love with a maiden whom he had seen on feast-days in the
+house of Messer Pietro. But still he knew not Elena's name; and she,
+thinking it impossible that such a child had inspired this passion,
+began to marvel which of the four sisters it was Gerardo loved. Then
+they appointed the next Sunday, when all the five girls should be
+together, for Gerardo by some sign, as he passed beneath the window,
+to make known to the old nurse his lady.
+
+Elena, meanwhile, who had watched Gerardo lying still and pale in
+swoon beneath her on the pavement of the palace, felt the stirring
+of a new unknown emotion in her soul. When Sunday came, she devised
+excuses for keeping her four friends away, bethinking her that she
+might see him once again alone, and not betray the agitation which she
+dreaded. This ill suited the schemes of the nurse, who nevertheless
+was forced to be content. But after dinner, seeing how restless was
+the girl, and how she came and went, and ran a thousand times to the
+balcony, the nurse began to wonder whether Elena herself were not in
+love with some one. So she feigned to sleep, but placed herself within
+sight of the window. And soon Gerardo came by in his gondola; and
+Elena, who was prepared, threw to him her nosegay. The watchful nurse
+had risen, and peeping behind the girl's shoulder, saw at a glance how
+matters stood. Thereupon she began to scold her charge, and say, 'Is
+this a fair and comely thing, to stand all day at balconies and throw
+flowers at passers-by? Woe to you if your father should come to know
+of this! He would make you wish yourself among the dead!' Elena, sore
+troubled at her nurse's rebuke, turned and threw her arms about her
+neck, and called her 'Nanna!' as the wont is of Venetian children.
+Then she told the old woman how she had learned that game from the
+four sisters, and how she thought it was not different, but far
+more pleasant, than the game of forfeits; whereupon her nurse spoke
+gravely, explaining what love is, and how that love should lead to
+marriage, and bidding her search her own heart if haply she could
+choose Gerardo for her husband. There was no reason, as she knew, why
+Messer Paolo's son should not mate with Messer Pietro's daughter. But
+being a romantic creature, as many women are, she resolved to bring
+the match about in secret.
+
+Elena took little time to reflect, but told her nurse that she was
+willing, if Gerardo willed it too, to have him for her husband. Then
+went the nurse and made the young man know how matters stood, and
+arranged with him a day, when Messer Pietro should be in the Council
+of the Pregadi, and the servants of the palace otherwise employed,
+for him to come and meet his Elena. A glad man was Gerardo, nor did
+he wait to think how better it would be to ask the hand of Elena in
+marriage from her father. But when the day arrived, he sought the
+nurse, and she took him to a chamber in the palace, where there stood
+an image of the Blessed Virgin. Elena was there, pale and timid; and
+when the lovers clasped hands, neither found many words to say. But
+the nurse bade them take heart, and leading them before Our Lady,
+joined their hands, and made Gerardo place his ring on his bride's
+finger. After this fashion were Gerardo and Elena wedded. And for some
+while, by the assistance of the nurse, they dwelt together in much
+love and solace, meeting often as occasion offered.
+
+Messer Paolo, who knew nothing of these things, took thought meanwhile
+for his son's career. It was the season when the Signiory of Venice
+sends a fleet of galleys to Beirut with merchandise; and the noblemen
+may bid for the hiring of a ship, and charge it with wares, and
+send whomsoever they list as factor in their interest. One of these
+galleys, then, Messer Paolo engaged, and told his son that he had
+appointed him to journey with it and increase their wealth. 'On thy
+return, my son,' he said, 'we will bethink us of a wife for thee.'
+Gerardo, when he heard these words, was sore troubled, and first he
+told his father roundly that he would not go, and flew off in the
+twilight to pour out his perplexities to Elena. But she, who was
+prudent and of gentle soul, besought him to obey his father in this
+thing, to the end, moreover, that, having done his will and increased
+his wealth, he might afterwards unfold the story of their secret
+marriage. To these good counsels, though loth, Gerardo consented.
+His father was overjoyed at his son's repentance. The galley was
+straightway laden with merchandise, and Gerardo set forth on his
+voyage.
+
+The trip to Beirut and back lasted usually six months or at the most
+seven. Now when Gerardo had been some six months away, Messer Pietro,
+noticing how fair his daughter was, and how she had grown into
+womanhood, looked about him for a husband for her. When he had found a
+youth suitable in birth and wealth and years, he called for Elena, and
+told her that the day had been appointed for her marriage. She, alas!
+knew not what to answer. She feared to tell her father that she was
+already married, for she knew not whether this would please Gerardo.
+For the same reason she dreaded to throw herself upon the kindness of
+Messer Paolo. Nor was her nurse of any help in counsel; for the old
+woman repented her of what she had done, and had good cause to believe
+that, even if the marriage with Gerardo were accepted by the two
+fathers, they would punish her for her own part in the affair.
+Therefore she bade Elena wait on fortune, and hinted to her that, if
+the worst came to the worst, no one need know she had been wedded with
+the ring to Gerardo. Such weddings, you must know, were binding; but
+till they had been blessed by the Church, they had not taken the force
+of a religious sacrament. And this is still the case in Italy among
+the common folk, who will say of a man, 'Si, è ammogliato; ma il
+matrimonio non è stato benedetto.' 'Yes, he has taken a wife, but the
+marriage has not yet been blessed.'
+
+So the days flew by in doubt and sore distress for Elena. Then on the
+night before her wedding, she felt that she could bear this life no
+longer. But having no poison, and being afraid to pierce her bosom
+with a knife, she lay down on her bed alone, and tried to die by
+holding in her breath. A mortal swoon came over her; her senses fled;
+the life in her remained suspended. And when her nurse came next
+morning to call her, she found poor Elena cold as a corpse. Messer
+Pietro and all the household rushed, at the nurse's cries, into the
+room, and they all saw Elena stretched dead upon her bed undressed.
+Physicians were called, who made theories to explain the cause of
+death. But all believed that she was really dead, beyond all help
+of art or medicine. Nothing remained but to carry her to church for
+burial instead of marriage. Therefore, that very evening, a funeral
+procession was formed, which moved by torchlight up the Grand Canal,
+along the Riva, past the blank walls of the Arsenal, to the Campo
+before San Pietro in Castello. Elena lay beneath the black felze
+in one gondola, with a priest beside her praying, and other boats
+followed bearing mourners. Then they laid her in a marble chest
+outside the church, and all departed, still with torches burning, to
+their homes.
+
+Now it so fell out that upon that very evening Gerardo's galley had
+returned from Syria, and was anchoring within the port of Lido, which
+looks across to the island of Castello. It was the gentle custom of
+Venice at that time that, when a ship arrived from sea, the friends of
+those on board at once came out to welcome them, and take and give the
+news. Therefore many noble youths and other citizens were on the deck
+of Gerardo's galley, making merry with him over the safe conduct
+of his voyage. Of one of these he asked, 'Whose is yonder funeral
+procession returning from San Pietro?' The young man made answer,
+'Alas, for poor Elena, Messer Pietro's daughter! She should have been
+married this day. But death took her, and to-night they buried her
+in the marble monument outside the church.' A woeful man was Gerardo,
+hearing suddenly this news, and knowing what his dear wife must
+have suffered ere she died. Yet he restrained himself, daring not to
+disclose his anguish, and waited till his friends had left the galley.
+Then he called to him the captain of the oarsmen, who was his friend,
+and unfolded to him all the story of his love and sorrow, and said
+that he must go that night and see his wife once more, if even he
+should have to break her tomb. The captain tried to dissuade him, but
+in vain. Seeing him so obstinate, he resolved not to desert Gerardo.
+The two men took one of the galley's boats, and rowed together toward
+San Pietro. It was past midnight when they reached the Campo and broke
+the marble sepulchre asunder. Pushing back its lid, Gerardo descended
+into the grave and abandoned himself upon the body of his Elena. One
+who had seen them at that moment could not well have said which of the
+two was dead and which was living--Elena or her husband. Meantime the
+captain of the oarsmen, fearing lest the watch (set by the Masters of
+the Night to keep the peace of Venice) might arrive, was calling on
+Gerardo to come back. Gerardo heeded him no whit. But at the last,
+compelled by his entreaties, and as it were astonied, he arose,
+bearing his wife's corpse in his arms, and carried her clasped against
+his bosom to the boat, and laid her therein, and sat down by her
+side and kissed her frequently, and suffered not his friend's
+remonstrances. Force was for the captain, having brought himself into
+this scrape, that he should now seek refuge by the nearest way from
+justice. Therefore he hoved gently from the bank, and plied his oar,
+and brought the gondola apace into the open waters. Gerardo still
+clasped Elena, dying husband by dead wife. But the sea-breeze
+freshened towards daybreak; and the captain, looking down upon that
+pair, and bringing to their faces the light of his boat's lantern,
+judged their case not desperate at all. On Elena's cheek there was a
+flush of life less deadly even than the pallor of Gerardo's forehead.
+Thereupon the good man called aloud, and Gerardo started from his
+grief; and both together they chafed the hands and feet of Elena; and,
+the sea-breeze aiding with its saltness, they awoke in her the spark
+of life.
+
+Dimly burned the spark. But Gerardo, being aware of it, became a man
+again. Then, having taken counsel with the captain, both resolved
+to bear her to that brave man's mother's house. A bed was soon made
+ready, and food was brought; and after due time, she lifted up her
+face and knew Gerardo. The peril of the grave was past, but thought
+had now to be taken for the future. Therefore Gerardo, leaving his
+wife to the captain's mother, rowed back to the galley and prepared to
+meet his father. With good store of merchandise and with great gains
+from his traffic, he arrived in that old palace on the Grand Canal.
+Then having opened to Messer Paolo the matters of his journey, and
+shown him how he had fared, and set before him tables of disbursements
+and receipts, he seized the moment of his father's gladness. 'Father,'
+he said, and as he spoke he knelt upon his knees, 'Father, I bring you
+not good store of merchandise and bags of gold alone; I bring you also
+a wedded wife, whom I have saved this night from death.' And when
+the old man's surprise was quieted, he told him the whole story. Now
+Messer Paolo, desiring no better than that his son should wed the
+heiress of his neighbour, and knowing well that Messer Pietro would
+make great joy receiving back his daughter from the grave, bade
+Gerardo in haste take rich apparel and clothe Elena therewith, and
+fetch her home. These things were swiftly done; and after evenfall
+Messer Pietro was bidden to grave business in his neighbour's palace.
+With heavy heart he came, from a house of mourning to a house of
+gladness. But there, at the banquet-table's head he saw his dead child
+Elena alive, and at her side a husband. And when the whole truth had
+been declared, he not only kissed and embraced the pair who knelt
+before him, but of his goodness forgave the nurse, who in her
+turn came trembling to his feet. Then fell there joy and bliss in
+overmeasure that night upon both palaces of the Canal Grande. And with
+the morrow the Church blessed the spousals which long since had been
+on both sides vowed and consummated.
+
+VI.--ON THE LAGOONS
+
+The mornings are spent in study, sometimes among pictures, sometimes
+in the Marcian Library, or again in those vast convent chambers of
+the Frari, where the archives of Venice load innumerable shelves. The
+afternoons invite us to a further flight upon the water. Both sandolo
+and gondola await our choice, and we may sail or row, according as the
+wind and inclination tempt us.
+
+Yonder lies San Lazzaro, with the neat red buildings of the Armenian
+convent. The last oleander blossoms shine rosy pink above its walls
+against the pure blue sky as we glide into the little harbour. Boats
+piled with coal-black grapes block the landing-place, for the Padri
+are gathering their vintage from the Lido, and their presses run
+with new wine. Eustace and I have not come to revive memories of
+Byron--that curious patron saint of the Armenian colony--or to
+inspect the printing-press, which issues books of little value for
+our studies. It is enough to pace the terrace, and linger half an
+hour beneath the low broad arches of the alleys pleached with vines,
+through which the domes and towers of Venice rise more beautiful by
+distance.
+
+Malamocco lies considerably farther, and needs a full hour of stout
+rowing to reach it. Alighting there, we cross the narrow strip of
+land, and find ourselves upon the huge sea-wall--block piled
+on block--of Istrian stone in tiers and ranks, with cunning
+breathing-places for the waves to wreak their fury on and foam their
+force away in fretful waste. The very existence of Venice may be said
+to depend sometimes on these _murazzi_, which were finished at
+an immense cost by the Republic in the days of its decadence. The
+enormous monoliths which compose them had to be brought across the
+Adriatic in sailing vessels. Of all the Lidi, that of Malamocco is the
+weakest; and here, if anywhere, the sea might effect an entrance into
+the lagoon. Our gondoliers told us of some places where the _murazzi_
+were broken in a gale, or _sciroccale_, not very long ago. Lying awake
+in Venice, when the wind blows hard, one hears the sea thundering upon
+its sandy barrier, and blesses God for the _murazzi_. On such a night
+it happened once to me to dream a dream of Venice overwhelmed by
+water. I saw the billows roll across the smooth lagoon like a gigantic
+Eager. The Ducal Palace crumbled, and San Marco's domes went down. The
+Campanile rocked and shivered like a reed. And all along the Grand
+Canal the palaces swayed helpless, tottering to their fall, while
+boats piled high with men and women strove to stem the tide, and save
+themselves from those impending ruins. It was a mad dream, born of the
+sea's roar and Tintoretto's painting. But this afternoon no such
+visions are suggested. The sea sleeps, and in the moist autumn air we
+break tall branches of the seeded yellowing samphire from hollows of
+the rocks, and bear them homeward in a wayward bouquet mixed with cobs
+of Indian-corn.
+
+Fusina is another point for these excursions. It lies at the mouth
+of the Canal di Brenta, where the mainland ends in marsh and
+meadows, intersected by broad renes. In spring the ditches bloom with
+fleurs-de-lys; in autumn they take sober colouring from lilac daisies
+and the delicate sea-lavender. Scores of tiny plants are turning
+scarlet on the brown moist earth; and when the sun goes down behind
+the Euganean hills, his crimson canopy of cloud, reflected on these
+shallows, muddy shoals, and wilderness of matted weeds, converts the
+common earth into a fairyland of fabulous dyes. Purple, violet, and
+rose are spread around us. In front stretches the lagoon, tinted
+with a pale light from the east, and beyond this pallid mirror shines
+Venice--a long low broken line, touched with the softest roseate
+flush. Ere we reach the Giudecca on our homeward way, sunset has
+faded. The western skies have clad themselves in green, barred with
+dark fire-rimmed clouds. The Euganean hills stand like stupendous
+pyramids, Egyptian, solemn, against a lemon space on the horizon. The
+far reaches of the lagoons, the Alps, and islands assume those tones
+of glowing lilac which are the supreme beauty of Venetian evening.
+Then, at last, we see the first lamps glitter on the Zattere. The
+quiet of the night has come.
+
+Words cannot be formed to express the endless varieties of Venetian
+sunset. The most magnificent follow after wet stormy days, when the
+west breaks suddenly into a labyrinth of fire, when chasms of clear
+turquoise heavens emerge, and horns of flame are flashed to the
+zenith, and unexpected splendours scale the fretted clouds, step over
+step, stealing along the purple caverns till the whole dome throbs.
+Or, again, after a fair day, a change of weather approaches, and
+high, infinitely high, the skies are woven over with a web of
+half-transparent cirrus-clouds. These in the afterglow blush crimson,
+and through their rifts the depth of heaven is of a hard and gemlike
+blue, and all the water turns to rose beneath them. I remember one
+such evening on the way back from Torcello. We were well out at sea
+between Mazzorbo and Murano. The ruddy arches overhead were reflected
+without interruption in the waveless ruddy lake below. Our black boat
+was the only dark spot in this sphere of splendour. We seemed to hang
+suspended; and such as this, I fancied, must be the feeling of an
+insect caught in the heart of a fiery-petalled rose. Yet not these
+melodramatic sunsets alone are beautiful. Even more exquisite,
+perhaps, are the lagoons, painted in monochrome of greys, with just
+one touch of pink upon a western cloud, scattered in ripples here and
+there on the waves below, reminding us that day has passed and evening
+come. And beautiful again are the calm settings of fair weather, when
+sea and sky alike are cheerful, and the topmost blades of the lagoon
+grass, peeping from the shallows, glance like emeralds upon the
+surface. There is no deep stirring of the spirit in a symphony of
+light and colour; but purity, peace, and freshness make their way into
+our hearts.
+
+VII.--AT THE LIDO
+
+Of all these afternoon excursions, that to the Lido is most frequent.
+It has two points for approach. The more distant is the little station
+of San Nicoletto, at the mouth of the Porto. With an ebb-tide, the
+water of the lagoon runs past the mulberry gardens of this hamlet like
+a river. There is here a grove of acacia-trees, shadowy and dreamy,
+above deep grass, which even an Italian summer does not wither. The
+Riva is fairly broad, forming a promenade, where one may conjure
+up the personages of a century ago. For San Nicoletto used to be a
+fashionable resort before the other points of Lido had been occupied
+by pleasure-seekers. An artist even now will select its old-world
+quiet, leafy shade, and prospect through the islands of Vignole and
+Sant' Erasmo to snow-touched peaks of Antelao and Tofana, rather than
+the glare and bustle and extended view of Venice which its rival Sant'
+Elisabetta offers.
+
+But when we want a plunge into the Adriatic, or a stroll along smooth
+sands, or a breath of genuine sea-breeze, or a handful of horned
+poppies from the dunes, or a lazy half-hour's contemplation of a
+limitless horizon flecked with russet sails, then we seek Sant'
+Elisabetta. Our boat is left at the landing-place. We saunter across
+the island and back again. Antonio and Francesco wait and order wine,
+which we drink with them in the shade of the little _osteria's_
+wall.
+
+A certain afternoon in May I well remember, for this visit to the Lido
+was marked by one of those apparitions which are as rare as they are
+welcome to the artist's soul. I have always held that in our modern
+life the only real equivalent for the antique mythopoeic sense--that
+sense which enabled the Hellenic race to figure for themselves the
+powers of earth and air, streams and forests, and the presiding genii
+of places, under the forms of living human beings, is supplied by
+the appearance at some felicitous moment of a man or woman who
+impersonates for our imagination the essence of the beauty that
+environs us. It seems, at such a fortunate moment, as though we had
+been waiting for this revelation, although perchance the want of it
+had not been previously felt. Our sensations and perceptions test
+themselves at the touchstone of this living individuality. The keynote
+of the whole music dimly sounding in our ears is struck. A melody
+emerges, clear in form and excellent in rhythm. The landscapes we have
+painted on our brain, no longer lack their central figure. The life
+proper to the complex conditions we have studied is discovered, and
+every detail, judged by this standard of vitality, falls into its
+right relations.
+
+I had been musing long that day and earnestly upon the mystery of the
+lagoons, their opaline transparencies of air and water, their fretful
+risings and sudden subsidence into calm, the treacherousness of their
+shoals, the sparkle and the splendour of their sunlight. I had asked
+myself how would a Greek sculptor have personified the elemental deity
+of these salt-water lakes, so different in quality from the Ĉgean
+or Ionian sea? What would he find distinctive of their spirit? The
+Tritons of these shallows must be of other form and lineage than the
+fierce-eyed youth who blows his conch upon the curled crest of a wave,
+crying aloud to his comrades, as he bears the nymph away to caverns
+where the billows plunge in tideless instability.
+
+We had picked up shells and looked for sea-horses on the Adriatic
+shore. Then we returned to give our boatmen wine beneath the vine-clad
+_pergola_. Four other men were there, drinking, and eating from a
+dish of fried fish set upon the coarse white linen cloth. Two of
+them soon rose and went away. Of the two who stayed, one was a large,
+middle-aged man; the other was still young. He was tall and sinewy,
+but slender, for these Venetians are rarely massive in their strength.
+Each limb is equally developed by the exercise of rowing upright,
+bending all the muscles to their stroke. Their bodies are elastically
+supple, with free sway from the hips and a mercurial poise upon the
+ankle. Stefano showed these qualities almost in exaggeration. The type
+in him was refined to its artistic perfection. Moreover, he was
+rarely in repose, but moved with a singular brusque grace. A black
+broad-brimmed hat was thrown back upon his matted _zazzera_ of
+dark hair tipped with dusky brown. This shock of hair, cut in flakes,
+and falling wilfully, reminded me of the lagoon grass when it darkens
+in autumn upon uncovered shoals, and sunset gilds its sombre edges.
+Fiery grey eyes beneath it gazed intensely, with compulsive effluence
+of electricity. It was the wild glance of a Triton. Short blonde
+moustache, dazzling teeth, skin bronzed, but showing white and
+healthful through open front and sleeves of lilac shirt. The dashing
+sparkle of this animate splendour, who looked to me as though the
+sea-waves and the sun had made him in some hour of secret and unquiet
+rapture, was somehow emphasised by a curious dint dividing his square
+chin--a cleft that harmonised with smile on lip and steady flame in
+eyes. I hardly know what effect it would have upon a reader to compare
+eyes to opals. Yet Stefano's eyes, as they met mine, had the vitreous
+intensity of opals, as though the colour of Venetian waters were
+vitalised in them. This noticeable being had a rough, hoarse voice,
+which, to develop the parallel with a sea-god, might have screamed in
+storm or whispered raucous messages from crests of tossing billows.
+
+I felt, as I looked, that here, for me at least, the mythopoem of the
+lagoons was humanised; the spirit of the saltwater lakes had appeared
+to me; the final touch of life emergent from nature had been given. I
+was satisfied; for I had seen a poem.
+
+Then we rose, and wandered through the Jews' cemetery. It is a quiet
+place, where the flat grave-stones, inscribed in Hebrew and Italian,
+lie deep in Lido sand, waved over with wild grass and poppies. I would
+fain believe that no neglect, but rather the fashion of this folk, had
+left the monuments of generations to be thus resumed by nature. Yet,
+knowing nothing of the history of this burial-ground, I dare not
+affirm so much. There is one outlying piece of the cemetery which
+seems to contradict my charitable interpretation. It is not far from
+San Nicoletto. No enclosure marks it from the unconsecrated dunes.
+Acacia-trees sprout amid the monuments, and break the tablets with
+their thorny shoots upthrusting from the soil. Where patriarchs and
+rabbis sleep for centuries, the fishers of the sea now wander, and
+defile these habitations of the dead:
+
+ Corruption most abhorred
+ Mingling itself with their renownèd ashes.
+
+Some of the grave-stones have been used to fence the towing-path; and
+one I saw, well carved with letters legible of Hebrew on fair Istrian
+marble, which roofed an open drain leading from the stable of a
+Christian dog.
+
+VIII.--A VENETIAN RESTAURANT
+
+At the end of a long glorious day, unhappy is that mortal whom the
+Hermes of a cosmopolitan hotel, white-chokered and white-waistcoated,
+marshals to the Hades of the _table-d'hôte_. The world has often
+been compared to an inn; but on my way down to this common meal I
+have, not unfrequently, felt fain to reverse the simile. From their
+separate stations, at the appointed hour, the guests like ghosts flit
+to a gloomy gas-lit chamber. They are of various speech and race,
+preoccupied with divers interests and cares. Necessity and the
+waiter drive them all to a sepulchral syssition, whereof the cook too
+frequently deserves that old Greek comic epithet--[Greek: hadou
+mageiros]--cook of the Inferno. And just as we are told that in
+Charon's boat we shall not be allowed to pick our society, so here
+we must accept what fellowship the fates provide. An English spinster
+retailing paradoxes culled to-day from Ruskin's handbooks; an American
+citizen describing his jaunt in a gondóla from the railway station;
+a German shopkeeper descanting in one breath on Baur's Bock and the
+beauties of the Marcusplatz; an intelligent ĉsthete bent on working
+into clearness his own views of Carpaccio's genius: all these in turn,
+or all together, must be suffered gladly through well-nigh two long
+hours. Uncomforted in soul we rise from the expensive banquet; and how
+often rise from it unfed!
+
+Far other be the doom of my own friends--of pious bards and genial
+companions, lovers of natural and lovely things! Nor for these do
+I desire a seat at Florian's marble tables, or a perch in Quadri's
+window, though the former supply dainty food, and the latter command
+a bird's-eye view of the Piazza. Rather would I lead them to a certain
+humble tavern on the Zattere. It is a quaint, low-built, unpretending
+little place, near a bridge, with a garden hard by which sends a
+cataract of honeysuckles sunward over a too-jealous wall. In front
+lies a Mediterranean steamer, which all day long has been discharging
+cargo. Gazing westward up Giudecca, masts and funnels bar the
+sunset and the Paduan hills; and from a little front room of the
+_trattoria_ the view is so marine that one keeps fancying oneself
+in some ship's cabin. Sea-captains sit and smoke beside their glass
+of grog in the pavilion and the _caffé_. But we do not seek their
+company at dinner-time. Our way lies under yonder arch, and up the
+narrow alley into a paved court. Here are oleanders in pots, and
+plants of Japanese spindle-wood in tubs; and from the walls beneath
+the window hang cages of all sorts of birds--a talking parrot, a
+whistling blackbird, goldfinches, canaries, linnets. Athos, the fat
+dog, who goes to market daily in a _barchetta_ with his master,
+snuffs around. 'Where are Porthos and Aramis, my friend?' Athos does
+not take the joke; he only wags his stump of tail and pokes his nose
+into my hand. What a Tartufe's nose it is! Its bridge displays the
+full parade of leather-bound brass-nailed muzzle. But beneath, this
+muzzle is a patent sham. The frame does not even pretend to close
+on Athos' jaw, and the wise dog wears it like a decoration. A little
+farther we meet that ancient grey cat, who has no discoverable name,
+but is famous for the sprightliness and grace with which she bears her
+eighteen years. Not far from the cat one is sure to find Carlo--the
+bird-like, bright-faced, close-cropped Venetian urchin, whose duty
+it is to trot backwards and forwards between the cellar and the
+dining-tables. At the end of the court we walk into the kitchen, where
+the black-capped little _padrone_ and the gigantic white-capped
+chef are in close consultation. Here we have the privilege of
+inspecting the larder--fish of various sorts, meat, vegetables,
+several kinds of birds, pigeons, tordi, beccafichi, geese, wild
+ducks, chickens, woodcock, &c., according to the season. We select
+our dinner, and retire to eat it either in the court among the birds
+beneath the vines, or in the low dark room which occupies one side of
+it. Artists of many nationalities and divers ages frequent this house;
+and the talk arising from the several little tables, turns upon points
+of interest and beauty in the life and landscape of Venice. There
+can be no difference of opinion about the excellence of
+the _cuisine_, or about the reasonable charges of this
+_trattoria_. A soup of lentils, followed by boiled turbot or
+fried soles, beefsteak or mutton cutlets, tordi or beccafichi, with
+a salad, the whole enlivened with good red wine or Florio's Sicilian
+Marsala from the cask, costs about four francs. Gas is unknown in the
+establishment. There is no noise, no bustle, no brutality of waiters,
+no _ahurissement_ of tourists. And when dinner is done, we can
+sit awhile over our cigarette and coffee, talking until the night
+invites us to a stroll along the Zattere or a _giro_ in the
+gondola.
+
+IX.--NIGHT IN VENICE
+
+Night in Venice! Night is nowhere else so wonderful, unless it be in
+winter among the high Alps. But the nights of Venice and the nights of
+the mountains are too different in kind to be compared.
+
+There is the ever-recurring miracle of the full moon rising, before
+day is dead, behind San Giorgio, spreading a path of gold on the
+lagoon which black boats traverse with the glow-worm lamp upon their
+prow; ascending the cloudless sky and silvering the domes of the
+Salute; pouring vitreous sheen upon the red lights of the Piazzetta;
+flooding the Grand Canal, and lifting the Rialto higher in ethereal
+whiteness; piercing but penetrating not the murky labyrinth of
+_rio_ linked with _rio_, through which we wind in light and
+shadow, to reach once more the level glories and the luminous expanse
+of heaven beyond the Misericordia.
+
+This is the melodrama of Venetian moonlight; and if a single
+impression of the night has to be retained from one visit to Venice,
+those are fortunate who chance upon a full moon of fair weather. Yet
+I know not whether some quieter and soberer effects are not more
+thrilling. To-night, for example, the waning moon will rise late
+through veils of _scirocco_. Over the bridges of San Cristoforo
+and San Gregorio, through the deserted Calle di Mezzo, my friend and
+I walk in darkness, pass the marble basements of the Salute, and push
+our way along its Riva to the point of the Dogana. We are out at sea
+alone, between the Canalozzo and the Giudecca. A moist wind ruffles
+the water and cools our forehead. It is so dark that we can only see
+San Giorgio by the light reflected on it from the Piazzetta. The same
+light climbs the Campanile of S. Mark, and shows the golden angel in
+a mystery of gloom. The only noise that reaches us is a confused hum
+from the Piazza. Sitting and musing there, the blackness of the water
+whispers in our ears a tale of death. And now we hear a plash of oars,
+and gliding through the darkness comes a single boat. One man leaps
+upon the landing-place without a word and disappears. There is another
+wrapped in a military cloak asleep. I see his face beneath me, pale
+and quiet. The _barcaruolo_ turns the point in silence. From the
+darkness they came; into the darkness they have gone. It is only an
+ordinary incident of coastguard service. But the spirit of the night
+has made a poem of it.
+
+Even tempestuous and rainy weather, though melancholy enough, is never
+sordid here. There is no noise from carriage traffic in Venice, and
+the sea-wind preserves the purity and transparency of the atmosphere.
+It had been raining all day, but at evening came a partial clearing.
+I went down to the Molo, where the large reach of the lagoon was all
+moon-silvered, and San Giorgio Maggiore dark against the bluish sky,
+and Santa Maria della Salute domed with moon-irradiated pearl, and the
+wet slabs of the Riva shimmering in moonlight, the whole misty sky,
+with its clouds and stellar spaces, drenched in moonlight, nothing but
+moonlight sensible except the tawny flare of gas-lamps and the orange
+lights of gondolas afloat upon the waters. On such a night the very
+spirit of Venice is abroad. We feel why she is called Bride of the
+Sea.
+
+Take yet another night. There had been a representation of Verdi's
+'Forza del Destino' at the Teatro Malibran. After midnight we walked
+homeward through the Merceria, crossed the Piazza, and dived into the
+narrow _calle_ which leads to the _traghetto_ of the Salute.
+It was a warm moist starless night, and there seemed no air to breathe
+in those narrow alleys. The gondolier was half asleep. Eustace called
+him as we jumped into his boat, and rang our _soldi_ on the
+gunwale. Then he arose and turned the _ferro_ round, and stood
+across towards the Salute. Silently, insensibly, from the oppression
+of confinement in the airless streets to the liberty and immensity
+of the water and the night we passed. It was but two minutes ere we
+touched the shore and said good-night, and went our way and left
+the ferryman. But in that brief passage he had opened our souls to
+everlasting things--the freshness, and the darkness, and the kindness
+of the brooding, all-enfolding night above the sea.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_THE GONDOLIER'S WEDDING_
+
+The night before the wedding we had a supper-party in my rooms. We
+were twelve in all. My friend Eustace brought his gondolier Antonio
+with fair-haired, dark-eyed wife, and little Attilio, their eldest
+child. My own gondolier, Francesco, came with his wife and two
+children. Then there was the handsome, languid Luigi, who, in his best
+clothes, or out of them, is fit for any drawing-room. Two gondoliers,
+in dark blue shirts, completed the list of guests, if we exclude the
+maid Catina, who came and went about the table, laughing and joining
+in the songs, and sitting down at intervals to take her share of wine.
+The big room looking across the garden to the Grand Canal had been
+prepared for supper; and the company were to be received in the
+smaller, which has a fine open space in front of it to southwards. But
+as the guests arrived, they seemed to find the kitchen and the cooking
+that was going on quite irresistible. Catina, it seems, had lost her
+head with so many cuttlefishes, _orai_, cakes, and fowls, and
+cutlets to reduce to order. There was, therefore, a great bustle below
+stairs; and I could hear plainly that all my guests were lending their
+making, or their marring, hands to the preparation of the supper. That
+the company should cook their own food on the way to the dining-room,
+seemed a quite novel arrangement, but one that promised well for their
+contentment with the banquet. Nobody could be dissatisfied with what
+was everybody's affair.
+
+When seven o'clock struck, Eustace and I, who had been entertaining
+the children in their mothers' absence, heard the sound of steps upon
+the stairs. The guests arrived, bringing their own _risotto_ with
+them. Welcome was short, if hearty. We sat down in carefully appointed
+order, and fell into such conversation as the quarter of San Vio and
+our several interests supplied. From time to time one of the matrons
+left the table and descended to the kitchen, when a finishing stroke
+was needed for roast pullet or stewed veal. The excuses they made
+their host for supposed failure in the dishes, lent a certain grace
+and comic charm to the commonplace of festivity. The entertainment
+was theirs as much as mine; and they all seemed to enjoy what took the
+form by degrees of curiously complicated hospitality. I do not think
+a well-ordered supper at any _trattoria_, such as at first
+suggested itself to my imagination, would have given any of us an
+equal pleasure or an equal sense of freedom. The three children had
+become the guests of the whole party. Little Attilio, propped upon an
+air-cushion, which puzzled him exceedingly, ate through his supper and
+drank his wine with solid satisfaction, opening the large brown eyes
+beneath those tufts of clustering fair hair which promise much beauty
+for him in his manhood. Francesco's boy, who is older and begins to
+know the world, sat with a semi-suppressed grin upon his face, as
+though the humour of the situation was not wholly hidden from him.
+Little Teresa, too, was happy, except when her mother, a severe
+Pomona, with enormous earrings and splendid _fazzoletto_ of
+crimson and orange dyes, pounced down upon her for some supposed
+infraction of good manners--_creanza_, as they vividly express it
+here. Only Luigi looked a trifle bored. But Luigi has been a soldier,
+and has now attained the supercilious superiority of young-manhood,
+which smokes its cigar of an evening in the piazza and knows the
+merits of the different cafés. The great business of the evening began
+when the eating was over, and the decanters filled with new wine of
+Mirano circulated freely. The four best singers of the party drew
+together; and the rest prepared themselves to make suggestions, hum
+tunes, and join with fitful effect in choruses. Antonio, who is a
+powerful young fellow, with bronzed cheeks and a perfect tempest of
+coal-black hair in flakes upon his forehead, has a most extraordinary
+soprano--sound as a bell, strong as a trumpet, well trained, and
+true to the least shade in intonation. Piero, whose rugged Neptunian
+features, sea-wrinkled, tell of a rough water-life, boasts a bass of
+resonant, almost pathetic quality. Francesco has a _mezzo voce_,
+which might, by a stretch of politeness, be called baritone. Piero's
+comrade, whose name concerns us not, has another of these nondescript
+voices. They sat together with their glasses and cigars before them,
+sketching part-songs in outline, striking the keynote--now higher and
+now lower--till they saw their subject well in view. Then they burst
+into full singing, Antonio leading with a metal note that thrilled
+one's ears, but still was musical. Complicated contrapuntal pieces,
+such as we should call madrigals, with ever-recurring refrains of
+'Venezia, gemma Triatica, sposa del mar,' descending probably from
+ancient days, followed each other in quick succession. Barcaroles,
+serenades, love-songs, and invitations to the water were interwoven
+for relief. One of these romantic pieces had a beautiful burden,
+'Dormi, o bella, o fingi di dormir,' of which the melody was fully
+worthy. But the most successful of all the tunes were two with a sad
+motive. The one repeated incessantly 'Ohimé! mia madre morì;' the
+other was a girl's love lament: 'Perchè tradirmi, perchè lasciarmi!
+prima d'amarmi non eri così!' Even the children joined in these; and
+Catina, who took the solo part in the second, was inspired to a great
+dramatic effort. All these were purely popular songs. The people of
+Venice, however, are passionate for operas. Therefore we had duets
+and solos from 'Ernani,' the 'Ballo in Maschera,' and the 'Forza del
+Destino,' and one comic chorus from 'Boccaccio,' which seemed to make
+them wild with pleasure. To my mind, the best of these more formal
+pieces was a duet between Attila and Italia from some opera unknown to
+me, which Antonio and Piero performed with incomparable spirit. It
+was noticeable how, descending to the people, sung by them for love
+at sea, or on excursions to the villages round Mestre, these operatic
+reminiscences had lost something of their theatrical formality, and
+assumed instead the serious gravity, the quaint movement, and marked
+emphasis which belong to popular music in Northern and Central Italy.
+An antique character was communicated even to the recitative of Verdi
+by slight, almost indefinable, changes of rhythm and accent. There was
+no end to the singing. 'Siamo appassionati per il canto,' frequently
+repeated, was proved true by the profusion and variety of songs
+produced from inexhaustible memories, lightly tried over, brilliantly
+performed, rapidly succeeding each other. Nor were gestures
+wanting--lifted arms, hands stretched to hands, flashing eyes, hair
+tossed from the forehead--unconscious and appropriate action--which
+showed how the spirit of the music and words alike possessed the men.
+One by one the children fell asleep. Little Attilio and Teresa were
+tucked up beneath my Scotch shawl at two ends of a great sofa; and not
+even his father's clarion voice, in the character of Italia defying
+Attila to harm 'le mie superbe città,' could wake the little boy up.
+The night wore on. It was past one. Eustace and I had promised to be
+in the church of the Gesuati at six next morning. We therefore gave
+the guests a gentle hint, which they as gently took. With exquisite,
+because perfectly unaffected, breeding they sank for a few moments
+into common conversation, then wrapped the children up, and took
+their leave. It was an uncomfortable, warm, wet night of sullen
+_scirocco_.
+
+The next day, which was Sunday, Francesco called me at five. There
+was no visible sunrise that cheerless damp October morning. Grey dawn
+stole somehow imperceptibly between the veil of clouds and leaden
+waters, as my friend and I, well sheltered by our _felze_, passed
+into the Giudecca, and took our station before the church of the
+Gesuati. A few women from the neighbouring streets and courts crossed
+the bridges in draggled petticoats on their way to first mass. A few
+men, shouldering their jackets, lounged along the Zattere, opened the
+great green doors, and entered. Then suddenly Antonio cried out that
+the bridal party was on its way, not as we had expected, in boats, but
+on foot. We left our gondola, and fell into the ranks, after shaking
+hands with Francesco, who is the elder brother of the bride. There was
+nothing very noticeable in her appearance, except her large dark eyes.
+Otherwise both face and figure were of a common type; and her bridal
+dress of sprigged grey silk, large veil and orange blossoms, reduced
+her to the level of a _bourgeoise_. It was much the same with
+the bridegroom. His features, indeed, proved him a true Venetian
+gondolier; for the skin was strained over the cheekbones, and the
+muscles of the throat beneath the jaws stood out like cords, and the
+bright blue eyes were deep-set beneath a spare brown forehead. But
+he had provided a complete suit of black for the occasion, and wore
+a shirt of worked cambric, which disguised what is really splendid in
+the physique of these oarsmen, at once slender and sinewy. Both bride
+and bridegroom looked uncomfortable in their clothes. The light that
+fell upon them in the church was dull and leaden. The ceremony, which
+was very hurriedly performed by an unctuous priest, did not appear to
+impress either of them. Nobody in the bridal party, crowding together
+on both sides of the altar, looked as though the service was of the
+slightest interest and moment. Indeed, this was hardly to be wondered
+at; for the priest, so far as I could understand his gabble, took
+the larger portion for read, after muttering the first words of the
+rubric. A little carven image of an acolyte--a weird boy who seemed to
+move by springs, whose hair had all the semblance of painted wood,
+and whose complexion was white and red like a clown's--did not make
+matters more intelligible by spasmodically clattering responses.
+
+After the ceremony we heard mass and contributed to three distinct
+offertories. Considering how much account even two _soldi_ are to
+these poor people, I was really angry when I heard the copper shower.
+Every member of the party had his or her pennies ready, and dropped
+them into the boxes. Whether it was the effect of the bad morning, or
+the ugliness of a very ill-designed _barocco_ building, or the
+fault of the fat oily priest, I know not. But the _sposalizio_
+struck me as tame and cheerless, the mass as irreverent and vulgarly
+conducted. At the same time there is something too impressive in
+the mass for any perfunctory performance to divest its symbolism of
+sublimity. A Protestant Communion Service lends itself more easily to
+degradation by unworthiness in the minister.
+
+We walked down the church in double file, led by the bride and
+bridegroom, who had knelt during the ceremony with the best
+man--_compare_, as he is called--at a narrow _prie-dieu_ before the
+altar. The _compare_ is a person of distinction at these weddings. He
+has to present the bride with a great pyramid of artificial flowers,
+which is placed before her at the marriage-feast, a packet of candles,
+and a box of bonbons. The comfits, when the box is opened, are found
+to include two magnificent sugar babies lying in their cradles. I was
+told that a _compare_, who does the thing handsomely, must be prepared
+to spend about a hundred francs upon these presents, in addition to
+the wine and cigars with which he treats his friends. On this occasion
+the women were agreed that he had done his duty well. He was a fat,
+wealthy little man, who lived by letting market-boats for hire on the
+Rialto.
+
+From the church to the bride's house was a walk of some three minutes.
+On the way we were introduced to the father of the bride--a very
+magnificent personage, with points of strong resemblance to Vittorio
+Emmanuele. He wore an enormous broad-brimmed hat and emerald-green
+earrings, and looked considerably younger than his eldest son,
+Francesco. Throughout the _nozze_ he took the lead in a grand
+imperious fashion of his own. Wherever he went, he seemed to fill the
+place, and was fully aware of his own importance. In Florence I think
+he would have got the nickname of _Tacchin_, or turkey-cock.
+Here at Venice the sons and daughters call their parent briefly
+_Vecchio_. I heard him so addressed with a certain amount of awe,
+expecting an explosion of bubbly-jock displeasure. But he took it, as
+though it was natural, without disturbance. The other _Vecchio_,
+father of the bridegroom, struck me as more sympathetic. He was a
+gentle old man, proud of his many prosperous, laborious sons.
+They, like the rest of the gentlemen, were gondoliers. Both the
+_Vecchi_, indeed, continue to ply their trade, day and night, at
+the _traghetto_.
+
+_Traghetti_ are stations for gondolas at different points of the
+canals. As their name implies, it is the first duty of the gondoliers
+upon them to ferry people across. This they do for the fixed fee of
+five centimes. The _traghetti_ are in fact Venetian cab-stands.
+And, of course, like London cabs, the gondolas may be taken off them
+for trips. The municipality, however, makes it a condition, under
+penalty of fine to the _traghetto_, that each station should
+always be provided with two boats for the service of the ferry. When
+vacancies occur on the _traghetti_, a gondolier who owns or hires
+a boat makes application to the municipality, receives a number, and
+is inscribed as plying at a certain station. He has now entered a sort
+of guild, which is presided over by a _Capo-traghetto_, elected
+by the rest for the protection of their interests, the settlement of
+disputes, and the management of their common funds. In the old acts
+of Venice this functionary is styled _Gastaldo di traghetto_. The
+members have to contribute something yearly to the guild. This payment
+varies upon different stations, according to the greater or less
+amount of the tax levied by the municipality on the _traghetto_.
+The highest subscription I have heard of is twenty-five francs; the
+lowest, seven. There is one _traghetto_, known by the name
+of Madonna del Giglio or Zobenigo, which possesses near its
+_pergola_ of vines a nice old brown Venetian picture. Some
+stranger offered a considerable sum for this. But the guild refused to
+part with it.
+
+As may be imagined, the _traghetti_ vary greatly in the amount
+and quality of their custom. By far the best are those in the
+neighbourhood of the hotels upon the Grand Canal. At any one of these
+a gondolier during the season is sure of picking up some foreigner or
+other who will pay him handsomely for comparatively light service.
+A _traghetto_ on the Giudecca, on the contrary, depends upon
+Venetian traffic. The work is more monotonous, and the pay is reduced
+to its tariffed minimum. So far as I can gather, an industrious
+gondolier, with a good boat, belonging to a good _traghetto_, may
+make as much as ten or fifteen francs in a single day. But this cannot
+be relied on. They therefore prefer a fixed appointment with a private
+family, for which they receive by tariff five francs a day, or by
+arrangement for long periods perhaps four francs a day, with certain
+perquisites and small advantages. It is great luck to get such an
+engagement for the winter. The heaviest anxieties which beset a
+gondolier are then disposed of. Having entered private service, they
+are not allowed to ply their trade on the _traghetto_, except
+by stipulation with their masters. Then they may take their place one
+night out of every six in the rank and file. The gondoliers have
+two proverbs, which show how desirable it is, while taking a fixed
+engagement, to keep their hold on the _traghetto_. One is to this
+effect: _il traghetto è un buon padrone_. The other satirises
+the meanness of the poverty-stricken Venetian nobility: _pompa di
+servitù, misera insegna_. When they combine the _traghetto_
+with private service, the municipality insists on their retaining
+the number painted on their gondola; and against this their employers
+frequently object. It is therefore a great point for a gondolier to
+make such an arrangement with his master as will leave him free to
+show his number. The reason for this regulation is obvious. Gondoliers
+are known more by their numbers and their _traghetti_ than
+their names. They tell me that though there are upwards of a
+thousand registered in Venice, each man of the trade knows the
+whole confraternity by face and number. Taking all things into
+consideration, I think four francs a day the whole year round are
+very good earnings for a gondolier. On this he will marry and rear a
+family, and put a little money by. A young unmarried man, working at
+two and a half or three francs a day, is proportionately well-to-do.
+If he is economical, he ought upon these wages to save enough in
+two or three years to buy himself a gondola. A boy from fifteen to
+nineteen is called a _mezz' uomo_, and gets about one franc a day. A
+new gondola with all its fittings is worth about a thousand francs. It
+does not last in good condition more than six or seven years. At the
+end of that time the hull will fetch eighty francs. A new hull can be
+had for three hundred francs. The old fittings--brass sea-horses or
+_cavalli_, steel prow or _ferro_, covered cabin or _felze_, cushions
+and leather-covered back-board or _stramazetto_, maybe transferred to
+it. When a man wants to start a gondola, he will begin by buying one
+already half past service--a _gondola da traghetto_ or _di mezza età_.
+This should cost him something over two hundred francs. Little by
+little, he accumulates the needful fittings; and when his first
+purchase is worn out, he hopes to set up with a well-appointed
+equipage. He thus gradually works his way from the rough trade which
+involves hard work and poor earnings to that more profitable industry
+which cannot be carried on without a smart boat. The gondola is a
+source of continual expense for repairs. Its oars have to be replaced.
+It has to be washed with sponges, blacked, and varnished. Its bottom
+needs frequent cleaning. Weeds adhere to it in the warm brackish
+water, growing rapidly through the summer months, and demanding to be
+scrubbed off once in every four weeks. The gondolier has no place
+where he can do this for himself. He therefore takes his boat to a
+wharf, or _squero_, as the place is called. At these _squeri_ gondolas
+are built as well as cleaned. The fee for a thorough setting to rights
+of the boat is five francs. It must be done upon a fine day. Thus in
+addition to the cost, the owner loses a good day's work.
+
+These details will serve to give some notion of the sort of people
+with whom Eustace and I spent our day. The bride's house is in an
+excellent position on an open canal leading from the Canalozzo to the
+Giudecca. She had arrived before us, and received her friends in the
+middle of the room. Each of us in turn kissed her cheek and murmured
+our congratulations. We found the large living-room of the house
+arranged with chairs all round the walls, and the company were
+marshalled in some order of precedence, my friend and I taking place
+near the bride. On either hand airy bedrooms opened out, and two
+large doors, wide open, gave a view from where we sat of a good-sized
+kitchen. This arrangement of the house was not only comfortable, but
+pretty; for the bright copper pans and pipkins ranged on shelves
+along the kitchen walls had a very cheerful effect. The walls were
+whitewashed, but literally covered with all sorts of pictures. A great
+plaster cast from some antique, an Atys, Adonis, or Paris, looked down
+from a bracket placed between the windows. There was enough furniture,
+solid and well kept, in all the rooms. Among the pictures were
+full-length portraits in oils of two celebrated gondoliers--one in
+antique costume, the other painted a few years since. The original of
+the latter soon came and stood before it. He had won regatta prizes;
+and the flags of four discordant colours were painted round him by the
+artist, who had evidently cared more to commemorate the triumphs of
+his sitter and to strike a likeness than to secure the tone of his own
+picture. This champion turned out a fine fellow--Corradini--with one
+of the brightest little gondoliers of thirteen for his son.
+
+After the company were seated, lemonade and cakes were handed round
+amid a hubbub of chattering women. Then followed cups of black coffee
+and more cakes. Then a glass of Cyprus and more cakes. Then a glass
+of curaçoa and more cakes. Finally, a glass of noyau and still more
+cakes. It was only a little after seven in the morning. Yet politeness
+compelled us to consume these delicacies. I tried to shirk my duty;
+but this discretion was taken by my hosts for well-bred modesty; and
+instead of being let off, I had the richest piece of pastry and the
+largest maccaroon available pressed so kindly on me, that, had they
+been poisoned, I would not have refused to eat them. The conversation
+grew more, and more animated, the women gathering together in their
+dresses of bright blue and scarlet, the men lighting cigars and
+puffing out a few quiet words. It struck me as a drawback that these
+picturesque people had put on Sunday-clothes to look as much like
+shopkeepers as possible. But they did not all of them succeed. Two
+handsome women, who handed the cups round--one a brunette, the other
+a blonde--wore skirts of brilliant blue, with a sort of white jacket,
+and white kerchief folded heavily about their shoulders. The brunette
+had a great string of coral, the blonde of amber, round her throat.
+Gold earrings and the long gold chains Venetian women wear, of all
+patterns and degrees of value, abounded. Nobody appeared without
+them; but I could not see any of an antique make. The men seemed to be
+contented with rings--huge, heavy rings of solid gold, worked with
+a rough flower pattern. One young fellow had three upon his fingers.
+This circumstance led me to speculate whether a certain portion at
+least of this display of jewellery around me had not been borrowed for
+the occasion.
+
+Eustace and I were treated quite like friends. They called us _I
+Signori_. But this was only, I think, because our English names
+are quite unmanageable. The women fluttered about us and kept
+asking whether we really liked it all? whether we should come to the
+_pranzo_? whether it was true we danced? It seemed to give them
+unaffected pleasure to be kind to us; and when we rose to go away, the
+whole company crowded round, shaking hands and saying: 'Si divertirà
+bene stasera!' Nobody resented our presence; what was better, no one
+put himself out for us. 'Vogliono veder il nostro costume,' I heard
+one woman say.
+
+We got home soon after eight, and, as our ancestors would have said,
+settled our stomachs with a dish of tea. It makes me shudder now to
+think of the mixed liquids and miscellaneous cakes we had consumed at
+that unwonted hour.
+
+At half-past three, Eustace and I again prepared ourselves for action.
+His gondola was in attendance, covered with the _felze_, to take us to
+the house of the _sposa_. We found the canal crowded with poor people
+of the quarter--men, women, and children lining the walls along its
+side, and clustering like bees upon the bridges. The water itself was
+almost choked with gondolas. Evidently the folk of San Vio thought our
+wedding procession would be a most exciting pageant. We entered the
+house, and were again greeted by the bride and bridegroom, who
+consigned each of us to the control of a fair tyrant. This is the most
+fitting way of describing our introduction to our partners of the
+evening; for we were no sooner presented, than the ladies swooped upon
+us like their prey, placing their shawls upon our left arms, while
+they seized and clung to what was left available of us for locomotion.
+There was considerable giggling and tittering throughout the company
+when Signora Fenzo, the young and comely wife of a gondolier, thus
+took possession of Eustace, and Signora dell' Acqua, the widow of
+another gondolier, appropriated me. The affair had been arranged
+beforehand, and their friends had probably chaffed them with the
+difficulty of managing two mad Englishmen. However, they proved equal
+to the occasion, and the difficulties were entirely on our side.
+Signora Fenzo was a handsome brunette, quiet in her manners, who meant
+business. I envied Eustace his subjection to such a reasonable being.
+Signora dell' Acqua, though a widow, was by no means disconsolate; and
+I soon perceived that it would require all the address and diplomacy I
+possessed, to make anything out of her society. She laughed
+incessantly; darted in the most diverse directions, dragging me along
+with her; exhibited me in triumph to her cronies; made eyes at me over
+a fan, repeated my clumsiest remarks, as though they gave her
+indescribable amusement; and all the while jabbered Venetian at
+express rate, without the slightest regard for my incapacity to follow
+her vagaries. The _Vecchio_ marshalled us in order. First went the
+_sposa_ and _comare_ with the mothers of bride and bridegroom. Then
+followed the _sposo_ and the bridesmaid. After them I was made to lead
+my fair tormentor. As we descended the staircase there arose a hubbub
+of excitement from the crowd on the canals. The gondolas moved
+turbidly upon the face of the waters. The bridegroom kept muttering to
+himself, 'How we shall be criticised! They will tell each other who
+was decently dressed, and who stepped awkwardly into the boats, and
+what the price of my boots was!' Such exclamations, murmured at
+intervals, and followed by chest-drawn sighs, expressed a deep
+preoccupation. With regard to his boots, he need have had no anxiety.
+They were of the shiniest patent leather, much too tight, and without
+a speck of dust upon them. But his nervousness infected me with a
+cruel dread. All those eyes were going to watch how we comported
+ourselves in jumping from the landing-steps into the boat! If this
+operation, upon a ceremonious occasion, has terrors even for a
+gondolier, how formidable it ought to be to me! And here is the
+Signora dell' Acqua's white cachemire shawl dangling on one arm, and
+the Signora herself languishingly clinging to the other; and the
+gondolas are fretting in a fury of excitement, like corks, upon the
+churned green water! The moment was terrible. The _sposa_ and her
+three companions had been safely stowed away beneath their _felze_.
+The _sposo_ had successfully handed the bridesmaid into the second
+gondola. I had to perform the same office for my partner. Off she
+went, like a bird, from the bank. I seized a happy moment, followed,
+bowed, and found myself to my contentment gracefully ensconced in a
+corner opposite the widow. Seven more gondolas were packed. The
+procession moved. We glided down the little channel, broke away into
+the Grand Canal, crossed it, and dived into a labyrinth from which we
+finally emerged before our destination, the Trattoria di San Gallo.
+The perils of the landing were soon over; and, with the rest of the
+guests, my mercurial companion and I slowly ascended a long flight of
+stairs leading to a vast upper chamber. Here we were to dine.
+
+It had been the gallery of some palazzo in old days, was above one
+hundred feet in length, fairly broad, with a roof of wooden rafters
+and large windows opening on a courtyard garden. I could see the tops
+of three cypress-trees cutting the grey sky upon a level with us.
+A long table occupied the centre of this room. It had been laid for
+upwards of forty persons, and we filled it. There was plenty of
+light from great glass lustres blazing with gas. When the ladies had
+arranged their dresses, and the gentlemen had exchanged a few polite
+remarks, we all sat down to dinner--I next my inexorable widow,
+Eustace beside his calm and comely partner. The first impression
+was one of disappointment. It looked so like a public dinner of
+middle-class people. There was no local character in costume or
+customs. Men and women sat politely bored, expectant, trifling with
+their napkins, yawning, muttering nothings about the weather or their
+neighbours. The frozen commonplaceness of the scene was made for
+me still more oppressive by Signora dell' Acqua. She was evidently
+satirical, and could not be happy unless continually laughing at or
+with somebody. 'What a stick the woman will think me!' I kept saying
+to myself. 'How shall I ever invent jokes in this strange land? I
+cannot even flirt with her in Venetian! And here I have condemned
+myself--and her too, poor thing--to sit through at least three hours
+of mortal dulness!' Yet the widow was by no means unattractive.
+Dressed in black, she had contrived by an artful arrangement of lace
+and jewellery to give an air of lightness to her costume. She had
+a pretty little pale face, a _minois chiffonné_, with slightly
+turned-up nose, large laughing brown eyes, a dazzling set of teeth,
+and a tempestuously frizzled mop of powdered hair. When I managed to
+get a side-look at her quietly, without being giggled at or driven
+half mad by unintelligible incitements to a jocularity I could
+not feel, it struck me that, if we once found a common term of
+communication we should become good friends. But for the moment that
+_modus vivendi_ seemed unattainable. She had not recovered from
+the first excitement of her capture of me. She was still showing
+me off and trying to stir me up. The arrival of the soup gave me
+a momentary relief; and soon the serious business of the afternoon
+began. I may add that before dinner was over, the Signora dell' Acqua
+and I were fast friends. I had discovered the way of making jokes, and
+she had become intelligible. I found her a very nice, though flighty,
+little woman; and I believe she thought me gifted with the faculty of
+uttering eccentric epigrams in a grotesque tongue. Some of my remarks
+were flung about the table, and had the same success as uncouth
+Lombard carvings have with connoisseurs in _naïvetés_ of art. By that
+time we had come to be _compare_ and _comare_ to each other--the
+sequel of some clumsy piece of jocularity.
+
+It was a heavy entertainment, copious in quantity, excellent in
+quality, plainly but well cooked. I remarked there was no fish. The
+widow replied that everybody present ate fish to satiety at home. They
+did not join a marriage feast at the San Gallo, and pay their nine
+francs, for that! It should be observed that each guest paid for his
+own entertainment. This appears to be the custom. Therefore attendance
+is complimentary, and the married couple are not at ruinous charges
+for the banquet. A curious feature in the whole proceeding had its
+origin in this custom. I noticed that before each cover lay an empty
+plate, and that my partner began with the first course to heap upon
+it what she had not eaten. She also took large helpings, and kept
+advising me to do the same. I said: 'No; I only take what I want to
+eat; if I fill that plate in front of me as you are doing, it will be
+great waste.' This remark elicited shrieks of laughter from all who
+heard it; and when the hubbub had subsided, I perceived an apparently
+official personage bearing down upon Eustace, who was in the same
+perplexity. It was then circumstantially explained to us that the
+empty plates were put there in order that we might lay aside what we
+could not conveniently eat, and take it home with us. At the end
+of the dinner the widow (whom I must now call my _comare_) had
+accumulated two whole chickens, half a turkey, and a large assortment
+of mixed eatables. I performed my duty and won her regard by placing
+delicacies at her disposition.
+
+Crudely stated, this proceeding moves disgust. But that is only
+because one has not thought the matter out. In the performance there
+was nothing coarse or nasty. These good folk had made a contract at
+so much a head--so many fowls, so many pounds of beef, &c, to be
+supplied; and what they had fairly bought, they clearly had a right
+to. No one, so far as I could notice, tried to take more than his
+proper share; except, indeed, Eustace and myself. In our first
+eagerness to conform to custom, we both overshot the mark, and grabbed
+at disproportionate helpings. The waiters politely observed that we
+were taking what was meant for two; and as the courses followed in
+interminable sequence, we soon acquired the tact of what was due to
+us.
+
+Meanwhile the room grew warm. The gentlemen threw off their coats--a
+pleasant liberty of which I availed myself, and was immediately more
+at ease. The ladies divested themselves of their shoes (strange
+to relate!) and sat in comfort with their stockinged feet upon the
+_scagliola_ pavement. I observed that some cavaliers by special
+permission were allowed to remove their partners' slippers. This was
+not my lucky fate. My _comare_ had not advanced to that point of
+intimacy. Healths began to be drunk. The conversation took a lively
+turn; and women went fluttering round the table, visiting their
+friends, to sip out of their glass, and ask each other how they
+were getting on. It was not long before the stiff veneer of
+_bourgeoisie_ which bored me had worn off. The people emerged in
+their true selves: natural, gentle, sparkling with enjoyment, playful.
+Playful is, I think, the best word to describe them. They played with
+infinite grace and innocence, like kittens, from the old men of sixty
+to the little boys of thirteen. Very little wine was drunk. Each guest
+had a litre placed before him. Many did not finish theirs; and for
+very few was it replenished. When at last the dessert arrived, and the
+bride's comfits had been handed round, they began to sing. It was very
+pretty to see a party of three or four friends gathering round some
+popular beauty, and paying her compliments in verse--they grouped
+behind her chair, she sitting back in it and laughing up to them,
+and joining in the chorus. The words, 'Brunetta mia simpatica, ti amo
+sempre più,' sung after this fashion to Eustace's handsome partner,
+who puffed delicate whiffs from a Russian cigarette, and smiled her
+thanks, had a peculiar appropriateness. All the ladies, it may be
+observed in passing, had by this time lit their cigarettes. The men
+were smoking Toscani, Sellas, or Cavours, and the little boys were
+dancing round the table breathing smoke from their pert nostrils.
+
+The dinner, in fact, was over. Other relatives of the guests arrived,
+and then we saw how some of the reserved dishes were to be bestowed. A
+side-table was spread at the end of the gallery, and these late-comers
+were regaled with plenty by their friends. Meanwhile, the big table
+at which we had dined was taken to pieces and removed. The
+_scagliola_ floor was swept by the waiters. Musicians came
+streaming in and took their places. The ladies resumed their shoes.
+Every one prepared to dance.
+
+My friend and I were now at liberty to chat with the men. He knew
+some of them by sight, and claimed acquaintance with others. There
+was plenty of talk about different boats, gondolas, and sandolos and
+topos, remarks upon the past season, and inquiries as to chances of
+engagements in the future. One young fellow told us how he had been
+drawn for the army, and should be obliged to give up his trade just
+when he had begun to make it answer. He had got a new gondola, and
+this would have to be hung up during the years of his service. The
+warehousing of a boat in these circumstances costs nearly one hundred
+francs a year, which is a serious tax upon the pockets of a private in
+the line. Many questions were put in turn to us, but all of the same
+tenor. 'Had we really enjoyed the _pranzo_? Now, really, were we
+amusing ourselves? And did we think the custom of the wedding _un
+bel costume_?' We could give an unequivocally hearty response to
+all these interrogations. The men seemed pleased. Their interest in
+our enjoyment was unaffected. It is noticeable how often the word
+_divertimento_ is heard upon the lips of the Italians. They have
+a notion that it is the function in life of the _Signori_ to
+amuse themselves.
+
+The ball opened, and now we were much besought by the ladies. I had to
+deny myself with a whole series of comical excuses. Eustace performed
+his duty after a stiff English fashion--once with his pretty partner
+of the _pranzo_, and once again with a fat gondolier. The band
+played waltzes and polkas, chiefly upon patriotic airs--the Marcia
+Reale, Garibaldi's Hymn, &c. Men danced with men, women with women,
+little boys and girls together. The gallery whirled with a laughing
+crowd. There was plenty of excitement and enjoyment--not an unseemly
+or extravagant word or gesture. My _comare_ careered about with a
+light mĉnadic impetuosity, which made me regret my inability to accept
+her pressing invitations. She pursued me into every corner of the
+room, but when at last I dropped excuses and told her that my real
+reason for not dancing was that it would hurt my health, she waived
+her claims at once with an _Ah, poverino!_
+
+Some time after midnight we felt that we had had enough of
+_divertimento_. Francesco helped us to slip out unobserved. With
+many silent good wishes we left the innocent playful people who had
+been so kind to us. The stars were shining from a watery sky as we
+passed into the piazza beneath the Campanile and the pinnacles of
+S. Mark. The Riva was almost empty, and the little waves fretted the
+boats moored to the piazzetta, as a warm moist breeze went fluttering
+by. We smoked a last cigar, crossed our _traghetto_, and were
+soon sound asleep at the end of a long pleasant day. The ball, we
+heard next morning, finished about four.
+
+Since that evening I have had plenty of opportunities for seeing my
+friends the gondoliers, both in their own homes and in my apartment.
+Several have entertained me at their mid-day meal of fried fish
+and amber-coloured polenta. These repasts were always cooked with
+scrupulous cleanliness, and served upon a table covered with coarse
+linen. The polenta is turned out upon a wooden platter, and cut with
+a string called _lassa_. You take a large slice of it on the
+palm of the left hand, and break it with the fingers of the right.
+Wholesome red wine of the Paduan district and good white bread were
+never wanting. The rooms in which we met to eat looked out on narrow
+lanes or over pergolas of yellowing vines. Their whitewashed walls
+were hung with photographs of friends and foreigners, many of them
+souvenirs from English or American employers. The men, in broad
+black hats and lilac shirts, sat round the table, girt with the red
+waist-wrapper, or _fascia_, which marks the ancient faction of
+the Castellani. The other faction, called Nicolotti, are distinguished
+by a black _assisa_. The quarters of the town are divided
+unequally and irregularly into these two parties. What was once a
+formidable rivalry between two sections of the Venetian populace,
+still survives in challenges to trials of strength and skill upon the
+water. The women, in their many-coloured kerchiefs, stirred polenta at
+the smoke-blackened chimney, whose huge pent-house roof projects two
+feet or more across the hearth. When they had served the table they
+took their seat on low stools, knitted stockings, or drank out of
+glasses handed across the shoulder to them by their lords. Some of
+these women were clearly notable housewives, and I have no reason to
+suppose that they do not take their full share of the housework. Boys
+and girls came in and out, and got a portion of the dinner to consume
+where they thought best. Children went tottering about upon the
+red-brick floor, the playthings of those hulking fellows, who handled
+them very gently and spoke kindly in a sort of confidential whisper
+to their ears. These little ears were mostly pierced for earrings, and
+the light blue eyes of the urchins peeped maliciously beneath shocks
+of yellow hair. A dog was often of the party. He ate fish like his
+masters, and was made to beg for it by sitting up and rowing with
+his paws. _Voga, Azzò, voga!_ The Anzolo who talked thus to
+his little brown Spitz-dog has the hoarse voice of a Triton and the
+movement of an animated sea-wave. Azzo performed his trick, swallowed
+his fish-bones, and the fiery Anzolo looked round approvingly.
+
+On all these occasions I have found these gondoliers the same
+sympathetic, industrious, cheery affectionate folk. They live in many
+respects a hard and precarious life. The winter in particular is a
+time of anxiety, and sometimes of privation, even to the well-to-do
+among them. Work then is scarce, and what there is, is rendered
+disagreeable to them by the cold. Yet they take their chance with
+facile temper, and are not soured by hardships. The amenities of the
+Venetian sea and air, the healthiness of the lagoons, the cheerful
+bustle of the poorer quarters, the brilliancy of this Southern
+sunlight, and the beauty which is everywhere apparent, must be
+reckoned as important factors in the formation of their character. And
+of that character, as I have said, the final note is playfulness.
+In spite of difficulties, their life has never been stern enough to
+sadden them. Bare necessities are marvellously cheap, and the pinch
+of real bad weather--such frost as locked the lagoons in ice two years
+ago, or such south-western gales as flooded the basement floors of
+all the houses on the Zattere--is rare and does not last long. On the
+other hand, their life has never been so lazy as to reduce them to
+the savagery of the traditional Neapolitan lazzaroni. They have had
+to work daily for small earnings, but under favourable conditions,
+and their labour has been lightened by much good-fellowship among
+themselves, by the amusements of their _feste_ and their singing
+clubs.
+
+Of course it is not easy for a stranger in a very different social
+position to feel that he has been admitted to their confidence.
+Italians have an ineradicable habit of making themselves externally
+agreeable, of bending in all indifferent matters to the whims and
+wishes of superiors, and of saying what they think _Signori_
+like. This habit, while it smoothes the surface of existence, raises
+up a barrier of compliment and partial insincerity, against which the
+more downright natures of us Northern folk break in vain efforts. Our
+advances are met with an imperceptible but impermeable resistance by
+the very people who are bent on making the world pleasant to us. It
+is the very reverse of that dour opposition which a Lowland Scot or
+a North English peasant offers to familiarity; but it is hardly less
+insurmountable. The treatment, again, which Venetians of the lower
+class have received through centuries from their own nobility, makes
+attempts at fraternisation on the part of gentlemen unintelligible to
+them. The best way, here and elsewhere, of overcoming these obstacles
+is to have some bond of work or interest in common--of service on the
+one side rendered, and goodwill on the other honestly displayed. The
+men of whom I have been speaking will, I am convinced, not shirk their
+share of duty or make unreasonable claims upon the generosity of their
+employers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_A CINQUE CENTO BRUTUS_
+
+
+I.--THE SESTIERE DI SAN POLO
+
+There is a quarter of Venice not much visited by tourists, lying as
+it does outside their beat, away from the Rialto, at a considerable
+distance from the Frari and San Rocco, in what might almost pass for a
+city separated by a hundred miles from the Piazza. This is the quarter
+of San Polo, one corner of which, somewhere between the back of
+the Palazzo Foscari and the Campo di San Polo, was the scene of
+a memorable act of vengeance in the year 1546. Here Lorenzino de'
+Medici, the murderer of his cousin Alessandro, was at last tracked
+down and put to death by paid cut-throats. How they succeeded in their
+purpose, we know in every detail from the narrative dictated by the
+chief assassin. His story so curiously illustrates the conditions of
+life in Italy three centuries ago, that I have thought it worthy of
+abridgment. But, in order to make it intelligible, and to paint the
+manners of the times more fully, I must first relate the series of
+events which led to Lorenzino's murder of his cousin Alessandro, and
+from that to his own subsequent assassination. Lorenzino de' Medici,
+the Florentine Brutus of the sixteenth century, is the hero of the
+tragedy. Some of his relatives, however, must first appear upon the
+scene before he enters with a patriot's knife concealed beneath a
+court-fool's bauble.
+
+II.--THE MURDER OF IPPOLITO DE' MEDICI
+
+After the final extinction of the Florentine Republic, the hopes of
+the Medici, who now aspired to the dukedom of Tuscany, rested on three
+bastards--Alessandro, the reputed child of Lorenzo, Duke of Urbino;
+Ippolito, the natural son of Giuliano, Duke of Nemours; and Giulio,
+the offspring of an elder Giuliano, who was at this time Pope, with
+the title of Clement VII. Clement had seen Rome sacked in 1527 by a
+horde of freebooters fighting under the Imperial standard, and had
+used the remnant of these troops, commanded by the Prince of Orange,
+to crush his native city in the memorable siege of 1529-30. He now
+determined to rule Florence from the Papal chair by the help of the
+two bastard cousins I have named. Alessandro was created Duke of
+Cività di Penna, and sent to take the first place in the city.
+Ippolito was made a cardinal; since the Medici had learned that Rome
+was the real basis of their power, and it was undoubtedly in Clement's
+policy to advance this scion of his house to the Papacy. The sole
+surviving representative of the great Lorenzo de' Medici's legitimate
+blood was Catherine, daughter of the Duke of Urbino by Madeleine de la
+Tour d'Auvergne. She was pledged in marriage to the Duke of Orleans,
+who was afterwards Henry II. of France. A natural daughter of
+the Emperor Charles V. was provided for her putative half-brother
+Alessandro. By means of these alliances the succession of Ippolito
+to the Papal chair would have been secured, and the strength of the
+Medici would have been confirmed in Tuscany, but for the disasters
+which have now to be related.
+
+Between the cousins Alessandro and Ippolito there was no love lost. As
+boys, they had both played the part of princes in Florence under the
+guardianship of the Cardinal Passerini da Cortona. The higher rank
+had then been given to Ippolito, who bore the title of Magnifico, and
+seemed thus designated for the lordship of the city. Ippolito, though
+only half a Medici, was of more authentic lineage than Alessandro; for
+no proof positive could be adduced that the latter was even a spurious
+child of the Duke of Urbino. He bore obvious witness to his mother's
+blood upon his mulatto's face; but this mother was the wife of a
+groom, and it was certain that in the court of Urbino she had not been
+chary of her favours. The old magnificence of taste, the patronage
+of art and letters, and the preference for liberal studies which
+distinguished Casa Medici, survived in Ippolito; whereas Alessandro
+manifested only the brutal lusts of a debauched tyrant. It was
+therefore with great reluctance that, moved by reasons of state and
+domestic policy, Ippolito saw himself compelled to accept the scarlet
+hat. Alessandro having been recognised as a son of the Duke of Urbino,
+had become half-brother to the future Queen of France. To treat him as
+the head of the family was a necessity thrust, in the extremity of
+the Medicean fortunes, upon Clement. Ippolito, who more entirely
+represented the spirit of the house, was driven to assume the position
+of a cadet, with all the uncertainties of an ecclesiastical career.
+
+In these circumstances Ippolito had not strength of character to
+sacrifice himself for the consolidation of the Medicean power, which
+could only have been effected by maintaining a close bond of union
+between its members. The death of Clement in 1534 obscured his
+prospects in the Church. He was still too young to intrigue for the
+tiara. The new Pope, Alessandro Farnese, soon after his election,
+displayed a vigour which was unexpected from his age, together with
+a nepotism which his previous character had scarcely warranted. The
+Cardinal de' Medici felt himself excluded and oppressed. He joined the
+party of those numerous Florentine exiles, headed by Filippo Strozzi,
+and the Cardinals Salviati and Ridolfi, all of whom were connected
+by marriage with the legitimate Medici, and who unanimously hated and
+were jealous of the Duke of Cività di Penna. On the score of policy it
+is difficult to condemn this step. Alessandro's hold upon Florence was
+still precarious, nor had he yet married Margaret of Austria. Perhaps
+Ippolito was right in thinking he had less to gain from his cousin
+than from the anti-Medicean faction and the princes of the Church who
+favoured it. But he did not play his cards well. He quarrelled with
+the new Pope, Paul III., and by his vacillations led the Florentine
+exiles to suspect he might betray them.
+
+In the summer of 1535 Ippolito was at Itri, a little town not far
+from Gaeta and Terracina, within easy reach of Fondi, where dwelt the
+beautiful Giulia Gonzaga. To this lady the Cardinal paid assiduous
+court, passing his time with her in the romantic scenery of that
+world-famous Capuan coast. On the 5th of August his seneschal,
+Giovann' Andrea, of Borgo San Sepolcro, brought him a bowl of
+chicken-broth, after drinking which he exclaimed to one of his
+attendants, 'I have been poisoned, and the man who did it is Giovann'
+Andrea.' The seneschal was taken and tortured, and confessed that he
+had mixed a poison with the broth. Four days afterwards the Cardinal
+died, and a post-mortem examination showed that the omentum had been
+eaten by some corrosive substance. Giovann' Andrea was sent in chains
+to Rome; but in spite of his confession, more than once repeated, the
+court released him. He immediately took refuge with Alessandro de'
+Medici in Florence, whence he repaired to Borgo San Sepolcro, and
+was, at the close of a few months, there murdered by the people of the
+place. From these circumstances it was conjectured, not without good
+reason, that Alessandro had procured his cousin's death; and a certain
+Captain Pignatta, of low birth in Florence, a bravo and a coward,
+was believed to have brought the poison to Itri from the Duke. The
+Medicean courtiers at Florence did not disguise their satisfaction;
+and one of them exclaimed, with reference to the event, 'We know how
+to brush flies from our noses!'
+
+III.--THE MURDER OF ALESSANDRO DE' MEDICI
+
+Having removed his cousin and rival from the scene, Alessandro de'
+Medici plunged with even greater effrontery into the cruelties and
+debaucheries which made him odious in Florence. It seemed as though
+fortune meant to smile on him; for in this same year (1535) Charles
+V. decided at Naples in his favour against the Florentine exiles,
+who were pleading their own cause and that of the city injured by his
+tyrannies; and in February of the following year he married Margaret
+of Austria, the Emperor's natural daughter. Francesco Guicciardini,
+the first statesman and historian of his age, had undertaken his
+defence, and was ready to support him by advice and countenance in
+the conduct of his government. Within the lute of this prosperity,
+however, there was one little rift. For some months past he had
+closely attached to his person a certain kinsman, Lorenzo de' Medici,
+who was descended in the fourth generation from Lorenzo, the brother
+of Cosimo Pater Patriĉ. This Lorenzo, or Lorenzino, or Lorenzaccio,
+as his most intimate acquaintances called him, was destined to murder
+Alessandro; and it is worthy of notice that the Duke had received
+frequent warnings of his fate. A Perugian page, for instance, who
+suffered from some infirmity, saw in a dream that Lorenzino would kill
+his master. Astrologers predicted that the Duke must die by having his
+throat cut. One of them is said to have named Lorenzo de' Medici as
+the assassin; and another described him so accurately that there was
+no mistaking the man. Moreover, Madonna Lucrezia Salviati wrote to the
+Duke from Rome that he should beware of a certain person, indicating
+Lorenzino; and her daughter, Madonna Maria, told him to his face
+she hated the young man, 'because I know he means to murder you,
+and murder you he will.' Nor was this all. The Duke's favourite
+body-servants mistrusted Lorenzino. On one occasion, when Alessandro
+and Lorenzino, attended by a certain Giomo, were escalading a wall at
+night, as was their wont upon illicit love-adventures, Giomo whispered
+to his master: 'Ah, my lord, do let me cut the rope, and rid ourselves
+of him!' To which the Duke replied: 'No, I do not want this; but if he
+could, I know he'd twist it round my neck.'
+
+In spite, then, of these warnings and the want of confidence he felt,
+the Duke continually lived with Lorenzino, employing him as pander in
+his intrigues, and preferring his society to that of simpler men. When
+he rode abroad, he took this evil friend upon his crupper; although
+he knew for certain that Lorenzino had stolen a tight-fitting vest of
+mail he used to wear, and, while his arms were round his waist, was
+always meditating how to stick a poignard in his body. He trusted,
+so it seems, to his own great strength and to the other's physical
+weakness.
+
+At this point, since Lorenzino is the principal actor in the two-act
+drama which follows, it will be well to introduce him to the reader in
+the words of Varchi, who was personally acquainted with him. Born at
+Florence in 1514, he was left early by his father's death to the
+sole care of his mother, Maria Soderini, 'a lady of rare prudence
+and goodness, who attended with the utmost pains and diligence to his
+education. No sooner, however, had he acquired the rudiments of humane
+learning, which, being of very quick parts, he imbibed with incredible
+facility, than he began to display a restless mind, insatiable and
+appetitive of vice. Soon afterwards, under the rule and discipline of
+Filippo Strozzi, he made open sport of all things human and divine;
+and preferring the society of low persons, who not only flattered him
+but were congenial to his tastes, he gave free rein to his desires,
+especially in affairs of love, without regard for sex or age or
+quality, and in his secret soul, while he lavished feigned caresses
+upon every one he saw, felt no esteem for any living being. He
+thirsted strangely for glory, and omitted no point of deed or word
+that might, he thought, procure him the reputation of a man of spirit
+or of wit. He was lean of person, somewhat slightly built, and on
+this account people called him Lorenzino. He never laughed, but had a
+sneering smile; and although he was rather distinguished by grace than
+beauty, his countenance being dark and melancholy, still in the flower
+of his age he was beloved beyond all measure by Pope Clement; in spite
+of which he had it in his mind (according to what he said himself
+after killing the Duke Alessandro) to have murdered him. He brought
+Francesco di Raffaello de' Medici, the Pope's rival, who was a young
+man of excellent attainments and the highest hope, to such extremity
+that he lost his wits, and became the sport of the whole court at
+Rome, and was sent back, as a lesser evil, as a confirmed madman to
+Florence.' Varchi proceeds to relate how Lorenzino fell
+into disfavour with the Pope and the Romans by chopping the heads off
+statues from the arch of Constantine and other monuments; for which
+act of vandalism Molsa impeached him in the Roman Academy, and a price
+was set upon his head. Having returned to Florence, he proceeded
+to court Duke Alessandro, into whose confidence he wormed himself,
+pretending to play the spy upon the exiles, and affecting a personal
+timidity which put the Prince off his guard. Alessandro called him
+'the philosopher,' because he conversed in solitude with his own
+thoughts and seemed indifferent to wealth and office. But all this
+while Lorenzino was plotting how to murder him.
+
+Giovio's account of this strange intimacy may be added, since it
+completes the picture I have drawn from Varchi:--'Lorenzo made himself
+the accomplice and instrument of those amorous amusements for which
+the Duke had an insatiable appetite, with the object of deceiving him.
+He was singularly well furnished with all the scoundrelly arts and
+trained devices of the pander's trade; composed fine verses to incite
+to lust; wrote and represented comedies in Italian; and pretended
+to take pleasure only in such tricks and studies. Therefore he never
+carried arms like other courtiers, and feigned to be afraid of blood,
+a man who sought tranquillity at any price. Besides, he bore a pallid
+countenance and melancholy brow, walking alone, talking very little
+and with few persons. He haunted solitary places apart from the city,
+and showed such plain signs of hypochondria that some began covertly
+to pass jokes on him. Certain others, who were more acute, suspected
+that he was harbouring and devising in his mind some terrible
+enterprise.' The Prologue to Lorenzino's own comedy of 'Aridosiso'
+brings the sardonic, sneering, ironical man vividly before us.
+He calls himself 'un certo omiciatto, che non è nessun di voi che
+veggendolo non l'avesse a noia, pensando che egli abbia fatto una
+commedia;' and begs the audience to damn his play to save him the
+tedium of writing another. Criticised by the light of his subsequent
+actions, this prologue may even be understood to contain a covert
+promise of the murder he was meditating.
+
+'In this way,' writes Varchi, 'the Duke had taken such familiarity
+with Lorenzo, that, not content with making use of him as a ruffian
+in his dealings with women, whether religious or secular, maidens
+or wives or widows, noble or plebeian, young or elderly, as it might
+happen, he applied to him to procure for his pleasure a half-sister of
+Lorenzo's own mother, a young lady of marvellous beauty, but not less
+chaste than beautiful, who was the wife of Lionardo Ginori, and lived
+not far from the back entrance to the palace of the Medici.' Lorenzino
+undertook this odious commission, seeing an opportunity to work his
+designs against the Duke. But first he had to form an accomplice,
+since he could not hope to carry out the murder without help. A bravo,
+called Michele del Tavolaccino, but better known by the nickname of
+Scoronconcolo, struck him as a fitting instrument. He had procured
+this man's pardon for a homicide, and it appears that the fellow
+retained a certain sense of gratitude. Lorenzino began by telling the
+man there was a courtier who put insults upon him, and Scoronconcolo
+professed his readiness to kill the knave. 'Sia chi si voglia; io
+l'ammazzerò, se fosse Cristo.' Up to the last minute the name of
+Alessandro was not mentioned. Having thus secured his assistant,
+Lorenzino chose a night when he knew that Alessandro Vitelli, captain
+of the Duke's guard, would be from home. Then, after supper, he
+whispered in Alessandro's ear that at last he had seduced his aunt
+with an offer of money, and that she would come to his, Lorenzo's
+chamber at the service of the Duke that night. Only the Duke must
+appear at the rendezvous alone, and when he had arrived, the lady
+should be fetched. 'Certain it is,' says Varchi, 'that the Duke,
+having donned a cloak of satin in the Neapolitan style, lined with
+sable, when he went to take his gloves, and there were some of mail
+and some of perfumed leather, hesitated awhile and said: "Which shall
+I choose, those of war, or those of love-making?"' He took the latter
+and went out with only four attendants, three of whom he dismissed
+upon the Piazza di San Marco, while one was stationed just opposite
+Lorenzo's house, with strict orders not to stir if he should see folk
+enter or issue thence. But this fellow, called the Hungarian, after
+waiting a great while, returned to the Duke's chamber, and there went
+to sleep.
+
+Meanwhile Lorenzino received Alessandro in his bedroom, where there
+was a good fire. The Duke unbuckled his sword, which Lorenzino took,
+and having entangled the belt with the hilt, so that it should not
+readily be drawn, laid it on the pillow. The Duke had flung himself
+already on the bed, and hid himself among the curtains--doing this, it
+is supposed, to save himself from the trouble of paying compliments to
+the lady when she should arrive. For Caterina Ginori had the fame of
+a fair speaker, and Alessandro was aware of his own incapacity to play
+the part of a respectful lover. Nothing could more strongly point the
+man's brutality than this act, which contributed in no small measure
+to his ruin.
+
+Lorenzino left the Duke upon the bed, and went at once for
+Scoronconcolo. He told him that the enemy was caught, and bade him
+only mind the work he had to do. 'That will I do,' the bravo answered,
+'even though it were the Duke himself.' 'You've hit the mark,' said
+Lorenzino with a face of joy; 'he cannot slip through our fingers.
+Come!' So they mounted to the bedroom, and Lorenzino, knowing where
+the Duke was laid, cried: 'Sir, are you asleep?' and therewith ran
+him through the back. Alessandro was sleeping, or pretending to
+sleep, face downwards, and the sword passed through his kidneys and
+diaphragm. But it did not kill him. He slipped from the bed, and
+seized a stool to parry the next blow. Scoronconcolo now stabbed him
+in the face, while Lorenzino forced him back upon the bed; and then
+began a hideous struggle. In order to prevent his cries, Lorenzino
+doubled his fist into the Duke's mouth. Alessandro seized the thumb
+between his teeth, and held it in a vice until he died. This disabled
+Lorenzino, who still lay upon his victim's body, and Scoronconcolo
+could not strike for fear of wounding his master. Between the writhing
+couple he made, however, several passes with his sword, which only
+pierced the mattress. Then he drew a knife and drove it into the
+Duke's throat, and bored about till he had severed veins and windpipe.
+
+
+IV.--THE FLIGHT OF LORENZINO DE' MEDICI
+
+Alessandro was dead. His body fell to earth. The two murderers,
+drenched with blood, lifted it up, and placed it on the bed, wrapped
+in the curtains, as they had found him first. Then Lorenzino went to
+the window, which looked out upon the Via Larga, and opened it to rest
+and breathe a little air. After this he called for Scoronconcolo's
+boy, Il Freccia, and bade him look upon the dead man. Il Freccia
+recognised the Duke. But why Lorenzino did this, no one knew. It
+seemed, as Varchi says, that, having planned the murder with great
+ability, and executed it with daring, his good sense and good luck
+forsook him. He made no use of the crime he had committed; and from
+that day forward till his own assassination, nothing prospered with
+him. Indeed, the murder of Alessandro appears to have been almost
+motiveless, considered from the point of view of practical politics.
+Varchi assumes that Lorenzino's burning desire of glory prompted the
+deed; and when he had acquired the notoriety he sought, there was an
+end to his ambition. This view is confirmed by the Apology he wrote
+and published for his act. It remains one of the most pregnant,
+bold, and brilliant pieces of writing which we possess in favour of
+tyrannicide from that epoch of insolent crime and audacious rhetoric.
+So energetic is the style, and so biting the invective of this
+masterpiece, in which the author stabs a second time his victim, that
+both Giordani and Leopardi affirmed it to be the only true monument of
+eloquence in the Italian language. If thirst for glory was Lorenzino's
+principal incentive, immediate glory was his guerdon. He escaped that
+same night with Scoronconcolo and Freccia to Bologna, where he stayed
+to dress his thumb, and then passed forward to Venice. Filippo Strozzi
+there welcomed him as the new Brutus, gave him money, and promised to
+marry his two sons to the two sisters of the tyrant-killer. Poems were
+written and published by the most famous men of letters, including
+Benedetto Varchi and Francesco Maria Molsa, in praise of the Tuscan
+Brutus, the liberator of his country from a tyrant. A bronze medal
+was struck bearing his name, with a profile copied from Michelangelo's
+bust of Brutus. On the obverse are two daggers and a cup, and the date
+viii. id. Jan.
+
+The immediate consequence of Alessandro's murder was the elevation
+of Cosimo, son of Giovanni delle Bande Nere, and second cousin of
+Lorenzino, to the duchy. At the ceremony of his investiture with
+the ducal honours, Cosimo solemnly undertook to revenge Alessandro's
+murder. In the following March he buried his predecessor with pomp
+in San Lorenzo. The body was placed beside the bones of the Duke of
+Urbino in the marble chest of Michelangelo, and here not many years
+ago it was discovered. Soon afterwards Lorenzino was declared a rebel.
+His portrait was painted according to old Tuscan precedent, head
+downwards, and suspended by one foot, upon the wall of the fort built
+by Alessandro. His house was cut in twain from roof to pavement, and
+a narrow lane was driven through it, which received the title of
+Traitor's Alley, _Chiasso del Traditore_. The price of four
+thousand golden florins was put upon his head, together with the
+further sum of one hundred florins per annum in perpetuity to be paid
+to the murderer and his direct heirs in succession, by the Otto di
+Balia. Moreover, the man who killed Lorenzino was to enjoy all civic
+privileges; exemption from all taxes, ordinary and extraordinary; the
+right of carrying arms, together with two attendants, in the city and
+the whole domain of Florence; and the further prerogative of restoring
+ten outlaws at his choice. If Lorenzino could be captured and brought
+alive to Florence, the whole of this reward would be doubled.
+
+This decree was promulgated in April 1537, and thenceforward Lorenzino
+de' Medici lived a doomed man. The assassin, who had been proclaimed a
+Brutus by Tuscan exiles and humanistic enthusiasts, was regarded as a
+Judas by the common people. Ballads were written on him with the title
+of the 'Piteous and sore lament made unto himself by Lorenzino de'
+Medici, who murdered the most illustrious Duke Alessandro.' He had
+become a wild beast, whom it was honourable to hunt down, a pest which
+it was righteous to extirpate. Yet fate delayed nine years to overtake
+him. What remains to be told about his story must be extracted
+from the narrative of the bravo who succeeded, with the aid of an
+accomplice, in despatching him at Venice.[13] So far as possible,
+I shall use the man's own words, translating them literally, and
+omitting only unimportant details. The narrative throws brilliant
+light upon the manners and movements of professional cut-throats at
+that period in Italy. It seems to have been taken down from the hero
+Francesco, or Cecco, Bibboni's lips; and there is no doubt that we
+possess in it a valuable historical document for the illustration of
+contemporary customs. It offers in all points a curious parallel
+to Cellini's account of his own homicides and hair-breadth escapes.
+Moreover, it is confirmed in its minutest circumstances by the records
+of the criminal courts of Venice in the sixteenth century. This I can
+attest from recent examination of MSS. relating to the _Signori
+di Notte_ and the _Esecutori contro la Bestemmia_, which are
+preserved among the Archives at the Frari.
+
+V.--THE MURDER OF LORENZINO DE' MEDICI
+
+'When I returned from Germany,' begins Bibboni, 'where I had been in
+the pay of the Emperor, I found at Vicenza Bebo da Volterra, who was
+staying in the house of M. Antonio da Roma, a nobleman of that city.
+This gentleman employed him because of a great feud he had; and he was
+mighty pleased, moreover, at my coming, and desired that I too should
+take up my quarters in his palace.'
+
+This paragraph strikes the keynote of the whole narrative, and
+introduces us to the company we are about to keep. The noblemen of
+that epoch, if they had private enemies, took into their service
+soldiers of adventure, partly to protect their persons, but also to
+make war, when occasion offered, on their foes. The _bravi_, as
+they were styled, had quarters assigned them in the basement of
+the palace, where they might be seen swaggering about the door or
+flaunting their gay clothes behind the massive iron bars of the
+windows which opened on the streets. When their master went abroad
+at night they followed him, and were always at hand to perform secret
+services in love affairs, assassination, and espial. For the rest,
+they haunted taverns, and kept up correspondence with prostitutes. An
+Italian city had a whole population of such fellows, the offscourings
+of armies, drawn from all nations, divided by their allegiance of the
+time being into hostile camps, but united by community of interest and
+occupation, and ready to combine against the upper class, upon whose
+vices, enmities, and cowardice they throve.
+
+Bibboni proceeds to say how another gentleman of Vicenza, M. Francesco
+Manente, had at this time a feud with certain of the Guazzi and the
+Laschi, which had lasted several years, and cost the lives of many
+members of both parties and their following. M. Francesco being a
+friend of M. Antonio, besought that gentleman to lend him Bibboni and
+Bebo for a season; and the two _bravi_ went together with their
+new master to Celsano, a village in the neighbourhood. 'There both
+parties had estates, and all of them kept armed men in their houses,
+so that not a day passed without feats of arms, and always there was
+some one killed or wounded. One day, soon afterwards, the leaders of
+our party resolved to attack the foe in their house, where we killed
+two, and the rest, numbering five men, entrenched themselves in
+a ground-floor apartment; whereupon we took possession of their
+harquebuses and other arms, which forced them to abandon the villa and
+retire to Vicenza; and within a short space of time this great feud
+was terminated by an ample peace.' After this Bebo took service with
+the Rector of the University in Padua, and was transferred by his new
+patron to Milan. Bibboni remained at Vicenza with M. Galeazzo della
+Seta, who stood in great fear of his life, notwithstanding the peace
+which had been concluded between the two factions. At the end of ten
+months he returned to M. Antonio da Roma and his six brothers, 'all of
+whom being very much attached to me, they proposed that I should
+live my life with them, for good or ill, and be treated as one of the
+family; upon the understanding that if war broke out and I wanted to
+take part in it, I should always have twenty-five crowns and arms and
+horse, with welcome home, so long as I lived; and in case I did not
+care to join the troops, the same provision for my maintenance.'
+
+From these details we comprehend the sort of calling which a bravo
+of Bibboni's species followed. Meanwhile Bebo was at Milan. 'There it
+happened that M. Francesco Vinta, of Volterra, was on embassy from
+the Duke of Florence. He saw Bebo, and asked him what he was doing in
+Milan, and Bebo answered that he was a knight errant.' This phrase,
+derived no doubt from the romantic epics then in vogue, was a pretty
+euphemism for a rogue of Bebo's quality. The ambassador now began
+cautiously to sound his man, who seems to have been outlawed from the
+Tuscan duchy, telling him he knew a way by which he might return with
+favour to his home, and at last disclosing the affair of Lorenzo. Bebo
+was puzzled at first, but when he understood the matter, he professed
+his willingness, took letters from the envoy to the Duke of Florence,
+and, in a private audience with Cosimo, informed him that he was ready
+to attempt Lorenzino's assassination. He added that 'he had a comrade
+fit for such a job, whose fellow for the business could not easily be
+found.'
+
+Bebo now travelled to Vicenza, and opened the whole matter to Bibboni,
+who weighed it well, and at last, being convinced that the Duke's
+commission to his comrade was _bona fide_, determined to take his
+share in the undertaking. The two agreed to have no accomplices.
+They went to Venice, and 'I,' says Bibboni, 'being most intimately
+acquainted with all that city, and provided there with many friends,
+soon quietly contrived to know where Lorenzino lodged, and took a room
+in the neighbourhood, and spent some days in seeing how we best might
+rule our conduct.' Bibboni soon discovered that Lorenzino never left
+his palace; and he therefore remained in much perplexity, until, by
+good luck, Ruberto Strozzi arrived from France in Venice, bringing in
+his train a Navarrese servant, who had the nickname of Spagnoletto.
+This fellow was a great friend of the bravo. They met, and Bibboni
+told him that he should like to go and kiss the hands of Messer
+Ruberto, whom he had known in Rome. Strozzi inhabited the same palace
+as Lorenzino. 'When we arrived there, both Messer Ruberto and Lorenzo
+were leaving the house, and there were around them so many gentlemen
+and other persons, that I could not present myself, and both
+straightway stepped into the gondola. Then I, not having seen Lorenzo
+for a long while past, and because he was very quietly attired, could
+not recognise the man exactly, but only as it were between certainty
+and doubt. Wherefore I said to Spagnoletto, "I think I know that
+gentleman, but don't remember where I saw him." And Messer Ruberto was
+giving him his right hand. Then Spagnoletto answered, "You know him
+well enough; he is Messer Lorenzo. But see you tell this to nobody. He
+goes by the name of Messer Dario, because he lives in great fear
+for his safety, and people don't know that he is now in Venice." I
+answered that I marvelled much, and if I could have helped him, would
+have done so willingly. Then I asked where they were going, and he
+said, to dine with Messer Giovanni della Casa, who was the Pope's
+Legate. I did not leave the man till I had drawn from him all I
+required.'
+
+Thus spoke the Italian Judas. The appearance of La Casa on the
+scene is interesting. He was the celebrated author of the scandalous
+'Capitolo del Forno,' the author of many sublime and melancholy
+sonnets, who was now at Venice, prosecuting a charge of heresy against
+Pier Paolo Vergerio, and paying his addresses to a noble lady of the
+Quirini family. It seems that on the territory of San Marco he made
+common cause with the exiles from Florence, for he was himself by
+birth a Florentine, and he had no objection to take Brutus-Lorenzino
+by the hand.
+
+After the noblemen had rowed off in their gondola to dine with the
+Legate, Bibboni and his friend entered their palace, where he found
+another old acquaintance, the house-steward, or _spenditore_ of
+Lorenzo. From him he gathered much useful information. Pietro Strozzi,
+it seems, had allowed the tyrannicide one thousand five hundred crowns
+a year, with the keep of three brave and daring companions (_tre
+compagni bravi e facinorosi_), and a palace worth fifty crowns on
+lease. But Lorenzo had just taken another on the Campo di San Polo at
+three hundred crowns a year, for which swagger (_altura_) Pietro
+Strozzi had struck a thousand crowns off his allowance. Bibboni also
+learned that he was keeping house with his uncle, Alessandro Soderini,
+another Florentine outlaw, and that he was ardently in love with a
+certain beautiful Barozza. This woman was apparently one of the grand
+courtesans of Venice. He further ascertained the date when he was
+going to move into the palace at San Polo, and, 'to put it briefly,
+knew everything he did, and, as it were, how many times a day he
+spit.' Such were the intelligences of the servants' hall, and of such
+value were they to men of Bibboni's calling.
+
+In the Carnival of 1546 Lorenzo meant to go masqued in the habit of
+a gipsy woman to the square of San Spirito, where there was to be a
+joust. Great crowds of people would assemble, and Bibboni hoped to
+do his business there. The assassination, however, failed on this
+occasion, and Lorenzo took up his abode in the palace he had hired
+upon the Campo di San Polo. This Campo is one of the largest open
+places in Venice, shaped irregularly, with a finely curving line upon
+the western side, where two of the noblest private houses in the city
+are still standing. Nearly opposite these, in the south-western angle,
+stands, detached, the little old church of San Polo. One of its side
+entrances opens upon the square; the other on a lane, which leads
+eventually to the Frari. There is nothing in Bibboni's narrative to
+make it clear where Lorenzo hired his dwelling. But it would seem
+from certain things which he says later on, that in order to enter the
+church his victim had to cross the square. Meanwhile Bibboni took the
+precaution of making friends with a shoemaker, whose shop commanded
+the whole Campo, including Lorenzo's palace. In this shop he began to
+spend much of his time; 'and oftentimes I feigned to be asleep;
+but God knows whether I was sleeping, for my mind, at any rate, was
+wide-awake.'
+
+A second convenient occasion for murdering Lorenzo soon seemed to
+offer. He was bidden to dine with Monsignor della Casa; and Bibboni,
+putting a bold face on, entered the Legate's palace, having left
+Bebo below in the loggia, fully resolved to do the business. 'But we
+found,' he says, 'that, they had gone to dine at Murano, so that we
+remained with our tabors in their bag.' The island of Murano at that
+period was a favourite resort of the Venetian nobles, especially of
+the more literary and artistic, who kept country-houses there, where
+they enjoyed the fresh air of the lagoons and the quiet of their
+gardens.
+
+The third occasion, after all these weeks of watching, brought success
+to Bibboni's schemes. He had observed how Lorenzo occasionally so far
+broke his rules of caution as to go on foot, past the church of San
+Polo, to visit the beautiful Barozza; and he resolved, if possible,
+to catch him on one of these journeys. 'It so chanced on the 28th of
+February, which was the second Sunday of Lent, that having gone, as
+was my wont, to pry out whether Lorenzo would give orders for going
+abroad that day, I entered the shoemaker's shop, and stayed awhile,
+until Lorenzo came to the window with a napkin round his neck for he
+was combing his hair--and at the same moment I saw a certain Giovan
+Battista Martelli, who kept his sword for the defence of Lorenzo's
+person, enter and come forth again. Concluding that they would
+probably go abroad, I went home to get ready and procure the necessary
+weapons, and there I found Bebo asleep in bed, and made him get up at
+once, and we came to our accustomed post of observation, by the church
+of San Polo, where our men would have to pass.' Bibboni now retired to
+his friend the shoemaker's, and Bebo took up his station at one of
+the side-doors of San Polo; 'and, as good luck would have it, Giovan
+Battista Martelli came forth, and walked a piece in front, and then
+Lorenzo came, and then Alessandro Soderini, going the one behind the
+other, like storks, and Lorenzo, on entering the church, and lifting
+up the curtain of the door, was seen from the opposite door by Bebo,
+who at the same time noticed how I had left the shop, and so we met
+upon the street as we had agreed, and he told me that Lorenzo was
+inside the church.'
+
+To any one who knows the Campo di San Polo, it will be apparent that
+Lorenzo had crossed from the western side of the piazza and entered
+the church by what is technically called its northern door. Bebo,
+stationed at the southern door, could see him when he pushed the heavy
+_stoia_ or leather curtain aside, and at the same time could
+observe Bibboni's movements in the cobbler's shop. Meanwhile Lorenzo
+walked across the church and came to the same door where Bebo had been
+standing. 'I saw him issue from the church and take the main street;
+then came Alessandro Soderini, and I walked last of all; and when
+we reached the point we had determined on, I jumped in front
+of Alessandro with the poignard in my hand, crying, "Hold hard,
+Alessandro, and get along with you in God's name, for we are not here
+for you!" He then threw himself around my waist, and grasped my arms,
+and kept on calling out. Seeing how wrong I had been to try to spare
+his life, I wrenched myself as well as I could from his grip, and with
+my lifted poignard struck him, as God willed, above the eyebrow, and a
+little blood trickled from the wound. He, in high fury, gave me such a
+thrust that I fell backward, and the ground besides was slippery
+from having rained a little. Then Alessandro drew his sword, which he
+carried in its scabbard, and thrust at me in front, and struck me on
+the corslet, which for my good fortune was of double mail. Before I
+could get ready I received three passes, which, had I worn a doublet
+instead of that mailed corslet, would certainly have run me through.
+At the fourth pass I had regained my strength and spirit, and closed
+with him, and stabbed him four times in the head, and being so close
+he could not use his sword, but tried to parry with his hand and hilt,
+and I, as God willed, struck him at the wrist below the sleeve of
+mail, and cut his hand off clean, and gave him then one last stroke on
+his head. Thereupon he begged for God's sake spare his life, and I, in
+trouble about Bebo, left him in the arms of a Venetian nobleman, who
+held him back from jumping into the canal.'
+
+Who this Venetian nobleman, found unexpectedly upon the scene, was,
+does not appear. Nor, what is still more curious, do we hear anything
+of that Martelli, the bravo, 'who kept his sword for the defence of
+Lorenzo's person.' The one had arrived accidentally, it seems. The
+other must have been a coward and escaped from the scuffle.
+
+'When I turned,' proceeds Bibboni, 'I found Lorenzo on his knees. He
+raised himself, and I, in anger, gave him a great cut across the head,
+which split it in two pieces, and laid him at my feet, and he never
+rose again.'
+
+VI.--THE ESCAPE OF THE BRAVI
+
+Bebo, meanwhile, had made off from the scene of action. And Bibboni,
+taking to his heels, came up with him in the little square of San
+Marcello. They now ran for their lives till they reached the traghetto
+di San Spirito, where they threw their poignards into the water,
+remembering that no man might carry these in Venice under penalty
+of the galleys. Bibboni's white hose were drenched with blood. He
+therefore agreed to separate from Bebo, having named a rendezvous.
+Left alone, his ill luck brought him face to face with twenty
+constables (_sbirri_). 'In a moment I conceived that they knew
+everything, and were come to capture me, and of a truth I saw that it
+was over with me. As swiftly as I could I quickened pace and got into
+a church, near to which was the house of a Compagnia, and the one
+opened into the other, and knelt down and prayed, commending myself
+with fervour to God for my deliverance and safety. Yet while I prayed,
+I kept my eyes well open and saw the whole band pass the church,
+except one man who entered, and I strained my sight so that I seemed
+to see behind as well as in front, and then it was I longed for my
+poignard, for I should not have heeded being in a church.' But the
+constable, it soon appeared, was not looking for Bibboni. So he
+gathered up his courage, and ran for the Church of San Spirito, where
+the Padre Andrea Volterrano was preaching to a great congregation.
+He hoped to go in by one door and out by the other, but the crowd
+prevented him, and he had to turn back and face the _sbirrí_. One
+of them followed him, having probably caught sight of the blood upon
+his hose. Then Bibboni resolved to have done with the fellow, and
+rushed at him, and flung him down with his head upon the pavement,
+and ran like mad and came at last, all out of breath, to San Marco. It
+seems clear that before Bibboni separated from Bebo they had crossed
+the water, for the Sestiere di San Polo is separated from the Sestiere
+di San Marco by the Grand Canal. And this they must have done at the
+traghetto di San Spirito. Neither the church nor the traghetto are
+now in existence, and this part of the story is therefore obscure.[14]
+Having reached San Marco, he took a gondola at the Ponte della Paglia,
+where tourists are now wont to stand and contemplate the Ducal Palace
+and the Bridge of Sighs. First, he sought the house of a woman of the
+town who was his friend; then changed purpose, and rowed to the palace
+of the Count Salici da Collalto. 'He was a great friend and intimate
+of ours, because Bebo and I had done him many and great services in
+times passed. There I knocked; and Bebo opened the door, and when he
+saw me dabbled with blood, he marvelled that I had not come to grief
+and fallen into the hands of justice, and, indeed, had feared as much
+because I had remained so long away.' It appears, therefore, that the
+Palazzo Collalto was their rendezvous. 'The Count was from home; but
+being known to all his people, I played the master and went into the
+kitchen to the fire, and with soap and water turned my hose, which had
+been white, to a grey colour.' This is a very delicate way of saying
+that he washed out the blood of Alessandro and Lorenzo!
+
+Soon after the Count returned, and 'lavished caresses' upon Bebo and
+his precious comrade. They did not tell him what they had achieved
+that morning, but put him off with a story of having settled a
+_sbirro_ in a quarrel about a girl. Then the Count invited them to
+dinner; and being himself bound to entertain the first physician of
+Venice, requested them to take it in an upper chamber. He and his
+secretary served them with their own hands at table. When the
+physician arrived, the Count went downstairs; and at this moment a
+messenger came from Lorenzo's mother, begging the doctor to go at once
+to San Polo, for that her son had been murdered and Soderini wounded
+to the death. It was now no longer possible to conceal their doings
+from the Count, who told them to pluck up courage and abide in
+patience. He had himself to dine and take his siesta, and then to
+attend a meeting of the Council.
+
+About the hour of vespers, Bibboni determined to seek better refuge.
+Followed at a discreet distance by Bebo, he first called at their
+lodgings and ordered supper. Two priests came in and fell into
+conversation with them. But something in the behaviour of one of
+these good men roused his suspicions. So they left the house, took a
+gondola, and told the man to row hard to S. Maria Zobenigo. On the way
+he bade him put them on shore, paid him well, and ordered him to wait
+for them. They landed near the palace of the Spanish embassy; and here
+Bibboni meant to seek sanctuary. For it must be remembered that the
+houses of ambassadors, no less than of princes of the Church, were
+inviolable. They offered the most convenient harbouring-places to
+rascals. Charles V., moreover, was deeply interested in the vengeance
+taken on Alessandro de' Medici's murderer, for his own natural
+daughter was Alessandro's widow and Duchess of Florence. In the palace
+they were met with much courtesy by about forty Spaniards, who showed
+considerable curiosity, and told them that Lorenzo and Alessandro
+Soderini had been murdered that morning by two men whose description
+answered to their appearance. Bibboni put their questions by and asked
+to see the ambassador. He was not at home. In that case, said Bibboni,
+take us to the secretary. Attended by some thirty Spaniards, 'with
+great joy and gladness,' they were shown into the secretary's chamber.
+He sent the rest of the folk away, 'and locked the door well, and then
+embraced and kissed us before we had said a word, and afterwards bade
+us talk freely without any fear.' When Bibboni had told the whole
+story, he was again embraced and kissed by the secretary, who
+thereupon left them and went to the private apartment of the
+ambassador. Shortly after he returned and led them by a winding
+staircase into the presence of his master. The ambassador greeted
+them with great honour, told them he would strain all the power of
+the empire to hand them in safety over to Duke Cosimo, and that he had
+already sent a courier to the Emperor with the good news.
+
+So they remained in hiding in the Spanish embassy; and in ten days'
+time commands were received from Charles himself that everything
+should be done to convey them safely to Florence. The difficulty was
+how to smuggle them out of Venice, where the police of the Republic
+were on watch, and Florentine outlaws were mounting guard on sea and
+shore to catch them. The ambassador began by spreading reports on the
+Rialto every morning of their having been seen at Padua, at Verona, in
+Friuli. He then hired a palace at Malghera, near Mestre, and went out
+daily with fifty Spaniards, and took carriage or amused himself with
+horse exercise and shooting. The Florentines, who were on watch, could
+only discover from his people that he did this for amusement. When
+he thought that he had put them sufficiently off their guard, the
+ambassador one day took Bibboni and Bebo out by Canaregio and Mestre
+to Malghera, concealed in his own gondola, with the whole train of
+Spaniards in attendance. And though, on landing, the Florentines
+challenged them, they durst not interfere with an ambassador or come
+to battle with his men. So Bebo and Bibboni were hustled into a coach,
+and afterwards provided with two comrades and four horses. They rode
+for ninety miles without stopping to sleep, and on the day following
+this long journey reached Trento, having probably threaded the
+mountain valleys above Bassano, for Bibboni speaks of a certain
+village where the people talked half German. The Imperial Ambassador
+at Trento forwarded them next day to Mantua; from Mantua they came to
+Piacenza; thence, passing through the valley of the Taro, crossing
+the Apennines at Cisa, descending on Pontremoli, and reaching Pisa at
+night, the fourteenth day after their escape from Venice.
+
+When they arrived at Pisa, Duke Cosimo was supping. So they went to
+an inn, and next morning presented themselves to his Grace. Cosimo
+received them kindly, assured them of his gratitude, confirmed them
+in the enjoyment of their rewards and privileges, and swore that they
+might rest secure of his protection in all parts of his dominion. We
+may imagine how the men caroused together after this reception. As
+Bibboni adds, 'We were now able for the whole time of life left us
+to live splendidly, without a thought or care.' The last words of his
+narrative are these: 'Bebo from Pisa, at what date I know not, went
+home to Volterra, his native town, and there finished his days; while
+I abode in Florence, where I have had no further wish to hear of wars,
+but to live my life in holy peace.'
+
+So ends the story of the two _bravi_. We have reason to believe,
+from some contemporary documents which Cantù has brought to light,
+that Bibboni exaggerated his own part in the affair. Luca Martelli,
+writing to Varchi, says that it was Bebo who clove Lorenzo's skull
+with a cutlass. He adds this curious detail, that the weapons of
+both men were poisoned, and that the wound inflicted by Bibboni on
+Soderini's hand was a slight one. Yet, the poignard being poisoned,
+Soderini died of it. In other respects Martelli's brief account agrees
+with that given by Bibboni, who probably did no more, his comrade
+being dead, than claim for himself, at some expense of truth, the
+lion's share of their heroic action.
+
+VII.--LORENZINO BRUTUS
+
+It remains to ask ourselves, What opinion can be justly formed of
+Lorenzino's character and motives? When he murdered his cousin, was
+he really actuated by the patriotic desire to rid his country of a
+monster? Did he imitate the Roman Brutus in the noble spirit of
+his predecessors, Olgiati and Boscoli, martyrs to the creed of
+tyrannicide? Or must this crowning action of a fretful life be
+explained, like his previous mutilation of the statues on the Arch
+of Constantine, by a wild thirst for notoriety? Did he hope that the
+exiles would return to Florence, and that he would enjoy an honourable
+life, an immortality of glorious renown? Did envy for his cousin's
+greatness and resentment of his undisguised contempt--the passions of
+one who had been used for vile ends--conscious of self-degradation and
+the loss of honour, yet mindful of his intellectual superiority--did
+these emotions take fire in him and mingle with a scholar's
+reminiscences of antique heroism, prompting him to plan a deed
+which should at least assume the show of patriotic zeal, and prove
+indubitable courage in its perpetrator? Did he, again, perhaps
+imagine, being next in blood to Alessandro and direct heir to the
+ducal crown by the Imperial Settlement of 1530, that the city would
+elect her liberator for her ruler? Alfieri and Niccolini, having
+taken, as it were, a brief in favour of tyrannicide, praised Lorenzino
+as a hero. De Musset, who wrote a considerable drama on his story,
+painted him as a _roué_ corrupted by society, enfeebled by
+circumstance, soured by commerce with an uncongenial world, who hides
+at the bottom of his mixed nature enough of real nobility to make him
+the leader of a forlorn hope for the liberties of Florence. This is
+the most favourable construction we can put upon Lorenzo's conduct.
+Yet some facts of the case warn us to suspend our judgment. He seems
+to have formed no plan for the liberation of his fellow-citizens. He
+gave no pledge of self-devotion by avowing his deed and abiding by its
+issues. He showed none of the qualities of a leader, whether in the
+cause of freedom or of his own dynastic interests, after the murder.
+He escaped as soon as he was able, as secretly as he could manage,
+leaving the city in confusion, and exposing himself to the obvious
+charge of abominable treason. So far as the Florentines knew, his
+assassination of their Duke was but a piece of private spite, executed
+with infernal craft. It is true that when he seized the pen in exile,
+he did his best to claim the guerdon of a patriot, and to throw the
+blame of failure on the Florentines. In his Apology, and in a letter
+written to Francesco de' Medici, he taunts them with lacking the
+spirit to extinguish tyranny when he had slain the tyrant. He summons
+plausible excuses to his aid--the impossibility of taking persons of
+importance into his confidence, the loss of blood he suffered from
+his wound, the uselessness of rousing citizens whom events proved
+over-indolent for action. He declares that he has nothing to regret.
+Having proved by deeds his will to serve his country, he has saved
+his life in order to spend it for her when occasion offered. But these
+arguments, invented after the catastrophe, these words, so bravely
+penned when action ought to have confirmed his resolution, do not
+meet the case. It was no deed of a true hero to assassinate a despot,
+knowing or half knowing that the despot's subjects would immediately
+elect another. Their languor could not, except rhetorically, be
+advanced in defence of his own flight.
+
+The historian is driven to seek both the explanation and palliation of
+Lorenzo's failure in the temper of his times. There was enough
+daring left in Florence to carry through a plan of brilliant treason,
+modelled on an antique Roman tragedy. But there was not moral force
+in the protagonist to render that act salutary, not public energy
+sufficient in his fellow-citizens to accomplish his drama of
+deliverance. Lorenzo was corrupt. Florence was flaccid. Evil manners
+had emasculated the hero. In the state the last spark of independence
+had expired with Ferrucci.
+
+Still I have not without forethought dubbed this man a Cinque Cento
+Brutus. Like much of the art and literature of his century, his action
+may be regarded as a _bizarre_ imitation of the antique manner.
+Without the force and purpose of a Roman, Lorenzo set himself to copy
+Plutarch's men--just as sculptors carved Neptunes and Apollos without
+the dignity and serenity of the classic style. The antique faith
+was wanting to both murderer and craftsman in those days. Even as
+Renaissance work in art is too often aimless, decorative, vacant of
+intention, so Lorenzino's Brutus tragedy seems but the snapping of
+a pistol in void air. He had the audacity but not the ethical
+consistency of his crime. He played the part of Brutus like a Roscius,
+perfect in its histrionic details. And it doubtless gave to this
+skilful actor a supreme satisfaction--salving over many wounds of
+vanity, quenching the poignant thirst for things impossible and
+draughts of fame--that he could play it on no mimic stage, but on
+the theatre of Europe. The weakness of his conduct was the central
+weakness of his age and country. Italy herself lacked moral purpose,
+sense of righteous necessity, that consecration of self to a noble
+cause, which could alone have justified Lorenzo's perfidy. Confused
+memories of Judith, Jael, Brutus, and other classical tyrannicides,
+exalted his imagination. Longing for violent emotions, jaded with
+pleasure which had palled, discontented with his wasted life, jealous
+of his brutal cousin, appetitive to the last of glory, he conceived
+his scheme. Having conceived, he executed it with that which never
+failed in Cinque Cento Italy--the artistic spirit of perfection. When
+it was over, he shrugged his shoulders, wrote his magnificent Apology
+with a style of adamant upon a plate of steel, and left it for the
+outlaws of Filippo Strozzi's faction to deal with the crisis he
+had brought about. For some years he dragged out an ignoble life
+in obscurity, and died at last, as Varchi puts it, more by his own
+carelessness than by the watchful animosity of others. Over the wild,
+turbid, clever, incomprehensible, inconstant hero-artist's grave we
+write our _Requiescat_. Clio, as she takes the pen in hand to
+record this prayer, smiles disdainfully and turns to graver business.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_TWO DRAMATISTS OF THE LAST CENTURY_
+
+
+There are few contrasts more striking than that which is presented
+by the memoirs of Goldoni and Alfieri. Both of these men bore names
+highly distinguished in the history of Italian literature. Both of
+them were framed by nature with strongly marked characters, and fitted
+to perform a special work in the world. Both have left behind them
+records of their lives and literary labours, singularly illustrative
+of their peculiar differences. There is no instance in which we see
+more clearly the philosophical value of autobiographies, than in these
+vivid pictures which the great Italian tragedian and comic author have
+delineated. Some of the most interesting works of Lionardo da Vinci,
+Giorgione, Albert Dürer, Rembrandt, Rubens, and Andrea del Sarto, are
+their portraits painted by themselves. These pictures exhibit not only
+the lineaments of the masters, but also their art. The hand which drew
+them was the hand which drew the 'Last Supper,' or the 'Madonna of
+the Tribune:' colour, method, chiaroscuro, all that makes up manner in
+painting, may be studied on the same canvas as that which faithfully
+represents the features of the man whose genius gave his style its
+special character. We seem to understand the clear calm majesty of
+Lionardo's manner, the silver-grey harmonies and smooth facility of
+Andrea's Madonnas, the better for looking at their faces drawn by
+their own hands at Florence. And if this be the case with a dumb
+picture, how far higher must be the interest and importance of the
+written life of a known author! Not only do we recognise in its
+composition the style and temper and habits of thought which are
+familiar to us in his other writings; but we also hear from his
+own lips how these were formed, how his tastes took their peculiar
+direction, what circumstances acted on his character, what hopes he
+had, and where he failed. Even should his autobiography not bear
+the marks of uniform candour, it probably reveals more of the actual
+truth, more of the man's real nature in its height and depth, than
+any memoir written by friend or foe. Its unconscious admissions, its
+general spirit, and the inferences which we draw from its perusal,
+are far more valuable than any mere statement of facts or external
+analysis, however scientific. When we become acquainted with
+the series of events which led to the conception or attended the
+production of some masterpiece of literature, a new light is thrown
+upon its beauties, fresh life bursts forth from every chapter, and we
+seem to have a nearer and more personal interest in its success. What
+a powerful sensation, for instance, is that which we experience when,
+after studying the 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,' Gibbon
+tells us how the thought of writing it came to him upon the Capitol,
+among the ruins of dead Rome, and within hearing of the mutter of the
+monks of Ara Coeli, and how he finished it one night by Lake Geneva,
+and laid his pen down and walked forth and saw the stars above his
+terrace at Lausanne!
+
+The memoirs of Alfieri and Goldoni are not deficient in any of the
+characteristics of good autobiography. They seem to bear upon their
+face the stamp of truthfulness, they illustrate their authors' lives
+with marvellous lucidity, and they are full of interest as stories.
+But it is to the contrast which they present that our attention should
+be chiefly drawn. Other biographies may be as interesting and amusing.
+None show in a more marked manner two distinct natures endowed with
+genius for one art, and yet designed in every possible particular for
+different branches of that art. Alfieri embodies Tragedy; Goldoni
+is the spirit of Comedy. They are both Italians: their tragedies and
+comedies are by no means cosmopolitan; but this national identity of
+character only renders more remarkable the individual divergences by
+which they were impelled into their different paths. Thalia seems to
+have made the one, body, soul, and spirit; and Melpomene the other;
+each goddess launched her favourite into circumstances suited to the
+evolution of his genius, and presided over his development, so that at
+his death she might exclaim,--Behold the living model of my Art!
+
+Goldoni was born at Venice in the year 1707; he had already reached
+celebrity when Alfieri saw the light for the first time, in 1749, at
+Asti. Goldoni's grandfather was a native of Modena, who had settled
+in Venice, and there lived with the prodigality of a rich and
+ostentatious 'bourgeois.' 'Amid riot and luxury did I enter the
+world,' says the poet, after enumerating the banquets and theatrical
+displays with which the old Goldoni entertained his guests in his
+Venetian palace and country-house. Venice at that date was certainly
+the proper birthplace for a comic poet. The splendour of the
+Renaissance had thoroughly habituated her nobles to pleasures of the
+sense, and had enervated their proud, maritime character, while the
+great name of the republic robbed them of the caution for which they
+used to be conspicuous. Yet the real strength of Venice was almost
+spent, and nothing remained but outward insolence and prestige.
+Everything was gay about Goldoni in his earliest childhood.
+Puppet-shows were built to amuse him by his grandfather. 'My
+mother,' he says, 'took charge of my education, and my father of my
+amusements.' Let us turn to the opening scene in Alfieri's life,
+and mark the difference. A father above sixty, 'noble, wealthy, and
+respectable,' who died before his son had reached the age of one year
+old. A mother devoted to religion, the widow of one marquis, and after
+the death of a second husband, Alfieri's father, married for the third
+time to a nobleman of ancient birth. These were Alfieri's parents. He
+was born in a solemn palazzo in the country town of Asti, and at the
+age of five already longed for death as an escape from disease and
+other earthly troubles. So noble and so wealthy was the youthful poet
+that an abbé was engaged to carry out his education, but not to teach
+him more than a count should know. Except this worthy man he had no
+companions whatever. Strange ideas possessed the boy. He ruminated on
+his melancholy, and when eight years old attempted suicide. At this
+age he was sent to the academy at Turin, attended, as befitted a lad
+of his rank, by a man-servant, who was to remain and wait on him at
+school. Alfieri stayed here several years without revisiting his home,
+tyrannised over by the valet who added to his grandeur, constantly
+subject to sickness, and kept in almost total ignorance by his
+incompetent preceptors. The gloom and pride and stoicism of his
+temperament were augmented by this unnatural discipline. His spirit
+did not break, but took a haughtier and more disdainful tone. He
+became familiar with misfortunes. He learned to brood over and
+intensify his passions. Every circumstance of his life seemed strung
+up to a tragic pitch. This at least is the impression which remains
+upon our mind after reading in his memoirs the narrative of what must
+in many of its details have been a common schoolboy's life at that
+time.
+
+Meanwhile, what had become of young Goldoni? His boyhood was as
+thoroughly plebeian, various, and comic as Alfieri's had been
+patrician, monotonous, and tragical. Instead of one place of
+residence, we read of twenty. Scrape succeeds to scrape, adventure to
+adventure. Knowledge of the world, and some book learning also, flow
+in upon the boy, and are eagerly caught up by him and heterogeneously
+amalgamated in his mind. Alfieri learned nothing, wrote nothing, in
+his youth, and heard his parents say--'A nobleman need never strive to
+be a doctor of the faculties.' Goldoni had a little medicine and much
+law thrust upon him. At eight he wrote a comedy, and ere long began
+to read the plays of Plautus, Terence, Aristophanes, and Machiavelli.
+Between the nature of the two poets there was a marked and
+characteristic difference as to their mode of labour and of acquiring
+knowledge. Both of them loved fame, and wrought for it; but Alfieri
+did so from a sense of pride and a determination to excel;
+while Goldoni loved the approbation of his fellows, sought their
+compliments, and basked in the sunshine of smiles. Alfieri wrote with
+labour. Each tragedy he composed went through a triple process of
+composition, and received frequent polishing when finished. Goldoni
+dashed off his pieces with the greatest ease on every possible
+subject. He once produced sixteen comedies in one theatrical season.
+Alfieri's were like lion's whelps--brought forth with difficulty,
+and at long intervals; Goldoni's, like the brood of a hare--many,
+frequent, and as agile as their parent. Alfieri amassed knowledge
+scrupulously, but with infinite toil. He mastered Greek and Hebrew
+when he was past forty. Goldoni never gave himself the least trouble
+to learn anything, but trusted to the ready wit, good memory, and
+natural powers, which helped him in a hundred strange emergencies.
+Power of will and pride sustained the one; facility and a
+good-humoured vanity the other. This contrast was apparent at a very
+early age. We have seen how Alfieri passed his time at Turin, in
+a kind of aristocratic prison of educational ignorance. Goldoni's
+grandfather died when he was five years old, and left his family in
+great embarrassment. The poet's father went off to practise medicine
+at Perugia. His son followed him, acquired the rudiments of knowledge
+in that town, and then proceeded to study philosophy alone at Rimini.
+There was no man-servant or academy in his case. He was far too
+plebeian and too free. The boy lodged with a merchant, and got some
+smattering of Thomas Aquinas and the Peripatetics into his small
+brain, while he contrived to form a friendship with an acting company.
+They were on the wing for Venice in a coasting boat, which would touch
+at Chiozza, where Goldoni's mother then resided. The boy pleased them.
+Would he like the voyage? This offer seemed too tempting, and away
+he rushed, concealed himself on board, and made one of a merry motley
+shipload. 'Twelve persons, actors as well as actresses, a prompter,
+a machinist, a storekeeper, eight domestics, four chambermaids, two
+nurses, children of every age, cats, dogs, monkeys, parrots, birds,
+pigeons, and a lamb; it was another Noah's ark.' The young poet felt
+at home; how could a comic poet feel otherwise? They laughed, they
+sang, they danced; they ate and drank, and played at cards. 'Macaroni!
+Every one fell on it, and three dishes were devoured. We had also
+alamode beef, cold fowl, a loin of veal, a dessert, and excellent
+wine. What a charming dinner! No cheer like a good appetite.' Their
+harmony, however, was disturbed. The 'première amoureuse,' who, in
+spite of her rank and title, was ugly and cross, and required to be
+coaxed with cups of chocolate, lost her cat. She tried to kill the
+whole boat-load of beasts--cats, dogs, monkeys, parrots, pigeons, even
+the lamb stood in danger of her wrath. A regular quarrel ensued, was
+somehow set at peace, and all began to laugh again. This is a sample
+of Goldoni's youth. Comic pleasures, comic dangers; nothing deep or
+lasting, but light and shadow cheerfully distributed, clouds lowering
+with storm, a distant growl of thunder, then a gleam of light and
+sunshine breaking overhead. He gets articled to an attorney at Venice,
+then goes to study law at Pavia; studies society instead, and flirts,
+and finally is expelled for writing satires. Then he takes a turn at
+medicine with his father in Friuli, and acts as clerk to the criminal
+chancellor at Chiozza.
+
+Every employment seems easy to him, but he really cares for none but
+literature. He spends all his spare time in reading and in amusements,
+and begins to write a tragic opera. This proves, however, eminently
+unsuccessful, and he burns it in a comic fit of anger. One laughable
+love-affair in which he engaged at Udine exhibits his adventures
+in their truly comic aspect. It reminds us of the scene in 'Don
+Giovanni,' where Leporello personates the Don and deceives Donna
+Elvira. Goldoni had often noticed a beautiful young lady at church
+and on the public drives: she was attended by a waiting-maid, who soon
+perceived that her mistress had excited the young man's admiration,
+and who promised to befriend him in his suit. Goldoni was told to
+repair at night to the palace of his mistress, and to pour his passion
+forth beneath her window. Impatiently he waited for the trysting
+hour, conned his love-sentences, and gloried in the romance of the
+adventure. When night came, he found the window, and a veiled figure
+of a lady in the moonlight, whom he supposed at once to be his
+mistress. Her he eloquently addressed in the true style of Romeo's
+rapture, and she answered him. Night after night this happened,
+but sometimes he was a little troubled by a sound of ill-suppressed
+laughter interrupting the _tête-à-tête_. Meanwhile Teresa,
+the waiting-maid, received from his hands costly presents for her
+mistress, and made him promises on her part in exchange. As she proved
+unable to fulfil them, Goldoni grew suspicious, and at last discovered
+that the veiled figure to whom he had poured out his tale of love was
+none other than Teresa, and that the laughter had proceeded from
+her mistress, whom the faithless waiting-maid regaled at her lover's
+expense. Thus ended this ridiculous matter. Goldoni was not, however,
+cured by his experience. One other love-affair rendered Udine too hot
+to hold him, and in consequence of a third he had to fly from Venice
+just when he was beginning to flourish there. At length he married
+comfortably and suitably, settling down into a quiet life with a woman
+whom, if he did not love her with passion, he at least respected and
+admired. Goldoni, in fact, had no real passion in his nature.
+
+Alfieri, on the other hand, was given over to volcanic ebullitions of
+the most ungovernable hate and affection, joy and sorrow. The chains
+of love which Goldoni courted so willingly, Alfieri regarded with
+the greatest shyness. But while Goldoni healed his heart of all its
+bruises in a week or so, the tragic poet bore about him wounds that
+would not close. He enumerates three serious passions which possessed
+his whole nature, and at times deprived him almost of his reason. A
+Dutch lady first won his heart, and when he had to leave her, Alfieri
+suffered so intensely that he never opened his lips during the course
+of a long journey through Germany, Switzerland, and Piedmont. Fevers,
+and suicides attempted but interrupted, marked the termination of this
+tragic amour. His second passion had for its object an English lady,
+with whose injured husband he fought a duel, although his collarbone
+was broken at the time. The lady proved unworthy of Alfieri as well
+as of her husband, and the poet left her in a most deplorable state
+of hopelessness and intellectual prostration. At last he formed
+a permanent affection for the wife of Prince Charles Edward, the
+Countess of Albany, in close friendship with whom he lived after her
+husband's death. The society of this lady gave him perfect happiness;
+but it was founded on her lofty beauty, the pathos of her situation,
+and her intellectual qualities. Melpomene presided at this union,
+while Thalia blessed the nuptials of Goldoni. How characteristic
+also were the adventures which these two pairs of lovers encountered!
+Goldoni once carried his wife upon his back across two rivers in their
+flight from the Spanish to the Austrian camp at Rimini, laughing and
+groaning, and perceiving the humour of his situation all the time.
+Alfieri, on an occasion of even greater difficulty, was stopped with
+his illustrious friend at the gates of Paris in 1792. They were flying
+in post-chaises, with their servants and their baggage, from the
+devoted city, when a troop of _sansculottes_ rushed on them,
+surged around the carriage, called them aristocrats, and tried to drag
+them off to prison. Alfieri, with his tall gaunt figure, pallid face,
+and red voluminous hair, stormed, raged, and raised his deep bass
+voice above the tumult. For half an hour he fought with them, then
+made his coachmen gallop through the gates, and scarcely halted till
+they got to Gravelines. By this prompt movement they escaped arrest
+and death at Paris. These two scenes would make agreeable companion
+pictures: Goldoni staggering beneath his wife across the muddy bed
+of an Italian stream--the smiling writer of agreeable plays, with his
+half-tearful helpmate ludicrous in her disasters; Alfieri mad with
+rage among Parisian Mĉnads, his princess quaking in her carriage, the
+air hoarse with cries, and death and safety trembling in the balance.
+It is no wonder that the one man wrote 'La Donna di Garbo' and the
+'Cortese Veneziano,' while the other was inditing essays on Tyranny
+and dramas of 'Antigone,' 'Timoleon,' and 'Brutus.'
+
+The difference between the men is seen no less remarkably in regard
+to courage. Alfieri was a reckless rider, and astonished even English
+huntsmen by his desperate leaps. In one of them he fell and broke
+his collar-bone, but not the less he held his tryst with a fair lady,
+climbed her park gates, and fought a duel with her husband. Goldoni
+was a pantaloon for cowardice. In the room of an inn at Desenzano
+which he occupied together with a female fellow-traveller, an attempt
+was made to rob them by a thief at night. All Goldoni was able to do
+consisted in crying out for help, and the lady called him 'M. l'Abbé'
+ever after for his want of pluck. Goldoni must have been by far the
+more agreeable of the two. In all his changes from town to town of
+Italy he found amusement and brought gaiety. The sights, the theatres,
+the society aroused his curiosity. He trembled with excitement at the
+performance of his pieces, made friends with the actors, taught them,
+and wrote parts to suit their qualities. At Pisa he attended as
+a stranger the meeting of the Arcadian Academy, and at its close
+attracted all attention to himself by his clever improvisation. He was
+in truth a ready-witted man, pliable, full of resource, bred half a
+valet, half a Roman _grĉculus_. Alfieri saw more of Europe than
+Goldoni. France, Germany, Holland, Switzerland, England, Spain, all
+parts of Italy he visited with restless haste. From land to land he
+flew, seeking no society, enjoying nothing, dashing from one inn door
+to another with his servants and his carriages, and thinking chiefly
+of the splendid stud of horses which he took about with him upon his
+travels. He was a lonely, stiff, self-engrossed, indomitable man. He
+could not rest at home: he could not bear to be the vassal of a king
+and breathe the air of courts. So he lived always on the wing, and
+ended by exiling himself from Sardinia in order to escape the trammels
+of paternal government. As for his tragedies, he wrote them to win
+laurels from posterity. He never cared to see them acted; he bullied
+even his printers and correctors; he cast a glove down in defiance
+of his critics. Goldoni sought the smallest meed of approbation. It
+pleased him hugely in his old age to be Italian master to a French
+princess. Alfieri openly despised the public. Goldoni wrote because he
+liked to write; Alfieri, for the sake of proving his superior powers.
+Against Alfieri's hatred of Turin and its trivial solemnities, we
+have to set Goldoni's love of Venice and its petty pleasures. He would
+willingly have drunk chocolate and played at dominoes or picquet all
+his life on the Piazza di San Marco, when Alfieri was crossing the
+sierras on his Andalusian horse, and devouring a frugal meal of rice
+in solitude. Goldoni glided through life an easy man, with genial,
+venial thoughts; with a clear, gay, gentle temper; a true sense of
+what is good and just; and a heart that loved diffusively, if not too
+warmly. Many were the checks and obstacles thrown on his path; but
+round them or above them he passed nimbly, without scar or scathe.
+Poverty went close behind him, but he kept her off, and never felt
+the pinch of need. Alfieri strained and strove against the barriers
+of fate; a sombre, rugged man, proud, candid, and self-confident, who
+broke or bent all opposition; now moving solemnly with tragic pomp,
+now dashing passionately forward by the might of will. Goldoni drew
+his inspirations from the moment and surrounding circumstances.
+Alfieri pursued an ideal, slowly formed, but strongly fashioned and
+resolutely followed. Of wealth he had plenty and to spare, but
+he disregarded it, and was a Stoic in his mode of life. He was an
+unworldly man, and hated worldliness. Goldoni, but for his authorship,
+would certainly have grown a prosperous advocate, and died of gout
+in Venice. Goldoni liked smart clothes; Alfieri went always in
+black. Goldoni's fits of spleen--for he _was_ melancholy now and
+then--lasted a day or two, and disappeared before a change of place.
+Alfieri dragged his discontent about with him all over Europe, and let
+it interrupt his work and mar his intellect for many months together.
+Alfieri was a patriot, and hated France. Goldoni never speaks
+of politics, and praises Paris as a heaven on earth. The genial
+moralising of the latter appears childish by the side of Alfieri's
+terse philosophy and pregnant remarks on the development of character.
+What suits the page of Plautus would look poor in 'Oedipus' or
+'Agamemnon.' Goldoni's memoirs are diffuse and flippant in their light
+French dress. They seem written to please. Alfieri's Italian style
+marches with dignity and Latin terseness. He rarely condescends to
+smile. He writes to instruct the world and to satisfy himself. Grim
+humour sometimes flashes out, as when he tells the story of the Order
+of Homer, which he founded. How different from Goldoni's naïve account
+of his little ovation in the theatre at Paris!
+
+But it would be idle to carry on this comparison, already tedious. The
+life of Goldoni was one long scene of shifts and jests, of frequent
+triumphs and some failures, of lessons hard at times, but kindly.
+Passions and _ennui_, flashes of heroic patriotism, constant
+suffering and stoical endurance, art and love idealised, fill up the
+life of Alfieri. Goldoni clung much to his fellow-men, and shared
+their pains and pleasures. Alfieri spent many of his years in almost
+absolute solitude. On the whole character and deeds of the one man was
+stamped Comedy: the other was own son of Tragedy.
+
+If, after reading the autobiographies of Alfieri and Goldoni, we turn
+to the perusal of their plays, we shall perceive that there is no
+better commentary on the works of an artist than his life, and no
+better life than one written by himself. The old style of criticism,
+which strove to separate an author's productions from his life, and
+even from the age in which he lived, to set up an arbitrary canon
+of taste, and to select one or two great painters or poets as ideals
+because they seemed to illustrate that canon, has passed away. We are
+beginning to feel that art is a part of history and of physiology.
+That is to say, the artist's work can only be rightly understood by
+studying his age and temperament. Goldoni's versatility and want of
+depth induced him to write sparkling comedies. The merry life men
+passed at Venice in its years of decadence proved favourable to his
+genius. Alfieri's melancholy and passionate qualities, fostered in
+solitude, and aggravated by a tyranny he could not bear, led him
+irresistibly to tragic composition. Though a noble, his nobility only
+added to his pride, and insensibly his intellect had been imbued with
+the democratic sentiments which were destined to shake Europe in his
+lifetime. This, in itself, was a tragic circumstance, bringing him
+into close sympathy with the Brutus, the Prometheus, the Timoleon of
+ancient history. Goldoni's _bourgeoisie_, in the atmosphere of
+which he was born and bred, was essentially comic. The true comedy
+of manners, which is quite distinct from Shakspere's fancy or from
+Aristophanic satire, is always laid in middle life. Though Goldoni
+tried to write tragedies, they were unimpassioned, dull, and tame. He
+lacked altogether the fire, high-wrought nobility of sentiment, and
+sense of form essential for tragic art. On the other hand, Alfieri
+composed some comedies before his death which were devoid of humour,
+grace, and lightness. A strange elephantine eccentricity is their
+utmost claim to comic character. Indeed, the temper of Alfieri, ever
+in extremes, led him even to exaggerate the qualities of tragedy.
+He carried its severity to a pitch of dulness and monotony. His
+chiaroscuro was too strong; virtue and villany appearing in pure
+black and white upon his pages. His hatred of tyrants induced him to
+transgress the rules of probability, so that it has been well said
+that if his wicked kings had really had such words of scorn and hatred
+thrown at them by their victims, they were greatly to be pitied. On
+the other hand, his pithy laconisms have often a splendidly tragical
+effect. There is nothing in the modern drama more rhetorically
+impressive, though spasmodic, than the well-known dialogue between
+Antigone and Creon:--
+
+'_Cr_. Scegliesti?
+
+'_Ant_. Ho scelto.
+
+'_Cr_. Emon?
+
+'_Ant_. Morte.
+
+'_Cr_. L'avrai!'
+
+Goldoni's comedies, again, have not enough of serious thought or of
+true creative imagination to be works of high art. They lean too much
+to the side of farce; they have none of the tragic salt which gives
+a dignity to Tartuffe. They are, in a word, almost too enethistically
+comic.
+
+The contrast between these authors might lead us to raise the question
+long ago discussed by Socrates at Agathon's banquet--Can the same man
+write both comedies and tragedies? We in England are accustomed to
+read the serious and comic plays of Shakspere, Fletcher, Jonson, and
+to think that one poet could excel in either branch. The custom of
+the Elizabethan theatre obliged this double authorship; yet it must be
+confessed that Shakspere's comedies are not such comedies as Greek
+or Romnan or French critics would admit. They are works of the purest
+imagination, wholly free from the laws of this world; while the
+tragedies of Fletcher have a melodramatic air equally at variance with
+the classical Melpomene. It may very seriously be doubted whether the
+same mind could produce, with equal power, a comedy like the 'Cortese
+Veneziano' and a tragedy like Alfieri's 'Brutus.' At any rate,
+returning to our old position, we find in these two men the very
+opposite conditions of dramatic genius. They are, as it were,
+specimens prepared by Nature for the instruction of those who analyse
+genius in its relations to temperament, to life, and to external
+circumstances.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [Footnote 1: This Essay was written in 1866, and published
+ in 1867. Reprinting it in 1879, after eighteen months spent
+ continuously in one high valley of the Grisons, I feel how
+ slight it is. For some amends, I take this opportunity of
+ printing at the end of it a description of Davos in winter.]
+
+ [Footnote 2: See, however, what is said about Leo Battista
+ Alberti in the sketch of Rimini in the second series.]
+
+ [Footnote 3: The Grisons surname Campèll may derive from the
+ Romansch Campo Bello. The founder of the house was one
+ Kaspar Campèll, who in the first half of the sixteenth
+ century preached the Reformed religion in the Engadine.]
+
+ [Footnote 4: I have translated and printed at the end of the
+ second volume some sonnets of Petrarch as a kind of palinode
+ for this impertinence.]
+
+ [Footnote 5: This begs the question whether [Greek:
+ leukoion] does not properly mean snowflake, or some such
+ flower. Violets in Greece, however, were often used for
+ crowns: [Greek: iostephanos] is the epithet of Homer for
+ Aphrodite, and of Aristophanes for Athens.]
+
+ [Footnote 6: Olive-trees must be studied at Mentone or San
+ Remo, in Corfu, at Tivoli, on the coast between Syracuse and
+ Catania, or on the lowlands of Apulia. The stunted but
+ productive trees of the Rhone valley, for example, are no
+ real measure of the beauty they can exhibit.]
+
+ [Footnote 7: Dante, Par. xi. 106.]
+
+ [Footnote 8: It is but just to Doctor Pasta to remark that
+ the above sentence was written more than ten years ago.
+ Since then he has enlarged and improved his house in many
+ ways, furnished it more luxuriously, made paths through the
+ beechwoods round it, and brought excellent water at a great
+ cost from a spring near the summit of the mountain. A more
+ charming residence from early spring to late autumn can
+ scarcely be discovered.]
+
+ [Footnote 9: 'The down upon their cheeks and chin was
+ yellower than helichrysus, and their breasts gleamed whiter
+ far than thou, O Moon.']
+
+ [Footnote 10: 'Thy tresses have I oftentimes compared to
+ Ceres' yellow autumn sheaves, wreathed in curled bands
+ around thy head.']
+
+ [Footnote 11: Both these and the large frescoes in the choir
+ have been chromolithographed by the Arundel Society.]
+
+ [Footnote 12: I cannot see clearly through these
+ transactions, the muddy waters of decadent Italian plot and
+ counterplot being inscrutable to senses assisted by nothing
+ more luminous than mere tradition.]
+
+ [Footnote 13: Those who are interested in such matters may
+ profitably compare this description of a planned murder in
+ the sixteenth century with the account written by Ambrogio
+ Tremazzi of the way in which he tracked and slew Troilo
+ Orsini in Paris in the year 1577. It is given by Gnoli in
+ his _Vittoria Accoramboni_, pp. 404-414.]
+
+ [Footnote 14: So far as I can discover, the only church of
+ San Spirito in Venice was a building on the island of San
+ Spirito, erected by Sansavino, which belonged to the
+ Sestiere di S. Croce, and which was suppressed in 1656. Its
+ plate and the fine pictures which Titian painted there were
+ transferred at that date to S.M. della Salute. I cannot help
+ inferring that either Bibboni's memory failed him, or that
+ his words were wrongly understood by printer or amanuensis.
+ If for S. Spirito we substitute S. Stefano, the account
+ would be intelligible.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketches and Studies in Italy and
+Greece, by John Addington Symonds
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece
+by John Addington Symonds
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece
+
+Author: John Addington Symonds
+
+Release Date: February 8, 2005 [EBook #14972]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SKETCHES IN ITALY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ted Garvin, Leonard Johnson and the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style=
+ " background-color: white; color: black; border-style: ridge;">
+ <center>
+ <h1>
+ SKETCHES AND STUDIES
+ <br />
+ IN
+ <br />
+ ITALY AND GREECE
+ </h1>
+ </center>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <h2>
+ BY
+ <br />
+ JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ AUTHOR OF "RENAISSANCE IN ITALY", "STUDIES OF THE GREEK POETS,"
+ ETC
+ </h4>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <h3>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h3>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <h4>
+ FIRST SERIES
+ </h4>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <h4>
+ NEW EDITION
+ </h4>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <h4>
+ LONDON
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ JOHN MURRAY,
+ <br />
+ ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
+ </h4>
+ <h3>
+ 1914
+ </h3>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="PREFATORY_NOTE" id="PREFATORY_NOTE"></a>PREFATORY NOTE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In preparing this new edition of the late J.A. Symonds's three
+ volumes of travels, 'Sketches in Italy and Greece,' 'Sketches and
+ Studies in Italy,' and 'Italian Byways,' nothing has been changed
+ except the order of the Essays. For the convenience of travellers
+ a topographical arrangement has been adopted. This implied a new
+ title to cover the contents of all three volumes, and 'Sketches
+ and Studies in Italy and Greece' has been chosen as departing
+ least from the author's own phraseology.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HORATIO F. BROWN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Venice: <i>June</i> 1898.
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <table summary="toc">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"><b>TABLE OF CONTENTS</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#PREFATORY_NOTE"><b>PREFATORY NOTE</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#THE_LOVE_OF_THE_ALPS1"><b>THE LOVE OF THE
+ ALPS</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#WINTER_NIGHTS_AT_DAVOS"><b>WINTER NIGHTS AT
+ DAVOS</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#BACCHUS_IN_GRAUBUNDEN"><b>BACCHUS IN
+ GRAUBÜNDEN</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#OLD_TOWNS_OF_PROVENCE"><b>OLD TOWNS OF
+ PROVENCE</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#THE_CORNICE"><b>THE CORNICE</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#AJACCIO"><b>AJACCIO</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#MONTE"><b>MONTE GENEROSO</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#LOMBARD_VIGNETTES"><b>LOMBARD VIGNETTES</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#COMO_AND_IL_MEDEGHINO"><b>COMO AND IL
+ MEDEGHINO</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#BERGAMO_AND_BARTOLOMMEO_COLLEONI"><b>BERGAMO AND
+ BARTOLOMMEO COLLEONI</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#CREMA_AND_THE_CRUCIFIX"><b>CREMA AND THE
+ CRUCIFIX</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#CHERUBINO_AT_THE_SCALA_THEATRE"><b>CHERUBINO AT THE
+ SCALA THEATRE</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#A_VENETIAN_MEDLEY"><b>A VENETIAN MEDLEY</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#THE_GONDOLIERS_WEDDING"><b>THE GONDOLIER'S
+ WEDDING</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#A_CINQUE_CENTO_BRUTUS"><b>A CINQUE CENTO
+ BRUTUS</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#TWO_DRAMATISTS_OF_THE_LAST_CENTURY"><b>TWO
+ DRAMATISTS OF THE LAST CENTURY</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <a href="#FOOTNOTES"><b>FOOTNOTES</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <h2>
+ SKETCHES AND STUDIES
+ <br />
+ IN
+ <br />
+ ITALY AND GREECE
+ </h2>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="THE_LOVE_OF_THE_ALPS1" id=
+ "THE_LOVE_OF_THE_ALPS1"></a><i>THE LOVE OF THE
+ ALPS</i><small><a name="FNanchor_1_1" id=
+ "FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class=
+ "fnanchor">[1]</a></small>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ Of all the joys in life, none is greater than the joy of arriving
+ on the outskirts of Switzerland at the end of a long dusty day's
+ journey from Paris. The true epicure in refined pleasures will
+ never travel to Basle by night. He courts the heat of the sun and
+ the monotony of French plains,&mdash;their sluggish streams and
+ never-ending poplar trees&mdash;for the sake of the evening
+ coolness and the gradual approach to the great Alps, which await
+ him at the close of the day. It is about Mulhausen that he begins
+ to feel a change in the landscape. The fields broaden into
+ rolling downs, watered by clear and running streams; the green
+ Swiss thistle grows by riverside and cowshed; pines begin to tuft
+ the slopes of gently rising hills; and now the sun has set, the
+ stars come out, first Hesper, then the troop of lesser lights;
+ and he feels&mdash;yes, indeed, there is now no mistake&mdash;the
+ well-known, well-loved magical fresh air, that never fails to
+ blow from snowy mountains and meadows watered by perennial
+ streams. The last hour is one of exquisite enjoyment, and when he
+ reaches Basle, he scarcely sleeps all night for hearing the swift
+ Rhine beneath the balconies, and knowing that the moon is shining
+ on its waters, through the town, beneath the bridges, between
+ pasture-lands and copses, up the still mountain-girdled valleys
+ to the ice-caves where the water springs. There is nothing in all
+ experience of travelling like this. We may greet the
+ Mediterranean at Marseilles with enthusiasm; on entering Rome by
+ the Porta del Popolo, we may reflect with pride that we have
+ reached the goal of our pilgrimage, and are at last among
+ world-shaking memories. But neither Rome nor the Riviera wins our
+ hearts like Switzerland. We do not lie awake in London thinking
+ of them; we do not long so intensely, as the year comes round, to
+ revisit them. Our affection is less a passion than that which we
+ cherish for Switzerland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why, then, is this? What, after all, is the love of the Alps, and
+ when and where did it begin? It is easier to ask these questions
+ than to answer them. The classic nations hated mountains. Greek
+ and Roman poets talk of them with disgust and dread. Nothing
+ could have been more depressing to a courtier of Augustus than
+ residence at Aosta, even though he found his theatres and
+ triumphal arches there. Wherever classical feeling has
+ predominated, this has been the case. Cellini's Memoirs, written
+ in the height of pagan Renaissance, well express the aversion
+ which a Florentine or Roman felt for the inhospitable
+ wildernesses of Switzerland.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id=
+ "FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class=
+ "fnanchor">[2]</a> Dryden, in his dedication to 'The Indian
+ Emperor,' says, 'High objects, it is true, attract the sight; but
+ it looks up with pain on craggy rocks and barren mountains, and
+ continues not intent on any object which is wanting in shades and
+ green to entertain it.' Addison and Gray had no better epithets
+ than 'rugged,' 'horrid,' and the like for Alpine landscape. The
+ classic spirit was adverse to enthusiasm for mere nature.
+ Humanity was too prominent, and city life absorbed all
+ interests,&mdash;not to speak of what perhaps is the weightiest
+ reason&mdash;that solitude, indifferent accommodation, and
+ imperfect means of travelling, rendered mountainous countries
+ peculiarly disagreeable. It is impossible to enjoy art or nature
+ while suffering from fatigue and cold, dreading the attacks of
+ robbers, and wondering whether you will find food and shelter at
+ the end of your day's journey. Nor was it different in the Middle
+ Ages. Then individuals had either no leisure from war or strife
+ with the elements, or else they devoted themselves to the
+ salvation of their souls. But when the ideas of the Middle Ages
+ had decayed, when improved arts of life had freed men from
+ servile subjection to daily needs, when the bondage of religious
+ tyranny had been thrown off and political liberty allowed the
+ full development of tastes and instincts, when, moreover, the
+ classical traditions had lost their power, and courts and
+ coteries became too narrow for the activity of man,&mdash;then
+ suddenly it was discovered that Nature in herself possessed
+ transcendent charms. It may seem absurd to class them all
+ together; yet there is no doubt that the French Revolution, the
+ criticism of the Bible, Pantheistic forms of religious feeling,
+ landscape-painting, Alpine travelling, and the poetry of Nature,
+ are all signs of the same movement&mdash;of a new Renaissance.
+ Limitations of every sort have been shaken off during the last
+ century; all forms have been destroyed, all questions asked. The
+ classical spirit loved to arrange, model, preserve traditions,
+ obey laws. We are intolerant of everything that is not simple,
+ unbiassed by prescription, liberal as the wind, and natural as
+ the mountain crags. We go to feed this spirit of freedom among
+ the Alps. What the virgin forests of America are to the
+ Americans, the Alps are to us. What there is in these huge blocks
+ and walls of granite crowned with ice that fascinates us, it is
+ hard to analyse. Why, seeing that we find them so attractive,
+ they should have repelled our ancestors of the fourth generation
+ and all the world before them, is another mystery. We cannot
+ explain what rapport there is between our human souls and these
+ inequalities in the surface of the earth which we call Alps.
+ Tennyson speaks of
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ Some vague emotion of delight
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In gazing up an Alpine height,
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ and its vagueness eludes definition. The interest which physical
+ science has created for natural objects has something to do with
+ it. Curiosity and the charm of novelty increase this interest. No
+ towns, no cultivated tracts of Europe however beautiful, form
+ such a contrast to our London life as Switzerland. Then there is
+ the health and joy that comes from exercise in open air; the
+ senses freshened by good sleep; the blood quickened by a lighter
+ and rarer atmosphere. Our modes of life, the breaking down of
+ class privileges, the extension of education, which contribute to
+ make the individual greater and society less, render the solitude
+ of mountains refreshing. Facilities of travelling and improved
+ accommodation leave us free to enjoy the natural beauty which we
+ seek. Our minds, too, are prepared to sympathise with the
+ inanimate world; we have learned to look on the universe as a
+ whole, and ourselves as a part of it, related by close ties of
+ friendship to all its other members Shelley's, Wordsworth's,
+ Goethe's poetry has taught us this; we are all more or less
+ Pantheists, worshippers of 'God in Nature,' convinced of the
+ omnipresence of the informing mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, when we admire the Alps, we are after all but children of
+ the century. We follow its inspiration blindly; and while we
+ think ourselves spontaneous in our ecstasy, perform the part for
+ which we have been trained from childhood by the atmosphere in
+ which we live. It is this very unconsciousness and universality
+ of the impulse we obey which makes it hard to analyse.
+ Contemporary history is difficult to write; to define the spirit
+ of the age in which we live is still more difficult; to account
+ for 'impressions which owe all their force to their identity with
+ themselves' is most difficult of all. We must be content to feel,
+ and not to analyse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rousseau has the credit of having invented the love of Nature.
+ Perhaps he first expressed, in literature, the pleasures of open
+ life among the mountains, of walking tours, of the '<i>école
+ buissonnière</i>,' away from courts, and schools, and cities,
+ which it is the fashion now to love. His bourgeois birth and
+ tastes, his peculiar religious and social views, his intense
+ self-engrossment,&mdash;all favoured the development of
+ Nature-worship. But Rousseau was not alone, nor yet creative, in
+ this instance. He was but one of the earliest to seize and
+ express a new idea of growing humanity. For those who seem to be
+ the most original in their inauguration of periods are only such
+ as have been favourably placed by birth and education to imbibe
+ the floating creeds of the whole race. They resemble the first
+ cases of an epidemic, which become the centres of infection and
+ propagate disease. At the time of Rousseau's greatness the French
+ people were initiative. In politics, in literature, in fashions,
+ and in philosophy, they had for some time led the taste of
+ Europe. But the sentiment which first received a clear and
+ powerful expression in the works of Rousseau, soon declared
+ itself in the arts and literature of other nations. Goethe,
+ Wordsworth, and the earlier landscape-painters, proved that
+ Germany and England were not far behind the French. In England
+ this love of Nature for its own sake is indigenous, and has at
+ all times been peculiarly characteristic of our genius. Therefore
+ it is not surprising that our life and literature and art have
+ been foremost in developing the sentiment of which we are
+ speaking. Our poets, painters, and prose writers gave the tone to
+ European thought in this respect. Our travellers in search of the
+ adventurous and picturesque, our Alpine Club, have made of
+ Switzerland an English playground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The greatest period in our history was but a foreshadowing of
+ this. To return to Nature-worship was but to reassume the habits
+ of the Elizabethan age, altered indeed by all the changes of
+ religion, politics, society, and science which the last three
+ centuries have wrought, yet still, in its original love of free
+ open life among the fields and woods, and on the sea, the same.
+ Now the French national genius is classical. It reverts to the
+ age of Louis XIV., and Rousseauism in their literature is as true
+ an innovation and parenthesis as Pope-and-Drydenism was in ours.
+ As in the age of the Reformation, so in this, the German element
+ of the modern character predominates. During the two centuries
+ from which we have emerged, the Latin element had the upper hand.
+ Our love of the Alps is a Gothic, a Teutonic, instinct;
+ sympathetic with all that is vague, infinite, and insubordinate
+ to rules, at war with all that is defined and systematic in our
+ genius. This we may perceive in individuals as well as in the
+ broader aspects of arts and literatures. The classically minded
+ man, the reader of Latin poets, the lover of brilliant
+ conversation, the frequenter of clubs and drawing-rooms, nice in
+ his personal requirements, scrupulous in his choice of words,
+ averse to unnecessary physical exertion, preferring town to
+ country life, <i>cannot</i> deeply feel the charm of the Alps.
+ Such a man will dislike German art, and however much he may
+ strive to be Catholic in his tastes, will find as he grows older
+ that his liking for Gothic architecture and modern painting
+ diminish almost to aversion before an increasing admiration for
+ Greek peristyles and the Medicean Venus. If in respect of
+ speculation all men are either Platonists or Aristotelians, in
+ respect of taste all men are either Greek or German.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At present the German, the indefinite, the natural, commands; the
+ Greek, the finite, the cultivated, is in abeyance. We who talk so
+ much about the feeling of the Alps, are creatures, not creators
+ of our <i>cultus</i>,&mdash;a strange reflection, proving how
+ much greater man is than men, the common reason of the age in
+ which we live than our own reasons, its constituents and
+ subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps it is our modern tendency to 'individualism' which makes
+ the Alps so much to us. Society is there reduced to a vanishing
+ point&mdash;no claims are made on human sympathies&mdash;there is
+ no need to toil in yoke-service with our fellows. We may be
+ alone, dream our own dreams, and sound the depths of personality
+ without the reproach of selfishness, without a restless wish to
+ join in action or money-making or the pursuit of fame. To
+ habitual residents among the Alps this absence of social duties
+ and advantages may be barbarising, even brutalising. But to men
+ wearied with too much civilisation, and deafened by the noise of
+ great cities, it is beyond measure refreshing. Then, again, among
+ the mountains history finds no place. The Alps have no past nor
+ present nor future. The human beings who live upon their sides
+ are at odds with nature, clinging on for bare existence to the
+ soil, sheltering themselves beneath protecting rocks from
+ avalanches, damming up destructive streams, all but annihilated
+ every spring. Man, who is paramount in the plain, is nothing
+ here. His arts and sciences, and dynasties, and modes of life,
+ and mighty works, and conquests and decays, demand our whole
+ attention in Italy or Egypt. But here the mountains, immemorially
+ the same, which were, which are, and which are to be, present a
+ theatre on which the soul breathes freely and feels herself
+ alone. Around her on all sides is God, and Nature, who is here
+ the face of God and not the slave of man. The spirit of the world
+ hath here not yet grown old. She is as young as on the first day;
+ and the Alps are a symbol of the self-creating, self-sufficing,
+ self-enjoying universe which lives for its own ends. For why do
+ the slopes gleam with flowers, and the hillsides deck themselves
+ with grass, and the inaccessible ledges of black rock bear their
+ tufts of crimson primroses and flaunting tiger-lilies? Why,
+ morning after morning, does the red dawn flush the pinnacles of
+ Monte Rosa above cloud and mist unheeded? Why does the torrent
+ shout, the avalanche reply in thunder to the music of the sun,
+ the trees and rocks and meadows cry their 'Holy, Holy, Holy'?
+ Surely not for us. We are an accident here, and even the few men
+ whose eyes are fixed habitually upon these things are dead to
+ them&mdash;the peasants do not even know the names of their own
+ flowers, and sigh with envy when you tell them of the plains of
+ Lincolnshire or Russian steppes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But indeed there is something awful in the Alpine elevation above
+ human things. We do not love Switzerland merely because we
+ associate its thought with recollections of holidays and
+ joyfulness. Some of the most solemn moments of life are spent
+ high up above among the mountains, on the barren tops of rocky
+ passes, where the soul has seemed to hear in solitude a low
+ controlling voice. It is almost necessary for the development of
+ our deepest affections that some sad and sombre moments should be
+ interchanged with hours of merriment and elasticity. It is this
+ variety in the woof of daily life which endears our home to us;
+ and perhaps none have fully loved the Alps who have not spent
+ some days of meditation, or it may be of sorrow, among their
+ solitudes. Splendid scenery, like music, has the power to make
+ 'of grief itself a fiery chariot for mounting above the sources
+ of grief,' to ennoble and refine our passions, and to teach us
+ that our lives are merely moments in the years of the eternal
+ Being. There are many, perhaps, who, within sight of some great
+ scene among the Alps, upon the height of the Stelvio or the
+ slopes of Mürren, or at night in the valley of Courmayeur, have
+ felt themselves raised above cares and doubts and miseries by the
+ mere recognition of unchangeable magnificence; have found a deep
+ peace in the sense of their own nothingness. It is not granted to
+ us everyday to stand upon these pinnacles of rest and faith above
+ the world. But having once stood there, how can we forget the
+ station? How can we fail, amid the tumult of our common cares, to
+ feel at times the hush of that far-off tranquillity? When our
+ life is most commonplace, when we are ill or weary in city
+ streets, we can remember the clouds upon the mountains we have
+ seen, the sound of innumerable waterfalls, and the scent of
+ countless flowers. A photograph of Bisson's or of Braun's, the
+ name of some well-known valley, the picture of some Alpine plant,
+ rouses the sacred hunger in our souls, and stirs again the faith
+ in beauty and in rest beyond ourselves which no man can take from
+ us. We owe a deep debt of gratitude to everything which enables
+ us to rise above depressing and enslaving circumstances, which
+ brings us nearer in some way or other to what is eternal in the
+ universe, and which makes us know that, whether we live or die,
+ suffer or enjoy, life and gladness are still strong in the world.
+ On this account, the proper attitude of the soul among the Alps
+ is one of silence. It is almost impossible without a kind of
+ impiety to frame in words the feelings they inspire. Yet there
+ are some sayings, hallowed by long usage, which throng the mind
+ through a whole summer's day, and seem in harmony with its
+ emotions&mdash;some portions of the Psalms or lines of greatest
+ poets, inarticulate hymns of Beethoven and Mendelssohn, waifs and
+ strays not always apposite, but linked by strong and subtle
+ chains of feeling with the grandeur of the mountains. This
+ reverential feeling for the Alps is connected with the
+ Pantheistic form of our religious sentiments to which I have
+ before alluded. It is a trite remark, that even devout men of the
+ present generation prefer temples <i>not</i> made with hands to
+ churches, and worship God in the fields more contentedly than in
+ their pews. What Mr. Ruskin calls 'the instinctive sense of the
+ divine presence not formed into distinct belief' lies at the root
+ of our profound veneration for the nobler aspects of mountain
+ scenery. This instinctive sense has been very variously expressed
+ by Goethe in Faust's celebrated confession of faith, by Shelley
+ in the stanzas of 'Adonais,' which begin 'He is made one with
+ nature,' by Wordsworth in the lines on Tintern Abbey, and lately
+ by Mr. Roden Noel in his noble poems of Pantheism. It is more or
+ less strongly felt by all who have recognised the indubitable
+ fact that religious belief is undergoing a sure process of change
+ from the dogmatic distinctness of the past to some at present
+ dimly descried creed of the future. Such periods of transition
+ are of necessity full of discomfort, doubt, and anxiety, vague,
+ variable, and unsatisfying. The men in whose spirits the
+ fermentation of the change is felt, who have abandoned their old
+ moorings, and have not yet reached the haven for which they are
+ steering, cannot but be indistinct and undecided in their faith.
+ The universe of which they form a part becomes important to them
+ in its infinite immensity. The principles of beauty, goodness,
+ order and law, no longer connected in their minds with definite
+ articles of faith, find symbols in the outer world. They are glad
+ to fly at certain moments from mankind and its oppressive
+ problems, for which religion no longer provides a satisfactory
+ solution, to Nature, where they vaguely localise the spirit that
+ broods over us controlling all our being. To such men Goethe's
+ hymn is a form of faith, and born of such a mood are the
+ following far humbler verses:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ At Mürren let the morning lead thee out
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ To walk upon the cold and cloven hills,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To hear the congregated mountains shout
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Their pĉan of a thousand foaming rills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Raimented with intolerable light
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The snow-peaks stand above thee, row on row
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arising, each a seraph in his might;
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ An organ each of varied stop doth blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heaven's azure dome trembles through all her spheres,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Feeling that music vibrate; and the sun
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Raises his tenor as he upward steers,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And all the glory-coated mists that run
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Below him in the valley, hear his voice,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And cry unto the dewy fields, Rejoice!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ There is a profound sympathy between music and fine scenery: they
+ both affect us in the same way, stirring strong but undefined
+ emotions, which express themselves in 'idle tears,' or evoking
+ thoughts 'which lie,' as Wordsworth says, 'too deep for tears,'
+ beyond the reach of any words. How little we know what multitudes
+ of mingling reminiscences, held in solution by the mind, and
+ colouring its fancy with the iridescence of variable hues, go to
+ make up the sentiments which music or which mountains stir! It is
+ the very vagueness, changefulness, and dreamlike indistinctness
+ of these feelings which cause their charm; they harmonise with
+ the haziness of our beliefs and seem to make our very doubts
+ melodious. For this reason it is obvious that unrestrained
+ indulgence in the pleasures of music or of scenery may tend to
+ destroy habits of clear thinking, sentimentalise the mind, and
+ render it more apt to entertain embryonic fancies than to bring
+ ideas to definite perfection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If hours of thoughtfulness and seclusion are necessary to the
+ development of a true love for the Alps, it is no less essential
+ to a right understanding of their beauty that we should pass some
+ wet and gloomy days among the mountains. The unclouded sunsets
+ and sunrises which often follow one another in September in the
+ Alps, have something terrible. They produce a satiety of
+ splendour, and oppress the mind with a sense of perpetuity. I
+ remember spending such a season in one of the Oberland valleys,
+ high up above the pine-trees, in a little châlet. Morning after
+ morning I awoke to see the sunbeams glittering on the Eiger and
+ the Jungfrau; noon after noon the snow-fields blazed beneath a
+ steady fire; evening after evening they shone like beacons in the
+ red light of the setting sun. Then peak by peak they lost the
+ glow; the soul passed from them, and they stood pale yet weirdly
+ garish against the darkened sky. The stars came out, the moon
+ shone, but not a cloud sailed over the untroubled heavens. Thus
+ day after day for several weeks there was no change, till I was
+ seized with an overpowering horror of unbroken calm. I left the
+ valley for a time; and when I returned to it in wind and rain, I
+ found that the partial veiling of the mountain heights restored
+ the charm which I had lost and made me feel once more at home.
+ The landscape takes a graver tone beneath the mist that hides the
+ higher peaks, and comes drifting, creeping, feeling, through the
+ pines upon their slopes&mdash;white, silent, blinding
+ vapour-wreaths around the sable spires. Sometimes the cloud
+ descends and blots out everything. Again it lifts a little,
+ showing cottages and distant Alps beneath its skirts. Then it
+ sweeps over the whole valley like a veil, just broken here and
+ there above a lonely châlet or a thread of distant dangling
+ torrent foam. Sounds, too, beneath the mist are more strange. The
+ torrent seems to have a hoarser voice and grinds the stones more
+ passionately against its boulders. The cry of shepherds through
+ the fog suggests the loneliness and danger of the hills. The
+ bleating of penned sheep or goats, and the tinkling of the
+ cowbells, are mysteriously distant and yet distinct in the dull
+ dead air. Then, again, how immeasurably high above our heads
+ appear the domes and peaks of snow revealed through chasms in the
+ drifting cloud; how desolate the glaciers and the avalanches in
+ gleams of light that struggle through the mist! There is a leaden
+ glare peculiar to clouds, which makes the snow and ice more
+ lurid. Not far from the house where I am writing, the avalanche
+ that swept away the bridge last winter is lying now, dripping
+ away, dank and dirty, like a rotting whale. I can see it from my
+ window, green beech-boughs nodding over it, forlorn larches
+ bending their tattered branches by its side, splinters of broken
+ pine protruding from its muddy caves, the boulders on its flank,
+ and the hoarse hungry torrent tossing up its tongues to lick the
+ ragged edge of snow. Close by, the meadows, spangled with yellow
+ flowers and red and blue, look even more brilliant than if the
+ sun were shining on them. Every cup and blade of grass is
+ drinking. But the scene changes; the mist has turned into
+ rain-clouds, and the steady rain drips down, incessant, blotting
+ out the view. Then, too, what a joy it is if the clouds break
+ towards evening with a north wind, and a rainbow in the valley
+ gives promise of a bright to-morrow! We look up to the cliffs
+ above our heads, and see that they have just been powdered with
+ the snow that is a sign of better weather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such rainy days ought to be spent in places like Seelisberg and
+ Mürren, at the edge of precipices, in front of mountains, or
+ above a lake. The cloud-masses crawl and tumble about the valleys
+ like a brood of dragons; now creeping along the ledges of the
+ rock with sinuous self-adjustment to its turns and twists; now
+ launching out into the deep, repelled by battling winds, or
+ driven onward in a coil of twisted and contorted serpent curls.
+ In the midst of summer these wet seasons often end in a heavy
+ fall of snow. You wake some morning to see the meadows which last
+ night were gay with July flowers huddled up in snow a foot in
+ depth. But fair weather does not tarry long to reappear. You put
+ on your thickest boots and sally forth to find the great cups of
+ the gentians full of snow, and to watch the rising of the
+ cloud-wreaths under the hot sun. Bad dreams or sickly thoughts,
+ dissipated by returning daylight or a friend's face, do not fly
+ away more rapidly and pleasantly than those swift glory-coated
+ mists that lose themselves we know not where in the blue depths
+ of the sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In contrast with these rainy days nothing can be more perfect
+ than clear moonlight nights. There is a terrace upon the roof of
+ the inn at Courmayeur where one may spend hours in the silent
+ watches, when all the world has gone to sleep beneath. The Mont
+ Chétif and the Mont de la Saxe form a gigantic portal not
+ unworthy of the pile that lies beyond. For Mont Blanc resembles a
+ vast cathedral; its countless spires are scattered over a mass
+ like that of the Duomo at Milan, rising into one tower at the
+ end. By night the glaciers glitter in the steady moon; domes,
+ pinnacles, and buttresses stand clear of clouds. Needles of every
+ height and most fantastic shapes rise from the central ridge,
+ some solitary, like sharp arrows shot against the sky, some
+ clustering into sheaves. On every horn of snow and bank of grassy
+ hill stars sparkle, rising, setting, rolling round through the
+ long silent night. Moonlight simplifies and softens the
+ landscape. Colours become scarcely distinguishable, and forms,
+ deprived of half their detail, gain in majesty and size. The
+ mountains seem greater far by night than day&mdash;higher heights
+ and deeper depths, more snowy pyramids, more beetling crags,
+ softer meadows, and darker pines. The whole valley is hushed, but
+ for the torrent and the chirping grasshopper and the striking of
+ the village clocks. The black tower and the houses of Courmayeur
+ in the foreground gleam beneath the moon until she reaches the
+ edge of the Cramont, and then sinks quietly away, once more to
+ reappear among the pines, then finally to leave the valley dark
+ beneath the shadow of the mountain's bulk. Meanwhile the heights
+ of snow still glitter in the steady light: they, too, will soon
+ be dark, until the dawn breaks, tinging them with rose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is not fair to dwell exclusively upon the more sombre
+ aspect of Swiss beauty when there are so many lively scenes of
+ which to speak. The sunlight and the freshness and the flowers of
+ Alpine meadows form more than half the charm of Switzerland. The
+ other day we walked to a pasture called the Col de Checruit, high
+ up the valley of Courmayeur, where the spring was still in its
+ first freshness. Gradually we climbed, by dusty roads and through
+ hot fields where the grass had just been mown, beneath the fierce
+ light of the morning sun. Not a breath of air was stirring, and
+ the heavy pines hung overhead upon their crags, as if to fence
+ the gorge from every wandering breeze. There is nothing more
+ oppressive than these scorching sides of narrow rifts, shut in by
+ woods and precipices. But suddenly the valley broadened, the
+ pines and larches disappeared, and we found ourselves upon a wide
+ green semicircle of the softest meadows. Little rills of water
+ went rushing through them, rippling over pebbles, rustling under
+ dock leaves, and eddying against their wooden barriers. Far and
+ wide 'you scarce could see the grass for flowers,' while on every
+ side the tinkling of cow-bells, and the voices of shepherds
+ calling to one another from the Alps, or singing at their work,
+ were borne across the fields. As we climbed we came into still
+ fresher pastures, where the snow had scarcely melted. There the
+ goats and cattle were collected, and the shepherds sat among
+ them, fondling the kids and calling them by name. When they
+ called, the creatures came, expecting salt and bread. It was
+ pretty to see them lying near their masters, playing and butting
+ at them with their horns, or bleating for the sweet rye-bread.
+ The women knitted stockings, laughing among themselves, and
+ singing all the while. As soon as we reached them, they gathered
+ round to talk. An old herdsman, who was clearly the patriarch of
+ this Arcadia, asked us many questions in a slow deliberate voice.
+ We told him who we were, and tried to interest him in the
+ cattle-plague, which he appeared to regard as an evil very unreal
+ and far away&mdash;like the murrain upon Pharaoh's herds which
+ one reads about in Exodus. But he was courteous and polite, doing
+ the honours of his pasture with simplicity and ease. He took us
+ to his châlet and gave us bowls of pure cold milk. It was a funny
+ little wooden house, clean and dark. The sky peeped through its
+ tiles, and if shepherds were not in the habit of sleeping soundly
+ all night long, they might count the setting and rising stars
+ without lifting their heads from the pillow. He told us how far
+ pleasanter they found the summer season than the long cold winter
+ which they have to spend in gloomy houses in Courmayeur. This,
+ indeed, is the true pastoral life which poets have
+ described&mdash;a happy summer holiday among the flowers, well
+ occupied with simple cares, and harassed by 'no enemy but winter
+ and rough weather.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very much of the charm of Switzerland belongs to simple
+ things&mdash;to greetings from the herdsmen, the 'Guten Morgen,'
+ and 'Guten Abend,' that are invariably given and taken upon
+ mountain paths; to the tame creatures, with their large dark
+ eyes, who raise their heads one moment from the pasture while you
+ pass; and to the plants that grow beneath your feet. The latter
+ end of May is the time when spring begins in the high Alps.
+ Wherever sunlight smiles away a patch of snow, the brown turf
+ soon becomes green velvet, and the velvet stars itself with red
+ and white and gold and blue. You almost see the grass and lilies
+ grow. First come pale crocuses and lilac soldanellas. These break
+ the last dissolving clods of snow, and stand upon an island, with
+ the cold wall they have thawed all round them. It is the fate of
+ these poor flowers to spring and flourish on the very skirts of
+ retreating winter; they soon wither&mdash;the frilled chalice of
+ the soldanella shrivels up and the crocus fades away before the
+ grass has grown; the sun, which is bringing all the other plants
+ to life, scorches their tender petals. Often when summer has
+ fairly come, you still may see their pearly cups and lilac bells
+ by the side of avalanches, between the chill snow and the fiery
+ sun, blooming and fading hour by hour. They have as it were but a
+ Pisgah view of the promised land, of the spring which they are
+ foremost to proclaim. Next come the clumsy gentians and yellow
+ anemones, covered with soft down like fledgling birds. These are
+ among the earliest and hardiest blossoms that embroider the high
+ meadows with a diaper of blue and gold. About the same time
+ primroses and auriculas begin to tuft the dripping rocks, while
+ frail white fleur-de-lis, like flakes of snow forgotten by the
+ sun, and golden-balled ranunculuses join with forget-me-nots and
+ cranesbill in a never-ending dance upon the grassy floor. Happy,
+ too, is he who finds the lilies-of-the-valley clustering about
+ the chestnut boles upon the Colma, or in the beechwood by the
+ stream at Macugnaga, mixed with garnet-coloured columbines and
+ fragrant white narcissus, which the people of the villages call
+ 'Angiolini.' There, too, is Solomon's seal, with waxen bells and
+ leaves expanded like the wings of hovering butterflies. But these
+ lists of flowers are tiresome and cold; it would be better to
+ draw the portrait of one which is particularly fascinating. I
+ think that botanists have called it <i>Saxifraga cotyledon</i>;
+ yet, in spite of its long name, it is beautiful and poetic.
+ London-pride is the commonest of all the saxifrages; but the one
+ of which I speak is as different from London-pride as a
+ Plantagenet upon his throne from that last Plantagenet who died
+ obscure and penniless some years ago. It is a great majestic
+ flower, which plumes the granite rocks of Monte Rosa in the
+ spring. At other times of the year you see a little tuft of
+ fleshy leaves set like a cushion on cold ledges and dark places
+ of dripping cliffs. You take it for a stonecrop&mdash;one of
+ those weeds doomed to obscurity, and safe from being picked
+ because they are so uninviting&mdash;and you pass it by
+ incuriously. But about June it puts forth its power, and from the
+ cushion of pale leaves there springs a strong pink stem, which
+ rises upward for a while, and then curves down and breaks into a
+ shower of snow-white blossoms. Far away the splendour gleams,
+ hanging like a plume of ostrich-feathers from the roof of rock,
+ waving to the wind, or stooping down to touch the water of the
+ mountain stream that dashes it with dew. The snow at evening,
+ glowing with a sunset flush, is not more rosy-pure than this
+ cascade of pendent blossoms. It loves to be
+ alone&mdash;inaccessible ledges, chasms where winds combat, or
+ moist caverns overarched near thundering falls, are the places
+ that it seeks. I will not compare it to a spirit of the mountains
+ or to a proud lonely soul, for such comparisons desecrate the
+ simplicity of nature, and no simile can add a glory to the
+ flower. It seems to have a conscious life of its own, so large
+ and glorious it is, so sensitive to every breath of air, so nobly
+ placed upon its bending stem, so royal in its solitude. I first
+ saw it years ago on the Simplon, feathering the drizzling crags
+ above Isella. Then we found it near Baveno, in a crack of sombre
+ cliff beneath the mines. The other day we cut an armful opposite
+ Varallo, by the Sesia, and then felt like murderers; it was so
+ sad to hold in our hands the triumph of those many patient
+ months, the full expansive life of the flower, the splendour
+ visible from valleys and hillsides, the defenceless creature
+ which had done its best to make the gloomy places of the Alps
+ most beautiful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After passing many weeks among the high Alps it is a pleasure to
+ descend into the plains. The sunset, and sunrise, and the stars
+ of Lombardy, its level horizons and vague misty distances, are a
+ source of absolute relief after the narrow skies and embarrassed
+ prospects of a mountain valley. Nor are the Alps themselves ever
+ more imposing than when seen from Milan or the church-tower of
+ Chivasso or the terrace of Novara, with a foreground of Italian
+ cornfields and old city towers and rice-ground, golden-green
+ beneath a Lombard sun. Half veiled by clouds, the mountains rise
+ like visionary fortress walls of a celestial
+ city&mdash;unapproachable, beyond the range of mortal feet. But
+ those who know by old experience what friendly châlets, and cool
+ meadows, and clear streams are hidden in their folds and valleys,
+ send forth fond thoughts and messages, like carrier-pigeons, from
+ the marble parapets of Milan, crying, 'Before another sun has
+ set, I too shall rest beneath the shadow of their pines!' It is
+ in truth not more than a day's journey from Milan to the brink of
+ snow at Macugnaga. But very sad it is to <i>leave</i> the Alps,
+ to stand upon the terraces of Berne and waft ineffectual
+ farewells. The unsympathising Aar rushes beneath; and the
+ snow-peaks, whom we love like friends, abide untroubled by the
+ coming and the going of the world. The clouds drift over
+ them&mdash;the sunset warms them with a fiery kiss. Night comes,
+ and we are hurried far away to wake beside the Seine,
+ remembering, with a pang of jealous passion, that the flowers on
+ Alpine meadows are still blooming, and the rivulets still flowing
+ with a ceaseless song, while Paris shops are all we see, and all
+ we hear is the dull clatter of a Paris crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>THE ALPS IN WINTER</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gradual approach of winter is very lovely in the high Alps.
+ The valley of Davos, where I am writing, more than five thousand
+ feet above the sea, is not beautiful, as Alpine valleys go,
+ though it has scenery both picturesque and grand within easy
+ reach. But when summer is passing into autumn, even the bare
+ slopes of the least romantic glen are glorified. Golden lights
+ and crimson are cast over the grey-green world by the fading of
+ innumerable plants. Then the larches begin to put on sallow tints
+ that deepen into orange, burning against the solid blue sky like
+ amber. The frosts are severe at night, and the meadow grass turns
+ dry and wan. The last lilac crocuses die upon the fields.
+ Icicles, hanging from watercourse or mill-wheel, glitter in the
+ noonday sunlight. The wind blows keenly from the north, and now
+ the snow begins to fall and thaw and freeze, and fall and thaw
+ again. The seasons are confused; wonderful days of flawless
+ purity are intermingled with storm and gloom. At last the time
+ comes when a great snowfall has to be expected. There is hard
+ frost in the early morning, and at nine o'clock the thermometer
+ stands at 2°. The sky is clear, but it clouds rapidly with films
+ of cirrus and of stratus in the south and west. Soon it is
+ covered over with grey vapour in a level sheet, all the hill-tops
+ standing hard against the steely heavens. The cold wind from the
+ west freezes the moustache to one's pipe-stem. By noon the air is
+ thick with a coagulated mist; the temperature meanwhile has
+ risen, and a little snow falls at intervals. The valleys are
+ filled with a curious opaque blue, from which the peaks rise,
+ phantom-like and pallid, into the grey air, scarcely
+ distinguishable from their background. The pine-forests on the
+ mountain-sides are of darkest indigo. There is an indescribable
+ stillness and a sense of incubation. The wind has fallen. Later
+ on, the snow-flakes flutter silently and sparely through the
+ lifeless air. The most distant landscape is quite blotted out.
+ After sunset the clouds have settled down upon the hills, and the
+ snow comes in thick, impenetrable fleeces. At night our hair
+ crackles and sparkles when we brush it. Next morning there is a
+ foot and a half of finely powdered snow, and still the snow is
+ falling. Strangely loom the châlets through the semi-solid
+ whiteness. Yet the air is now dry and singularly soothing. The
+ pines are heavy with their wadded coverings; now and again one
+ shakes himself in silence, and his burden falls in a white cloud,
+ to leave a black-green patch upon the hillside, whitening again
+ as the imperturbable fall continues. The stakes by the roadside
+ are almost buried. No sound is audible. Nothing is seen but the
+ snow-plough, a long raft of planks with a heavy stone at its stem
+ and a sharp prow, drawn by four strong horses, and driven by a
+ young man erect upon the stem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So we live through two days and nights, and on the third a north
+ wind blows. The snow-clouds break and hang upon the hills in
+ scattered fleeces; glimpses of blue sky shine through, and
+ sunlight glints along the heavy masses. The blues of the shadows
+ are everywhere intense. As the clouds disperse, they form in
+ moulded domes, tawny like sunburned marble in the distant south
+ lands. Every châlet is a miracle of fantastic curves, built by
+ the heavy hanging snow. Snow lies mounded on the roads and
+ fields, writhed into loveliest wreaths, or outspread in the
+ softest undulations. All the irregularities of the hills are
+ softened into swelling billows like the mouldings of Titanic
+ statuary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened once or twice last winter that such a clearing after
+ snowfall took place at full moon. Then the moon rose in a swirl
+ of fleecy vapour&mdash;clouds above, beneath, and all around. The
+ sky was blue as steel, and infinitely deep with mist-entangled
+ stars. The horn above which she first appears stood carved of
+ solid black, and through the valley's length from end to end
+ yawned chasms and clefts of liquid darkness. As the moon rose,
+ the clouds were conquered, and massed into rolling waves upon the
+ ridges of the hills. The spaces of open sky grew still more blue.
+ At last the silver light came flooding over all, and here and
+ there the fresh snow glistened on the crags. There is movement,
+ palpitation, life of light through earth and sky. To walk out on
+ such a night, when the perturbation of storm is over and the
+ heavens are free, is one of the greatest pleasures offered by
+ this winter life. It is so light that you can read the smallest
+ print with ease. The upper sky looks quite black, shading by
+ violet and sapphire into turquoise upon the horizon. There is the
+ colour of ivory upon the nearest snow-fields, and the distant
+ peaks sparkle like silver, crystals glitter in all directions on
+ the surface of the snow, white, yellow, and pale blue. The stars
+ are exceedingly keen, but only a few can shine in the intensity
+ of moonlight. The air is perfectly still, and though icicles may
+ be hanging from beard and moustache to the furs beneath one's
+ chin, there is no sensation of extreme cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the earlier frosts of the season, after the first snows
+ have fallen, but when there is still plenty of moisture in the
+ ground, the loveliest fern-fronds of pure rime may be found in
+ myriads on the meadows. They are fashioned like perfect vegetable
+ structures, opening fan-shaped upon crystal stems, and catching
+ the sunbeams with the brilliancy of diamonds. Taken at certain
+ angles, they decompose light into iridescent colours, appearing
+ now like emeralds, rubies, or topazes, and now like Labrador
+ spar, blending all hues in a wondrous sheen. When the lake
+ freezes for the first time, its surface is of course quite black,
+ and so transparent that it is easy to see the fishes swimming in
+ the deep beneath; but here and there, where rime has fallen,
+ there sparkle these fantastic flowers and ferns and mosses made
+ of purest frost. Nothing, indeed, can be more fascinating than
+ the new world revealed by frost. In shaded places of the valley
+ you may walk through larches and leafless alder thickets by
+ silent farms, all silvered over with hoar spangles&mdash;fairy
+ forests, where the flowers and foliage are rime. The streams are
+ flowing half-frozen over rocks sheeted with opaque green ice.
+ Here it is strange to watch the swirl of water freeing itself
+ from these frost-shackles, and to see it eddying beneath the
+ overhanging eaves of frailest crystal-frosted snow. All is so
+ silent, still, and weird in this white world, that one marvels
+ when the spirit of winter will appear, or what shrill voices in
+ the air will make his unimaginable magic audible. Nothing
+ happens, however, to disturb the charm, save when a sunbeam cuts
+ the chain of diamonds on an alder bough, and down they drift in a
+ thin cloud of dust. It may be also that the air is full of
+ floating crystals, like tiniest most restless fire-flies rising
+ and falling and passing crosswise in the sun-illumined shade of
+ tree or mountain-side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not easy to describe these beauties of the winter-world;
+ and yet one word must be said about the sunsets. Let us walk out,
+ therefore, towards the lake at four o'clock in mid-December. The
+ thermometer is standing at 3°, and there is neither breath of
+ wind nor cloud. Venus is just visible in rose and sapphire, and
+ the thin young moon is beside her. To east and south the snowy
+ ranges burn with yellow fire, deepening to orange and crimson
+ hues, which die away and leave a greenish pallor. At last, the
+ higher snows alone are livid with a last faint tinge of light,
+ and all beneath is quite white. But the tide of glory turns.
+ While the west grows momently more pale, the eastern heavens
+ flush with afterglow, suffuse their spaces with pink and violet.
+ Daffodil and tenderest emerald intermingle; and these colours
+ spread until the west again has rose and primrose and sapphire
+ wonderfully blent, and from the burning skies a light is cast
+ upon the valley&mdash;a phantom light, less real, more like the
+ hues of molten gems, than were the stationary flames of sunset.
+ Venus and the moon meanwhile are silvery clear. Then the whole
+ illumination fades like magic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the charms of which I have been writing are combined in a
+ sledge-drive. With an arrowy gliding motion one passes through
+ the snow-world as through a dream. In the sunlight the snow
+ surface sparkles with its myriad stars of crystals. In the shadow
+ it ceases to glitter, and assumes a blueness scarcely less blue
+ than the sky. So the journey is like sailing through alternate
+ tracts of light irradiate heavens, and interstellar spaces of the
+ clearest and most flawless ether. The air is like the keen air of
+ the highest glaciers. As we go, the bells keep up a drowsy
+ tinkling at the horse's head. The whole landscape is
+ transfigured&mdash;lifted high up out of commonplaceness. The
+ little hills are Monte Rosas and Mont Blancs. Scale is
+ annihilated, and nothing tells but form. There is hardly any
+ colour except the blue of sky and shadow. Everything is traced in
+ vanishing tints, passing from the almost amber of the distant
+ sunlight through glowing white into pale greys and brighter blues
+ and deep ethereal azure. The pines stand in black platoons upon
+ the hillsides, with a tinge of red or orange on their sable. Some
+ carry masses of snow. Others have shaken their plumes free. The
+ châlets are like fairy houses or toys, waist-deep in stores of
+ winter fuel. With their mellow tones of madder and umber on the
+ weather-beaten woodwork relieved against the white, with
+ fantastic icicles and folds of snow depending from their eaves,
+ or curled like coverlids from roof and window-sill, they are far
+ more picturesque than in the summer. Colour, wherever it is
+ found, whether in these cottages or in a block of serpentine by
+ the roadside, or in the golden bulrush blades by the lake shore,
+ takes more than double value. It is shed upon the landscape like
+ a spiritual and transparent veil. Most beautiful of all are the
+ sweeping lines of pure untroubled snow, fold over fold of
+ undulating softness, billowing along the skirts of the peaked
+ hills. There is no conveying the charm of immaterial, aërial,
+ lucid beauty, the feeling of purity and aloofness from sordid
+ things, conveyed by the fine touch on all our senses of light,
+ colour, form, and air, and motion, and rare tinkling sound. The
+ magic is like a spirit mood of Shelley's lyric verse. And, what
+ is perhaps most wonderful, this delicate delight may be enjoyed
+ without fear in the coldest weather. It does not matter how low
+ the temperature may be, if the sun is shining, the air dry, and
+ the wind asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaving the horse-sledges on the verge of some high hill-road,
+ and trusting oneself to the little hand-sledge which the people
+ of the Grisons use, and which the English have christened by the
+ Canadian term 'toboggan,' the excitement becomes far greater. The
+ hand-sledge is about three feet long, fifteen inches wide, and
+ half a foot above the ground, on runners shod with iron. Seated
+ firmly at the back, and guiding with the feet in front, the rider
+ skims down precipitous slopes and round perilous corners with a
+ rapidity that beats a horse's pace. Winding through sombre
+ pine-forests, where the torrent roars fitfully among caverns of
+ barbed ice, and the glistening mountains tower above in their
+ glory of sun-smitten snow, darting round the frozen ledges at the
+ turnings of the road, silently gliding at a speed that seems
+ incredible, it is so smooth, he traverses two or three miles
+ without fatigue, carried onward by the mere momentum of his
+ weight. It is a strange and great joy. The toboggan, under these
+ conditions, might be compared to an enchanted boat shooting the
+ rapids of a river; and what adds to its fascination is the entire
+ loneliness in which the rider passes through those weird and
+ ever-shifting scenes of winter radiance. Sometimes, when the snow
+ is drifting up the pass, and the world is blank behind, before,
+ and all around, it seems like plunging into chaos. The muffled
+ pines loom fantastically through the drift as we rush past them,
+ and the wind, ever and anon, detaches great masses of snow in
+ clouds from their bent branches. Or again at night, when the moon
+ is shining, and the sky is full of flaming stars, and the snow,
+ frozen to the hardness of marble, sparkles with innumerable
+ crystals, a new sense of strangeness and of joy is given to the
+ solitude, the swiftness, and the silence of the exercise. No
+ other circumstances invest the poetry of rapid motion with more
+ fascination. Shelley, who so loved the fancy of a boat inspired
+ with its own instinct of life, would have delighted in the game,
+ and would probably have pursued it recklessly. At the same time,
+ as practised on a humbler scale nearer home, in company, and on a
+ run selected for convenience rather than for picturesqueness,
+ tobogganing is a very Bohemian amusement. No one who indulges in
+ it can count on avoiding hard blows and violent upsets, nor will
+ his efforts to maintain his equilibrium at the dangerous corners
+ be invariably graceful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing, it might be imagined, could be more monotonous than an
+ Alpine valley covered up with snow. And yet to one who has passed
+ many months in that seclusion Nature herself presents no
+ monotony; for the changes constantly wrought by light and cloud
+ and alternations of weather on this landscape are infinitely
+ various. The very simplicity of the conditions seems to assist
+ the supreme artist. One day is wonderful because of its unsullied
+ purity; not a cloud visible, and the pines clothed in velvet of
+ rich green beneath a faultless canopy of light. The next presents
+ a fretwork of fine film, wrought by the south wind over the whole
+ sky, iridescent with delicate rainbow tints within the influences
+ of the sun, and ever-changing shape. On another, when the
+ turbulent Föhn is blowing, streamers of snow may be seen flying
+ from the higher ridges against a pallid background of slaty
+ cloud, while the gaunt ribs of the hills glisten below with
+ fitful gleams of lurid light. At sunrise, one morning, stealthy
+ and mysterious vapours clothe the mountains from their basement
+ to the waist, while the peaks are glistening serenely in clear
+ daylight. Another opens with silently falling snow. A third is
+ rosy through the length and breadth of the dawn-smitten valley.
+ It is, however, impossible to catalogue the indescribable variety
+ of those beauties, which those who love nature may enjoy by
+ simply waiting on the changes of the winter in a single station
+ of the Alps.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="WINTER_NIGHTS_AT_DAVOS" id=
+ "WINTER_NIGHTS_AT_DAVOS"></a><i>WINTER NIGHTS AT DAVOS</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ I
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Light, marvellously soft yet penetrating, everywhere diffused,
+ everywhere reflected without radiance, poured from the moon high
+ above our heads in a sky tinted through all shades and
+ modulations of blue, from turquoise on the horizon to opaque
+ sapphire at the zenith&mdash;<i>dolce color</i>. (It is difficult
+ to use the word <i>colour</i> for this scene without suggesting
+ an exaggeration. The blue is almost indefinable, yet felt. But if
+ possible, the total effect of the night landscape should be
+ rendered by careful exclusion of tints from the word-palette. The
+ art of the etcher is more needed than that of the painter.)
+ Heaven overhead is set with stars, shooting intensely,
+ smouldering with dull red in Aldeboran, sparkling diamond-like in
+ Sirius, changing from orange to crimson and green in the swart
+ fire of yonder double star. On the snow this moonlight falls
+ tenderly, not in hard white light and strong black shadow, but in
+ tones of cream and ivory, rounding the curves of drift. The
+ mountain peaks alone glisten as though they were built of silver
+ burnished by an agate. Far away they rise diminished in stature
+ by the all-pervading dimness of bright light, that erases the
+ distinctions of daytime. On the path before our feet lie crystals
+ of many hues, the splinters of a thousand gems. In the wood there
+ are caverns of darkness, alternating with spaces of star-twinkled
+ sky, or windows opened between russet stems and solid branches
+ for the moony sheen. The green of the pines is felt, although
+ invisible, so soft in substance that it seems less like velvet
+ than some materialised depth of dark green shadow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Snow falling noiseless and unseen. One only knows that it is
+ falling by the blinking of our eyes as the flakes settle on their
+ lids and melt. The cottage windows shine red, and moving lanterns
+ of belated wayfarers define the void around them. Yet the night
+ is far from dark. The forests and the mountain-bulk beyond the
+ valley loom softly large and just distinguishable through a
+ pearly haze. The path is purest trackless whiteness, almost
+ dazzling though it has no light. This was what Dante felt when he
+ reached the lunar sphere:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ Parova a me, che nube ne coprisse
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucida, spessa, solida e pulita.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Walking silent, with insensible footfall, slowly, for the snow is
+ deep above our ankles, we wonder what the world would be like if
+ this were all. Could the human race be acclimatised to this
+ monotony (we say) perhaps emotion would be rarer, yet more
+ poignant, suspended brooding on itself, and wakening by flashes
+ to a quintessential mood. Then fancy changes, and the thought
+ occurs that even so must be a planet, not yet wholly made, nor
+ called to take her place among the sisterhood of light and song.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sunset was fading out upon the Rhĉtikon and still reflected from
+ the Seehorn on the lake, when we entered the gorge of the
+ Fluela&mdash;dense pines on either hand, a mounting drift of snow
+ in front, and faint peaks, paling from rose to saffron, far
+ above, beyond. There was no sound but a tinkling stream and the
+ continual jingle of our sledge-bells. We drove at a foot's pace,
+ our horse finding his own path. When we left the forest, the
+ light had all gone except for some almost imperceptible touches
+ of primrose on the eastern horns. It was a moonless night, but
+ the sky was alive with stars, and now and then one fell. The last
+ house in the valley was soon passed, and we entered those bleak
+ gorges where the wind, fine, noiseless, penetrating like an edge
+ of steel, poured slantwise on us from the north. As we rose, the
+ stars to west seemed far beneath us, and the Great Bear sprawled
+ upon the ridges of the lower hills outspread. We kept slowly
+ moving onward, upward, into what seemed like a thin impalpable
+ mist, but was immeasurable tracts of snow. The last cembras were
+ left behind, immovable upon dark granite boulders on our right.
+ We entered a formless and unbillowed sea of greyness, from which
+ there rose dim mountain-flanks that lost themselves in air. Up,
+ ever up, and still below us westward sank the stars. We were now
+ 7500 feet above sea-level, and the December night was rigid with
+ intensity of frost. The cold, and movement, and solemnity of
+ space, drowsed every sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The memory of things seen and done in moonlight is like the
+ memory of dreams. It is as a dream that I recall the night of our
+ tobogganing to Klosters, though it was full enough of active
+ energy. The moon was in her second quarter, slightly filmed with
+ very high thin clouds, that disappeared as night advanced,
+ leaving the sky and stars in all their lustre. A sharp frost,
+ sinking to three degrees above zero Fahrenheit, with a fine pure
+ wind, such wind as here they call 'the mountain breath.' We drove
+ to Wolfgang in a two-horse sledge, four of us inside, and our two
+ Christians on the box. Up there, where the Alps of Death descend
+ to join the Lakehorn Alps, above the Wolfswalk, there is a world
+ of whiteness&mdash;frozen ridges, engraved like cameos of aërial
+ onyx upon the dark, star-tremulous sky; sculptured buttresses of
+ snow, enclosing hollows filled with diaphanous shadow, and
+ sweeping aloft into the upland fields of pure clear drift. Then
+ came the swift descent, the plunge into the pines, moon-silvered
+ on their frosted tops. The battalions of spruce that climb those
+ hills defined the dazzling snow from which they sprang, like the
+ black tufts upon an ermine robe. At the proper moment we left our
+ sledge, and the big Christian took his reins in hand to follow
+ us. Furs and greatcoats were abandoned. Each stood forth tightly
+ accoutred, with short coat, and clinging cap, and gaitered legs
+ for the toboggan. Off we started in line, with but brief interval
+ between, at first slowly, then glidingly, and when the impetus
+ was gained, with darting, bounding, almost savage
+ swiftness&mdash;sweeping round corners, cutting the hard
+ snow-path with keen runners, avoiding the deep ruts, trusting to
+ chance, taking advantage of smooth places, till the rush and
+ swing and downward swoop became mechanical. Space was devoured.
+ Into the massy shadows of the forest, where the pines joined
+ overhead, we pierced without a sound, and felt far more than saw
+ the great rocks with their icicles; and out again, emerging into
+ moonlight, met the valley spread beneath our feet, the mighty
+ peaks of the Silvretta and the vast blue sky. On, on, hurrying,
+ delaying not, the woods and hills rushed by. Crystals upon the
+ snow-banks glittered to the stars. Our souls would fain have
+ stayed to drink these marvels of the moon-world, but our limbs
+ refused. The magic of movement was upon us, and eight minutes
+ swallowed the varying impressions of two musical miles. The
+ village lights drew near and nearer, then the sombre village
+ huts, and soon the speed grew less, and soon we glided to our
+ rest into the sleeping village street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was just past midnight. The moon had fallen to the western
+ horns. Orion's belt lay bar-like on the opening of the pass, and
+ Sirius shot flame on the Seehorn. A more crystalline night, more
+ full of fulgent stars, was never seen, stars everywhere, but
+ mostly scattered in large sparkles on the snow. Big Christian
+ went in front, tugging toboggans by their strings, as Gulliver,
+ in some old woodcut, drew the fleets of Lilliput. Through the
+ brown wood-châlets of Selfrangr, up to the undulating meadows,
+ where the snow slept pure and crisp, he led us. There we sat
+ awhile and drank the clear air, cooled to zero, but innocent and
+ mild as mother Nature's milk. Then in an instant, down, down
+ through the hamlet, with its châlets, stables, pumps, and logs,
+ the slumbrous hamlet, where one dog barked, and darkness dwelt
+ upon the path of ice, down with the tempest of a dreadful speed,
+ that shot each rider upward in the air, and made the frame of the
+ toboggan tremble&mdash;down over hillocks of hard frozen snow,
+ dashing and bounding, to the river and the bridge. No bones were
+ broken, though the race was thrice renewed, and men were spilt
+ upon the roadside by some furious plunge. This amusement has the
+ charm of peril and the unforeseen. In no wise else can colder,
+ keener air be drunken at such furious speed. The joy, too, of the
+ engine-driver and the steeplechaser is upon us. Alas, that it
+ should be so short! If only roads were better made for the
+ purpose, there would be no end to it; for the toboggan cannot
+ lose his wind. But the good thing fails at last, and from the
+ silence of the moon we pass into the silence of the fields of
+ sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new stable is a huge wooden building, with raftered lofts to
+ stow the hay, and stalls for many cows and horses. It stands
+ snugly in an angle of the pine-wood, bordering upon the great
+ horse-meadow. Here at night the air is warm and tepid with the
+ breath of kine. Returning from my forest walk, I spy one window
+ yellow in the moonlight with a lamp. I lift the latch. The hound
+ knows me, and does not bark. I enter the stable, where six horses
+ are munching their last meal. Upon the corn-bin sits a knecht. We
+ light our pipes and talk. He tells me of the valley of Arosa (a
+ hawk's flight westward over yonder hills), how deep in grass its
+ summer lawns, how crystal-clear its stream, how blue its little
+ lakes, how pure, without a taint of mist, 'too beautiful to
+ paint,' its sky in winter! This knecht is an Ardüser, and the
+ valley of Arosa lifts itself to heaven above his Langwies home.
+ It is his duty now to harness a sleigh for some night-work. We
+ shake hands and part&mdash;I to sleep, he for the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lake has frozen late this year, and there are places in it
+ where the ice is not yet firm. Little snow has fallen since it
+ froze&mdash;about three inches at the deepest, driven by winds
+ and wrinkled like the ribbed sea-sand. Here and there the
+ ice-floor is quite black and clear, reflecting stars, and dark as
+ heaven's own depths. Elsewhere it is of a suspicious whiteness,
+ blurred in surface, with jagged cracks and chasms, treacherously
+ mended by the hand of frost. Moving slowly, the snow cries
+ beneath our feet, and the big crystals tinkle. These are shaped
+ like fern-fronds, growing fan-wise from a point, and set at
+ various angles, so that the moonlight takes them with capricious
+ touch. They flash, and are quenched, and flash again, light
+ darting to light along the level surface, while the sailing
+ planets and the stars look down complacent at this mimicry of
+ heaven. Everything above, around, beneath, is very
+ beautiful&mdash;the slumbrous woods, the snowy fells, and the far
+ distance painted in faint blue upon the tender background of the
+ sky. Everything is placid and beautiful; and yet the place is
+ terrible. For, as we walk, the lake groans, with throttled sobs,
+ and sudden cracklings of its joints, and sighs that shiver,
+ undulating from afar, and pass beneath our feet, and die away in
+ distance when they reach the shore. And now and then an upper
+ crust of ice gives way; and will the gulfs then drag us down? We
+ are in the very centre of the lake. There is no use in thinking
+ or in taking heed. Enjoy the moment, then, and march. Enjoy the
+ contrast between this circumambient serenity and sweetness, and
+ the dreadful sense of insecurity beneath. Is not, indeed, our
+ whole life of this nature? A passage over perilous deeps, roofed
+ by infinity and sempiternal things, surrounded too with
+ evanescent forms, that like these crystals, trodden underfoot, or
+ melted by the Föhn-wind into dew, flash, in some lucky moment,
+ with a light that mimics stars! But to allegorise and sermonise
+ is out of place here. It is but the expedient of those who cannot
+ etch sensation by the burin of their art of words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is ten o'clock upon Sylvester Abend, or New Year's Eve. Herr
+ Buol sits with his wife at the head of his long table. His family
+ and serving folk are round him. There is his mother, with little
+ Ursula, his child, upon her knee. The old lady is the mother of
+ four comely daughters and nine stalwart sons, the eldest of whom
+ is now a grizzled man. Besides our host, four of the brothers are
+ here to-night; the handsome melancholy Georg, who is so gentle in
+ his speech; Simeon, with his diplomatic face; Florian, the
+ student of medicine; and my friend, colossal-breasted Christian.
+ Palmy came a little later, worried with many cares, but happy to
+ his heart's core. No optimist was ever more convinced of his
+ philosophy than Palmy. After them, below the salt, were ranged
+ the knechts and porters, the marmiton from the kitchen, and
+ innumerable maids. The board was tesselated with plates of
+ birnen-brod and eier-brod, küchli and cheese and butter; and
+ Georg stirred grampampuli in a mighty metal bowl. For the
+ uninitiated, it may be needful to explain these Davos delicacies.
+ Birnen-brod is what the Scotch would call a 'bun,' or massive
+ cake, composed of sliced pears, almonds, spices, and a little
+ flour. Eier-brod is a saffron-coloured sweet bread, made with
+ eggs; and küchli is a kind of pastry, crisp and flimsy, fashioned
+ into various devices of cross, star, and scroll. Grampampuli is
+ simply brandy burnt with sugar, the most unsophisticated punch I
+ ever drank from tumblers. The frugal people of Davos, who live on
+ bread and cheese and dried meat all the year, indulge themselves
+ but once with these unwonted dainties in the winter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The occasion was cheerful, and yet a little solemn. The scene was
+ feudal. For these Buols are the scions of a warrior race:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ A race illustrious for heroic deeds;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Humbled, but not degraded.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ During the six centuries through which they have lived nobles in
+ Davos, they have sent forth scores of fighting men to foreign
+ lands, ambassadors to France and Venice and the Milanese,
+ governors to Chiavenna and Bregaglia and the much-contested
+ Valtelline. Members of their house are Counts of
+ Buol-Schauenstein in Austria, Freiherrs of Muhlingen and
+ Berenberg in the now German Empire. They keep the patent of
+ nobility conferred on them by Henri IV. Their ancient
+ coat&mdash;parted per pale azure and argent, with a dame of the
+ fourteenth century bearing in her hand a rose, all
+ counterchanged&mdash;is carved in wood and monumental marble on
+ the churches and old houses hereabouts. And from immemorial
+ antiquity the Buol of Davos has sat thus on Sylvester Abend with
+ family and folk around him, summoned from alp and snowy field to
+ drink grampampuli and break the birnen-brod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These rites performed, the men and maids began to
+ sing&mdash;brown arms lounging on the table, and red hands folded
+ in white aprons&mdash;serious at first in hymn-like cadences,
+ then breaking into wilder measures with a jodel at the close.
+ There is a measured solemnity in the performance, which strikes
+ the stranger as somewhat comic. But the singing was good; the
+ voices strong and clear in tone, no hesitation and no shirking of
+ the melody. It was clear that the singers enjoyed the music for
+ its own sake, with half-shut eyes, as they take dancing, solidly,
+ with deep-drawn breath, sustained and indefatigable. But eleven
+ struck; and the two Christians, my old friend, and Palmy, said we
+ should be late for church. They had promised to take me with them
+ to see bell-ringing in the tower. All the young men of the
+ village meet, and draw lots in the Stube of the Rathhaus. One
+ party tolls the old year out; the other rings the new year in. He
+ who comes last is sconced three litres of Veltliner for the
+ company. This jovial fine was ours to pay to-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we came into the air, we found a bitter frost; the whole sky
+ clouded over; a north wind whirling snow from alp and forest
+ through the murky gloom. The benches and broad walnut tables of
+ the Bathhaus were crowded with men, in shaggy homespun of brown
+ and grey frieze. Its low wooden roof and walls enclosed an
+ atmosphere of smoke, denser than the external snow-drift. But our
+ welcome was hearty, and we found a score of friends. Titanic
+ Fopp, whose limbs are Michelangelesque in length; spectacled
+ Morosani; the little tailor Kramer, with a French horn on his
+ knees; the puckered forehead of the Baumeister; the Troll-shaped
+ postman; peasants and woodmen, known on far excursions upon pass
+ and upland valley. Not one but carried on his face the memory of
+ winter strife with avalanche and snow-drift, of horses struggling
+ through Fluela whirlwinds, and wine-casks tugged across Bernina,
+ and haystacks guided down precipitous gullies at thundering speed
+ 'twixt pine and pine, and larches felled in distant glens beside
+ the frozen watercourses. Here we were, all met together for one
+ hour from our several homes and occupations, to welcome in the
+ year with clinked glasses and cries of <i>Prosit Neujahr!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tolling bells above us stopped. Our turn had come. Out into
+ the snowy air we tumbled, beneath the row of wolves' heads that
+ adorn the pent-house roof. A few steps brought us to the still
+ God's acre, where the snow lay deep and cold upon high-mounded
+ graves of many generations. We crossed it silently, bent our
+ heads to the low Gothic arch, and stood within the tower. It was
+ thick darkness there. But far above, the bells began again to
+ clash and jangle confusedly, with volleys of demonic joy.
+ Successive flights of ladders, each ending in a giddy platform
+ hung across the gloom, climb to the height of some hundred and
+ fifty feet; and all their rungs were crusted with frozen snow,
+ deposited by trampling boots. For up and down these stairs,
+ ascending and descending, moved other than angels&mdash;the
+ friezejacketed Bürschen, Grisons bears, rejoicing in their
+ exercise, exhilarated with the tingling noise of beaten metal. We
+ reached the first room safely, guided by firm-footed Christian,
+ whose one candle just defined the rough walls and the slippery
+ steps. There we found a band of boys, pulling ropes that set the
+ bells in motion. But our destination was not reached. One more
+ aërial ladder, perpendicular in darkness, brought us swiftly to
+ the home of sound. It is a small square chamber, where the bells
+ are hung, filled with the interlacement of enormous beams, and
+ pierced to north and south by open windows, from whose parapets I
+ saw the village and the valley spread beneath. The fierce wind
+ hurried through it, charged with snow, and its narrow space was
+ thronged with men. Men on the platform, men on the window-sills,
+ men grappling the bells with iron arms, men brushing by to reach
+ the stairs, crossing, recrossing, shouldering their mates,
+ drinking red wine from gigantic beakers, exploding crackers,
+ firing squibs, shouting and yelling in corybantic chorus. They
+ yelled and shouted, one could see it by their open mouths and
+ glittering eyes; but not a sound from human lungs could reach our
+ ears. The overwhelming incessant thunder of the bells drowned
+ all. It thrilled the tympanum, ran through the marrow of the
+ spine, vibrated in the inmost entrails. Yet the brain was only
+ steadied and excited by this sea of brazen noise. After a few
+ moments I knew the place and felt at home in it. Then I enjoyed a
+ spectacle which sculptors might have envied. For they ring the
+ bells in Davos after this fashion:&mdash;The lads below set them
+ going with ropes. The men above climb in pairs on ladders to the
+ beams from which they are suspended. Two mighty pine-trees,
+ roughly squared and built into the walls, extend from side to
+ side across the belfry. Another from which the bells hang,
+ connects these massive trunks at right angles. Just where the
+ central beam is wedged into the two parallel supports, the
+ ladders reach them from each side of the belfry, so that, bending
+ from the higher rung of the ladder, and leaning over, stayed upon
+ the lateral beam, each pair of men can keep one bell in movement
+ with their hands. Each comrade plants one leg upon the ladder,
+ and sets the other knee firmly athwart the horizontal pine. Then
+ round each other's waist they twine left arm and right. The two
+ have thus become one man. Right arm and left are free to grasp
+ the bell's horns, sprouting at its crest beneath the beam. With a
+ grave rhythmic motion, bending sideward in a close embrace,
+ swaying and returning to their centre from the well-knit loins,
+ they drive the force of each strong muscle into the vexed bell.
+ The impact is earnest at first, but soon it becomes frantic. The
+ men take something from each other of exalted enthusiasm. This
+ efflux of their combined energies inspires them and exasperates
+ the mighty resonance of metal which they rule. They are lost in a
+ trance of what approximates to dervish passion&mdash;so thrilling
+ is the surge of sound, so potent are the rhythms they obey. Men
+ come and tug them by the heels. One grasps the starting thews
+ upon their calves. Another is impatient for their place. But they
+ strain still, locked together, and forgetful of the world. At
+ length they have enough: then slowly, clingingly unclasp, turn
+ round with gazing eyes, and are resumed, sedately, into the
+ diurnal round of common life. Another pair is in their room upon
+ the beam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Englishman who saw these things stood looking up, enveloped
+ in his ulster with the grey cowl thrust upon his forehead, like a
+ monk. One candle cast a grotesque shadow of him on the plastered
+ wall. And when his chance came, though he was but a weakling, he
+ too climbed and for some moments hugged the beam, and felt the
+ madness of the swinging bell. Descending, he wondered long and
+ strangely whether he ascribed too much of feeling to the men he
+ watched. But no, that was impossible. There are emotions deeply
+ seated in the joy of exercise, when the body is brought into
+ play, and masses move in concert, of which the subject is but
+ half conscious. Music and dance, and the delirium of battle or
+ the chase, act thus upon spontaneous natures. The mystery of
+ rhythm and associated energy and blood tingling in sympathy is
+ here. It lies at the root of man's most tyrannous instinctive
+ impulses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was past one when we reached home, and now a meditative man
+ might well have gone to bed. But no one thinks of sleeping on
+ Sylvester Abend. So there followed bowls of punch in one friend's
+ room, where English, French, and Germans blent together in
+ convivial Babel; and flasks of old Montagner in another. Palmy,
+ at this period, wore an archdeacon's hat, and smoked a
+ churchwarden's pipe; and neither were his own, nor did he derive
+ anything ecclesiastical or Anglican from the association. Late in
+ the morning we must sally forth, they said, and roam the town.
+ For it is the custom here on New Year's night to greet
+ acquaintances, and ask for hospitality, and no one may deny these
+ self-invited guests. We turned out again into the grey snow-swept
+ gloom, a curious Comus&mdash;not at all like Greeks, for we had
+ neither torches in our hands nor rose-wreaths to suspend upon a
+ lady's door-posts. And yet I could not refrain, at this supreme
+ moment of jollity, in the zero temperature, amid my Grisons
+ friends, from humming to myself verses from the Greek
+ Anthology:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ The die is cast! Nay, light the torch!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'll take the road! Up, courage, ho!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why linger pondering in the porch?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon Love's revel we will go!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Shake off those fumes of wine! Hang care
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And caution! What has Love to do
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With prudence? Let the torches flare!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quick, drown the doubts that hampered you!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Cast weary wisdom to the wind!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One thing, but one alone, I know:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Love bent e'en Jove and made him blind
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon Love's revel we will go!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ And then again:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ I've drunk sheer madness! Not with wine,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But old fantastic tales, I'll arm
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My heart in heedlessness divine,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And dare the road, nor dream of harm!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ I'll join Love's rout! Let thunder break,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let lightning blast me by the way!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Invulnerable Love shall shake
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His ĉgis o'er my head to-day.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This last epigram was not inappropriate to an invalid about to
+ begin the fifth act in a roystering night's adventure. And still
+ once more:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Cold blows the winter wind; 'tis Love,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whose sweet eyes swim with honeyed tears,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That bears me to thy doors, my love,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tossed by the storm of hopes and fears.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Cold blows the blast of aching Love;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But be thou for my wandering sail,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adrift upon these waves of love,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Safe harbour from the whistling gale!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ However, upon this occasion, though we had winter-wind enough,
+ and cold enough, there was not much love in the business. My arm
+ was firmly clenched in Christian Buol's, and Christian Palmy came
+ behind, trolling out songs in Italian dialect, with still
+ recurring <i>canaille</i> choruses, of which the facile rhymes
+ seemed mostly made on a prolonged <i>amu-u-u-r</i>. It is
+ noticeable that Italian ditties are specially designed for
+ fellows shouting in the streets at night. They seem in keeping
+ there, and nowhere else that I could ever see. And these Davosers
+ took to them naturally when the time for Comus came. It was
+ between four and five in the morning, and nearly all the houses
+ in the place were dark. The tall church-tower and spire loomed up
+ above us in grey twilight. The tireless wind still swept thin
+ snow from fell and forest. But the frenzied bells had sunk into
+ their twelvemonth's slumber, which shall be broken only by
+ decorous tollings at less festive times. I wondered whether they
+ were tingling still with the heart-throbs and with the pressure
+ of those many arms? Was their old age warmed, as mine was, with
+ that gust of life&mdash;the young men who had clung to them like
+ bees to lily-bells, and shaken all their locked-up tone and
+ shrillness into the wild winter air? Alas! how many generations
+ of the young have handled them; and they are still there, frozen
+ in their belfry; and the young grow middle-aged, and old, and die
+ at last; and the bells they grappled in their lust of manhood
+ toll them to their graves, on which the tireless wind will,
+ winter after winter, sprinkle snow from alps and forests which
+ they knew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There is a light,' cried Christian, 'up in Anna's window!' 'A
+ light! a light!' the Comus shouted. But how to get at the window,
+ which is pretty high above the ground, and out of reach of the
+ most ardent revellers? We search a neighbouring shed, extract a
+ stable-ladder, and in two seconds Palmy has climbed to the
+ topmost rung, while Christian and Georg hold it firm upon the
+ snow beneath. Then begins a passage from some comic opera of
+ Mozart's or Cimarosa's&mdash;an escapade familiar to Spanish or
+ Italian students, which recalls the stage. It is an episode from
+ 'Don Giovanni,' translated to this dark-etched scene of snowy
+ hills, and Gothic tower, and mullioned windows deep embayed
+ beneath their eaves and icicles. <i>Deh vieni alla finestra!</i>
+ sings Palmy-Leporello; the chorus answers: <i>Deh vieni! Perchè
+ non vieni ancora?</i> pleads Leporello; the chorus shouts:
+ <i>Perchè? Mio amu-u-u-r</i>, sighs Leporello; and Echo cries,
+ <i>amu-u-u-r!</i> All the wooing, be it noticed, is conducted in
+ Italian. But the actors murmur to each other in Davoser Deutsch,
+ 'She won't come, Palmy! It is far too late; she is gone to bed.
+ Come down; you'll wake the village with your caterwauling!' But
+ Leporello waves his broad archdeacon's hat, and resumes a flood
+ of flexible Bregaglian. He has a shrewd suspicion that the girl
+ is peeping from behind the window curtain; and tells us, bending
+ down from the ladder, in a hoarse stage-whisper, that we must
+ have patience; 'these girls are kittle cattle, who take long to
+ draw: but if your lungs last out, they're sure to show.' And
+ Leporello is right. Faint heart ne'er won fair lady. From the
+ summit of his ladder, by his eloquent Italian tongue, he brings
+ the shy bird down at last. We hear the unbarring of the house
+ door, and a comely maiden, in her Sunday dress, welcomes us
+ politely to her ground-floor sitting-room. The Comus enters, in
+ grave order, with set speeches, handshakes, and inevitable
+ <i>Prosits</i>! It is a large low chamber, with a huge stone
+ stove, wide benches fixed along the walls, and a great oval
+ table. We sit how and where we can. Red wine is produced, and
+ eier-brod and küchli. Fräulein Anna serves us sedately, holding
+ her own with decent self-respect against the inrush of the
+ revellers. She is quite alone; but are not her father and mother
+ in bed above, and within earshot? Besides, the Comus, even at
+ this abnormal hour and after an abnormal night, is well
+ conducted. Things seem slipping into a decorous wine-party, when
+ Leporello readjusts the broad-brimmed hat upon his head, and very
+ cleverly acts a little love-scene for our benefit. Fräulein Anna
+ takes this as a delicate compliment, and the thing is so prettily
+ done in truth, that not the sternest taste could be offended.
+ Meanwhile another party of night-wanderers, attracted by our
+ mirth, break in. More <i>Prosits</i> and clinked glasses follow;
+ and with a fair good-morning to our hostess, we retire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is too late to think of bed. 'The quincunx of heaven,' as Sir
+ Thomas Browne phrased it on a dissimilar occasion, 'runs low....
+ The huntsmen are up in America; and not in America only, for the
+ huntsmen, if there are any this night in Graubünden, have long
+ been out upon the snow, and the stable-lads are dragging the
+ sledges from their sheds to carry down the mails to Landquart. We
+ meet the porters from the various hotels, bringing letter-bags
+ and luggage to the post. It is time to turn in and take a cup of
+ black coffee against the rising sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some nights, even in Davos, are spent, even by an invalid, in
+ bed. A leaflet, therefore, of 'Sleep-chasings' may not
+ inappropriately be flung, as envoy to so many wanderings on foot
+ and sledge upon the winter snows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first is a confused medley of things familiar and things
+ strange. I have been dreaming of far-away old German towns, with
+ gabled houses deep in snow; dreaming of châlets in forgotten
+ Alpine glens, where wood-cutters come plunging into sleepy light
+ from gloom, and sinking down beside the stove to shake the drift
+ from their rough shoulders; dreaming of vast veils of icicles
+ upon the gaunt black rocks in places where no foot of man will
+ pass, and where the snow is weaving eyebrows over the ledges of
+ grey whirlwind-beaten precipices; dreaming of Venice, forlorn
+ beneath the windy drip of rain, the gas lamps flickering on the
+ swimming piazzetta, the barche idle, the gondolier wrapped in his
+ thread-bare cloak, alone; dreaming of Apennines, with world-old
+ cities, brown, above the brown sea of dead chestnut boughs;
+ dreaming of stormy tides, and watchers aloft in lighthouses when
+ day is finished; dreaming of dead men and women and dead children
+ in the earth, far down beneath the snow-drifts, six feet deep.
+ And then I lift my face, awaking, from my pillow; the pallid moon
+ is on the valley, and the room is filled with spectral light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sleep, and change my dreaming. This is a hospice in an
+ unfrequented pass, between sad peaks, beside a little black lake,
+ overdrifted with soft snow. I pass into the house-room, gliding
+ silently. An old man and an old woman are nodding, bowed in
+ deepest slumber, by the stove. A young man plays the zither on a
+ table. He lifts his head, still modulating with his fingers on
+ the strings. He looks right through me with wide anxious eyes. He
+ does not see me, but sees Italy, I know, and some one wandering
+ on a sandy shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sleep, and change my dreaming. This is S. Stephen's Church in
+ Wien. Inside, the lamps are burning dimly in the choir. There is
+ fog in the aisles; but through the sleepy air and over the red
+ candles flies a wild soprano's voice, a boy's soul in its singing
+ sent to heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sleep, and change my dreaming. From the mufflers in which his
+ father, the mountebank, has wrapped the child, to carry him
+ across the heath, a little tumbling-boy emerges in soiled tights.
+ He is half asleep. His father scrapes the fiddle. The boy
+ shortens his red belt, kisses his fingers to us, and ties himself
+ into a knot among the glasses on the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sleep, and change my dreaming. I am on the parapet of a huge
+ circular tower, hollow like a well, and pierced with windows at
+ irregular intervals. The parapet is broad, and slabbed with red
+ Verona marble. Around me are athletic men, all naked, in the
+ strangest attitudes of studied rest, down-gazing, as I do, into
+ the depths below. There comes a confused murmur of voices, and
+ the tower is threaded and rethreaded with great cables. Up these
+ there climb to us a crowd of young men, clinging to the ropes and
+ flinging their bodies sideways on aërial trapezes. My heart
+ trembles with keen joy and terror. For nowhere else could plastic
+ forms be seen more beautiful, and nowhere else is peril more
+ apparent. Leaning my chin upon the utmost verge, I wait. I watch
+ one youth, who smiles and soars to me; and when his face is
+ almost touching mine, he speaks, but what he says I know not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sleep, and change my dreaming. The whole world rocks to its
+ foundations. The mountain summits that I know are shaken. They
+ bow their bristling crests. They are falling, falling on us, and
+ the earth is riven. I wake in terror, shouting: INSOLITIS
+ TREMUERUNT MOTIBUS ALPES! An earthquake, slight but real, has
+ stirred the ever-wakeful Vesta of the brain to this Virgilian
+ quotation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sleep, and change my dreaming. Once more at night I sledge
+ alone upon the Klosters road. It is the point where the woods
+ close over it and moonlight may not pierce the boughs. There come
+ shrill cries of many voices from behind, and rushings that pass
+ by and vanish. Then on their sledges I behold the phantoms of the
+ dead who died in Davos, longing for their homes; and each flies
+ past me, shrieking in the still cold air; and phosphorescent like
+ long meteors, the pageant turns the windings of the road below
+ and disappears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sleep, and change my dreaming. This is the top of some high
+ mountain, where the crags are cruelly tortured and cast in
+ enormous splinters on the ledges of cliffs grey with old-world
+ ice. A ravine, opening at my feet, plunges down immeasurably to a
+ dim and distant sea. Above me soars a precipice embossed with a
+ gigantic ice-bound shape. As I gaze thereon, I find the
+ lineaments and limbs of a Titanic man chained and nailed to the
+ rock. His beard has grown for centuries, and flowed this way and
+ that, adown his breast and over to the stone on either side; and
+ the whole of him is covered with a greenish ice, ancient beyond
+ the memory of man. 'This is Prometheus,' I whisper to myself,
+ 'and I am alone on Caucasus.'
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="BACCHUS_IN_GRAUBUNDEN" id=
+ "BACCHUS_IN_GRAUBUNDEN"></a>BACCHUS IN GRAUBÜNDEN
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ I
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some years' residence in the Canton of the Grisons made me
+ familiar with all sorts of Valtelline wine; with masculine but
+ rough <i>Inferno</i>, generous <i>Forzato</i>, delicate
+ <i>Sassella</i>, harsher <i>Montagner</i>, the raspberry flavour
+ of <i>Grumello</i>, the sharp invigorating twang of <i>Villa</i>.
+ The colour, ranging from garnet to almandine or ruby, told me the
+ age and quality of wine; and I could judge from the crust it
+ forms upon the bottle, whether it had been left long enough in
+ wood to ripen. I had furthermore arrived at the conclusion that
+ the best Valtelline can only be tasted in cellars of the Engadine
+ or Davos, where this vintage matures slowly in the mountain air,
+ and takes a flavour unknown at lower levels. In a word, it had
+ amused my leisure to make or think myself a connoisseur. My
+ literary taste was tickled by the praise bestowed in the Augustan
+ age on Rhĉtic grapes by Virgil:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ Et quo te carmine dicam,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rhĉtica? nec cellis ideo contende Falernis.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ I piqued myself on thinking that could the poet but have drank
+ one bottle at Samaden&mdash;where Stilicho, by the way, in his
+ famous recruiting expedition may perhaps have drank it&mdash;he
+ would have been less chary in his panegyric. For the point of
+ inferiority on which he seems to insist, namely, that Valtelline
+ wine does not keep well in cellar, is only proper to this vintage
+ in Italian climate. Such meditations led my fancy on the path of
+ history. Is there truth, then, in the dim tradition that this
+ mountain land was colonised by Etruscans? Is <i>Ras</i> the root
+ of Rhĉtia? The Etruscans were accomplished wine-growers, we know.
+ It was their Montepulciano which drew the Gauls to Rome, if Livy
+ can be trusted. Perhaps they first planted the vine in
+ Valtelline. Perhaps its superior culture in that district may be
+ due to ancient use surviving in a secluded Alpine valley. One
+ thing is certain, that the peasants of Sondrio and Tirano
+ understand viticulture better than the Italians of Lombardy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then my thoughts ran on to the period of modern history, when the
+ Grisons seized the Valtelline in lieu of war-pay from the Dukes
+ of Milan. For some three centuries they held it as a subject
+ province. From the Rathhaus at Davos or Chur they sent their
+ nobles&mdash;Von Salis and Buol, Planta and Sprecher von
+ Bernegg&mdash;across the hills as governors or podestàs to
+ Poschiavo, Sondrio, Tirano, and Morbegno. In those old days the
+ Valtelline wines came duly every winter over snow-deep passes to
+ fill the cellars of the Signori Grigioni. That quaint traveller
+ Tom Coryat, in his so-called 'Crudities,' notes the custom early
+ in the seventeenth century. And as that custom then obtained, it
+ still subsists with little alteration. The
+ wine-carriers&mdash;Weinführer, as they are called&mdash;first
+ scaled the Bernina pass, halting then as now, perhaps at
+ Poschiavo and Pontresina. Afterwards, in order to reach Davos,
+ the pass of the Scaletta rose before them&mdash;a wilderness of
+ untracked snow-drifts. The country-folk still point to narrow,
+ light hand-sledges, on which the casks were charged before the
+ last pitch of the pass. Some wine came, no doubt, on
+ pack-saddles. A meadow in front of the Dischma-Thal, where the
+ pass ends, still bears the name of the Ross-Weid, or
+ horse-pasture. It was here that the beasts of burden used for
+ this wine-service, rested after their long labours. In favourable
+ weather the whole journey from Tirano would have occupied at
+ least four days, with scanty halts at night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Valtelline slipped from the hands of the Grisons early in
+ this century. It is rumoured that one of the Von Salis family
+ negotiated matters with Napoleon more for his private benefit
+ than for the interests of the state. However this may have been,
+ when the Graubünden became a Swiss Canton, after four centuries
+ of sovereign independence, the whole Valtelline passed to
+ Austria, and so eventually to Italy. According to modern and just
+ notions of nationality, this was right. In their period of power,
+ the Grisons masters had treated their Italian dependencies with
+ harshness. The Valtelline is an Italian valley, connected with
+ the rest of the peninsula by ties of race and language. It is,
+ moreover, geographically linked to Italy by the great stream of
+ the Adda, which takes its rise upon the Stelvio, and after
+ passing through the Lake of Como, swells the volume of the Po.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, though politically severed from the Valtelline, the
+ Engadiners and Davosers have not dropped their old habit of
+ importing its best produce. What they formerly levied as masters,
+ they now acquire by purchase. The Italian revenue derives a large
+ profit from the frontier dues paid at the gate between Tirano and
+ Poschiavo on the Bernina road. Much of the same wine enters
+ Switzerland by another route, travelling from Sondrio to
+ Chiavenna and across the Splügen. But until quite recently, the
+ wine itself could scarcely be found outside the Canton. It was
+ indeed quoted upon Lombard wine-lists. Yet no one drank it; and
+ when I tasted it at Milan, I found it quite unrecognisable. The
+ fact seems to be that the Graubündeners alone know how to deal
+ with it; and, as I have hinted, the wine requires a mountain
+ climate for its full development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The district where the wine of Valtellina is grown extends,
+ roughly speaking, from Tirano to Morbegno, a distance of some
+ fifty-four miles. The best sorts come from the middle of this
+ region. High up in the valley, soil and climate are alike less
+ favourable. Low down a coarser, earthier quality springs from fat
+ land where the valley broadens. The northern hillsides to a very
+ considerable height above the river are covered with vineyards.
+ The southern slopes on the left bank of the Adda, lying more in
+ shade, yield but little. Inferno, Grumello, and Perla di Sassella
+ are the names of famous vineyards. Sassella is the general name
+ for a large tract. Buying an Inferno, Grumello, or Perla di
+ Sassella wine, it would be absurd to suppose that one obtained it
+ precisely from the eponymous estate. But as each of these
+ vineyards yields a marked quality of wine, which is taken as
+ standard-giving, the produce of the whole district may be broadly
+ classified as approaching more or less nearly to one of these
+ accepted types. The Inferno, Grumello, and Perla di Sassella of
+ commerce are therefore three sorts of good Valtelline, ticketed
+ with famous names to indicate certain differences of quality.
+ Montagner, as the name implies, is a somewhat lighter wine, grown
+ higher up in the hill-vineyards. And of this class there are many
+ species, some approximating to Sassella in delicacy of flavour,
+ others approaching the tart lightness of the Villa vintage. This
+ last takes its title from a village in the neighbourhood of
+ Tirano, where a table-wine is chiefly grown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forzato is the strongest, dearest, longest-lived of this whole
+ family of wines. It is manufactured chiefly at Tirano; and, as
+ will be understood from its name, does not profess to belong to
+ any one of the famous localities. Forzato or Sforzato, forced or
+ enforced, is in fact a wine which has undergone a more artificial
+ process. In German the people call it Strohwein, which also
+ points to the method of its preparation. The finest grapes are
+ selected and dried in the sun (hence the <i>Stroh</i>) for a
+ period of eight or nine weeks. When they have almost become
+ raisins, they are pressed. The must is heavily charged with
+ sugar, and ferments powerfully. Wine thus made requires several
+ years to ripen. Sweet at first, it takes at last a very fine
+ quality and flavour, and is rough, almost acid, on the tongue.
+ Its colour too turns from a deep rich crimson to the tone of
+ tawny port, which indeed it much resembles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Forzato, which has been long in cask, and then perhaps three
+ years in bottle, will fetch at least six francs, or may rise to
+ even ten francs a flask. The best Sassella rarely reaches more
+ than five francs. Good Montagner and Grumello can be had perhaps
+ for four francs; and Inferno of a special quality for six francs.
+ Thus the average price of old Valtelline wine may be taken as
+ five francs a bottle. These, I should observe, are hotel prices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Valtelline wines bought in the wood vary, of course, according to
+ their age and year of vintage. I have found that from 2.50 fr. to
+ 3.50 fr. per litre is a fair price for sorts fit to bottle. The
+ new wine of 1881 sold in the following winter at prices varying
+ from 1.05 fr. to 1.80 fr. per litre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is customary for the Graubünden wine-merchants to buy up the
+ whole produce of a vineyard from the peasants at the end of the
+ vintage. They go in person or depute their agents to inspect the
+ wine, make their bargains, and seal the cellars where the wine is
+ stored. Then, when the snow has fallen, their own horses with
+ sleighs and trusted servants go across the passes to bring it
+ home. Generally they have some local man of confidence at Tirano,
+ the starting-point for the homeward journey, who takes the casks
+ up to that place and sees them duly charged. Merchants of old
+ standing maintain relations with the same peasants, taking their
+ wine regularly; so that from Lorenz Gredig at Pontresina or
+ Andreas Gredig at Davos Dörfli, from Fanconi at Samaden, or from
+ Giacomi at Chiavenna, special qualities of wine, the produce of
+ certain vineyards, are to be obtained. Up to the present time
+ this wine trade has been conducted with simplicity and honesty by
+ both the dealers and the growers. One chief merit of Valtelline
+ wine is that it is pure. How long so desirable a state of things
+ will survive the slow but steady development of an export
+ business may be questioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With so much practical and theoretical interest in the produce of
+ the Valtelline to stimulate my curiosity, I determined to visit
+ the district at the season when the wine was leaving it. It was
+ the winter of 1881-82, a winter of unparalleled beauty in the
+ high Alps. Day succeeded day without a cloud. Night followed
+ night with steady stars, gliding across clear mountain ranges and
+ forests of dark pines unstirred by wind. I could not hope for a
+ more prosperous season; and indeed I made such use of it, that
+ between the months of January and March I crossed six passes of
+ the Alps in open sleighs&mdash;the Fluela Bernina, Splügen,
+ Julier, Maloja, and Albula&mdash;with less difficulty and
+ discomfort in mid-winter than the traveller may often find on
+ them in June.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of January, my friend Christian and I left Davos long
+ before the sun was up, and ascended for four hours through the
+ interminable snow-drifts of the Fluela in a cold grey shadow. The
+ sun's light seemed to elude us. It ran along the ravine through
+ which we toiled; dipped down to touch the topmost pines above our
+ heads; rested in golden calm upon the Schiahorn at our back;
+ capriciously played here and there across the Weisshorn on our
+ left, and made the precipices of the Schwartzhorn glitter on our
+ right. But athwart our path it never fell until we reached the
+ very summit of the pass. Then we passed quietly into the full
+ glory of the winter morning&mdash;a tranquil flood of sunbeams,
+ pouring through air of crystalline purity, frozen and motionless.
+ White peaks and dark brown rocks soared up, cutting a sky of
+ almost purple blueness. A stillness that might be felt brooded
+ over the whole world; but in that stillness there was nothing
+ sad, no suggestion of suspended vitality. It was the stillness
+ rather of untroubled health, of strength omnipotent but
+ unexerted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the Hochspitz of the Fluela the track plunges at one bound
+ into the valley of the Inn, following a narrow cornice carved
+ from the smooth bank of snow, and hung, without break or barrier,
+ a thousand feet or more above the torrent. The summer road is
+ lost in snow-drifts. The galleries built as a protection from
+ avalanches, which sweep in rivers from those grim, bare fells
+ above, are blocked with snow. Their useless arches yawn, as we
+ glide over or outside them, by paths which instinct in our horse
+ and driver traces. As a fly may creep along a house-roof,
+ slanting downwards we descend. One whisk from the swinged tail of
+ an avalanche would hurl us, like a fly, into the ruin of the
+ gaping gorge. But this season little snow has fallen on the
+ higher hills; and what still lies there, is hard frozen.
+ Therefore we have no fear, as we whirl fast and faster from the
+ snow-fields into the black forests of gnarled cembras and
+ wind-wearied pines. Then Süss is reached, where the Inn hurries
+ its shallow waters clogged with ice-floes through a sleepy
+ hamlet. The stream is pure and green; for the fountains of the
+ glaciers are locked by winter frosts; and only clear rills from
+ perennial sources swell its tide. At Süss we lost the sun, and
+ toiled in garish gloom and silence, nipped by the ever-deepening
+ cold of evening, upwards for four hours to Samaden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day was spent in visiting the winter colony at San
+ Moritz, where the Kulm Hotel, tenanted by some twenty guests,
+ presented in its vastness the appearance of a country-house. One
+ of the prettiest spots in the world is the ice-rink, fashioned by
+ the skill of Herr Caspar Badrutt on a high raised terrace,
+ commanding the valley of the Inn and the ponderous bulwarks of
+ Bernina. The silhouettes of skaters, defined against that
+ landscape of pure white, passed to and fro beneath a cloudless
+ sky. Ladies sat and worked or read on seats upon the ice. Not a
+ breath of wind was astir, and warm beneficent sunlight flooded
+ the immeasurable air. Only, as the day declined, some iridescent
+ films overspread the west; and just above Maloja the apparition
+ of a mock sun&mdash;a well-defined circle of opaline light,
+ broken at regular intervals by four globes&mdash;seemed to
+ portend a change of weather. This forecast fortunately proved
+ delusive. We drove back to Samaden across the silent snow,
+ enjoying those delicate tints of rose and violet and saffron
+ which shed enchantment for one hour over the white monotony of
+ Alpine winter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At half-past eight next morning, the sun was rising from behind
+ Pitz Languard, as we crossed the Inn and drove through Pontresina
+ in the glorious light, with all its huge hotels quite empty and
+ none but a few country-folk abroad. Those who only know the
+ Engadine in summer have little conception of its beauty. Winter
+ softens the hard details of bare rock, and rounds the melancholy
+ grassless mountain flanks, suspending icicles to every ledge and
+ spangling the curved surfaces of snow with crystals. The
+ landscape gains in purity, and, what sounds unbelievable, in
+ tenderness. Nor does it lose in grandeur. Looking up the valley
+ of the Morteratsch that morning, the glaciers were
+ distinguishable in hues of green and sapphire through their veil
+ of snow; and the highest peaks soared in a transparency of
+ amethystine light beneath a blue sky traced with filaments of
+ windy cloud. Some storm must have disturbed the atmosphere in
+ Italy, for fan-shaped mists frothed out around the sun, and
+ curled themselves above the mountains in fine feathery wreaths,
+ melting imperceptibly into air, until, when we had risen above
+ the cembras, the sky was one deep solid blue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All that upland wilderness is lovelier now than in the summer;
+ and on the morning of which I write, the air itself was far more
+ summery than I have ever known it in the Engadine in August. We
+ could scarcely bear to place our hands upon the woodwork of the
+ sleigh because of the fierce sun's heat. And yet the atmosphere
+ was crystalline with windless frost. As though to increase the
+ strangeness of these contrasts, the pavement of beaten snow was
+ stained with red drops spilt from wine-casks which pass over it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief feature of the Bernina&mdash;what makes it a dreary
+ pass enough in summer, but infinitely beautiful in
+ winter&mdash;is its breadth; illimitable undulations of
+ snow-drifts; immensity of open sky; unbroken lines of white,
+ descending in smooth curves from glittering ice-peaks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A glacier hangs in air above the frozen lakes, with all its
+ green-blue ice-cliffs glistening in intensest light. Pitz Palu
+ shoots aloft like sculptured marble, delicately veined with soft
+ aërial shadows of translucent blue. At the summit of the pass all
+ Italy seems to burst upon the eyes in those steep serried ranges,
+ with their craggy crests, violet-hued in noonday sunshine, as
+ though a bloom of plum or grape had been shed over them,
+ enamelling their jagged precipices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The top of the Bernina is not always thus in winter. It has a bad
+ reputation for the fury of invading storms, when falling snow
+ hurtles together with snow scooped from the drifts in eddies, and
+ the weltering white sea shifts at the will of whirlwinds. The
+ Hospice then may be tenanted for days together by weather-bound
+ wayfarers; and a line drawn close beneath its roof shows how two
+ years ago the whole building was buried in one snow-shroud. This
+ morning we lounged about the door, while our horses rested and
+ postillions and carters pledged one another in cups of new
+ Veltliner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The road takes an awful and sudden dive downwards, quite
+ irrespective of the carefully engineered post-track. At this
+ season the path is badly broken into ruts and chasms by the wine
+ traffic. In some places it was indubitably perilous: a narrow
+ ledge of mere ice skirting thinly clad hard-frozen banks of snow,
+ which fell precipitately sideways for hundreds of sheer feet. We
+ did not slip over this parapet, though we were often within an
+ inch of doing so. Had our horse stumbled, it is not probable that
+ I should have been writing this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we came to the galleries which defend the road from
+ avalanches, we saw ahead of us a train of over forty sledges
+ ascending, all charged with Valtelline wine. Our postillions drew
+ up at the inner side of the gallery, between massive columns of
+ the purest ice dependent from the rough-hewn roof and walls of
+ rock. A sort of open <i>loggia</i> on the farther side framed
+ vignettes of the Valtelline mountains in their hard cerulean
+ shadows and keen sunlight. Between us and the view defiled the
+ wine-sledges; and as each went by, the men made us drink out of
+ their <i>trinketti</i>. These are oblong, hexagonal wooden kegs,
+ holding about fourteen litres, which the carter fills with wine
+ before he leaves the Valtelline, to cheer him on the homeward
+ journey. You raise it in both hands, and when the bung has been
+ removed, allow the liquor to flow stream-wise down your throat.
+ It was a most extraordinary Bacchic procession&mdash;a pomp
+ which, though undreamed of on the banks of the Ilissus,
+ proclaimed the deity of Dionysos in authentic fashion. Struggling
+ horses, grappling at the ice-bound floor with sharp-spiked shoes;
+ huge, hoarse drivers, some clad in sheepskins from Italian
+ valleys, some brown as bears in rough Graubünden homespun; casks,
+ dropping their spilth of red wine on the snow; greetings,
+ embracings; patois of Bergamo, Romansch, and German roaring
+ around the low-browed vaults and tingling ice pillars; pourings
+ forth of libations of the new strong Valtelline on breasts and
+ beards;&mdash;the whole made up a scene of stalwart jollity and
+ manful labour such as I have nowhere else in such wild
+ circumstances witnessed. Many Davosers were there, the men of
+ Andreas Gredig, Valär, and so forth; and all of these, on
+ greeting Christian, forced us to drain a <i>Schluck</i> from
+ their unmanageable cruses. Then on they went, crying, creaking,
+ struggling, straining through the corridor, which echoed
+ deafeningly, the gleaming crystals of those hard Italian
+ mountains in their winter raiment building a background of still
+ beauty to the savage Bacchanalian riot of the team.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How little the visitors who drink Valtelline wine at S. Moritz or
+ Davos reflect by what strange ways it reaches them. A sledge can
+ scarcely be laden with more than one cask of 300 litres on the
+ ascent; and this cask, according to the state of the road, has
+ many times to be shifted from wheels to runners and back again
+ before the journey is accomplished. One carter will take charge
+ of two horses, and consequently of two sledges and two casks,
+ driving them both by voice and gesture rather than by rein. When
+ they leave the Valtelline, the carters endeavour, as far as
+ possible, to take the pass in gangs, lest bad weather or an
+ accident upon the road should overtake them singly. At night they
+ hardly rest three hours, and rarely think of sleeping, but spend
+ the time in drinking and conversation. The horses are fed and
+ littered; but for them too the night-halt is little better than a
+ baiting-time. In fair weather the passage of the mountain is not
+ difficult, though tiring. But woe to men and beasts alike if they
+ encounter storms! Not a few perish in the passes; and it
+ frequently happens that their only chance is to unyoke the horses
+ and leave the sledges in a snow-wreath, seeking for themselves
+ such shelter as may possibly be gained, frost-bitten, after hours
+ of battling with impermeable drifts. The wine is frozen into one
+ solid mass of rosy ice before it reaches Pontresina. This does
+ not hurt the young vintage, but it is highly injurious to wine of
+ some years' standing. The perils of the journey are aggravated by
+ the savage temper of the drivers. Jealousies between the natives
+ of rival districts spring up; and there are men alive who have
+ fought the whole way down from Fluela Hospice to Davos Platz with
+ knives and stones, hammers and hatchets, wooden staves and
+ splintered cart-wheels, staining the snow with blood, and
+ bringing broken pates, bruised limbs, and senseless comrades home
+ to their women to be tended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bacchus Alpinus shepherded his train away from us to northward,
+ and we passed forth into noonday from the gallery. It then seemed
+ clear that both conductor and postillion were sufficiently merry.
+ The plunge they took us down those frozen parapets, with shriek
+ and <i>jauchzen</i> and cracked whips, was more than ever
+ dangerous. Yet we reached La Rosa safely. This is a lovely
+ solitary spot, beside a rushing stream, among grey granite
+ boulders grown with spruce and rhododendron: a veritable rose of
+ Sharon blooming in the desert. The wastes of the Bernina stretch
+ above, and round about are leaguered some of the most forbidding
+ sharp-toothed peaks I ever saw. Onwards, across the silent snow,
+ we glided in immitigable sunshine, through opening valleys and
+ pine-woods, past the robber-huts of Pisciadella, until at
+ evenfall we rested in the roadside inn at Poschiavo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The snow-path ended at Poschiavo; and when, as usual, we started
+ on our journey next day at sunrise, it was in a carriage upon
+ wheels. Yet even here we were in full midwinter. Beyond Le Prese
+ the lake presented one sheet of smooth black ice, reflecting
+ every peak and chasm of the mountains, and showing the rocks and
+ water-weeds in the clear green depths below. The glittering floor
+ stretched away for acres of untenanted expanse, with not a skater
+ to explore those dark mysterious coves, or strike across the
+ slanting sunlight poured from clefts in the impendent hills.
+ Inshore the substance of the ice sparkled here and there with
+ iridescence like the plumelets of a butterfly's wing under the
+ microscope, wherever light happened to catch the jagged or
+ oblique flaws that veined its solid crystal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the lake the road descends suddenly for a considerable
+ distance through a narrow gorge, following a torrent which rushes
+ among granite boulders. Chestnut trees begin to replace the
+ pines. The sunnier terraces are planted with tobacco, and at a
+ lower level vines appear at intervals in patches. One comes at
+ length to a great red gate across the road, which separates
+ Switzerland from Italy, and where the export dues on wine are
+ paid. The Italian custom-house is romantically perched above the
+ torrent. Two courteous and elegant <i>finanzieri</i>, mere boys,
+ were sitting wrapped in their military cloaks and reading novels
+ in the sun as we drove up. Though they made some pretence of
+ examining the luggage, they excused themselves with sweet smiles
+ and apologetic eyes&mdash;it was a disagreeable duty!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A short time brought us to the first village in the Valtelline,
+ where the road bifurcates northward to Bormio and the Stelvio
+ pass, southward to Sondrio and Lombardy. It is a little hamlet,
+ known by the name of La Madonna di Tirano, having grown up round
+ a pilgrimage church of great beauty, with tall Lombard
+ bell-tower, pierced with many tiers of pilastered windows, ending
+ in a whimsical spire, and dominating a fantastic cupola building
+ of the earlier Renaissance. Taken altogether, this is a charming
+ bit of architecture, picturesquely set beneath the granite
+ snow-peaks of the Valtelline. The church, they say, was raised at
+ Madonna's own command to stay the tide of heresy descending from
+ the Engadine; and in the year 1620, the bronze statue of S.
+ Michael, which still spreads wide its wings above the cupola,
+ looked down upon the massacre of six hundred Protestants and
+ foreigners, commanded by the patriot Jacopo Robustelli.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Madonna the road leads up the valley through a narrow avenue
+ of poplar-trees to the town of Tirano. We were now in the
+ district where Forzato is made, and every vineyard had a name and
+ history. In Tirano we betook ourself to the house of an old
+ acquaintance of the Buol family, Bernardo da Campo, or, as the
+ Graubündeners call him, Bernard Campbèll. We found him at dinner
+ with his son and grandchildren in a vast, dark, bare Italian
+ chamber. It would be difficult to find a more typical old
+ Scotchman of the Lowlands than he looked, with his clean
+ close-shaven face, bright brown eyes, and snow-white hair
+ escaping from a broad-brimmed hat. He might have sat to a painter
+ for some Covenanter's portrait, except that there was nothing
+ dour about him, or for an illustration to Burns's 'Cotter's
+ Saturday Night.' The air of probity and canniness combined with a
+ twinkle of dry humour was completely Scotch; and when he tapped
+ his snuff-box, telling stories of old days, I could not refrain
+ from asking him about his pedigree. It should be said that there
+ is a considerable family of Campèlls or Campbèlls in the
+ Graubünden, who are fabled to deduce their stock from a Scotch
+ Protestant of Zwingli's time; and this made it irresistible to
+ imagine that in our friend Bernardo I had chanced upon a notable
+ specimen of atavism. All he knew, however, was, that his first
+ ancestor had been a foreigner, who came across the mountains to
+ Tirano two centuries ago.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id=
+ "FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class=
+ "fnanchor">[3]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This old gentleman is a considerable wine-dealer. He sent us with
+ his son, Giacomo, on a long journey underground through his
+ cellars, where we tasted several sorts of Valtelline, especially
+ the new Forzato, made a few weeks since, which singularly
+ combines sweetness with strength, and both with a slight
+ effervescence. It is certainly the sort of wine wherewith to
+ tempt a Polyphemus, and not unapt to turn a giant's head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaving Tirano, and once more passing through the poplars by
+ Madonna, we descended the valley all along the vineyards of Villa
+ and the vast district of Sassella. Here and there, at wayside
+ inns, we stopped to drink a glass of some particular vintage; and
+ everywhere it seemed as though god Bacchus were at home. The
+ whole valley on the right side of the Adda is one gigantic
+ vineyard, climbing the hills in tiers and terraces, which justify
+ its Italian epithet of <i>Teatro di Bacco</i>. The rock is a
+ greyish granite, assuming sullen brown and orange tints where
+ exposed to sun and weather. The vines are grown on stakes, not
+ trellised over trees or carried across boulders, as is the
+ fashion at Chiavenna or Terlan. Yet every advantage of the
+ mountain is adroitly used; nooks and crannies being specially
+ preferred, where the sun's rays are deflected from hanging
+ cliffs. The soil seems deep, and is of a dull yellow tone. When
+ the vines end, brushwood takes up the growth, which expires at
+ last in crag and snow. Some alps and chalets, dimly traced
+ against the sky, are evidences that a pastoral life prevails
+ above the vineyards. Pan there stretches the pine-thyrsus down to
+ vine-garlanded Dionysos.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Adda flows majestically among willows in the midst, and the
+ valley is nearly straight. The prettiest spot, perhaps, is at
+ Tresenda or S. Giacomo, where a pass from Edolo and Brescia
+ descends from the southern hills. But the Valtelline has no great
+ claim to beauty of scenery. Its chief town, Sondrio, where we
+ supped and drank some special wine called <i>il vino de' Signori
+ Grigioni</i>, has been modernised in dull Italian fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hotel at Sondrio, La Maddalena, was in carnival uproar of
+ masquers, topers, and musicians all night through. It was as much
+ as we could do to rouse the sleepy servants and get a cup of
+ coffee ere we started in the frozen dawn. 'Verfluchte Maddalena!'
+ grumbled Christian as he shouldered our portmanteaus and bore
+ them in hot haste to the post. Long experience only confirms the
+ first impression, that, of all cold, the cold of an Italian
+ winter is most penetrating. As we lumbered out of Sondrio in a
+ heavy diligence, I could have fancied myself back once again at
+ Radicofani or among the Ciminian hills. The frost was
+ penetrating. Fur-coats would not keep it out; and we longed to be
+ once more in open sledges on Bernina rather than enclosed in that
+ cold coupé. Now we passed Grumello, the second largest of the
+ renowned vine districts; and always keeping the white mass of
+ Monte di Disgrazia in sight, rolled at last into Morbegno. Here
+ the Valtelline vintage properly ends, though much of the ordinary
+ wine is probably supplied from the inferior produce of these
+ fields. It was past noon when we reached Colico, and saw the Lake
+ of Como glittering in sunlight, dazzling cloaks of snow on all
+ the mountains, which look as dry and brown as dead beech-leaves
+ at this season. Our Bacchic journey had reached its close; and it
+ boots not here to tell in detail how we made our way across the
+ Splügen, piercing its avalanches by low-arched galleries scooped
+ from the solid snow, and careering in our sledges down
+ perpendicular snow-fields, which no one who has crossed that pass
+ from the Italian side in winter will forget. We left the refuge
+ station at the top together with a train of wine-sledges, and
+ passed them in the midst of the wild descent. Looking back, I saw
+ two of their horses stumble in the plunge and roll headlong over.
+ Unluckily in one of these somersaults a man was injured. Flung
+ ahead into the snow by the first lurch, the sledge and wine-cask
+ crossed him like a garden-roller. Had his bed not been of snow,
+ he must have been crushed to death; and as it was, he presented a
+ woeful appearance when he afterwards arrived at Splügen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though not strictly connected with the subject of this paper, I
+ shall conclude these notes of winter wanderings in the high Alps
+ with an episode which illustrates their curious vicissitudes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was late in the month of March, and nearly all the mountain
+ roads were open for wheeled vehicles. A carriage and four horses
+ came to meet us at the termination of a railway journey in
+ Bagalz. We spent one day in visiting old houses of the Grisons
+ aristocracy at Mayenfeld and Zizers, rejoicing in the early
+ sunshine, which had spread the fields with spring
+ flowers&mdash;primroses and oxlips, violets, anemones, and bright
+ blue squills. At Chur we slept, and early next morning started
+ for our homeward drive to Davos. Bad weather had declared itself
+ in the night. It blew violently, and the rain soon changed to
+ snow, frozen by a bitter north blast. Crossing the dreary heath
+ of Lenz was both magnificent and dreadful. By the time we reached
+ Wiesen, all the forests were laden with snow, the roads deep in
+ snow-drifts, the whole scene wintrier than it had been the winter
+ through.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Wiesen we should have stayed, for evening was fast setting in.
+ But in ordinary weather it is only a two hours drive from Wiesen
+ to Davos. Our coachman made no objections to resuming the
+ journey, and our four horses had but a light load to drag. So we
+ telegraphed for supper to be prepared, and started between five
+ and six.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A deep gorge has to be traversed, where the torrent cleaves its
+ way between jaws of limestone precipices. The road is carried
+ along ledges and through tunnels in the rock. Avalanches, which
+ sweep this passage annually from the hills above, give it the
+ name of Züge, or the Snow-Paths. As we entered the gorge darkness
+ fell, the horses dragged more heavily, and it soon became evident
+ that our Tyrolese driver was hopelessly drunk. He nearly upset us
+ twice by taking sharp turns in the road, banged the carriage
+ against telegraph posts and jutting rocks, shaved the very verge
+ of the torrent in places where there was no parapet, and, what
+ was worst of all, refused to leave his box without a fight. The
+ darkness by this time was all but total, and a blinding
+ snow-storm swept howling through the ravine. At length we got the
+ carriage to a dead-stop, and floundered out in deep wet snow
+ toward some wooden huts where miners in old days made their
+ habitation. The place, by a curious, perhaps unconscious irony,
+ is called Hoffnungsau, or the Meadow of Hope. Indeed, it is not
+ ill named; for many wanderers, escaping, as we did, from the
+ dreadful gorge of Avalanches on a stormy night, may have felt, as
+ we now felt, their hope reviving when they reached this shelter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no light; nothing above, beneath, around, on any side,
+ but tearing tempest and snow whirled through the ravine. The
+ horses were taken out of the carriage; on their way to the
+ stable, which fortunately in these mountain regions will be
+ always found beside the poorest habitation, one of them fell back
+ across a wall and nearly broke his spine. Hoffnungsau is
+ inhabited all through the year. In its dismal dark kitchen we
+ found a knot of workmen gathered together, and heard there were
+ two horses on the premises besides our own. It then occurred to
+ us that we might accomplish the rest of the journey with such
+ sledges as they bring the wood on from the hills in winter, if
+ coal-boxes or boxes of any sort could be provided. These should
+ be lashed to the sledges and filled with hay. We were only four
+ persons; my wife and a friend should go in one, myself and my
+ little girl in the other. No sooner thought of than put into
+ practice. These original conveyances were improvised, and after
+ two hours' halt on the Meadow of Hope, we all set forth again at
+ half-past eight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have rarely felt anything more piercing than the grim cold of
+ that journey. We crawled at a foot's pace through changeful
+ snow-drifts. The road was obliterated, and it was my duty to keep
+ a petroleum stable-lamp swinging to illuminate the untracked
+ wilderness. My little girl was snugly nested in the hay, and
+ sound asleep with a deep white covering of snow above her.
+ Meanwhile, the drift clave in frozen masses to our faces, lashed
+ by a wind so fierce and keen that it was difficult to breathe it.
+ My forehead-bone ached, as though with neuralgia, from the mere
+ mask of icy snow upon it, plastered on with frost. Nothing could
+ be seen but millions of white specks, whirled at us in eddying
+ concentric circles. Not far from the entrance to the village we
+ met our house-folk out with lanterns to look for us. It was past
+ eleven at night when at last we entered warm rooms and refreshed
+ ourselves for the tiring day with a jovial champagne supper.
+ Horses, carriage, and drunken driver reached home next morning.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="OLD_TOWNS_OF_PROVENCE" id=
+ "OLD_TOWNS_OF_PROVENCE"></a>OLD TOWNS OF PROVENCE
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ Travellers journeying southward from Paris first meet with
+ olive-trees near Montdragon or Monsélimart&mdash;little towns,
+ with old historic names, upon the road to Orange. It is here that
+ we begin to feel ourselves within the land of Provence, where the
+ Romans found a second Italy, and where the autumn of their
+ antique civilisation was followed, almost without an intermediate
+ winter of barbarism, by the light and delicate springtime of
+ romance. Orange itself is full of Rome. Indeed, the ghost of the
+ dead empire seems there to be more real and living than the
+ actual flesh and blood of modern time, as represented by narrow
+ dirty streets and mean churches. It is the shell of the huge
+ theatre, hollowed from the solid hill, and fronted with a wall
+ that seems made rather to protect a city than to form a
+ sounding-board for a stage, which first tells us that we have
+ reached the old Arausio. Of all theatres this is the most
+ impressive, stupendous, indestructible, the Colosseum hardly
+ excepted; for in Rome herself we are prepared for something
+ gigantic, while in the insignificant Arausio&mdash;a sort of
+ antique Tewkesbury&mdash;to find such magnificence, durability,
+ and vastness, impresses one with a nightmare sense that the old
+ lioness of Empire can scarcely yet be dead. Standing before the
+ colossal, towering, amorphous precipice which formed the
+ background of the scena, we feel as if once more the
+ 'heart-shaking sound of Consul Romanus' might be heard; as if
+ Roman knights and deputies, arisen from the dead, with faces hard
+ and stern as those of the warriors carved on Trajan's frieze,
+ might take their seats beneath us in the orchestra, and, after
+ proclamation made, the mortmain of imperial Rome be laid upon the
+ comforts, liberties, and little gracefulnesses of our modern
+ life. Nor is it unpleasant to be startled from such reverie by
+ the voice of the old guardian upon the stage beneath, sonorously
+ devolving the vacuous Alexandrines with which he once welcomed
+ his ephemeral French emperor from Algiers. The little man is dim
+ with distance, eclipsed and swallowed up by the shadows and
+ grotesque fragments of the ruin in the midst of which he stands.
+ But his voice&mdash;thanks to the inimitable constructive art of
+ the ancient architect, which, even in the desolation of at least
+ thirteen centuries, has not lost its cunning-emerges from the
+ pigmy throat, and fills the whole vast hollow with its clear, if
+ tiny, sound. Thank heaven, there is no danger of Roman
+ resurrection here! The illusion is completely broken, and we turn
+ to gather the first violets of February, and to wonder at the
+ quaint postures of a praying mantis on the grass grown tiers and
+ porches fringed with fern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sense of Roman greatness which is so oppressive in Orange and
+ in many other parts of Provence, is not felt at Avignon. Here we
+ exchange the ghost of Imperial for the phantom of Ecclesiastical
+ Rome. The fixed epithet of Avignon is Papal; and as the express
+ train rushes over its bleak and wind-tormented plain, the heavy
+ dungeon-walls and battlemented towers of its palace fortress seem
+ to warn us off, and bid us quickly leave the Babylon of exiled
+ impious Antichrist. Avignon presents the bleakest, barest,
+ greyest scene upon a February morning, when the incessant mistral
+ is blowing, and far and near, upon desolate hillside and sandy
+ plain, the scanty trees are bent sideways, the crumbling castle
+ turrets shivering like bleached skeletons in the dry ungenial
+ air. Yet inside the town, all is not so dreary. The Papal palace,
+ with its terrible Glacière, its chapel painted by Simone Memmi,
+ its endless corridors and staircases, its torture-chamber,
+ funnel-shaped to drown and suffocate&mdash;so runs
+ tradition&mdash;the shrieks of wretches on the rack, is now a
+ barrack, filled with lively little French soldiers, whose
+ politeness, though sorely taxed, is never ruffled by the
+ introduction of inquisitive visitors into their dormitories,
+ eating-places, and drill-grounds. And strange, indeed, it is to
+ see the lines of neat narrow barrack beds, between which the
+ red-legged little men are shaving, polishing their guns, or
+ mending their trousers, in those vaulted halls of popes and
+ cardinals, those vast presence-chambers and audience-galleries,
+ where Urban entertained S. Catherine, where Rienzi came, a
+ prisoner, to be stared at. Pass by the Glacière with a shudder,
+ for it has still the reek of blood about it; and do not long
+ delay in the cheerless dungeon of Rienzi. Time and regimental
+ whitewash have swept these lurking-places of old crime very bare;
+ but the parable of the seven devils is true in more senses than
+ one, and the ghosts that return to haunt a deodorised,
+ disinfected, garnished sepulchre are almost more ghastly than
+ those which have never been disturbed from their old habitations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little by little the eye becomes accustomed to the bareness and
+ greyness of this Provençal landscape; and then we find that the
+ scenery round Avignon is eminently picturesque. The view from Les
+ Doms&mdash;which is a hill above the Pope's palace, the
+ Acropolis, as it were, of Avignon&mdash;embraces a wide stretch
+ of undulating champaign, bordered by low hills, and intersected
+ by the flashing waters of the majestic Rhone. Across the stream
+ stands Villeneuve, like a castle of romance, with its round stone
+ towers fronting the gates and battlemented walls of the Papal
+ city. A bridge used to connect the two towns, but it is now
+ broken. The remaining fragment is of solid build, resting on
+ great buttresses, one of which rises fantastically above the
+ bridge into a little chapel. Such, one might fancy, was the
+ bridge which Ariosto's Rodomonte kept on horse against the
+ Paladins of Charlemagne, when angered by the loss of his love.
+ Nor is it difficult to imagine Bradamante spurring up the slope
+ against him with her magic lance in rest, and tilting him into
+ the tawny waves beneath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On a clear October morning, when the vineyards are taking their
+ last tints of gold and crimson, and the yellow foliage of the
+ poplars by the river mingles with the sober greys of olive-trees
+ and willows, every square inch of this landscape, glittering as
+ it does with light and with colour, the more beautiful for its
+ subtlety and rarity, would make a picture. Out of many such
+ vignettes let us choose one. We are on the shore close by the
+ ruined bridge, the rolling muddy Rhone in front; beyond it, by
+ the towing-path, a tall strong cypress-tree rises beside a little
+ house, and next to it a crucifix twelve feet or more in height,
+ the Christ visible afar, stretched upon His red cross; arundo
+ donax is waving all around, and willows near; behind, far off,
+ soar the peaked hills, blue and pearled with clouds; past the
+ cypress, on the Rhone, comes floating a long raft, swift through
+ the stream, its rudder guided by a score of men: one standing
+ erect upon the prow bends forward to salute the cross; on flies
+ the raft, the tall reeds rustle, and the cypress sleeps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For those who have time to spare in going to or from the south it
+ is worth while to spend a day or two in the most comfortable and
+ characteristic of old French inns, the Hôtel de l'Europe, at
+ Avignon. Should it rain, the museum of the town is worth a visit.
+ It contains Horace Vernet's not uncelebrated picture of Mazeppa,
+ and another, less famous, but perhaps more interesting, by
+ swollen-cheeked David, the 'genius in convulsion,' as Carlyle has
+ christened him. His canvas is unfinished. Who knows what cry of
+ the Convention made the painter fling his palette down and leave
+ the masterpiece he might have spoiled? For in its way the picture
+ is a masterpiece. There lies Jean Barrad, drummer, aged fourteen,
+ slain in La Vendée, a true patriot, who, while his life-blood
+ flowed away, pressed the tricolor cockade to his heart, and
+ murmured 'Liberty!' David has treated his subject classically.
+ The little drummer-boy, though French enough in feature and in
+ feeling, lies, Greek-like, naked on the sand&mdash;a very
+ Hyacinth of the Republic, La Vendée's Ilioneus. The tricolor
+ cockade and the sentiment of upturned patriotic eyes are the only
+ indications of his being a hero in his teens, a citizen who
+ thought it sweet to die for France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fine weather a visit to Vaucluse should by no means be
+ omitted, not so much, perhaps, for Petrarch's sake as for the
+ interest of the drive, and for the marvel of the fountain of the
+ Sorgues. For some time after leaving Avignon you jog along the
+ level country between avenues of plane-trees; then comes a hilly
+ ridge, on which the olives, mulberries, and vineyards join their
+ colours and melt subtly into distant purple. After crossing this
+ we reach L'Isle, an island village girdled by the gliding
+ Sorgues, overshadowed with gigantic plane-boughs, and echoing to
+ the plash of water dripped from mossy fern-tufted millwheels.
+ Those who expect Petrarch's Sorgues to be some trickling poet's
+ rill emerging from a damp grotto, may well be astounded at the
+ rush and roar of this azure river so close upon its
+ fountain-head. It has a volume and an arrow-like rapidity that
+ communicate the feeling of exuberance and life. In passing, let
+ it not be forgotten that it was somewhere or other in this
+ 'chiaro fondo di Sorga,' as Carlyle describes, that Jourdain, the
+ hangman-hero of the Glacière, stuck fast upon his pony when
+ flying from his foes, and had his accursed life, by some
+ diabolical providence, spared for future butcheries. On we go
+ across the austere plain, between fields of madder, the red roots
+ of the 'garance' lying in swathes along the furrows. In front
+ rise ash-grey hills of barren rock, here and there crimsoned with
+ the leaves of the dwarf sumach. A huge cliff stands up and seems
+ to bar all passage. Yet the river foams in torrents at our side.
+ Whence can it issue? What pass or cranny in that precipice is
+ cloven for its escape? These questions grow in interest as we
+ enter the narrow defile of limestone rocks which leads to the
+ cliff-barrier, and find ourselves among the figs and olives of
+ Vaucluse. Here is the village, the little church, the ugly column
+ to Petrarch's memory, the inn, with its caricatures of Laura, and
+ its excellent trout, the bridge and the many-flashing, eddying
+ Sorgues, lashed by millwheels, broken by weirs, divided in its
+ course, channelled and dyked, yet flowing irresistibly and
+ undefiled. Blue, purple, greened by moss and water-weeds,
+ silvered by snow-white pebbles, on its pure smooth bed the river
+ runs like elemental diamond, so clear and fresh. The rocks on
+ either side are grey or yellow, terraced into oliveyards, with
+ here and there a cypress, fig, or mulberry tree. Soon the gardens
+ cease, and lentisk, rosemary, box, and ilex&mdash;shrubs of
+ Provence&mdash;with here and there a sumach out of reach, cling
+ to the hard stone. And so at last we are brought face to face
+ with the sheer impassable precipice. At its basement sleeps a
+ pool, perfectly untroubled; a lakelet in which the sheltering
+ rocks and nestling wild figs are glassed as in a mirror&mdash;a
+ mirror of blue-black water, like amethyst or fluor-spar&mdash;so
+ pure, so still, that where it laps the pebbles you can scarcely
+ say where air begins and water ends. This, then, is Petrarch's
+ 'grotto;' this is the fountain of Vaucluse. Up from its deep
+ reservoirs, from the mysterious basements of the mountain, wells
+ the silent stream; pauseless and motionless it fills its urn,
+ rises unruffled, glides until the brink is reached, then
+ overflows, and foams, and dashes noisily, a cataract, among the
+ boulders of the hills. Nothing at Vaucluse is more impressive
+ than the contrast between the tranquil silence of the fountain
+ and the roar of the released impetuous river. Here we can realise
+ the calm clear eyes of sculptured water-gods, their brimming
+ urns, their gushing streams, the magic of the mountain-born and
+ darkness-cradled flood. Or again, looking up at the sheer steep
+ cliff, 800 feet in height, and arching slightly roofwise, so that
+ no rain falls upon the cavern of the pool, we seem to see the
+ stroke of Neptune's trident, the hoof of Pegasus, the force of
+ Moses' rod, which cleft rocks and made water gush forth in the
+ desert. There is a strange fascination in the spot. As our eyes
+ follow the white pebble which cleaves the surface and falls
+ visibly, until the veil of azure is too thick for sight to
+ pierce, we feel as if some glamour were drawing us, like Hylas,
+ to the hidden caves. At least, we long to yield a prized and
+ precious offering to the spring, to grace the nymph of Vaucluse
+ with a pearl of price as token of our reverence and love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile nothing has been said about Petrarch, who himself said
+ much about the spring, and complained against those very nymphs
+ to whom we have in wish, at least, been scattering jewels, that
+ they broke his banks and swallowed up his gardens every winter.
+ At Vaucluse Petrarch loved, and lived, and sang. He has made
+ Vaucluse famous, and will never be forgotten there. But for the
+ present the fountain is even more attractive than the memory of
+ the poet.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The change from Avignon to Nismes is very trying to the latter
+ place; for Nismes is not picturesquely or historically
+ interesting. It is a prosperous modern French town with two
+ almost perfect Roman monuments&mdash;Les Arènes and the Maison
+ Carrée. The amphitheatre is a complete oval, visible at one
+ glance. Its smooth white stone, even where it has not been
+ restored, seems unimpaired by age; and Charles Martel's
+ conflagration, when he burned the Saracen hornet's nest inside
+ it, has only blackened the outer walls and arches venerably.
+ Utility and perfect adaptation of means to ends form the beauty
+ of Roman buildings. The science of construction and large
+ intelligence displayed in them, their strength, simplicity,
+ solidity, and purpose, are their glory. Perhaps there is only one
+ modern edifice&mdash;Palladio's Palazzo della Ragione at
+ Vicenza&mdash;which approaches the dignity and loftiness of Roman
+ architecture; and this it does because of its absolute freedom
+ from ornament, the vastness of its design, and the durability of
+ its material. The temple, called the Maison Carrée, at Nismes, is
+ also very perfect, and comprehended at one glance. Light,
+ graceful, airy, but rather thin and narrow, it reminds one of the
+ temple of Fortuna Virilis at Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if Nismes itself is not picturesque, its environs contain the
+ wonderful Pont du Gard. A two or three hours' drive leads through
+ a desolate country to the valley of the Cardon, where suddenly,
+ at a turn of the road, one comes upon the aqueduct. It is not
+ within the scope of words to describe the impression produced by
+ those vast arches, row above row, cutting the deep blue sky. The
+ domed summer clouds sailing across them are comprehended in the
+ gigantic span of their perfect semicircles, which seem rather to
+ have been described by Miltonic compasses of Deity than by merely
+ human mathematics. Yet, standing beneath one of the vaults and
+ looking upward, you may read Roman numerals in order from I. to
+ X., which prove their human origin well enough. Next to their
+ strength, regularity, and magnitude, the most astonishing point
+ about this triple tier of arches, piled one above the other to a
+ height of 180 feet above a brawling stream between two barren
+ hills, is their lightness. The arches are not thick; the causeway
+ on the top is only just broad enough for three men to walk
+ abreast. So smooth and perpendicular are the supporting walls
+ that scarcely a shrub or tuft of grass has grown upon the
+ aqueduct in all these years. And yet the huge fabric is
+ strengthened by no buttress, has needed no repair. This lightness
+ of structure, combined with such prodigious durability, produces
+ the strongest sense of science and self-reliant power in the men
+ who designed it. None but Romans could have built such a
+ monument, and have set it in such a place&mdash;a wilderness of
+ rock and rolling hill, scantily covered with low brushwood, and
+ browsed over by a few sheep&mdash;for such a purpose, too, in
+ order to supply Nemausus with pure water. The modern town does
+ pretty well without its water; but here subsists the civilisation
+ of eighteen centuries past intact: the human labour yet remains,
+ the measuring, contriving mind of man, shrinking from no
+ obstacles, spanning the air, and in one edifice combining
+ gigantic strength and perfect beauty. It is impossible not to
+ echo Rousseau's words in such a place, and to say with him: 'Le
+ retentissement de mes pas dans ces immenses voûtes me faisait
+ croire entendre la forte voix de ceux qui les avaient bâties. Je
+ me perdais comme un insecte dans cette immensité. Je sentais,
+ tout en me faisant petit, je ne sais quoi qui m'élevait l'âme; et
+ je me disais en soupirant, Que ne suis-je né Romain!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is nothing at Arles which produces the same deep and
+ indelible impression. Yet Arles is a far more interesting town
+ than Nismes, partly because of the Rhone delta which begins
+ there, partly because of its ruinous antiquity, and partly also
+ because of the strong local character of its population. The
+ amphitheatre of Arles is vaster and more sublime in its
+ desolation than the tidy theatre at Nismes; the crypts, and dens,
+ and subterranean passages suggest all manner of speculation as to
+ the uses to which they may have been appropriated; while the
+ broken galleries outside, intricate and black and cavernous, like
+ Piranesi's etchings of the 'Carceri,' present the wildest
+ pictures of greatness in decay, fantastic dilapidation. The ruins
+ of the smaller theatre, again, with their picturesquely grouped
+ fragments and their standing columns, might be sketched for a
+ frontispiece to some dilettante work on classical antiquities.
+ For the rest, perhaps the Aliscamps, or ancient Roman
+ burial-ground, is the most interesting thing at Arles, not only
+ because of Dante's celebrated lines in the canto of
+ 'Farinata:'&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ Si come ad Arli ove 'l Rodano stagna,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fanno i sepolcri tutto 'l loco varo;
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ but also because of the intrinsic picturesqueness of this avenue
+ of sepulchres beneath green trees upon a long soft grassy field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as at Avignon and Nismes, so also at Arles, one of the chief
+ attractions of the place lies at a distance, and requires a
+ special expedition. The road to Les Baux crosses a true Provençal
+ desert where one realises the phrase, 'Vieux comme les rochers de
+ Provence,'&mdash;a wilderness of grey stone, here and there worn
+ into cart-tracks, and tufted with rosemary, box, lavender, and
+ lentisk. On the way it passes the Abbaye de Mont Majeur, a ruin
+ of gigantic size, embracing all periods of architecture; where
+ nothing seems to flourish now but henbane and the wild cucumber,
+ or to breathe but a mumble-toothed and terrible old hag. The ruin
+ stands above a desolate marsh, its vast Italian buildings of
+ Palladian splendour looking more forlorn in their decay than the
+ older and austerer mediĉval towers, which rise up proud and
+ patient and defiantly erect beneath the curse of time. When at
+ length what used to be the castle town of Les Baux is reached,
+ you find a naked mountain of yellow sandstone, worn away by
+ nature into bastions and buttresses and coigns of vantage,
+ sculptured by ancient art into palaces and chapels, battlements
+ and dungeons. Now art and nature are confounded in one ruin.
+ Blocks of masonry lie cheek by jowl with masses of the rough-hewn
+ rock; fallen cavern vaults are heaped round fragments of
+ fan-shaped spandrel and clustered column-shaft; the doors and
+ windows of old pleasure-rooms are hung with ivy and wild fig for
+ tapestry; winding staircases start midway upon the cliff, and
+ lead to vacancy. High overhead suspended in mid-air hang
+ chambers&mdash;lady's bower or poet's singing-room&mdash;now
+ inaccessible, the haunt of hawks and swallows. Within this rocky
+ honeycomb&mdash;'cette ville en monolithe,' as it has been aptly
+ called, for it is literally scooped out of one mountain
+ block&mdash;live about two hundred poor people, foddering their
+ wretched goats at carved piscina and stately sideboards, erecting
+ mud beplastered hovels in the halls of feudal princes. Murray is
+ wrong in calling the place a mediĉval town in its original state,
+ for anything more purely ruinous, more like a decayed old cheese,
+ cannot possibly be conceived. The living only inhabit the tombs
+ of the dead. At the end of the last century, when revolutionary
+ effervescence was beginning to ferment, the people of Arles swept
+ all its feudality away, defacing the very arms upon the town
+ gate, and trampling the palace towers to dust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The castle looks out across a vast extent of plain over Arles,
+ the stagnant Rhone, the Camargue, and the salt pools of the
+ lingering sea. In old days it was the eyrie of an eagle race
+ called Seigneurs of Les Baux; and whether they took their title
+ from the rock, or whether, as genealogists would have it, they
+ gave the name of Oriental Balthazar&mdash;their reputed ancestor,
+ one of the Magi&mdash;to the rock itself, remains a mystery not
+ greatly worth the solving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anyhow, here they lived and flourished, these feudal princes,
+ bearing for their ensign a silver comet of sixteen rays upon a
+ field of gules&mdash;themselves a comet race, baleful to the
+ neighbouring lowlands, blazing with lurid splendour over wide
+ tracts of country, a burning, raging, fiery-souled, swift-handed
+ tribe, in whom a flame unquenchable glowed from son to sire
+ through twice five hundred years until, in the sixteenth century,
+ they were burned out, and nothing remained but
+ cinders&mdash;these broken ruins of their eyrie, and some outworn
+ and dusty titles. Very strange are the fate and history of these
+ same titles: King of Arles, for instance, savouring of troubadour
+ and high romance; Prince of Tarentum, smacking of old plays and
+ Italian novels; Prince of Orange, which the Nassaus, through the
+ Châlons, seized in all its emptiness long after the real
+ principality had passed away, and came therewith to sit on
+ England's throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Les Baux in their heyday were patterns of feudal nobility.
+ They warred incessantly with Counts of Provence, archbishops and
+ burghers of Arles, Queens of Naples, Kings of Aragon. Crusading,
+ pillaging, betraying, spending their substance on the sword, and
+ buying it again by deeds of valour or imperial acts of favour,
+ tuning troubadour harps, presiding at courts of love,&mdash;they
+ filled a large page in the history of Southern France. The Les
+ Baux were very superstitious. In the fulness of their prosperity
+ they restricted the number of their dependent towns, or <i>places
+ baussenques</i>, to seventy-nine, because these numbers in
+ combination were thought to be of good omen to their house. Beral
+ des Baux, Seigneur of Marseilles, was one day starting on a
+ journey with his whole force to Avignon. He met an old woman
+ herb-gathering at daybreak, and said, 'Mother, hast thou seen a
+ crow or other bird?' 'Yea,' answered the crone, 'on the trunk of
+ a dead willow.' Beral counted upon his fingers the day of the
+ year, and turned bridle. With troubadours of name and note they
+ had dealings, but not always to their own advantage, as the
+ following story testifies. When the Baux and Berengers were
+ struggling for the countship of Provence, Raymond Berenger, by
+ his wife's counsel, went, attended by troubadours, to meet the
+ Emperor Frederick at Milan. There he sued for the investiture and
+ ratification of Provence. His troubadours sang and charmed
+ Frederick; and the Emperor, for the joy he had in them, wrote his
+ celebrated lines beginning&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ Plas mi cavalier Francez.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ And when Berenger made his request he met with no refusal.
+ Hearing thereof, the lords of Baux came down in wrath with a
+ clangour of armed men. But music had already gained the day; and
+ where the Phoebus of Provence had shone, the Ĉolus of
+ storm-shaken Les Baux was powerless. Again, when Blacas, a knight
+ of Provence, died, the great Sordello chanted one of his most
+ fiery hymns, bidding the princes of Christendom flock round and
+ eat the heart of the dead lord. 'Let Rambaude des Baux,' cries
+ the bard, with a sarcasm that is clearly meant, but at this
+ distance almost unintelligible, 'take also a good piece, for she
+ is fair and good and truly virtuous; let her keep it well who
+ knows so well to husband her own weal.' But the poets were not
+ always adverse to the house of Baux. Fouquet, the beautiful and
+ gentle melodist whom Dante placed in paradise, served Adelaisie,
+ wife of Berald, with long service of unhappy love, and wrote upon
+ her death 'The Complaint of Berald des Baux for Adelaisie.'
+ Guillaume de Cabestan loved Berangère des Baux, and was so loved
+ by her that she gave him a philtre to drink, whereof he sickened
+ and grew mad. Many more troubadours are cited as having
+ frequented the castle of Les Baux, and among the members of the
+ princely house were several poets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of them were renowned for beauty. We hear of a Cécile,
+ called Passe Rose, because of her exceeding loveliness; also of
+ an unhappy François, who, after passing eighteen years in prison,
+ yet won the grace and love of Joan of Naples by his charms. But
+ the real temper of this fierce tribe was not shown among
+ troubadours, or in the courts of love and beauty. The stern and
+ barren rock from which they sprang, and the comet of their
+ scutcheon, are the true symbols of their nature. History records
+ no end of their ravages and slaughters. It is a tedious catalogue
+ of blood&mdash;how one prince put to fire and sword the whole
+ town of Courthezon; how another was stabbed in prison by his
+ wife; how a third besieged the castle of his niece, and sought to
+ undermine her chamber, knowing her the while to be in childbed;
+ how a fourth was flayed alive outside the walls of Avignon. There
+ is nothing terrible, splendid, and savage, belonging to feudal
+ history, of which an example may not be found in the annals of
+ Les Baux, as narrated by their chronicler, Jules Canonge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However abrupt may seem the transition from these memories of the
+ ancient nobles of Les Baux to mere matters of travel and
+ picturesqueness, it would be impossible to take leave of the old
+ towns of Provence without glancing at the cathedrals of S.
+ Trophime at Arles, and of S. Gilles&mdash;a village on the border
+ of the dreary flamingo-haunted Camargue. Both of these buildings
+ have porches splendidly encrusted with sculptures, half
+ classical, half mediĉval, marking the transition from ancient to
+ modern art. But that of S. Gilles is by far the richer and more
+ elaborate. The whole façade of this church is one mass of
+ intricate decoration; Norman arches and carved lions, like those
+ of Lombard architecture, mingling fantastically with Greek
+ scrolls of fruit and flowers, with elegant Corinthian columns
+ jutting out upon the church steps, and with the old conventional
+ wave-border that is called Etruscan in our modern jargon. From
+ the midst of florid fret and foliage lean mild faces of saints
+ and Madonnas. Symbols of evangelists with half-human, half-animal
+ eyes and wings, are interwoven with the leafy bowers of cupids.
+ Grave apostles stand erect beneath acanthus wreaths that ought to
+ crisp the forehead of a laughing Faun or Bacchus. And yet so
+ full, exuberant, and deftly chosen are these various elements,
+ that there remains no sense of incongruity or discord. The
+ mediĉval spirit had much trouble to disentangle itself from
+ classic reminiscences; and fortunately for the picturesqueness of
+ S. Gilles, it did not succeed. How strangely different is the
+ result of this transition in the south from those severe and
+ rigid forms which we call Romanesque in Germany and Normandy and
+ England!
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="THE_CORNICE" id="THE_CORNICE"></a>THE CORNICE
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ It was a dull afternoon in February when we left Nice, and drove
+ across the mountains to Mentone. Over hill and sea hung a thick
+ mist. Turbia's Roman tower stood up in cheerless solitude,
+ wreathed round with driving vapour, and the rocky nest of Esa
+ seemed suspended in a chaos between sea and sky. Sometimes the
+ fog broke and showed us Villafranca, lying green and flat in the
+ deep blue below: sometimes a distant view of higher peaks swam
+ into sight from the shifting cloud. But the whole scene was
+ desolate. Was it for this that we had left our English home, and
+ travelled from London day and night? At length we reached the
+ edge of the cloud, and jingled down by Roccabruna and the
+ olive-groves, till one by one Mentone's villas came in sight, and
+ at last we found ourselves at the inn door. That night, and all
+ next day and the next night, we heard the hoarse sea beat and
+ thunder on the beach. The rain and wind kept driving from the
+ south, but we consoled ourselves with thinking that the
+ orange-trees and every kind of flower were drinking in the
+ moisture and waiting to rejoice in sunlight which would come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a Sunday morning when we woke and found that the rain had
+ gone, the sun was shining brightly on the sea, and a clear north
+ wind was blowing cloud and mist away. Out upon the hills we went,
+ not caring much what path we took; for everything was beautiful,
+ and hill and vale were full of garden walks. Through
+ lemon-groves,&mdash;pale, golden-tender trees,&mdash;and olives,
+ stretching their grey boughs against the lonely cottage tiles, we
+ climbed, until we reached the pines and heath above. Then I knew
+ the meaning of Theocritus for the first time. We found a well,
+ broad, deep, and clear, with green herbs growing at the bottom, a
+ runlet flowing from it down the rocky steps, maidenhair, black
+ adiantum, and blue violets, hanging from the brink and mirrored
+ in the water. This was just the well in <i>Hylas</i>. Theocritus
+ has been badly treated. They call him a court poet, dead to
+ Nature, artificial in his pictures. Yet I recognised this
+ fountain by his verse, just as if he had showed me the very spot.
+ Violets grow everywhere, of every shade, from black to lilac.
+ Their stalks are long, and the flowers 'nod' upon them, so that I
+ see how the Greeks could make them into chaplets&mdash;how
+ Lycidas wore his crown of white violets<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id=
+ "FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class=
+ "fnanchor">[5]</a> lying by the fireside elbow-deep in withered
+ asphodel, watching the chestnuts in the embers, and softly
+ drinking deep healths to Ageanax far off upon the waves. It is
+ impossible to go wrong in these valleys. They are cultivated to
+ the height of about five hundred feet above the sea, in terraces
+ laboriously built up with walls, earthed and manured, and
+ irrigated by means of tanks and aqueducts. Above this level,
+ where the virgin soil has not been yet reclaimed, or where the
+ winds of winter bring down freezing currents from the mountains
+ through a gap or gully of the lower hills, a tangled growth of
+ heaths and arbutus, and pines, and rosemarys, and myrtles,
+ continue the vegetation, till it finally ends in bare grey rocks
+ and peaks some thousand feet in height. Far above all signs of
+ cultivation on these arid peaks, you still may see villages and
+ ruined castles, built centuries ago for a protection from the
+ Moorish pirates. To these mountain fastnesses the people of the
+ coast retreated when they descried the sails of their foes on the
+ horizon. In Mentone, not very long ago, old men might be seen who
+ in their youth were said to have been taken captive by the Moors;
+ and many Arabic words have found their way into the patois of the
+ people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is something strangely fascinating in the sight of these
+ ruins on the burning rocks, with their black sentinel cypresses,
+ immensely tall and far away. Long years and rain and sunlight
+ have made these castellated eyries one with their native stone.
+ It is hard to trace in their foundations where Nature's
+ workmanship ends and where man's begins. What strange sights the
+ mountain villagers must see! The vast blue plain of the
+ unfurrowed deep, the fairy range of Corsica hung midway between
+ the sea and sky at dawn or sunset, the stars so close above their
+ heads, the deep dew-sprinkled valleys, the green pines! On
+ penetrating into one of these hill-fortresses, you find that it
+ is a whole village, with a church and castle and piazza, some few
+ feet square, huddled together on a narrow platform. We met one
+ day three magnates of Gorbio taking a morning stroll backwards
+ and forwards, up and down their tiny square. Vehemently
+ gesticulating, loudly chattering, they talked as though they had
+ not seen each other for ten years, and were but just unloading
+ their budgets of accumulated news. Yet these three men probably
+ had lived, eaten, drunk, and talked together from the cradle to
+ that hour: so true it is that use and custom quicken all our
+ powers, especially of gossiping and scandal-mongering. S. Agnese
+ is the highest and most notable of all these villages. The cold
+ and heat upon its absolutely barren rock must be alike
+ intolerable. In appearance it is not unlike the Etruscan towns of
+ Central Italy; but there is something, of course, far more
+ imposing in the immense antiquity and the historical associations
+ of a Narni, a Fiesole, a Chiusi, or an Orvieto. Sea-life and
+ rusticity strike a different note from that of those
+ Apennine-girdled seats of dead civilisation, in which nations,
+ arts, and religions have gone by and left but few
+ traces,&mdash;some wrecks of giant walls, some excavated tombs,
+ some shrines, where monks still sing and pray above the relics of
+ the founders of once world-shaking, now almost forgotten, orders.
+ Here at Mentone there is none of this; the idyllic is the true
+ note, and Theocritus is still alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not often scale these altitudes, but keep along the
+ terraced glades by the side of olive-shaded streams. The violets,
+ instead of peeping shyly from hedgerows, fall in ripples and
+ cascades over mossy walls among maidenhair and spleen-worts. They
+ are very sweet, and the sound of trickling water seems to mingle
+ with their fragrance in a most delicious harmony. Sound, smell,
+ and hue make up one chord, the sense of which is pure and perfect
+ peace. The country-people are kind, letting us pass everywhere,
+ so that we make our way along their aqueducts and through their
+ gardens, under laden lemon-boughs, the pale fruit dangling at our
+ ears, and swinging showers of scented dew upon us as we pass. Far
+ better, however, than lemon or orange trees, are the olives. Some
+ of these are immensely old, numbering, it is said, five
+ centuries, so that Petrarch may almost have rested beneath their
+ shade on his way to Avignon. These veterans are cavernous with
+ age: gnarled, split, and twisted trunks, throwing out arms that
+ break into a hundred branches; every branch distinct, and
+ feathered with innumerable sparks and spikelets of white, wavy,
+ greenish light. These are the leaves, and the stems are grey with
+ lichens. The sky and sea&mdash;two blues, one full of sunlight
+ and the other purple&mdash;set these fountains of perennial
+ brightness like gems in lapis-lazuli. At a distance the same
+ olives look hoary and soft&mdash;a veil of woven light or
+ luminous haze. When the wind blows their branches all one way,
+ they ripple like a sea of silver. But underneath their covert, in
+ the shade, grey periwinkles wind among the snowy drift of allium.
+ The narcissus sends its arrowy fragrance through the air, while,
+ far and wide, red anemones burn like fire, with interchange of
+ blue and lilac buds, white arums, orchises, and pink gladiolus.
+ Wandering there, and seeing the pale flowers, stars white and
+ pink and odorous, we dream of Olivet, or the grave Garden of the
+ Agony, and the trees seem always whispering of sacred things. How
+ people can blaspheme against the olives, and call them imitations
+ of the willow, or complain that they are shabby shrubs, I do not
+ know.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This shore would stand for Shelley's Island of Epipsychidion, or
+ the golden age which Empedocles describes, when the mild nations
+ worshipped Aphrodite with incense and the images of beasts and
+ yellow honey, and no blood was spilt upon her altars&mdash;when
+ 'the trees flourished with perennial leaves and fruit, and ample
+ crops adorned their boughs through all the year.' This even now
+ is literally true of the lemon-groves, which do not cease to
+ flower and ripen. Everything fits in to complete the reproduction
+ of Greek pastoral life. The goats eat cytisus and myrtle on the
+ shore; a whole flock gathered round me as I sat beneath a tuft of
+ golden green euphorbia the other day, and nibbled bread from my
+ hands. The frog still croaks by tank and fountain, 'whom the
+ Muses have ordained to sing for aye,' in spite of Bion's death.
+ The narcissus, anemone, and hyacinth still tell their tales of
+ love and death. Hesper still gazes on the shepherd from the
+ mountain-head. The slender cypresses still vibrate, the pines
+ murmur. Pan sleeps in noontide heat, and goat-herds and wayfaring
+ men lie down to slumber by the roadside, under olive-boughs in
+ which cicadas sing. The little villages high up are just as
+ white, the mountains just as grey and shadowy when evening falls.
+ Nothing is changed&mdash;except ourselves. I expect to find a
+ statue of Priapus or pastoral Pan, hung with wreaths of
+ flowers&mdash;the meal cake, honey, and spilt wine upon his
+ altar, and young boys and maidens dancing round. Surely, in some
+ far-off glade, by the side of lemon-grove or garden, near the
+ village, there must be still a pagan remnant of glad
+ Nature-worship. Surely I shall chance upon some Thyrsis piping in
+ the pine-tree shade, or Daphne flying from the arms of Phoebus.
+ So I dream until I come upon the Calvary set on a solitary
+ hillock, with its prayer-steps lending a wide prospect across the
+ olives and the orange-trees, and the broad valleys, to
+ immeasurable skies and purple seas. There is the iron cross, the
+ wounded heart, the spear, the reed, the nails, the crown of
+ thorns, the cup of sacrificial blood, the title, with its
+ superscription royal and divine. The other day we crossed a brook
+ and entered a lemon-field, rich with blossoms and carpeted with
+ red anemones. Everything basked in sunlight and glittered with
+ exceeding brilliancy of hue. A tiny white chapel stood in a
+ corner of the enclosure. Two iron-grated windows let me see
+ inside: it was a bare place, containing nothing but a wooden
+ praying-desk, black and worm-eaten, an altar with its candles and
+ no flowers, and above the altar a square picture brown with age.
+ On the floor were scattered several pence, and in a vase above
+ the holy-water vessel stood some withered hyacinths. As my sight
+ became accustomed to the gloom, I could see from the darkness of
+ the picture a pale Christ nailed to the cross with agonising
+ upward eyes and ashy aureole above the bleeding thorns. Thus I
+ stepped suddenly away from the outward pomp and bravery of nature
+ to the inward aspirations, agonies, and martyrdoms of
+ man&mdash;from Greek legends of the past to the real Christian
+ present&mdash;and I remembered that an illimitable prospect has
+ been opened to the world, that in spite of ourselves we must turn
+ our eyes heavenward, inward, to the infinite unseen beyond us and
+ within our souls. Nothing can take us back to Phoebus or to Pan.
+ Nothing can again identify us with the simple natural earth.
+ '<i>Une immense espérance a traversé la terre</i>,' and these
+ chapels, with their deep significances, lurk in the fair
+ landscape like the cares of real life among our dreams of art, or
+ like a fear of death and the hereafter in the midst of opera
+ music. It is a strange contrast. The worship of men in those old
+ times was symbolised by dances in the evening, banquets,
+ libations, and mirth-making. 'Euphrosyne' was alike the goddess
+ of the righteous mind and of the merry heart. Old withered women
+ telling their rosaries at dusk; belated shepherds crossing
+ themselves beneath the stars when they pass the chapel; maidens
+ weighed down with Margaret's anguish of unhappy love; youths
+ vowing their life to contemplation in secluded
+ cloisters,&mdash;these are the human forms which gather round
+ such chapels; and the motto of the worshippers consists in this,
+ 'Do often violence to thy desire.' In the Tyrol we have seen
+ whole villages praying together at daybreak before their day's
+ work, singing their <i>Miserere</i> and their <i>Gloria</i> and
+ their <i>Dies Irĉ</i>, to the sound of crashing organs and
+ jangling bells; appealing in the midst of Nature's splendour to
+ the Spirit which is above Nature, which dwells in darkness rather
+ than light, and loves the yearnings and contentions of our soul
+ more than its summer gladness and peace. Even the olives here
+ tell more to us of Olivet and the Garden than of the oil-press
+ and the wrestling-ground. The lilies carry us to the Sermon on
+ the Mount, and teach humility, instead of summoning up some
+ legend of a god's love for a mortal. The hillside tanks and
+ running streams, and water-brooks swollen by sudden rain, speak
+ of Palestine. We call the white flowers stars of Bethlehem. The
+ large sceptre-reed; the fig-tree, lingering in barrenness when
+ other trees are full of fruit; the locust-beans of the
+ Caruba:&mdash;for one suggestion of Greek idylls there is yet
+ another, of far deeper, dearer power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But who can resist the influence of Greek ideas at the Cap S.
+ Martin? Down to the verge of the sea stretch the tall, twisted
+ stems of Levant pines, and on the caverned limestone breaks the
+ deep blue water. Dazzling as marble are these rocks, pointed and
+ honeycombed with constant dashing of the restless sea, tufted
+ with corallines and grey and purple seaweeds in the little pools,
+ but hard and dry and rough above tide level. Nor does the sea
+ always lap them quietly; for the last few days it has come
+ tumbling in, roaring and raging on the beach with huge waves
+ crystalline in their transparency, and maned with fleecy spray.
+ Such were the rocks and such the swell of breakers when Ulysses
+ grasped the shore after his long swim. Samphire, very salt and
+ fragrant, grows in the rocky honeycomb; then lentisk and
+ beach-loving myrtle, both exceeding green and bushy; then
+ rosemary and euphorbia above the reach of spray. Fishermen, with
+ their long reeds, sit lazily perched upon black rocks above blue
+ waves, sunning themselves as much as seeking sport. One distant
+ tip of snow, seen far away behind the hills, reminds us of an
+ alien, unremembered winter. While dreaming there, this fancy came
+ into my head: Polyphemus was born yonder in the Gorbio Valley.
+ There he fed his sheep and goats, and on the hills found scanty
+ pasture for his kine. He and his mother lived in the white house
+ by the cypress near the stream where tulips grow. Young Galatea,
+ nursed in the caverns of these rocks, white as the foam, and shy
+ as the sea fishes, came one morning up the valley to pick
+ mountain hyacinths, and little Polyphemus led the way. He knew
+ where violets and sweet narcissus grew, as well as Galatea where
+ pink coralline and spreading sea-flowers with their waving arms.
+ But Galatea, having filled her lap with bluebells, quite forgot
+ the leaping kids, and piping Cyclops, and cool summer caves, and
+ yellow honey, and black ivy, and sweet vine, and water cold as
+ Alpine snow. Down the swift streamlet she danced laughingly, and
+ made herself once more bitter with the sea. But Polyphemus
+ remained,&mdash;hungry, sad, gazing on the barren sea, and piping
+ to the mockery of its waves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Filled with these Greek fancies, it is strange to come upon a
+ little sandstone dell furrowed by trickling streams and overgrown
+ with English primroses; or to enter the village of Roccabruna,
+ with its mediĉval castle and the motto on its walls, <i>Tempora
+ labuntur tacitisque senescimus annis</i>. A true motto for the
+ town, where the butcher comes but once a week, and where men and
+ boys, and dogs, and palms, and lemon-trees grow up and flourish
+ and decay in the same hollow of the sunny mountain-side. Into the
+ hard conglomerate of the hill the town is built; house walls and
+ precipices mortised into one another, dovetailed by the art of
+ years gone by, and riveted by age. The same plants grow from both
+ alike&mdash;spurge, cistus, rue, and henbane, constant to the
+ desolation of abandoned dwellings. From the castle you look down
+ on roofs, brown tiles and chimney-pots, set one above the other
+ like a big card-castle. Each house has its foot on a neighbour's
+ neck, and its shoulder set against the native stone. The streets
+ meander in and out, and up and down, overarched and balconied,
+ but very clean. They swarm with children, healthy, happy, little
+ monkeys, who grow fat on salt fish and yellow polenta, with oil
+ and sun <i>ad libitum</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At night from Roccabruna you may see the flaring gas-lamps of the
+ gaming-house at Monaco, that Armida's garden of the nineteenth
+ century. It is the sunniest and most sheltered spot of all the
+ coast. Long ago Lucan said of Monaco, '<i>Non Corus in illum jus
+ habet aut Zephyrus</i>;' winter never comes to nip its tangled
+ cactuses, and aloes, and geraniums. The air swoons with the scent
+ of lemon-groves; tall palm-trees wave their graceful branches by
+ the shore; music of the softest and the loudest swells from the
+ palace; cool corridors and sunny seats stand ready for the
+ noontide heat or evening calm; without, are olive-gardens, green
+ and fresh and full of flowers. But the witch herself holds her
+ high court and never-ending festival of sin in the painted
+ banquet-halls and among the green tables.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us leave this scene and turn with the country-folk of
+ Roccabruna to S. Michael's Church at Mentone. High above the sea
+ it stands, and from its open doors you look across the mountains
+ with their olive-trees. Inside the church is a seething mass of
+ country-folk and townspeople, mostly women, and these almost all
+ old, but picturesque beyond description; kerchiefs of every
+ colour, wrinkles of every shape and depth, skins of every tone of
+ brown and yellow, voices of every gruffness, shrillness,
+ strength, and weakness. Wherever an empty corner can be found, it
+ is soon filled by tottering babies and mischievous children. The
+ country-women come with their large dangling earrings of thin
+ gold, wearing pink tulips or lemon-buds in their black hair. A
+ low buzz of gossiping and mutual recognition keeps the air alive.
+ The whole service seems a holiday&mdash;a general enjoyment of
+ gala dresses and friendly greetings, very different from the
+ silence, immobility, and <i>noli me tangere</i> aspect of an
+ English congregation. Over all drones, rattles, snores, and
+ shrieks the organ; wailing, querulous, asthmatic, incomplete, its
+ everlasting nasal chant&mdash;always beginning, never ending,
+ through a range of two or three notes ground into one monotony.
+ The voices of the congregation rise and sink above it. These
+ southern people, like the Arabs, the Apulians, and the Spaniards,
+ seem to find their music in a hurdy-gurdy swell of sound. The
+ other day we met a little girl, walking and spinning, and singing
+ all the while, whose song was just another version of this chant.
+ It has a discontented plaintive wail, as if it came from some
+ vast age, and were a cousin of primeval winds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first sight, by the side of Mentone, San Remo is sadly
+ prosaic. The valleys seem to sprawl, and the universal olives are
+ monotonously grey upon their thick clay soil. Yet the wealth of
+ flowers in the fat earth is wonderful. One might fancy oneself in
+ a weedy farm flower-bed invaded by stray oats and beans and
+ cabbages and garlic from the kitchen-garden. The country does not
+ suggest a single Greek idea. It has no form or outline&mdash;no
+ barren peaks, no spare and difficult vegetation. The beauty is
+ rich but tame&mdash;valleys green with oats and corn, blossoming
+ cherry-trees, and sweet bean-fields, figs coming into leaf, and
+ arrowy bay-trees by the side of sparkling streams: here and there
+ a broken aqueduct or rainbow bridge hung with maidenhair and
+ briar and clematis and sarsaparilla.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the cathedral church of San Siro on Good Friday they hang the
+ columns and the windows with black; they cover the pictures and
+ deface the altar; above the high altar they raise a crucifix, and
+ below they place a catafalque with the effigy of the dead Christ.
+ To this sad symbol they address their prayers and incense, chant
+ their 'litanies and lurries,' and clash the rattles, which
+ commemorate their rage against the traitor Judas. So far have we
+ already passed away from the Greek feeling of Mentone. As I
+ listened to the hideous din, I could not but remember the
+ Theocritean burial of Adonis. Two funeral beds prepared: two
+ feasts recurring in the springtime of the year. What a difference
+ beneath this superficial
+ similarity&mdash;&kappa;&alpha;&lambda;&omicron;&sigmaf;
+ &nbsp;&nu;&#941;&kappa;&upsilon;&sigmaf;&nbsp;&omicron;&iota;&#901;&alpha;
+ &nbsp;&kappa;&alpha;&theta;&epsilon;&#973;&delta;&omega;&nu;&mdash;
+ <i>attritus ĉgrâ macie</i>. But the fast of Good Friday is
+ followed by the festival of Easter. That, after all, is the chief
+ difference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After leaving the cathedral we saw a pretty picture in a dull old
+ street of San Remo&mdash;three children leaning from a window,
+ blowing bubbles. The bubbles floated down the street, of every
+ colour, round and trembling, like the dreams of life which
+ children dream. The town is certainly most picturesque. It
+ resembles a huge glacier of houses poured over a wedge of rock,
+ running down the sides and along the ridge, and spreading itself
+ into a fan between two torrents on the shore below. House over
+ house, with balcony and staircase, convent turret and church
+ tower, palm-trees and olives, roof gardens and clinging
+ creepers&mdash;this white cataract of buildings streams downward
+ from the lazar-house, and sanctuary, and sandstone quarries on
+ the hill. It is a mass of streets placed close above each other,
+ and linked together with arms and arches of solid masonry, as a
+ protection from the earthquakes, which are frequent at San Remo.
+ The walls are tall, and form a labyrinth of gloomy passages and
+ treacherous blind alleys, where the Moors of old might meet with
+ a ferocious welcome. Indeed, San Remo is a fortress as well as a
+ dwelling-place. Over its gateways may still be traced the pipes
+ for molten lead, and on its walls the eyeloops for arrows, with
+ brackets for the feet of archers. Masses of building have been
+ shaken down by earthquakes. The ruins of what once were houses
+ gape with blackened chimneys and dark forlorn cellars; mazes of
+ fungus and unhealthy weeds among the still secure habitations.
+ Hardly a ray of light penetrates the streets; one learns the
+ meaning of the Italian word <i>uggia</i> from their cold and
+ gloom. During the day they are deserted by every one but babies
+ and witchlike old women&mdash;some gossiping, some sitting vacant
+ at the house door, some spinning or weaving, or minding little
+ children&mdash;ugly and ancient as are their own homes, yet clean
+ as are the streets. The younger population goes afield; the men
+ on mules laden for the hills, the women burdened like mules with
+ heavy and disgusting loads. It is an exceptionally good-looking
+ race; tall, well-grown, and strong.&mdash;But to the streets
+ again. The shops in the upper town are few, chiefly wine-booths
+ and stalls for the sale of salt fish, eggs, and bread, or
+ cobblers' and tinkers' ware. Notwithstanding the darkness of
+ their dwellings, the people have a love of flowers; azaleas lean
+ from their windows, and vines, carefully protected by a sheath of
+ brickwork, climb the six stories, to blossom out into a pergola
+ upon the roof. Look at that mass of greenery and colours, dimly
+ seen from beneath, with a yellow cat sunning herself upon the
+ parapet! To reach such a garden and such sunlight who would not
+ mount six stories and thread a labyrinth of passages? I should
+ prefer a room upon the east side of the town, looking southward
+ to the Molo and the sea, with a sound of water beneath, and a
+ palm soaring up to fan my window with his feathery leaves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shrines are little spots of brightness in the gloomy streets.
+ Madonna with a sword; Christ holding His pierced and bleeding
+ heart; l'Eterno Padre pointing to the dead Son stretched upon His
+ knee; some souls in torment; S. Roch reminding us of old plagues
+ by the spot upon his thigh;&mdash;these are the symbols of the
+ shrines. Before them stand rows of pots filled with gillyflowers,
+ placed there by pious, simple, praying hands&mdash;by maidens
+ come to tell their sorrows to our Lady rich in sorrow, by old
+ women bent and shrivelled, in hopes of paradise or gratitude for
+ happy days, when Madonna kept Cecchino faithful to his home, or
+ saved the baby from the fever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lower down, between the sea and the hill, is the municipal,
+ aristocratic, ecclesiastical quarter of San Remo. There stands
+ the Palace Borea&mdash;a truly princely pile, built in the last
+ Renaissance style of splendour, with sea-nymphs and dolphins, and
+ satyric heads, half lips, half leafage, round about its doors and
+ windows. Once it formed the dwelling of a feudal family, but now
+ it is a roomy anthill of a hundred houses, shops, and offices,
+ the Boreas of to-day retaining but a portion of one flat, and
+ making profit of the rest. There, too, are the barracks and the
+ syndic's hall; the Jesuits' school, crowded with boys and girls;
+ the shops for clothes, confectionery, and trinkets; the piazza,
+ with its fountain and tasselled planes, and flowery
+ chestnut-trees, a mass of greenery. Under these trees the idlers
+ lounge, boys play at leap-frog, men at bowls. Women in San Remo
+ work all day, but men and boys play for the most part at bowls or
+ toss-penny or leap-frog or morra. San Siro, the cathedral, stands
+ at one end of the square. Do not go inside; it has a sickly smell
+ of immemorial incense and garlic, undefinable and horrible. Far
+ better looks San Siro from the parapet above the torrent. There
+ you see its irregular half-Gothic outline across a tangle of
+ lemon-trees and olives. The stream rushes by through high walls,
+ covered with creepers, spanned by ferny bridges, feathered by one
+ or two old tufty palms. And over all rises the ancient turret of
+ San Siro, like a Spanish giralda, a minaret of pinnacles and
+ pyramids and dome bubbles, with windows showing heavy bells, old
+ clocks, and sundials painted on the walls, and a cupola of green
+ and yellow tiles like serpent-scales, to crown the whole. The sea
+ lies beyond, and the house-roofs break it with grey horizontal
+ lines. Then there are convents, legions of them, large white
+ edifices, Jesuitical apparently for the most part, clanging
+ importunate bells, leaning rose-blossoms and cypress-boughs over
+ their jealous walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, there is the port&mdash;the mole running out into the
+ sea, the quay planted with plane-trees, and the
+ fishing-boats&mdash;by which San Remo is connected with the naval
+ glory of the past&mdash;with the Riviera that gave birth to
+ Columbus&mdash;with the Liguria that the Dorias ruled&mdash;with
+ the great name of Genoa. The port is empty enough now; but from
+ the pier you look back on San Remo and its circling hills, a
+ jewelled town set in illimitable olive greyness. The quay seems
+ also to be the cattle-market. There the small buff cows of North
+ Italy repose after their long voyage or march, kneeling on the
+ sandy ground or rubbing their sides against the wooden cross awry
+ with age and shorn of all its symbols. Lambs frisk among the
+ boats; impudent kids nibble the drooping ears of patient mules.
+ Hinds in white jackets and knee-breeches made of skins, lead
+ shaggy rams and fiercely bearded goats, ready to butt at every
+ barking dog, and always seeking opportunities of flight. Farmers
+ and parish priests in black petticoats feel the cattle and
+ dispute about the price, or whet their bargains with a draught of
+ wine. Meanwhile the nets are brought on shore glittering with the
+ fry of sardines, which are cooked like whitebait, with
+ cuttlefish&mdash;amorphous objects stretching shiny feelers on
+ the hot dry sand&mdash;and prickly purple eggs of the sea-urchin.
+ Women go about their labour through the throng, some carrying
+ stones upon their heads, or unloading boats and bearing planks of
+ wood in single file, two marching side by side beneath one load
+ of lime, others scarcely visible under a stack of oats, another
+ with her baby in its cradle fast asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ San Remo has an elder brother among the hills, which is called
+ San Romolo, after one of the old bishops of Genoa. Who San Remo
+ was is buried in remote antiquity; but his town has prospered,
+ while of San Romolo nothing remains but a ruined hill-convent
+ among pine-trees. The old convent is worth visiting. Its road
+ carries you into the heart of the sierra which surrounds San
+ Remo, a hill-country something like the Jura, undulating and
+ green to the very top with maritime pines and pinasters. Riding
+ up, you hear all manner of Alpine sounds; brawling streams,
+ tinkling cowbells, and herdsmen calling to each other on the
+ slopes. Beneath you lies San Remo, scarcely visible; and over it
+ the great sea rises ever so far into the sky, until the white
+ sails hang in air, and cloud and sea-line melt into each other
+ indistinguishably. Spanish chestnuts surround the monastery with
+ bright blue gentians, hepaticas, forget-me-nots, and primroses
+ about their roots. The house itself is perched on a knoll with
+ ample prospect to the sea and to the mountains, very near to
+ heaven, within a theatre of noble contemplations and
+ soul-stirring thoughts. If Mentone spoke to me of the poetry of
+ Greek pastoral life, this convent speaks of mediĉval
+ monasticism&mdash;of solitude with God, above, beneath, and all
+ around, of silence and repose from agitating cares, of continuity
+ in prayer, and changelessness of daily life. Some precepts of the
+ <i>Imitatio</i> came into my mind: 'Be never wholly idle; read or
+ write, pray or meditate, or work with diligence for the common
+ needs.' 'Praiseworthy is it for the religious man to go abroad
+ but seldom, and to seem to shun, and keep his eyes from men.'
+ 'Sweet is the cell when it is often sought, but if we gad about,
+ it wearies us by its seclusion.' Then I thought of the monks so
+ living in this solitude; their cell windows looking across the
+ valley to the sea, through summer and winter, under sun and
+ stars. Then would they read or write, what long melodious hours!
+ or would they pray, what stations on the pine-clad hills! or
+ would they toil, what terraces to build and plant with corn, what
+ flowers to tend, what cows to milk and pasture, what wood to cut,
+ what fir-cones to gather for the winter fire! or should they
+ yearn for silence, silence from their comrades of the solitude,
+ what whispering galleries of God, where never human voice breaks
+ loudly, but winds and streams and lonely birds disturb the awful
+ stillness! In such a hermitage as this, only more wild, lived S.
+ Francis of Assisi, among the Apennines.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id=
+ "FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class=
+ "fnanchor">[7]</a> It was there that he learned the tongues of
+ beasts and birds, and preached them sermons. Stretched for hours
+ motionless on the bare rocks, coloured like them and rough like
+ them in his brown peasant's serge, he prayed and meditated, saw
+ the vision of Christ crucified, and planned his order to
+ regenerate a vicious age. So still he lay, so long, so like a
+ stone, so gentle were his eyes, so kind and low his voice, that
+ the mice nibbled breadcrumbs from his wallet, lizards ran over
+ him, and larks sang to him in the air. There, too, in those long,
+ solitary vigils, the Spirit of God came upon him, and the spirit
+ of Nature was even as God's Spirit, and he sang: 'Laudato sia Dio
+ mio Signore, con tutte le creature, specialmente messer lo frate
+ sole; per suor luna, e per le stelle; per frate vento e per
+ l'aire, e nuvolo, e sereno e ogni tempo.' Half the value of this
+ hymn would be lost were we to forget how it was written, in what
+ solitudes and mountains far from men, or to ticket it with some
+ abstract word like Pantheism. Pantheism it is not; but an
+ acknowledgment of that brotherhood, beneath the love of God, by
+ which the sun and moon and stars, and wind and air and cloud, and
+ clearness and all weather, and all creatures, are bound together
+ with the soul of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few, of course, were like S. Francis. Probably no monk of San
+ Romolo was inspired with his enthusiasm for humanity, or had his
+ revelation of the Divine Spirit inherent in the world. Still
+ fewer can have felt the ĉsthetic charm of Nature but most
+ vaguely. It was as much as they could boast, if they kept
+ steadily to the rule of their order, and attended to the concerns
+ each of his own soul. A terrible selfishness, if rightly
+ considered; but one which accorded with the delusion that this
+ world is a cave of care, the other world a place of torture or
+ undying bliss, death the prime object of our meditation, and
+ lifelong abandonment of our fellow-men the highest mode of
+ existence. Why, then, should monks, so persuaded of the riddle of
+ the earth, have placed themselves in scenes so beautiful? Why
+ rose the Camaldolis and Chartreuses over Europe? white convents
+ on the brows of lofty hills, among the rustling boughs of
+ Vallombrosas, in the grassy meadows of Engelbergs,&mdash;always
+ the eyries of Nature's lovers, men smitten with the loveliness of
+ earth? There is surely some meaning in these poetic stations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is a sentence of the <i>Imitatio</i> which throws some light
+ upon the hymn of S. Francis and the sites of Benedictine
+ monasteries, by explaining the value of natural beauty for monks
+ who spent their life in studying death: 'If thy heart were right,
+ then would every creature be to thee a mirror of life, and a book
+ of holy doctrine. There is no creature so small and vile that
+ does not show forth the goodness of God.' With this sentence
+ bound about their foreheads, walked Fra Angelico and S. Francis.
+ To men like them the mountain valleys and the skies, and all that
+ they contained, were full of deep significance. Though they
+ reasoned '<i>de conditione humanĉ miseriĉ</i>,' and '<i>de
+ contemptu mundi</i>,' yet the whole world was a pageant of God's
+ glory, a testimony to His goodness. Their chastened senses, pure
+ hearts, and simple wills were as wings by which they soared above
+ the things of earth, and sent the music of their souls aloft with
+ every other creature in the symphony of praise. To them, as to
+ Blake, the sun was no mere blazing disc or ball, but 'an
+ innumerable company of the heavenly host singing, "Holy, holy,
+ holy is the Lord God Almighty."' To them the winds were brothers,
+ and the streams were sisters&mdash;brethren in common dependence
+ upon God their Father, brethren in common consecration to His
+ service, brethren by blood, brethren by vows of holiness.
+ Unquestioning faith rendered this world no puzzle; they
+ overlooked the things of sense because the spiritual things were
+ ever present, and as clear as day. Yet did they not forget that
+ spiritual things are symbolised by things of sense; and so the
+ smallest herb of grass was vital to their tranquil
+ contemplations. We who have lost sight of the invisible world,
+ who set our affections more on things of earth, fancy that
+ because these monks despised the world, and did not write about
+ its landscapes, therefore they were dead to its beauty. This is
+ mere vanity: the mountains, stars, seas, fields, and living
+ things were only swallowed up in the one thought of God, and made
+ subordinate to the awfulness of human destinies. We to whom hills
+ are hills, and seas are seas, and stars are ponderable
+ quantities, speak, write, and reason of them as of objects
+ interesting in themselves. The monks were less ostensibly
+ concerned about such things, because they only found in them the
+ vestibules and symbols of a hidden mystery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contrast between the Greek and mediĉval modes of regarding
+ Nature is not a little remarkable. Both Greeks and monks, judged
+ by nineteenth-century standards, were unobservant of natural
+ beauties. They make but brief and general remarks upon landscapes
+ and the like. The
+ &pi;&omicron;&nu;&tau;&#943;&omega;&nu;&nbsp;&tau;&epsilon;&nbsp;
+ &kappa;&upsilon;&mu;&#940;&tau;&omega;&nu;
+ &nbsp;&#940;&nu;&#942;&rho;&iota;&theta;&mu;&omicron;&nu;&nbsp;
+ &gamma;&#941;&lambda;&alpha;&sigma;&mu;&alpha;&nbsp; is very
+ rare. But the Greeks stopped at the threshold of Nature; the
+ forces they found there, the gods, were inherent in Nature, and
+ distinct. They did not, like the monks, place one spiritual
+ power, omnipotent and omnipresent, above all, and see in Nature
+ lessons of Divine government. We ourselves having somewhat
+ overstrained the latter point of view, are now apt to return
+ vaguely to Greek fancies. Perhaps, too, we talk so much about
+ scenery because it is scenery to us, and the life has gone out of
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot leave the Cornice without one word about a place which
+ lies between Mentone and San Remo. Bordighera has a beauty which
+ is quite distinct from both. Palms are its chief characteristics.
+ They lean against the garden walls, and feather the wells outside
+ the town, where women come with brazen pitchers to draw water. In
+ some of the marshy tangles of the plain, they spring from a thick
+ undergrowth of spiky leaves, and rear their tall aërial arms
+ against the deep blue background of the sea or darker purple of
+ the distant hills. White pigeons fly about among their branches,
+ and the air is loud with cooings and with rustlings, and the
+ hoarser croaking of innumerable frogs. Then, in the olive-groves
+ that stretch along the level shore, are labyrinths of rare and
+ curious plants, painted tulips and white periwinkles, flinging
+ their light of blossoms and dark glossy leaves down the swift
+ channels of the brawling streams. On each side of the rivulets
+ they grow, like sister cataracts of flowers instead of spray. At
+ night fresh stars come out along the coast, beneath the stars of
+ heaven; for you can see the lamps of Ventimiglia and Mentone and
+ Monaco, and, far away, the lighthouses upon the promontories of
+ Antibes and the Estrelles. At dawn, a vision of Corsica grows
+ from the sea. The island lies eighty miles away, but one can
+ trace the dark strip of irregular peaks glowing amid the gold and
+ purple of the rising sun. If the air is clear and bright, the
+ snows and overvaulting clouds which crown its mountains shine all
+ day, and glitter like an apparition in the bright blue sky.
+ 'Phantom fair,' half raised above the sea, it stands, as unreal
+ and transparent as the moon when seen in April sunlight, yet not
+ to be confounded with the shape of any cloud. If Mentone speaks
+ of Greek legends, and San Romolo restores the monastic past, we
+ feel ourselves at Bordighera transported to the East; and lying
+ under its tall palms can fancy ourselves at Tyre or Daphne, or in
+ the gardens of a Moslem prince.
+ </p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>
+ Note.&mdash;Dec. 1873. My old impressions are renewed and
+ confirmed by a third visit, after seven years, to this coast.
+ For purely idyllic loveliness, the Cornice is surpassed by
+ nothing in the South. A very few spots in Sicily, the road
+ between Castellammare and Amalfi, and the island of Corfu, are
+ its only rivals in this style of scenery. From Cannes to Sestri
+ is one continuous line of exquisitely modulated landscape
+ beauty, which can only be fully appreciated by travellers in
+ carriage or on foot.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="AJACCIO" id="AJACCIO"></a><i>AJACCIO</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ It generally happens that visitors to Ajaccio pass over from the
+ Cornice coast, leaving Nice at night, and waking about sunrise to
+ find themselves beneath the frowning mountains of Corsica. The
+ difference between the scenery of the island and the shores which
+ they have left is very striking. Instead of the rocky mountains
+ of the Cornice, intolerably dry and barren at their summits, but
+ covered at their base with villages and ancient towns and
+ olive-fields, Corsica presents a scene of solitary and peculiar
+ grandeur. The highest mountain-tops are covered with snow, and
+ beneath the snow-level to the sea they are as green as Irish or
+ as English hills, but nearly uninhabited and uncultivated.
+ Valleys of almost Alpine verdure are succeeded by tracts of
+ chestnut wood and scattered pines, or deep and flowery
+ brushwood&mdash;the 'maquis' of Corsica, which yields shelter to
+ its traditional outlaws and bandits. Yet upon these hillsides
+ there are hardly any signs of life; the whole country seems
+ abandoned to primeval wildness and the majesty of desolation.
+ Nothing can possibly be more unlike the smiling Riviera, every
+ square mile of which is cultivated like a garden, and every
+ valley and bay dotted over with white villages. After steaming
+ for a few hours along this savage coast, the rocks which guard
+ the entrance to the bay of Ajaccio, murderous-looking teeth and
+ needles ominously christened Sanguinari, are passed, and we enter
+ the splendid land-locked harbour, on the northern shore of which
+ Ajaccio is built. About three centuries ago the town, which used
+ to occupy the extreme or eastern end of the bay, was removed to a
+ more healthy point upon the northern coast, so that Ajaccio is
+ quite a modern city. Visitors who expect to find in it the
+ picturesqueness of Genoa or San Remo, or even of Mentone, will be
+ sadly disappointed. It is simply a healthy, well-appointed town
+ of recent date, the chief merits of which are, that it has wide
+ streets, and is free, externally at least, from the filth and
+ rubbish of most southern seaports.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if Ajaccio itself is not picturesque, the scenery which it
+ commands, and in the heart of which it lies, is of the most
+ magnificent. The bay of Ajaccio resembles a vast Italian
+ lake&mdash;a Lago Maggiore, with greater space between the
+ mountains and the shore. From the snow-peaks of the interior,
+ huge granite crystals clothed in white, to the southern extremity
+ of the bay, peak succeeds peak and ridge rises behind ridge in a
+ line of wonderful variety and beauty. The atmospheric changes of
+ light and shadow, cloud and colour, on this upland country, are
+ as subtle and as various as those which lend their beauty to the
+ scenery of the lakes, while the sea below is blue and rarely
+ troubled. One could never get tired with looking at this view.
+ Morning and evening add new charms to its sublimity and beauty.
+ In the early morning Monte d'Oro sparkles like a Monte Rosa with
+ its fresh snow, and the whole inferior range puts on the crystal
+ blueness of dawn among the Alps. In the evening, violet and
+ purple tints and the golden glow of Italian sunset lend a
+ different lustre to the fairyland. In fact, the beauties of
+ Switzerland and Italy are curiously blended in this landscape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In soil and vegetation the country round Ajaccio differs much
+ from the Cornice. There are very few olive-trees, nor is the
+ cultivated ground backed up so immediately by stony mountains;
+ but between the seashore and the hills there is plenty of space
+ for pasture-land, and orchards of apricot and peach-trees, and
+ orange gardens. This undulating champaign, green with meadows and
+ watered with clear streams, is very refreshing to the eyes of
+ Northern people, who may have wearied of the bareness and
+ greyness of Nice or Mentone. It is traversed by excellent roads,
+ recently constructed on a plan of the French Government, which
+ intersect the country in all directions, and offer an infinite
+ variety of rides or drives to visitors. The broken granite of
+ which these roads are made is very pleasant for riding over. Most
+ of the hills through which they strike, after starting from
+ Ajaccio, are clothed with a thick brushwood of box, ilex,
+ lentisk, arbutus, and laurustinus, which stretches down
+ irregularly into vineyards, olive-gardens, and meadows. It is,
+ indeed, the native growth of the island; for wherever a piece of
+ ground is left untilled, the macchi grow up, and the scent of
+ their multitudinous aromatic blossoms is so strong that it may be
+ smelt miles out at sea. Napoleon, at S. Helena, referred to this
+ fragrance when he said that he should know Corsica blindfold by
+ the smell of its soil. Occasional woods of holm oak make darker
+ patches on the landscape, and a few pines fringe the side of
+ enclosure walls or towers. The prickly pear runs riot in and out
+ among the hedges and upon the walls, diversifying the colours of
+ the landscape with its strange grey-green masses and unwieldy
+ fans. In spring, when peach and almond trees are in blossom, and
+ when the roadside is starred with asphodels, this country is most
+ beautiful in its gladness. The macchi blaze with cistus flowers
+ of red and silver. Golden broom mixes with the dark purple of the
+ great French lavender, and over the whole mass of blossom wave
+ plumes of Mediterranean heath and sweet-scented yellow coronilla.
+ Under the stems of the ilex peep cyclamens, pink and sweet; the
+ hedgerows are a tangle of vetches, convolvuluses, lupines,
+ orchises, and alliums, with here and there a purple iris. It
+ would be difficult to describe all the rare and lovely plants
+ which are found here in a profusion that surpasses even the
+ flower-gardens of the Cornice, and reminds one of the most
+ favoured Alpine valleys in their early spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the French occupied Corsica they have done much for the
+ island by improving its harbours and making good roads, and
+ endeavouring to mitigate the ferocity of the people. But they
+ have many things to contend against, and Corsica is still behind
+ the other provinces of France. The people are idle, haughty,
+ umbrageous, fiery, quarrelsome, fond of gipsy life, and retentive
+ through generations of old feuds and prejudices to an almost
+ inconceivable extent. Then the nature of the country itself
+ offers serious obstacles to its proper colonisation and
+ cultivation. The savage state of the island and its internal
+ feuds have disposed the Corsicans to quit the seaboard for their
+ mountain villages and fortresses, so that the great plains at the
+ foot of the hills are unwholesome for want of tillage and
+ drainage. Again, the mountains themselves have in many parts been
+ stripped of their forests, and converted into mere wildernesses
+ of macchi stretching up and down their slopes for miles and miles
+ of useless desolation. Another impediment to proper cultivation
+ is found in the old habit of what is called free pasturage. The
+ highland shepherds are allowed by the national custom to drive
+ down their flocks and herds to the lowlands during the winter, so
+ that fences are broken, young crops are browsed over and trampled
+ down, and agriculture becomes a mere impossibility. The last and
+ chief difficulty against which the French have had to contend,
+ and up to this time with apparent success, is brigandage. The
+ Corsican system of brigandage is so very different from that of
+ the Italians, Sicilians, and Greeks, that a word may be said
+ about its peculiar character. In the first place, it has nothing
+ at all to do with robbery and thieving. The Corsican bandit took
+ to a free life among the macchi, not for the sake of supporting
+ himself by lawless depredation, but because he had put himself
+ under a legal and social ban by murdering some one in obedience
+ to the strict code of honour of his country. His victim may have
+ been the hereditary foe of his house for generations, or else the
+ newly made enemy of yesterday. But in either case, if he had
+ killed him fairly, after a due notification of his intention to
+ do so, he was held to have fulfilled a duty rather than to have
+ committed a crime. He then betook himself to the dense tangles of
+ evergreens which I have described, where he lived upon the
+ charity of countryfolk and shepherds. In the eyes of those simple
+ people it was a sacred duty to relieve the necessities of the
+ outlaws, and to guard them from the bloodhounds of justice. There
+ was scarcely a respectable family in Corsica who had not one or
+ more of its members thus <i>alla campagna</i>, as it was
+ euphemistically styled. The Corsicans themselves have attributed
+ this miserable state of things to two principal causes. The first
+ of these was the ancient bad government of the island: under its
+ Genoese rulers no justice was administered, and private vengeance
+ for homicide or insult became a necessary consequence among the
+ haughty and warlike families of the mountain villages. Secondly,
+ the Corsicans have been from time immemorial accustomed to wear
+ arms in everyday life. They used to sit at their house doors and
+ pace the streets with musket, pistol, dagger, and cartouch-box on
+ their persons; and on the most trivial occasion of merriment or
+ enthusiasm they would discharge their firearms. This habit gave a
+ bloody termination to many quarrels, which might have ended more
+ peaceably had the parties been unarmed; and so the seeds of
+ <i>vendetta</i> were constantly being sown. Statistics published
+ by the French Government present a hideous picture of the state
+ of bloodshed in Corsica even during this century. In one period
+ of thirty years (between 1821 and 1850) there were 4319 murders
+ in the island. Almost every man was watching for his neighbour's
+ life, or seeking how to save his own; and agriculture and
+ commerce were neglected for this grisly game of hide-and-seek. In
+ 1853 the French began to take strong measures, and, under the
+ Prefect Thuillier, they hunted the bandits from the macchi,
+ killing between 200 and 300 of them. At the same time an edict
+ was promulgated against bearing arms. It is forbidden to sell the
+ old Corsican stiletto in the shops, and no one may carry a gun,
+ even for sporting purposes, unless he obtains a special licence.
+ These licences, moreover, are only granted for short and
+ precisely measured periods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to appreciate the stern and gloomy character of the
+ Corsicans, it is necessary to leave the smiling gardens of
+ Ajaccio, and to visit some of the more distant mountain
+ villages&mdash;Vico, Cavro, Bastelica, or Bocognano, any of which
+ may easily be reached from the capital. Immediately after
+ quitting the seaboard, we enter a country austere in its
+ simplicity, solemn without relief, yet dignified by its majesty
+ and by the sense of freedom it inspires. As we approach the
+ mountains, the macchi become taller, feathering man-high above
+ the road, and stretching far away upon the hills. Gigantic masses
+ of granite, shaped like buttresses and bastions, seem to guard
+ the approaches to these hills; while, looking backward over the
+ green plain, the sea lies smiling in a haze of blue among the
+ rocky horns and misty headlands of the coast. There is a
+ stateliness about the abrupt inclination of these granite slopes,
+ rising from their frowning portals by sharp <i>arêtes</i> to the
+ snows piled on their summits, which contrasts in a strange way
+ with the softness and beauty of the mingling sea and plain
+ beneath. In no landscape are more various qualities combined; in
+ none are they so harmonised as to produce so strong a sense of
+ majestic freedom and severe power. Suppose that we are on the
+ road to Corte, and have now reached Bocognano, the first
+ considerable village since we left Ajaccio. Bocognano might be
+ chosen as typical of Corsican hill-villages, with its narrow
+ street, and tall tower-like houses of five or six stories high,
+ faced with rough granite, and pierced with the smallest windows
+ and very narrow doorways. These buildings have a mournful and
+ desolate appearance. There is none of the grandeur of antiquity
+ about them; no sculptured arms or castellated turrets, or
+ balconies or spacious staircases, such as are common in the
+ poorest towns of Italy. The signs of warlike occupation which
+ they offer, and their sinister aspect of vigilance, are
+ thoroughly prosaic. They seem to suggest a state of society in
+ which feud and violence were systematised into routine. There is
+ no relief to the savage austerity of their forbidding aspect; no
+ signs of wealth or household comfort; no trace of art, no
+ liveliness and gracefulness of architecture. Perched upon their
+ coigns of vantage, these villages seem always menacing, as if
+ Saracen pirates, or Genoese marauders, or bandits bent on
+ vengeance, were still for ever on the watch. Forests of immensely
+ old chestnut-trees surround Bocognano on every side, so that you
+ step from the village streets into the shade of woods that seem
+ to have remained untouched for centuries. The country-people
+ support themselves almost entirely upon the fruit of these
+ chestnuts; and there is a large department of Corsica called
+ Castagniccia, from the prevalence of these trees and the
+ sustenance which the inhabitants derive from them. Close by the
+ village brawls a torrent, such as one may see in the Monte Rosa
+ valleys or the Apennines, but very rarely in Switzerland. It is
+ of a pure green colour, absolutely like Indian jade, foaming
+ round the granite boulders, and gliding over smooth slabs of
+ polished stone, and eddying into still, deep pools fringed with
+ fern. Monte d'Oro, one of the largest mountains of Corsica, soars
+ above, and from his snows the purest water, undefiled by glacier
+ mud or the <i>débris</i> of avalanches, melts away. Following the
+ stream, we rise through the macchi and the chestnut woods, which
+ grow more sparely by degrees, until we reach the zone of beeches.
+ Here the scene seems suddenly transferred to the Pyrenees; for
+ the road is carried along abrupt slopes, thickly set with
+ gigantic beech-trees, overgrown with pink and silver lichens. In
+ the early spring their last year's leaves are still crisp with
+ hoar-frost; one morning's journey has brought us from the summer
+ of Ajaccio to winter on these heights, where no flowers are
+ visible but the pale hellebore and tiny lilac crocuses.
+ Snow-drifts stretch by the roadside, and one by one the pioneers
+ of the vast pine-woods of the interior appear. A great portion of
+ the pine-forest (<i>Pinus larix</i>, or Corsican pine, not larch)
+ between Bocognano and Corte had recently been burned by accident
+ when we passed by. Nothing could be more forlorn than the black
+ leafless stems and branches emerging from the snow. Some of these
+ trees were mast-high, and some mere saplings. Corte itself is
+ built among the mountain fastnesses of the interior. The snows
+ and granite cliffs of Monte Rotondo overhang it to the
+ north-west, while two fair valleys lead downward from its eyrie
+ to the eastern coast. The rock on which it stands rises to a
+ sharp point, sloping southward, and commanding the valleys of the
+ Golo and the Tavignano. Remembering that Corte was the old
+ capital of Corsica, and the centre of General Paoli's government,
+ we are led to compare the town with Innsprück, Meran, or
+ Grenoble. In point of scenery and situation it is hardly second
+ to any of these mountain-girdled cities; but its poverty and
+ bareness are scarcely less striking than those of Bocognano.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole Corsican character, with its stern love of justice, its
+ furious revengefulness and wild passion for freedom, seems to be
+ illustrated by the peculiar elements of grandeur and desolation
+ in this landscape. When we traverse the forest of Vico or the
+ rocky pasture-lands of Niolo, the history of the Corsican
+ national heroes, Giudice della Rocca and Sampiero, becomes
+ intelligible, nor do we fail to understand some of the mysterious
+ attraction which led the more daring spirits of the island to
+ prefer a free life among the macchi and pine-woods to placid
+ lawful occupations in farms and villages. The lives of the two
+ men whom I have mentioned are so prominent in Corsican history,
+ and are so often still upon the lips of the common people, that
+ it may be well to sketch their outlines in the foreground of the
+ Salvator Rosa landscape just described. Giudice was the governor
+ of Corsica, as lieutenant for the Pisans, at the end of the
+ thirteenth century. At that time the island belonged to the
+ republic of Pisa, but the Genoese were encroaching on them by
+ land and sea, and the whole life of their brave champion was
+ spent in a desperate struggle with the invaders, until at last he
+ died, old, blind, and in prison, at the command of his savage
+ foes. Giudice was the title which the Pisans usually conferred
+ upon their governor, and Della Rocca deserved it by right of his
+ own inexorable love of justice. Indeed, justice seems to have
+ been with him a passion, swallowing up all other feelings of his
+ nature. All the stories which are told of him turn upon this
+ point in his character; and though they may not be strictly true,
+ they illustrate the stern virtues for which he was celebrated
+ among the Corsicans, and show what kind of men this harsh and
+ gloomy nation loved to celebrate as heroes. This is not the place
+ either to criticise these legends or to recount them at full
+ length. The most famous and the most characteristic may, however,
+ be briefly told. On one occasion, after a victory over the
+ Genoese, he sent a message that the captives in his hands should
+ be released if their wives and sisters came to sue for them. The
+ Genoese ladies embarked, and arrived in Corsica, and to Giudice's
+ nephew was intrusted the duty of fulfilling his uncle's promise.
+ In the course of executing his commission, the youth was so
+ smitten with the beauty of one of the women that he dishonoured
+ her. Thereupon Giudice had him at once put to death. Another
+ story shows the Spartan justice of this hero in a less savage
+ light. He was passing by a cowherd's cottage, when he heard some
+ young calves bleating. On inquiring what distressed them, he was
+ told that the calves had not enough milk to drink after the farm
+ people had been served. Then Giudice made it a law that the
+ calves throughout the land should take their fill before the cows
+ were milked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sampiero belongs to a later period of Corsican history. After a
+ long course of misgovernment the Genoese rule had become
+ unbearable. There was no pretence of administering justice, and
+ private vengeance had full sway in the island. The sufferings of
+ the nation were so great that the time had come for a new judge
+ or saviour to rise among them. Sampiero was the son of obscure
+ parents who lived at Bastelica. But his abilities very soon
+ declared themselves, and made a way for him in the world. He
+ spent his youth in the armies of the Medici and of the French
+ Francis, gaining great renown as a brave soldier. Bayard became
+ his friend, and Francis made him captain of his Corsican bands.
+ But Sampiero did not forget the wrongs of his native land while
+ thus on foreign service. He resolved, if possible, to undermine
+ the power of Genoa, and spent the whole of his manhood and old
+ age in one long struggle with their great captain, Stephen Doria.
+ Of his stern patriotism and Roman severity of virtue the
+ following story is a terrible illustration. Sampiero, though a
+ man of mean birth, had married an heiress of the noble Corsican
+ house of the Ornani. His wife, Vannina, was a woman of timid and
+ flexible nature, who, though devoted to her husband, fell into
+ the snares of his enemies. During his absence on an embassy to
+ Algiers the Genoese induced her to leave her home at Marseilles
+ and to seek refuge in their city, persuading her that this step
+ would secure the safety of her child. She was starting on her
+ journey when a friend of Sampiero arrested her, and brought her
+ back to Aix, in Provence. Sampiero, when he heard of these
+ events, hurried to France, and was received by a relative of his,
+ who hinted that he had known of Vannina's projected flight. 'E tu
+ hai taciuto?' was Sampiero's only answer, accompanied by a stroke
+ of his poignard that killed the lukewarm cousin. Sampiero now
+ brought his wife from Aix to Marseilles, preserving the most
+ absolute silence on the way, and there, on entering his house, he
+ killed her with his own hand. It is said that he loved Vannina
+ passionately; and when she was dead, he caused her to be buried
+ with magnificence in the church of S. Francis. Like Giudice,
+ Sampiero fell at last a prey to treachery. The murder of Vannina
+ had made the Ornani his deadly foes. In order to avenge her
+ blood, they played into the hands of the Genoese, and laid a plot
+ by which the noblest of the Corsicans was brought to death.
+ First, they gained over to their scheme a monk of Bastelica,
+ called Ambrogio, and Sampiero's own squire and shield-bearer,
+ Vittolo. By means of these men, in whom he trusted, he was drawn
+ defenceless and unattended into a deeply wooded ravine near
+ Cavro, not very far from his birthplace, where the Ornani and
+ their Genoese troops surrounded him. Sampiero fired his pistols
+ in vain, for Vittolo had loaded them with the shot downwards.
+ Then he drew his sword, and began to lay about him, when the same
+ Vittolo, the Judas, stabbed him from behind, and the old lion
+ fell dead by his friend's hand. Sampiero was sixty-nine when he
+ died, in the year 1567. It is satisfactory to know that the
+ Corsicans have called traitors and foes to their country Vittoli
+ for ever. These two examples of Corsican patriots are enough; we
+ need not add to theirs the history of Paoli&mdash;a milder and
+ more humane, but scarcely less heroic leader. Paoli, however, in
+ the hour of Corsica's extremest peril, retired to England, and
+ died in philosophic exile. Neither Giudice nor Sampiero would
+ have acted thus. The more forlorn the hope, the more they
+ struggled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the old Corsican customs which are fast dying out, but
+ which still linger in the remote valleys of Niolo and Vico, is
+ the <i>vócero</i>, or funeral chant, improvised by women at
+ funerals over the bodies of the dead. Nothing illustrates the
+ ferocious temper and savage passions of the race better than
+ these <i>vóceri</i>, many of which have been written down and
+ preserved. Most of them are songs of vengeance and imprecation,
+ mingled with hyperbolical laments and utterances of extravagant
+ grief, poured forth by wives and sisters at the side of murdered
+ husbands and brothers. The women who sing them seem to have lost
+ all milk of human kindness, and to have exchanged the virtues of
+ their sex for Spartan fortitude and the rage of furies. While we
+ read their turbid lines we are carried in imagination to one of
+ the cheerless houses of Bastelica or Bocognano, overshadowed by
+ its mournful chestnut-tree, on which the blood of the murdered
+ man is yet red. The <i>gridata</i>, or wake, is assembled in a
+ dark room. On the wooden board, called <i>tola</i>, the corpse
+ lies stretched; and round it are women, veiled in the blue-black
+ mantle of Corsican costume, moaning and rocking themselves upon
+ their chairs. The <i>pasto</i> or <i>conforto</i>, food supplied
+ for mourners, stands upon a side table, and round the room are
+ men with savage eyes and bristling beards, armed to the teeth,
+ keen for vengeance. The dead man's musket and pocket-pistol lie
+ beside him, and his bloody shirt is hung up at his head.
+ Suddenly, the silence, hitherto only disturbed by suppressed
+ groans and muttered curses, is broken by a sharp cry. A woman
+ rises: it is the sister of the dead man; she seizes his shirt,
+ and holding it aloft with Mĉnad gestures and frantic screams,
+ gives rhythmic utterance to her grief and rage. 'I was spinning,
+ when I heard a great noise: it was a gunshot, which went into my
+ heart, and seemed a voice that cried, "Run, thy brother is
+ dying." I ran into the room above; I took the blow into my
+ breast; I said, "Now he is dead, there is nothing to give me
+ comfort. Who will undertake thy vengeance? When I show thy shirt,
+ who will vow to let his beard grow till the murderer is slain?
+ Who is there left to do it? A mother near her death? A sister? Of
+ all our race there is only left a woman, without kin, poor,
+ orphan, and a girl. Yet, O my brother! never fear. For thy
+ vengeance thy sister is enough!
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ '"Ma per fà la to bindetta,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sta siguru, basta anch ella!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Give me the pistol; I will shoulder the gun; I will away to the
+ hills. My brother, heart of thy sister, thou shalt be avenged!"'
+ A <i>vócero</i> declaimed upon the bier of Giammatteo and
+ Pasquale, two cousins, by the sister of the former, is still
+ fiercer and more energetic in its malediction. This Erinnys of
+ revenge prays Christ and all the saints to extirpate the
+ murderer's whole race, to shrivel it up till it passes from the
+ earth. Then, with a sudden and vehement transition to the pathos
+ of her own sorrow, she exclaims:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ 'Halla mai bista nissunu
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tumbà l'omi pe li canti?'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It appears from these words that Giammatteo's enemies had killed
+ him because they were jealous of his skill in singing. Shortly
+ after, she curses the curate of the village, a kinsman of the
+ murderer, for refusing to toll the funeral bells; and at last,
+ all other threads of rage and sorrow being twined and knotted
+ into one, she gives loose to her raging thirst for blood: 'If
+ only I had a son, to train like a sleuth-hound, that he might
+ track the murderer! Oh, if I had a son! Oh, if I had a lad!' Her
+ words seem to choke her, and she swoons, and remains for a short
+ time insensible. When the Bacchante of revenge awakes, it is with
+ milder feelings in her heart: 'O brother mine, Matteo! art thou
+ sleeping? Here I will rest with thee and weep till daybreak.' It
+ is rare to find in literature so crude and intense an expression
+ of fiery hatred as these untranslatable <i>vóceri</i> present.
+ The emotion is so simple and so strong that it becomes sublime by
+ mere force, and affects us with a strange pathos when contrasted
+ with the tender affection conveyed in such terms of endearment as
+ 'my dove,' 'my flower,' 'my pheasant,' 'my bright painted
+ orange,' addressed to the dead. In the <i>vóceri</i> it often
+ happens that there are several interlocutors: one friend
+ questions and another answers; or a kinswoman of the murderer
+ attempts to justify the deed, and is overwhelmed with deadly
+ imprecations. Passionate appeals are made to the corpse: 'Arise!
+ Do you not hear the women cry? Stand up. Show your wounds, and
+ let the fountains of your blood flow! Alas! he is dead; he
+ sleeps; he cannot hear!' Then they turn again to tears and
+ curses, feeling that no help or comfort can come from the
+ clay-cold form. The intensity of grief finds strange language for
+ its utterance. A girl, mourning over her father, cries:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ 'Mi l'hannu crucifissatu
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cume Ghiesu Cristu in croce.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Once only, in Viale's collection, does any friend of the dead
+ remember mercy. It is an old woman, who points to the crucifix
+ above the bier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all the <i>vóceri</i> are not so murderous. Several are
+ composed for girls who died unwedded and before their time, by
+ their mothers or companions. The language of these laments is far
+ more tender and ornate. They praise the gentle virtues and beauty
+ of the girl, her piety and helpful household ways. The most
+ affecting of these dirges is that which celebrates the death of
+ Romana, daughter of Dariola Danesi. Here is a pretty picture of
+ the girl: 'Among the best and fairest maidens you were like a
+ rose among flowers, like the moon among stars; so far more lovely
+ were you than the loveliest. The youths in your presence were
+ like lighted torches, but full of reverence; you were courteous
+ to all, but with none familiar. In church they gazed at you, but
+ you looked at none of them; and after mass you said, "Mother, let
+ us go." Oh! who will console me for your loss? Why did the Lord
+ so much desire you? But now you rest in heaven, all joy and
+ smiles; for the world was not worthy of so fair a face. Oh, how
+ far more beautiful will Paradise be now!' Then follows a piteous
+ picture of the old bereaved mother, to whom a year will seem a
+ thousand years, who will wander among relatives without
+ affection, neighbours without love; and who, when sickness comes,
+ will have no one to give her a drop of water, or to wipe the
+ sweat from her brow, or to hold her hand in death. Yet all that
+ is left for her is to wait and pray for the end, that she may
+ join again her darling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is time to return to Ajaccio itself. At present the
+ attractions and ornaments of the town consist of a good public
+ library, Cardinal Fesch's large but indifferent collection of
+ pictures, two monuments erected to Napoleon, and Napoleon's
+ house. It will always be the chief pride of Ajaccio that she gave
+ birth to the great emperor. Close to the harbour, in a public
+ square by the sea-beach, stands an equestrian statue of the
+ conqueror, surrounded by his four brothers on foot. They are all
+ attired in Roman fashion, and are turned seaward, to the west, as
+ if to symbolise the emigration of this family to subdue Europe.
+ There is something ludicrous and forlorn in the stiffness of the
+ group&mdash;something even pathetic, when we think how Napoleon
+ gazed seaward from another island, no longer on horseback, no
+ longer laurel-crowned, an unthroned, unseated conqueror, on S.
+ Helena. His father's house stands close by. An old Italian
+ waiting-woman, who had been long in the service of the Murats,
+ keeps it and shows it. She has the manners of a lady, and can
+ tell many stories of the various members of the Buonaparte
+ family. Those who fancy that Napoleon was born in a mean dwelling
+ of poor parents will be surprised to find so much space and
+ elegance in these apartments. Of course his family was not rich
+ by comparison with the riches of French or English nobles. But
+ for Corsicans they were well-to-do, and their house has an air of
+ antique dignity. The chairs of the entrance-saloon have been
+ literally stripped of their coverings by enthusiastic visitors;
+ the horse-hair stuffing underneath protrudes itself with a sort
+ of comic pride, as if protesting that it came to be so tattered
+ in an honourable service. Some of the furniture seems new; but
+ many old presses, inlaid with marbles, agates, and lapis-lazuli,
+ such as Italian families preserve for generations, have an air of
+ respectable antiquity about them. Nor is there any doubt that the
+ young Napoleon led his minuets beneath the stiff girandoles of
+ the formal dancing-room. There, too, in a dark back chamber, is
+ the bed in which he was born. At its foot is a photograph of the
+ Prince Imperial sent by the Empress Eugénie, who, when she
+ visited the room, wept much <i>pianse molto</i> (to use the old
+ lady's phrase)&mdash;at seeing the place where such lofty
+ destinies began. On the wall of the same room is a portrait of
+ Napoleon himself as the young general of the republic&mdash;with
+ the citizen's unkempt hair, the fierce fire of the Revolution in
+ his eyes, a frown upon his forehead, lips compressed, and
+ quivering nostrils; also one of his mother, the pastille of a
+ handsome woman, with Napoleonic eyes and brows and nose, but with
+ a vacant simpering mouth. Perhaps the provincial artist knew not
+ how to seize the expression of this feature, the most difficult
+ to draw. For we cannot fancy that Letizia had lips without the
+ firmness or the fulness of a majestic nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole first story of this house belonged to the Buonaparte
+ family. The windows look out partly on a little court and partly
+ on narrow streets. It was, no doubt, the memory of this home that
+ made Napoleon, when emperor, design schemes for the good of
+ Corsica&mdash;schemes that might have brought him more honour
+ than many conquests, but which he had no time or leisure to carry
+ out. On S. Helena his mind often reverted to them, and he would
+ speak of the gummy odours of the macchi wafted from the hillsides
+ to the seashore.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="MONTE" id="MONTE"></a><i>MONTE GENEROSO</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ The long hot days of Italian summer were settling down on plain
+ and country when, in the last week of May, we travelled northward
+ from Florence and Bologna seeking coolness. That was very hard to
+ find in Lombardy. The days were long and sultry, the nights
+ short, without a respite from the heat. Milan seemed a furnace,
+ though in the Duomo and the narrow shady streets there was a
+ twilight darkness which at least looked cool. Long may it be
+ before the northern spirit of improvement has taught the Italians
+ to despise the wisdom of their forefathers, who built those
+ sombre streets of palaces with overhanging eaves, that, almost
+ meeting, form a shelter from the fiercest sun. The lake country
+ was even worse than the towns; the sunlight lay all day asleep
+ upon the shining waters, and no breeze came to stir their surface
+ or to lift the tepid veil of haze, through which the stony
+ mountains, with their yet unmelted patches of winter snow, glared
+ as if in mockery of coolness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we heard of a new inn, which had just been built by an
+ enterprising Italian doctor below the very top of Monte Generoso.
+ There was a picture of it in the hotel at Cadenabbia, but this
+ gave but little idea of any particular beauty. A big square
+ house, with many windows, and the usual ladies on mules, and
+ guides with alpenstocks, advancing towards it, and some round
+ bushes growing near, was all it showed. Yet there hung the real
+ Monte Generoso above our heads, and we thought it must be cooler
+ on its height than by the lake-shore. To find coolness was the
+ great point with us just then. Moreover, some one talked of the
+ wonderful plants that grew among its rocks, and of its grassy
+ slopes enamelled with such flowers as make our cottage gardens at
+ home gay in summer, not to speak of others rarer and peculiar to
+ the region of the Southern Alps. Indeed, the Generoso has a name
+ for flowers, and it deserves it, as we presently found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This mountain is fitted by its position for commanding one of the
+ finest views in the whole range of the Lombard Alps. A glance at
+ the map shows that. Standing out pre-eminent among the chain of
+ lower hills to which it belongs, the lakes of Lugano and Como
+ with their long arms enclose it on three sides, while on the
+ fourth the plain of Lombardy with its many cities, its rich
+ pasture-lands and cornfields intersected by winding river-courses
+ and straight interminable roads, advances to its very foot. No
+ place could be better chosen for surveying that contrasted scene
+ of plain and mountain, which forms the great attraction of the
+ outlying buttresses of the central Alpine mass. The superiority
+ of the Monte Generoso to any of the similar eminences on the
+ northern outskirts of Switzerland is great. In richness of
+ colour, in picturesqueness of suggestion, in sublimity and
+ breadth of prospect, its advantages are incontestable. The
+ reasons for this superiority are obvious. On the Italian side the
+ transition from mountain to plain is far more abrupt; the
+ atmosphere being clearer, a larger sweep of distance is within
+ our vision; again, the sunlight blazes all day long upon the very
+ front and forehead of the distant Alpine chain, instead of merely
+ slanting along it, as it does upon the northern side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Mendrisio, the village at the foot of the mountain, an easy
+ mule-path leads to the hotel, winding first through
+ English-looking hollow lanes with real hedges, which are rare in
+ this country, and English primroses beneath them. Then comes a
+ forest region of luxuriant chestnut-trees, giants with pink boles
+ just bursting into late leafage, yellow and tender, but too thin
+ as yet for shade. A little higher up, the chestnuts are displaced
+ by wild laburnums bending under their weight of flowers. The
+ graceful branches meet above our heads, sweeping their long
+ tassels against our faces as we ride beneath them, while the air
+ for a good mile is full of fragrance. It is strange to be
+ reminded in this blooming labyrinth of the dusty suburb roads and
+ villa gardens of London. The laburnum is pleasant enough in S.
+ John's Wood or the Regent's Park in May&mdash;a tame domesticated
+ thing of brightness amid smoke and dust. But it is another joy to
+ see it flourishing in its own home, clothing acres of the
+ mountain-side in a very splendour of spring-colour, mingling its
+ paler blossoms with the golden broom of our own hills, and with
+ the silver of the hawthorn and wild cherry. Deep beds of
+ lilies-of-the-valley grow everywhere beneath the trees; and in
+ the meadows purple columbines, white asphodels, the Alpine
+ spirĉa, tall, with feathery leaves, blue scabious, golden
+ hawkweeds, turkscap lilies, and, better than all, the exquisite
+ narcissus poeticus, with its crimson-tipped cup, and the pure
+ pale lilies of San Bruno, are crowded in a maze of dazzling
+ brightness. Higher up the laburnums disappear, and flaunting
+ crimson peonies gleam here and there upon the rocks, until at
+ length the gentians and white ranunculuses of the higher Alps
+ displace the less hardy flowers of Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About an hour below the summit of the mountain we came upon the
+ inn, a large clean building, with scanty furniture and snowy
+ wooden floors, guiltless of carpets. It is big enough to hold
+ about a hundred guests; and Doctor Pasta, who built it, a native
+ of Mendrisio, was gifted either with much faith or with a real
+ prophetic instinct.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id=
+ "FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class=
+ "fnanchor">[8]</a> Anyhow he deserves commendation for his spirit
+ of enterprise. As yet the house is little known to English
+ travellers: it is mostly frequented by Italians from Milan,
+ Novara, and other cities of the plain, who call it the Italian
+ Righi, and come to it, as cockneys go to Richmond, for noisy
+ picnic excursions, or at most for a few weeks'
+ <i>villeggiatura</i> in the summer heats. When we were there in
+ May the season had scarcely begun, and the only inmates besides
+ ourselves were a large party from Milan, ladies and gentlemen in
+ holiday guise, who came, stayed one night, climbed the peak at
+ sunrise, and departed amid jokes and shouting and half-childish
+ play, very unlike the doings of a similar party in sober England.
+ After that the stillness of nature descended on the mountain, and
+ the sun shone day after day upon that great view which seemed
+ created only for ourselves. And what a view it was! The plain
+ stretching up to the high horizon, where a misty range of pink
+ cirrus-clouds alone marked the line where earth ended and the sky
+ began, was islanded with cities and villages innumerable, basking
+ in the hazy shimmering heat. Milan, seen through the doctor's
+ telescope, displayed its Duomo perfect as a microscopic shell,
+ with all its exquisite fretwork, and Napoleon's arch of triumph
+ surmounted by the four tiny horses, as in a fairy's dream. Far
+ off, long silver lines marked the lazy course of Po and Ticino,
+ while little lakes like Varese and the lower end of Maggiore
+ spread themselves out, connecting the mountains with the plain.
+ Five minutes' walk from the hotel brought us to a ridge where the
+ precipice fell suddenly and almost sheer over one arm of Lugano
+ Lake. Sullenly outstretched asleep it lay beneath us, coloured
+ with the tints of fluor-spar, or with the changeful green and
+ azure of a peacock's breast. The depth appeared immeasurable. San
+ Salvadore had receded into insignificance: the houses and
+ churches and villas of Lugano bordered the lake-shore with an
+ uneven line of whiteness. And over all there rested a blue mist
+ of twilight and of haze, contrasting with the clearness of the
+ peaks above. It was sunset when we first came here; and, wave
+ beyond wave, the purple Italian hills tossed their crested
+ summits to the foot of a range of stormy clouds that shrouded the
+ high Alps. Behind the clouds was sunset, clear and golden; but
+ the mountains had put on their mantle for the night, and the hem
+ of their garment was all we were to see. And yet&mdash;over the
+ edge of the topmost ridge of cloud, what was that long hard line
+ of black, too solid and immovable for cloud, rising into four
+ sharp needles clear and well defined? Surely it must be the
+ familiar outline of Monte Rosa itself, the form which every one
+ who loves the Alps knows well by heart, which picture-lovers know
+ from Ruskin's woodcut in the 'Modern Painters.' For a moment only
+ the vision stayed: then clouds swept over it again, and from the
+ place where the empress of the Alps had been, a pillar of mist
+ shaped like an angel's wing, purple and tipped with gold, shot up
+ against the pale green sky. That cloud-world was a pageant in
+ itself, as grand and more gorgeous perhaps than the mountains
+ would have been. Deep down through the hollows of the Simplon a
+ thunderstorm was driving; and we saw forked flashes once and
+ again, as in a distant world, lighting up the valleys for a
+ moment, and leaving the darkness blacker behind them as the storm
+ blurred out the landscape forty miles away. Darkness was coming
+ to us too, though our sky was clear and the stars were shining
+ brightly. At our feet the earth was folding itself to sleep; the
+ plain was wholly lost; little islands of white mist had formed
+ themselves, and settled down upon the lakes and on their marshy
+ estuaries; the birds were hushed; the gentian-cups were filling
+ to the brim with dew. Night had descended on the mountain and the
+ plain; the show was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dawn was whitening in the east next morning, when we again
+ scrambled through the dwarf beechwood to the precipice above the
+ lake. Like an ink-blot it lay, unruffled, slumbering sadly. Broad
+ sheets of vapour brooded on the plain, telling of miasma and
+ fever, of which we on the mountain, in the pure cool air, knew
+ nothing. The Alps were all there now&mdash;cold, unreal,
+ stretching like a phantom line of snowy peaks, from the sharp
+ pyramids of Monte Viso and the Grivola in the west to the distant
+ Bernina and the Ortler in the east. Supreme among them towered
+ Monte Rosa&mdash;queenly, triumphant, gazing down in proud
+ pre-eminence, as she does when seen from any point of the Italian
+ plain. There is no mountain like her. Mont Blanc himself is
+ scarcely so regal; and she seems to know it, for even the clouds
+ sweep humbled round her base, girdling her at most, but leaving
+ her crown clear and free. Now, however, there were no clouds to
+ be seen in all the sky. The mountains had a strange unshriven
+ look, as if waiting to be blessed. Above them, in the cold grey
+ air, hung a low black arch of shadow, the shadow of the bulk of
+ the huge earth, which still concealed the sun. Slowly, slowly
+ this dark line sank lower, till, one by one, at last, the peaks
+ caught first a pale pink flush; then a sudden golden glory
+ flashed from one to the other, as they leapt joyfully into life.
+ It is a supreme moment this first burst of life and light over
+ the sleeping world, as one can only see it on rare days and in
+ rare places like the Monte Generoso. The earth&mdash;enough of it
+ at least for us to picture to ourselves the whole&mdash;lies at
+ our feet; and we feel as the Saviour might have felt, when from
+ the top of that high mountain He beheld the kingdoms of the world
+ and all the glory of them. Strangely and solemnly may we image to
+ our fancy the lives that are being lived down in those cities of
+ the plain: how many are waking at this very moment to toil and a
+ painful weariness, to sorrow, or to 'that unrest which men
+ miscall delight;' while we upon our mountain buttress, suspended
+ in mid-heaven and for a while removed from daily cares, are
+ drinking in the beauty of the world that God has made so fair and
+ wonderful. From this same eyrie, only a few years ago, the
+ hostile armies of France, Italy, and Austria might have been
+ watched moving in dim masses across the plains, for the
+ possession of which they were to clash in mortal fight at
+ Solferino and Magenta. All is peaceful now. It is hard to picture
+ the waving cornfields trodden down, the burning villages and
+ ransacked vineyards, all the horrors of real war to which that
+ fertile plain has been so often the prey. But now these memories
+ of
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ Old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And battles long ago,
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ do but add a calm and beauty to the radiant scene that lies
+ before us. And the thoughts which it suggests, the images with
+ which it stores our mind, are not without their noblest uses. The
+ glory of the world sinks deeper into our shallow souls than we
+ well know; and the spirit of its splendour is always ready to
+ revisit us on dark and dreary days at home with an unspeakable
+ refreshment. Even as I write, I seem to see the golden glow
+ sweeping in broad waves over the purple hills nearer and nearer,
+ till the lake brightens at our feet, and the windows of Lugano
+ flash with sunlight, and little boats creep forth across the
+ water like spiders on a pond, leaving an arrowy track of light
+ upon the green behind them, while Monte Salvadore with its tiny
+ chapel and a patch of the further landscape are still kept in
+ darkness by the shadow of the Generoso itself. The birds wake
+ into song as the sun's light comes; cuckoo answers cuckoo from
+ ridge to ridge; dogs bark; and even the sounds of human life rise
+ up to us: children's voices and the murmurs of the market-place
+ ascending faintly from the many villages hidden among the
+ chestnut-trees beneath our feet; while the creaking of a cart we
+ can but just see slowly crawling along the straight road by the
+ lake, is heard at intervals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The full beauty of the sunrise is but brief. Already the low
+ lakelike mists we saw last night have risen and spread, and
+ shaken themselves out into masses of summer clouds, which,
+ floating upward, threaten to envelop us upon our vantage-ground.
+ Meanwhile they form a changeful sea below, blotting out the
+ plain, surging up into the valleys with the movement of a billowy
+ tide, attacking the lower heights like the advance-guard of a
+ besieging army, but daring not as yet to invade the cold and
+ solemn solitudes of the snowy Alps. These, too, in time, when the
+ sun's heat has grown strongest, will be folded in their midday
+ pall of sheltering vapour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very summit of Monte Generoso must not be left without a word
+ of notice. The path to it is as easy as the sheep-walks on an
+ English down, though cut along grass-slopes descending at a
+ perilously sharp angle. At the top the view is much the same, as
+ far as the grand features go, as that which is commanded from the
+ cliff by the hotel. But the rocks here are crowded with rare
+ Alpine flowers&mdash;delicate golden auriculas with powdery
+ leaves and stems, pale yellow cowslips, imperial purple
+ saxifrages, soldanellas at the edge of lingering patches of the
+ winter snow, blue gentians, crocuses, and the frail, rosy-tipped
+ ranunculus, called glacialis. Their blooming time is brief. When
+ summer comes the mountain will be bare and burned, like all
+ Italian hills. The Generoso is a very dry mountain, silent and
+ solemn from its want of streams. There is no sound of falling
+ waters on its crags; no musical rivulets flow down its sides, led
+ carefully along the slopes, as in Switzerland, by the peasants,
+ to keep their hay-crops green and gladden the thirsty turf
+ throughout the heat and drought of summer. The soil is a Jurassic
+ limestone: the rain penetrates the porous rock, and sinks through
+ cracks and fissures, to reappear above the base of the mountain
+ in a full-grown stream. This is a defect in the Generoso, as much
+ to be regretted as the want of shade upon its higher pastures.
+ Here, as elsewhere in Piedmont, the forests are cut for charcoal;
+ the beech-scrub, which covers large tracts of the hills, never
+ having the chance of growing into trees much higher than a man.
+ It is this which makes an Italian mountain at a distance look
+ woolly, like a sheep's back. Among the brushwood, however,
+ lilies-of-the-valley and Solomon's seals delight to grow; and the
+ league-long beds of wild strawberries prove that when the
+ laburnums have faded, the mountain will become a garden of
+ feasting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on the crest of Monte Generoso, late one afternoon in May,
+ that we saw a sight of great beauty. The sun had yet about an
+ hour before it sank behind the peaks of Monte Rosa, and the sky
+ was clear, except for a few white clouds that floated across the
+ plain of Lombardy. Then as we sat upon the crags, tufted with
+ soldanellas and auriculas, we could see a fleecy vapour gliding
+ upward from the hollows of the mountain, very thin and pale, yet
+ dense enough to blot the landscape to the south and east from
+ sight. It rose with an imperceptible motion, as the Oceanides
+ might have soared from the sea to comfort Prometheus in the
+ tragedy of Ĉschylus. Already the sun had touched its upper edge
+ with gold, and we were expecting to be enveloped in a mist; when
+ suddenly upon the outspread sheet before us there appeared two
+ forms, larger than life, yet not gigantic, surrounded with haloes
+ of such tempered iridescence as the moon half hidden by a summer
+ cloud is wont to make. They were the glorified figures of
+ ourselves; and what we did, the phantoms mocked, rising or
+ bowing, or spreading wide their arms. Some scarce-felt breeze
+ prevented the vapour from passing across the ridge to westward,
+ though it still rose from beneath, and kept fading away into thin
+ air above our heads. Therefore the vision lasted as long as the
+ sun stayed yet above the Alps; and the images with their aureoles
+ shrank and dilated with the undulations of the mist. I could not
+ but think of that old formula for an anthropomorphic
+ Deity&mdash;'the Brocken-spectre of the human spirit projected on
+ the mists of the Non-ego.' Even like those cloud-phantoms are the
+ gods made in the image of man, who have been worshipped through
+ successive ages of the world, gods dowered with like passions to
+ those of the races who have crouched before them, gods cruel and
+ malignant and lustful, jealous and noble and just, radiant or
+ gloomy, the counterparts of men upon a vast and shadowy scale.
+ But here another question rose. If the gods that men have made
+ and ignorantly worshipped be really but glorified copies of their
+ own souls, where is the sun in this parallel? Without the sun's
+ rays the mists of Monte Generoso could have shown, no shadowy
+ forms. Without some other power than the mind of man, could men
+ have fashioned for themselves those ideals that they named their
+ gods? Unseen by Greek, or Norseman, or Hindoo, the potent force
+ by which alone they could externalise their image, existed
+ outside them, independent of their thought. Nor does the trite
+ epigram touch the surface of the real mystery. The sun, the human
+ beings on the mountain, and the mists are all parts of one
+ material universe: the transient phenomenon we witnessed was but
+ the effect of a chance combination. Is, then, the anthropomorphic
+ God as momentary and as accidental in the system of the world as
+ that vapoury spectre? The God in whom we live and move and have
+ our being must be far more all-pervasive, more incognisable by
+ the souls of men, who doubt not for one moment of His presence
+ and His power. Except for purposes of rhetoric the metaphor that
+ seemed so clever fails. Nor, when once such thoughts have been
+ stirred in us by such a sight, can we do better than repeat
+ Goethe's sublime profession of a philosophic mysticism. This
+ translation I made one morning on the Pasterze Gletscher beneath
+ the spires of the Gross Glockner:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ To Him who from eternity, self-stirred,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Himself hath made by His creative word!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Him, supreme, who causeth Faith to be,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trust, Hope, Love, Power, and endless Energy!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Him, who, seek to name Him as we will,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unknown within Himself abideth still!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Strain ear and eye, till sight and sense be dim;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thou'lt find but faint similitudes of Him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yea, and thy spirit in her flight of flame
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still strives to gauge the symbol and the name:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charmed and compelled thou climb'st from height to height,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And round thy path the world shines wondrous bright;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time, Space, and Size, and Distance cease to be,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And every step is fresh infinity.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ What were the God who sat outside to scan
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spheres that 'neath His finger circling ran?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God dwells within, and moves the world and moulds,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Himself and Nature in one form enfolds:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus all that lives in Him and breathes and is,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall ne'er His puissance, ne'er His spirit miss.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ The soul of man, too, is an universe:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whence follows it that race with race concurs
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In naming all it knows of good and true
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God,&mdash;yea, its own God; and with homage due
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surrenders to His sway both earth and heaven;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fears Him, and loves, where place for love is given.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="LOMBARD_VIGNETTES" id="LOMBARD_VIGNETTES"></a><i>LOMBARD
+ VIGNETTES</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ ON THE SUPERGA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the chord of Lombard colouring in May. Lowest in the
+ scale: bright green of varied tints, the meadow-grasses mingling
+ with willows and acacias, harmonised by air and distance. Next,
+ opaque blue&mdash;the blue of something between amethyst and
+ lapis-lazuli&mdash;that belongs alone to the basements of Italian
+ mountains. Higher, the roseate whiteness of ridged snow on Alps
+ or Apennines. Highest, the blue of the sky, ascending from pale
+ turquoise to transparent sapphire filled with light. A mediĉval
+ mystic might have likened this chord to the spiritual world. For
+ the lowest region is that of natural life, of plant and bird and
+ beast, and unregenerate man; it is the place of faun and nymph
+ and satyr, the plain where wars are fought and cities built, and
+ work is done. Thence we climb to purified humanity, the mountains
+ of purgation, the solitude and simplicity of contemplative life
+ not yet made perfect by freedom from the flesh. Higher comes that
+ thin white belt, where are the resting places of angelic feet,
+ the points whence purged souls take their flight toward infinity.
+ Above all is heaven, the hierarchies ascending row on row to
+ reach the light of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This fancy occurred to me as I climbed the slope of the Superga,
+ gazing over acacia hedges and poplars to the mountains bare in
+ morning light. The occasional occurrence of bars across this
+ chord&mdash;poplars shivering in sun and breeze, stationary
+ cypresses as black as night, and tall campanili with the hot red
+ shafts of glowing brick&mdash;adds just enough of composition to
+ the landscape. Without too much straining of the allegory, the
+ mystic might have recognised in these aspiring bars the upward
+ effort of souls rooted in the common life of earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The panorama, unrolling as we ascend, is enough to overpower a
+ lover of beauty. There is nothing equal to it for space and
+ breadth and majesty. Monte Rosa, the masses of Mont Blanc blent
+ with the Grand Paradis, the airy pyramid of Monte Viso, these are
+ the battlements of that vast Alpine rampart, in which the vale of
+ Susa opens like a gate. To west and south sweep the Maritime Alps
+ and the Apennines. Beneath, glides the infant Po; and where he
+ leads our eyes, the plain is only limited by pearly mist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A BRONZE BUST OF CALIGULA AT TURIN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Albertina bronze is one of the most precious portraits of
+ antiquity, not merely because it confirms the testimony of the
+ green basalt bust in the Capitol, but also because it supplies an
+ even more emphatic and impressive illustration to the narrative
+ of Suetonius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Caligula is here represented as young and singularly beautiful.
+ It is indeed an ideal Roman head, with the powerful square
+ modelling, the crisp short hair, low forehead and regular firm
+ features, proper to the noblest Roman type. The head is thrown
+ backward from the throat; and there is a something of menace or
+ defiance or suffering in the suggestion of brusque movement given
+ to the sinews of the neck. This attitude, together with the
+ tension of the forehead, and the fixed expression of pain and
+ strain communicated by the lines of the mouth&mdash;strong
+ muscles of the upper lip and abruptly chiselled under
+ lip&mdash;in relation to the small eyes, deep set beneath their
+ cavernous and level brows, renders the whole face a monument of
+ spiritual anguish. I remember that the green basalt bust of the
+ Capitol has the same anxious forehead, the same troubled and
+ overburdened eyes; but the agony of this fretful mouth,
+ comparable to nothing but the mouth of Pandolfo Sigismondo
+ Malatesta, and, like that, on the verge of breaking into the
+ spasms of delirium, is quite peculiar to the Albertina bronze. It
+ is just this which the portrait of the Capitol lacks for the
+ completion of Caligula. The man who could be so represented in
+ art had nothing wholly vulgar in him. The brutality of Caracalla,
+ the overblown sensuality of Nero, the effeminacy of Commodus or
+ Heliogabalus, are all absent here. This face idealises the
+ torture of a morbid soul. It is withal so truly beautiful that it
+ might easily be made the poem of high suffering or noble passion.
+ If the bronze were plastic, I see how a great sculptor, by but
+ few strokes, could convert it into an agonising Stephen or
+ Sebastian. As it is, the unimaginable touch of disease, the
+ unrest of madness, made Caligula the genius of insatiable
+ appetite; and his martyrdom was the torment of lust and ennui and
+ everlasting agitation. The accident of empire tantalised him with
+ vain hopes of satisfying the Charybdis of his soul's sick
+ cravings. From point to point he passed of empty pleasure and
+ unsatisfying cruelty, for ever hungry; until the malady of his
+ spirit, unrestrained by any limitations, and with the right
+ medium for its development, became unique&mdash;the tragic type
+ of pathological desire. What more than all things must have
+ plagued a man with that face was probably the unavoidable
+ meanness of his career. When we study the chapters of Suetonius,
+ we are forced to feel that, though the situation and the madness
+ of Caligula were dramatically impressive, his crimes were trivial
+ and, small. In spite of the vast scale on which he worked his
+ devilish will, his life presents a total picture of sordid vice,
+ differing only from pot-house dissipation and schoolboy cruelty
+ in point of size. And this of a truth is the Nemesis of evil.
+ After a time, mere tyrannous caprice must become commonplace and
+ cloying, tedious to the tyrant, and uninteresting to the student
+ of humanity: nor can I believe that Caligula failed to perceive
+ this to his own infinite disgust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suetonius asserts that he was hideously ugly. How are we to
+ square this testimony with the witness of the bronze before us?
+ What changed the face, so beautiful and terrible in youth, to
+ ugliness that shrank from sight in manhood? Did the murderers
+ find it blurred in its fine lineaments, furrowed with lines of
+ care, hollowed with the soul's hunger? Unless a life of vice and
+ madness had succeeded in making Caligula's face what the faces of
+ some maniacs are&mdash;the bloated ruin of what was once a living
+ witness to the soul within&mdash;I could fancy that death may
+ have sanctified it with even more beauty than this bust of the
+ self-tormented young man shows. Have we not all seen the anguish
+ of thought-fretted faces smoothed out by the hands of the
+ Deliverer?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERRARI AT VERCELLI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is possible that many visitors to the Cathedral of Como have
+ carried away the memory of stately women with abundant yellow
+ hair and draperies of green and crimson, in a picture they
+ connect thereafter with Gaudenzio Ferrari. And when they come to
+ Milan, they are probably both impressed and disappointed by a
+ Martyrdom of S. Catherine in the Brera, bearing the same artist's
+ name. If they wish to understand this painter, they must seek him
+ at Varallo, at Saronno, and at Vercelli. In the Church of S.
+ Cristoforo in Vercelli, Gaudenzio Ferrari at the full height of
+ his powers showed what he could do to justify Lomazzo's title
+ chosen for him of the Eagle. He has indeed the strong wing and
+ the swiftness of the king of birds. And yet the works of few
+ really great painters&mdash;and among the really great we place
+ Ferrari&mdash;leave upon the mind a more distressing sense of
+ imperfection. Extraordinary fertility of fancy, vehement dramatic
+ passion, sincere study of nature, and great command of technical
+ resources are here (as elsewhere in Ferrari's frescoes)
+ neutralised by an incurable defect of the combining and
+ harmonising faculty, so essential to a masterpiece. There is
+ stuff enough of thought and vigour and imagination to make a
+ dozen artists. And yet we turn away disappointed from the
+ crowded, dazzling, stupefying wilderness of forms and faces on
+ these mighty walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All that Ferrari derived from actual life&mdash;the heads of
+ single figures, the powerful movement of men and women in excited
+ action, the monumental pose of two praying nuns&mdash;is
+ admirably rendered. His angels too, in S. Cristoforo as
+ elsewhere, are quite original; not only in their type of beauty,
+ which is terrestrial and peculiar to Ferrari, without a touch of
+ Correggio's sensuality; but also in the intensity of their
+ emotion, the realisation of their vitality. Those which hover
+ round the Cross in the fresco of the 'Crucifixion' are as
+ passionate as any angels of the Giottesque masters in Assisi.
+ Those again which crowd the Stable of Bethlehem in the 'Nativity'
+ yield no point of idyllic charm to Gozzoli's in the Riccardi
+ Chapel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 'Crucifixion' and the 'Assumption of Madonna' are very tall
+ and narrow compositions, audacious in their attempt to fill
+ almost unmanageable space with a connected action. Of the two
+ frescoes the 'Crucifixion,' which has points of strong similarity
+ to the same subject at Varallo, is by far the best. Ferrari never
+ painted anything at once truer to life and nobler in tragic style
+ than the fainting Virgin. Her face expresses the very acme of
+ martyrdom&mdash;not exaggerated nor spasmodic, but real and
+ sublime&mdash;in the suffering of a stately matron. In points
+ like this Ferrari cannot be surpassed. Raphael could scarcely
+ have done better; besides, there is an air of sincerity, a stamp
+ of popular truth, in this episode, which lies beyond Raphael's
+ sphere. It reminds us rather of Tintoretto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the 'Crucifixion,' I place the 'Adoration of the Magi,'
+ full of fine mundane motives and gorgeous costumes; then the
+ 'Sposalizio' (whose marriage, I am not certain), the only grandly
+ composed picture of the series, and marked by noble heads; then
+ the 'Adoration of the Shepherds,' with two lovely angels holding
+ the bambino. The 'Assumption of the Magdalen'&mdash;for which
+ fresco there is a valuable cartoon in the Albertina Collection at
+ Turin&mdash;must have been a fine picture; but it is ruined now.
+ An oil altar-piece in the choir of the same church struck me less
+ than the frescoes. It represents Madonna and a crowd of saints
+ under an orchard of apple-trees, with cherubs curiously flung
+ about almost at random in the air. The motive of the orchard is
+ prettily conceived and carried out with spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What Ferrari possessed was rapidity of movement, fulness and
+ richness of reality, exuberance of invention, excellent
+ portraiture, dramatic vehemence, and an almost unrivalled
+ sympathy with the swift and passionate world of angels. What he
+ lacked was power of composition, simplicity of total effect,
+ harmony in colouring, control over his own luxuriance, the sense
+ of tranquillity. He seems to have sought grandeur in size and
+ multitude, richness, éclat, contrast. Being the disciple of
+ Lionardo and Raphael, his defects are truly singular. As a
+ composer, the old leaven of Giovenone remained in him; but he
+ felt the dramatic tendencies of a later age, and in occasional
+ episodes he realised them with a force and <i>furia</i> granted
+ to very few of the Italian painters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LANINI AT VERCELLI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Casa Mariano is a palace which belonged to a family of that
+ name. Like many houses of the sort in Italy, it fell to vile
+ uses; and its hall of audience was turned into a lumber-room. The
+ Operai of Vercelli, I was told, bought the palace a few years
+ ago, restored the noble hall, and devoted a smaller room to a
+ collection of pictures valuable for students of the early
+ Vercellese style of painting. Of these there is no need to speak.
+ The great hall is the gem of the Casa Mariano. It has a coved
+ roof, with a large flat oblong space in the centre of the
+ ceiling. The whole of this vault and the lunettes beneath were
+ painted by Lanini; so runs the tradition of the fresco-painter's
+ name; and though much injured by centuries of outrage, and
+ somewhat marred by recent restoration, these frescoes form a
+ precious monument of Lombard art. The object of the painter's
+ design seems to have been the glorification of Music. In the
+ central compartment of the roof is an assembly of the gods,
+ obviously borrowed from Raphael's 'Marriage of Cupid and Psyche'
+ in the Farnesina at Rome. The fusion of Roman composition with
+ Lombard execution constitutes the chief charm of this singular
+ work, and makes it, so far as I am aware, unique. Single figures
+ of the goddesses, and the whole movement of the scene upon
+ Olympus, are transcribed without attempt at concealment. And yet
+ the fresco is not a barefaced copy. The manner of feeling and of
+ execution is quite different from that of Raphael's school. The
+ poetry and sentiment are genuinely Lombard. None of Raphael's
+ pupils could have carried out his design with a delicacy of
+ emotion and a technical skill in colouring so consummate. What,
+ we think, as we gaze upward, would the Master have given for such
+ a craftsman? The hardness, coarseness, and animal crudity of the
+ Roman School are absent: so also is their vigour. But where the
+ grace of form and colour is so soft and sweet, where the
+ high-bred calm of good company is so sympathetically rendered,
+ where the atmosphere of amorous languor and of melody is so
+ artistically diffused, we cannot miss the powerful modelling and
+ rather vulgar <i>tours de force</i> of Giulio Romano. The scale
+ of tone is silvery golden. There are no hard blues, no coarse red
+ flesh-tints, no black shadows. Mellow lights, the morning hues of
+ primrose, or of palest amber, pervade the whole society. It is a
+ court of gentle and harmonious souls; and though this style of
+ beauty might cloy, at first sight there is something ravishing in
+ those yellow-haired white-limbed, blooming deities. No movement
+ of lascivious grace as in Correggio, no perturbation of the
+ senses as in some of the Venetians, disturbs the rhythm of their
+ music; nor is the pleasure of the flesh, though felt by the
+ painter and communicated to the spectator, an interruption to
+ their divine calm. The white, saffron-haired goddesses are
+ grouped together like stars seen in the topaz light of evening,
+ like daffodils half smothered in snowdrops, and among them,
+ Diana, with the crescent on her forehead, is the fairest. Her
+ dream-like beauty need fear no comparison with the Diana of the
+ Camera di S. Paolo. Apollo and Bacchus are scarcely less lovely
+ in their bloom of earliest manhood; honey-pale, as Greeks would
+ say; like statues of living electron; realising Simaetha's
+ picture of her lover and his friend:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ &Tau;&omicron;&#943;&sigmaf;&nbsp;&delta;&#900;&nbsp;&#942;&nu;
+ &nbsp;&xi;&alpha;&nu;&theta;&omicron;&tau;&#941;&rho;&alpha;&nbsp;&mu;&#941;&nu;
+ &epsilon;&lambda;&iota;&chi;&rho;&#973;&sigma;&omicron;&iota;&omicron;
+ &nbsp;&gamma;&epsilon;&nu;&epsilon;&iota;&#940;&sigmaf;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &sigma;&tau;&#942;&theta;&epsilon;&alpha;&nbsp;&delta;&epsilon;
+ &nbsp;&sigma;&tau;&#943;&lambda;&beta;&omicron;&nu;&tau;&alpha;
+ &nbsp;&pi;&omicron;&lambda;&#973;&nbsp;&pi;&lambda;&#941;&omicron;&nu;&nbsp;
+ &eta;&#901;&nbsp;&tau;&upsilon;&nbsp;&Sigma;&epsilon;&lambda;&#940;&nu;&alpha;.
+ <a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It was thus that the almost childlike spirit of the Milanese
+ painters felt the antique: how differently from their Roman
+ brethren! It was thus that they interpreted the lines of their
+ own poets:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ E i tuoi capei più volte ho somigliati
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Di Cerere a le paglie secche o bionde
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dintorno crespi al tuo capo legati.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id=
+ "FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class=
+ "fnanchor">[10]</a>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Yet the painter of this hall&mdash;whether we are to call him
+ Lanini or another&mdash;was not a composer. Where he has not
+ robbed the motives and the distribution of the figures from
+ Raphael, he has nothing left but grace of detail. The
+ intellectual feebleness of his style may be seen in many figures
+ of women playing upon instruments of music, ranged around the
+ walls. One girl at the organ is graceful; another with a
+ tambourine has a sort of Bassarid beauty. But the group of
+ Apollo, Pegasus, and a Muse upon Parnassus, is a failure in its
+ meaningless frigidity, while few of these subordinate
+ compositions show power of conception or vigour of design.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lanini, like Sodoma, was a native of Vercelli; and though he was
+ Ferrari's pupil, there is more in him of Luini or of Sodoma than
+ of his master. He does not rise at any point to the height of
+ these three great masters, but he shares some of Luini's and
+ Sodoma's fine qualities, without having any of Ferrari's force. A
+ visit to the mangled remnants of his frescoes in S. Caterina will
+ repay the student of art. This was once, apparently, a double
+ church, or a church with the hall and chapel of a
+ <i>confraternita</i> appended to it. One portion of the building
+ was painted with the history of the Saint; and very lovely must
+ this work have been, to judge by the fragments which have
+ recently been rescued from whitewash, damp, and ruthless
+ mutilation. What wonderful Lombard faces, half obliterated on the
+ broken wall and mouldering plaster, smile upon us like drowned
+ memories swimming up from the depths of oblivion! Wherever three
+ or four are grouped together, we find an exquisite little
+ picture&mdash;an old woman and two young women in a doorway, for
+ example, telling no story, but touching us with simple harmony of
+ form. Nothing further is needed to render their grace
+ intelligible. Indeed, knowing the faults of the school, we may
+ seek some consolation by telling ourselves that these incomplete
+ fragments yield Lanini's best. In the coved compartments of the
+ roof, above the windows, ran a row of dancing boys; and these are
+ still most beautifully modelled, though the pallor of recent
+ whitewash is upon them. All the boys have blonde hair. They are
+ naked, with scrolls or ribbons wreathed around them, adding to
+ the airiness of their continual dance. Some of the loveliest are
+ in a room used to stow away the lumber of the church&mdash;old
+ boards and curtains, broken lanterns, candle-ends in tin sconces,
+ the musty apparatus of festival adornments, and in the midst of
+ all a battered, weather-beaten bier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE PIAZZA OF PIACENZA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great feature of Piacenza is its famous
+ piazza&mdash;romantically, picturesquely perfect square,
+ surpassing the most daring attempts of the scene-painter, and
+ realising a poet's dreams. The space is considerable, and many
+ streets converge upon it at irregular angles. Its finest
+ architectural feature is the antique Palace of the Commune:
+ Gothic arcades of stone below, surmounted by a brick building
+ with wonderfully delicate and varied terra-cotta work in the
+ round-arched windows. Before this façade, on the marble pavement,
+ prance the bronze equestrian statues of two
+ Farnesi&mdash;insignificant men, exaggerated horses, flying
+ drapery&mdash;as <i>barocco</i> as it is possible to be in style,
+ but so splendidly toned with verdigris, so superb in their
+ <i>bravura</i> attitude, and so happily placed in the line of two
+ streets lending far vistas from the square into the town beyond,
+ that it is difficult to criticise them seriously. They form,
+ indeed, an important element in the pictorial effect, and enhance
+ the terra-cotta work of the façade by the contrast of their
+ colour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time to see this square is in evening twilight&mdash;that
+ wonderful hour after sunset&mdash;when the people are strolling
+ on the pavement, polished to a mirror by the pacing of successive
+ centuries, and when the cavalry soldiers group themselves at the
+ angles under the lamp-posts or beneath the dimly lighted Gothic
+ arches of the Palace. This is the magical mellow hour to be
+ sought by lovers of the picturesque in all the towns of Italy,
+ the hour which, by its tender blendings of sallow western lights
+ with glimmering lamps, casts the veil of half shadow over any
+ crudeness and restores the injuries of Time; the hour when all
+ the tints of these old buildings are intensified, etherealised,
+ and harmonised by one pervasive glow. When I last saw Piacenza,
+ it had been raining all day; and ere sundown a clearing had come
+ from the Alps, followed by fresh threatenings of thunderstorms.
+ The air was very liquid. There was a tract of yellow sunset sky
+ to westward, a faint new moon half swathed in mist above, and
+ over all the north a huge towered thundercloud kept flashing
+ distant lightnings. The pallid primrose of the West, forced down
+ and reflected back from that vast bank of tempest, gave unearthly
+ beauty to the hues of church and palace&mdash;tender half-tones
+ of violet and russet paling into greys and yellows on what in
+ daylight seemed but dull red brick. Even the uncompromising
+ façade of S. Francesco helped; and the Dukes were like statues of
+ the 'Gran Commendatore,' waiting for Don Giovanni's invitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MASOLINO AT CASTIGLIONE D'OLONA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the loveliest Arcadian scenery of woods and fields and
+ rushing waters the road leads downward from Varese to
+ Castiglione. The Collegiate Church stands on a leafy hill above
+ the town, with fair prospect over groves and waterfalls and
+ distant mountains. Here in the choir is a series of frescoes by
+ Masolino da Panicale, the master of Masaccio, who painted them
+ about the year 1428. 'Masolinus de Florentia pinxit' decides
+ their authorship. The histories of the Virgin, S. Stephen and S.
+ Lawrence, are represented: but the injuries of time and neglect
+ have been so great that it is difficult to judge them fairly. All
+ we feel for certain is that Masolino had not yet escaped from the
+ traditional Giottesque mannerism. Only a group of Jews stoning
+ Stephen, and Lawrence before the tribunal, remind us by dramatic
+ energy of the Brancacci Chapel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Baptistery frescoes, dealing with the legend of S. John, show
+ a remarkable advance; and they are luckily in better
+ preservation. A soldier lifting his two-handed sword to strike
+ off the Baptist's head is a vigorous figure, full of Florentine
+ realism. Also in the Baptism in Jordan we are reminded of
+ Masaccio by an excellent group of bathers&mdash;one man taking
+ off his hose, another putting them on again, a third standing
+ naked with his back turned, and a fourth shivering half-dressed
+ with a look of curious sadness on his face. The nude has been
+ carefully studied and well realised. The finest composition of
+ this series is a large panel representing a double
+ action&mdash;Salome at Herod's table begging for the Baptist's
+ head, and then presenting it to her mother Herodias. The costumes
+ are quattrocento Florentine, exactly rendered. Salome is a
+ graceful slender creature; the two women who regard her offering
+ to Herodias with mingled curiosity and horror, are well
+ conceived. The background consists of a mountain landscape in
+ Masaccio's simple manner, a rich Renaissance villa, and an open
+ loggia. The architecture perspective is scientifically accurate,
+ and a frieze of boys with garlands on the villa is in the best
+ manner of Florentine sculpture. On the mountain side, diminished
+ in scale, is a group of elders, burying the body of S. John.
+ These are massed together and robed in the style of Masaccio, and
+ have his virile dignity of form and action. Indeed this
+ interesting wall-painting furnishes an epitome of Florentine art,
+ in its intentions and achievements, during the first half of the
+ fifteenth century. The colour is strong and brilliant, and the
+ execution solid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The margin of the Salome panel has been used for scratching the
+ Chronicle of Castiglione. I read one date, 1568, several of the
+ next century, the record of a duel between two gentlemen, and
+ many inscriptions to this effect, 'Erodiana Regina,' 'Omnia
+ praetereunt,' &amp;c. A dirty one-eyed fellow keeps the place. In
+ my presence he swept the frescoes over with a scratchy broom,
+ flaying their upper surface in profound unconsciousness of
+ mischief. The armour of the executioner has had its steel colours
+ almost rubbed off by this infernal process. Damp and cobwebs are
+ far kinder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE CERTOSA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Certosa of Pavia leaves upon the mind an impression of
+ bewildering sumptuousness: nowhere else are costly materials so
+ combined with a lavish expenditure of the rarest art. Those who
+ have only once been driven round together with the crew of
+ sightseers, can carry little away but the memory of lapis-lazuli
+ and bronze-work, inlaid agates and labyrinthine sculpture,
+ cloisters tenantless in silence, fair painted faces smiling from
+ dark corners on the senseless crowd, trim gardens with rows of
+ pink primroses in spring, and of begonia in autumn, blooming
+ beneath colonnades of glowing terra-cotta. The striking contrast
+ between the Gothic of the interior and the Renaissance façade,
+ each in its own kind perfect, will also be remembered; and
+ thoughts of the two great houses, Visconti and Sforza, to whose
+ pride of power it is a monument, may be blended with the
+ recollection of art-treasures alien to their spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two great artists, Ambrogio Borgognone and Antonio Amadeo, are
+ the presiding genii of the Certosa. To minute criticism, based
+ upon the accurate investigation of records and the comparison of
+ styles, must be left the task of separating their work from that
+ of numerous collaborators. But it is none the less certain that
+ the keynote of the whole music is struck by them, Amadeo, the
+ master of the Colleoni chapel at Bergamo, was both sculptor and
+ architect. If the façade of the Certosa be not absolutely his
+ creation, he had a hand in the distribution of its masses and the
+ detail of its ornaments. The only fault in this otherwise
+ faultless product of the purest quattrocento inspiration, is that
+ the façade is a frontispiece, with hardly any structural relation
+ to the church it masks: and this, though serious from the point
+ of view of architecture, is no abatement of its sculpturesque and
+ picturesque refinement. At first sight it seems a wilderness of
+ loveliest reliefs and statues&mdash;of angel faces, fluttering
+ raiment, flowing hair, love-laden youths, and stationary figures
+ of grave saints, mid wayward tangles of acanthus and wild vine
+ and cupid-laden foliage; but the subordination of these
+ decorative details to the main design, clear, rhythmical, and
+ lucid, like a chaunt of Pergolese or Stradella, will enrapture
+ one who has the sense for unity evoked from divers elements, for
+ thought subduing all caprices to the harmony of beauty. It is not
+ possible elsewhere in Italy to find the instinct of the earlier
+ Renaissance, so amorous in its expenditure of rare material, so
+ lavish in its bestowal of the costliest workmanship on ornamental
+ episodes, brought into truer keeping with a pure and simple
+ structural effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the great sculptor-architects of Lombardy worked in
+ succession on this miracle of beauty; and this may account for
+ the sustained perfection of style, which nowhere suffers from the
+ languor of exhaustion in the artist or from repetition of
+ motives. It remains the triumph of North Italian genius,
+ exhibiting qualities of tenderness and self-abandonment to
+ inspiration, which we lack in the severer masterpieces of the
+ Tuscan school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Borgognone is assigned the painting of the roof in nave and
+ choir&mdash;exceeding rich, varied, and withal in sympathy with
+ stately Gothic style. Borgognone again is said to have designed
+ the saints and martyrs worked in <i>tarsia</i> for the
+ choir-stalls. His frescoes are in some parts well preserved, as
+ in the lovely little Madonna at the end of the south chapel,
+ while the great fresco above the window in the south transept has
+ an historical value that renders it interesting in spite of
+ partial decay. Borgognone's oil pictures throughout the church
+ prove, if such proof were needed after inspection of the
+ altar-piece in our National Gallery, that he was one of the most
+ powerful and original painters of Italy, blending the repose of
+ the earlier masters and their consummate workmanship with a
+ profound sensibility to the finest shades of feeling and the
+ rarest forms of natural beauty. He selected an exquisite type of
+ face for his young men and women; on his old men he bestowed
+ singular gravity and dignity. His saints are a society of strong,
+ pure, restful, earnest souls, in whom the passion of deepest
+ emotion is transfigured by habitual calm. The brown and golden
+ harmonies he loved, are gained without sacrifice of lustre: there
+ is a self-restraint in his colouring which corresponds to the
+ reserve of his emotion; and though a regret sometimes rises in
+ our mind that he should have modelled the light and shade upon
+ his faces with a brusque, unpleasing hardness, their pallor
+ dwells within our memory as something delicately sought if not
+ consummately attained. In a word, Borgognone was a true Lombard
+ of the best time. The very imperfection of his flesh-painting
+ repeats in colour what the greatest Lombard sculptors sought in
+ stone&mdash;a sharpness of relief that passes over into
+ angularity. This brusqueness was the counterpoise to tenderness
+ of feeling and intensity of fancy in these northern artists. Of
+ all Borgognone's pictures in the Certosa I should select the
+ altar-piece of S. Siro with S. Lawrence and S. Stephen and two
+ Fathers of the Church, for its fusion of this master's qualities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Certosa is a wilderness of lovely workmanship. From
+ Borgognone's majesty we pass into the quiet region of Luini's
+ Christian grace, or mark the influence of Lionardo on that rare
+ Assumption of Madonna by his pupil, Andrea Solari. Like
+ everything touched by the Lionardesque spirit, this great picture
+ was left unfinished: yet Northern Italy has nothing finer to show
+ than the landscape, outspread in its immeasurable purity of calm,
+ behind the grouped Apostles and the ascendant Mother of Heaven.
+ The feeling of that happy region between the Alps and Lombardy,
+ where there are many waters&mdash;<i>et tacitos sine labe laous
+ sine murmure rivos</i>&mdash;and where the last spurs of the
+ mountains sink in undulations to the plain, has passed into this
+ azure vista, just as all Umbria is suggested in a twilight
+ background of young Raphael or Perugino.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The portraits of the Dukes of Milan and their families carry us
+ into a very different realm of feeling. Medallions above the
+ doors of sacristy and chancel, stately figures reared aloft
+ beneath gigantic canopies, men and women slumbering with folded
+ hands upon their marble biers&mdash;we read in all those
+ sculptured forms a strange record of human restlessness, resolved
+ into the quiet of the tomb. The iniquities of Gian Galeazzo
+ Visconti, <i>il gran Biscione</i>, the blood-thirst of Gian
+ Maria, the dark designs of Filippo and his secret vices,
+ Francesco Sforza's treason, Galeazzo Maria's vanities and lusts;
+ their tyrants' dread of thunder and the knife; their awful deaths
+ by pestilence and the assassin's poignard; their selfishness,
+ oppression, cruelty and fraud; the murders of their kinsmen;
+ their labyrinthine plots and acts of broken faith;&mdash;all is
+ tranquil now, and we can say to each what Bosola found for the
+ Duchess of Malfi ere her execution:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ Much you had of land and rent;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your length in clay's now competent:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A long war disturbed your mind;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here your perfect peace is signed!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Some of these faces are commonplace, with <i>bourgeois</i>
+ cunning written on the heavy features; one is bluff, another
+ stolid, a third bloated, a fourth stately. The sculptors have
+ dealt fairly with all, and not one has the lineaments of utter
+ baseness. To Cristoforo Solari's statues of Lodovico Sforza and
+ his wife, Beatrice d'Este, the palm of excellence in art and of
+ historical interest must be awarded. Sculpture has rarely been
+ more dignified and true to life than here. The woman with her
+ short clustering curls, the man with his strong face, are resting
+ after that long fever which brought woe to Italy, to Europe a new
+ age, and to the boasted minion of Fortune a slow death in the
+ prison palace of Loches. Attired in ducal robes, they lie in
+ state; and the sculptor has carved the lashes on their eyelids,
+ heavy with death's marmoreal sleep. He at least has passed no
+ judgment on their crimes. Let us too bow and leave their memories
+ to the historian's pen, their spirits to God's mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all wanderings in this Temple of Art, we return to Antonio
+ Amadeo, to his long-haired seraphs playing on the lutes of
+ Paradise, to his angels of the Passion with their fluttering
+ robes and arms outspread in agony, to his saints and satyrs
+ mingled on pilasters of the marble doorways, his delicate
+ <i>Lavabo</i> decorations, and his hymns of piety expressed in
+ noble forms of weeping women and dead Christs. Wherever we may
+ pass, this master-spirit of the Lombard style enthralls
+ attention. His curious treatment of drapery as though it Ĥwere
+ made of crumpled paper, and his trick of enhancing relief by
+ sharp angles and attenuated limbs, do not detract from his
+ peculiar charm. That is his way, very different from Donatello's,
+ of attaining to the maximum of life and lightness in the stubborn
+ vehicle of stone. Nor do all the riches of the choir&mdash;those
+ multitudes of singing angels, those Ascensions and Assumptions,
+ and innumerable basreliefs of gleaming marble moulded into
+ softest wax by mastery of art&mdash;distract our eyes from the
+ single round medallion, not larger than a common plate, inscribed
+ by him upon the front of the high altar. Perhaps, if one who
+ loved Amadeo were bidden to point out his masterpiece, he would
+ lead the way at once to this. The space is small: yet it includes
+ the whole tragedy of the Passion. Christ is lying dead among the
+ women on his mother's lap, and there are pitying angels in the
+ air above. One woman lifts his arm, another makes her breast a
+ pillow for his head. Their agony is hushed, but felt in every
+ limb and feature; and the extremity of suffering is seen in each
+ articulation of the worn and wounded form just taken from the
+ cross. It would be too painful, were not the harmony of art so
+ rare, the interlacing of those many figures in a simple round so
+ exquisite. The noblest tranquillity and the most passionate
+ emotion are here fused in a manner of adorable naturalness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the church it is delightful to escape into the cloisters,
+ flooded with sunlight, where the swallows skim, and the brown
+ hawks circle, and the mason bees are at work upon their cells
+ among the carvings. The arcades of the two cloisters are the
+ final triumph of Lombard terra-cotta. The memory fails before
+ such infinite invention, such facility and felicity of execution.
+ Wreaths of cupids gliding round the arches among grape-bunches
+ and bird-haunted foliage of vine; rows of angels, like rising and
+ setting planets, some smiling and some grave, ascending and
+ descending by the Gothic curves; saints stationary on their
+ pedestals, and faces leaning from the rounds above; crowds of
+ cherubs, and courses of stars, and acanthus leaves in woven
+ lines, and ribands incessantly inscribed with Ave Maria! Then,
+ over all, the rich red light and purple shadows of the brick,
+ than which no substance sympathises more completely with the sky
+ of solid blue above, the broad plain space of waving summer grass
+ beneath our feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is now late afternoon, and when evening comes, the train will
+ take us back to Milan. There is yet a little while to rest tired
+ eyes and strained spirits among the willows and the poplars by
+ the monastery wall. Through that grey-green leafage, young with
+ early spring, the pinnacles of the Certosa leap like flames into
+ the sky. The rice-fields are under water, far and wide, shining
+ like burnished gold beneath the level light now near to sun-down.
+ Frogs are croaking; those persistent frogs, whom the Muses have
+ ordained to sing for aye, in spite of Bion and all tuneful poets
+ dead. We sit and watch the water-snakes, the busy rats, the
+ hundred creatures swarming in the fat well-watered soil.
+ Nightingales here and there, new-comers, tune their timid April
+ song: but, strangest of all sounds in such a place, my comrade
+ from the Grisons jodels forth an Alpine cowherd's melody. <i>Auf
+ den Alpen droben ist ein herrliches Leben!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did the echoes of Gian Galeazzo's convent ever wake to such a
+ tune as this before?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SAN MAURIZIO
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The student of art in Italy, after mastering the characters of
+ different styles and epochs, finds a final satisfaction in the
+ contemplation of buildings designed and decorated by one master,
+ or by groups of artists interpreting the spirit of a single
+ period. Such supreme monuments of the national genius are not
+ very common, and they are therefore the more precious. Giotto's
+ Chapel at Padua; the Villa Farnesina at Rome, built by Peruzzi
+ and painted in fresco by Raphael and Sodoma; the Palazzo del Te
+ at Mantua, Giulio Romano's masterpiece; the Scuola di San Rocco,
+ illustrating the Venetian Renaissance at its climax, might be
+ cited among the most splendid of these achievements. In the
+ church of the Monastero Maggiore at Milan, dedicated to S.
+ Maurizio, Lombard architecture and fresco-painting may be studied
+ in this rare combination. The monastery itself, one of the oldest
+ in Milan, formed a retreat for cloistered virgins following the
+ rule of S. Benedict. It may have been founded as early as the
+ tenth century; but its church was rebuilt in the first two
+ decades of the sixteenth, between 1503 and 1519, and was
+ immediately afterwards decorated with frescoes by Luini and his
+ pupils. Gian Giacomo Dolcebono, architect and sculptor, called by
+ his fellow-craftsmen <i>magistro di taliare pietre</i>, gave the
+ design, at once simple and harmonious, which was carried out with
+ hardly any deviation from his plan. The church is a long
+ parallelogram, divided into two unequal portions, the first and
+ smaller for the public, the second for the nuns. The walls are
+ pierced with rounded and pilastered windows, ten on each side,
+ four of which belong to the outer and six to the inner section.
+ The dividing wall or septum rises to the point from which the
+ groinings of the roof spring; and round three sides of the whole
+ building, north, east, and south, runs a gallery for the use of
+ the convent. The altars of the inner and outer church are placed
+ against the septum, back to back, with certain differences of
+ structure that need not be described. Simple and severe, S.
+ Maurizio owes its architectural beauty wholly and entirely to
+ purity of line and perfection of proportion. There is a
+ prevailing spirit of repose, a sense of space, fair, lightsome,
+ and adapted to serene moods of the meditative fancy in this
+ building, which is singularly at variance with the religious
+ mysticism and imaginative grandeur of a Gothic edifice. The
+ principal beauty of the church, however, is its tone of colour.
+ Every square inch is covered with fresco or rich woodwork,
+ mellowed by time into that harmony of tints which blends the work
+ of greater and lesser artists in one golden hue of brown. Round
+ the arcades of the convent-loggia run delicate arabesques with
+ faces of fair female saints&mdash;Catherine, Agnes, Lucy,
+ Agatha,&mdash;gem-like or star-like, gazing from their gallery
+ upon the church below. The Luinesque smile is on their lips and
+ in their eyes, quiet, refined, as though the emblems of their
+ martyrdom brought back no thought of pain to break the Paradise
+ of rest in which they dwell. There are twenty-six in all, a
+ sisterhood of stainless souls, the lilies of Love's garden
+ planted round Christ's throne. Soldier saints are mingled with
+ them in still smaller rounds above the windows, chosen to
+ illustrate the virtues of an order which renounced the world. To
+ decide whose hand produced these masterpieces of Lombard suavity
+ and grace, or whether more than one, would not be easy. Near the
+ altar we can perhaps trace the style of Bartolommeo Suardi in an
+ Annunciation painted on the spandrils&mdash;that heroic style,
+ large and noble, known to us by the chivalrous S. Martin and the
+ glorified Madonna of the Brera frescoes. It is not impossible
+ that the male saints of the loggia may be also his, though a
+ tenderer touch, a something more nearly Lionardesque in its
+ quietude, must be discerned in Lucy and her sisters. The whole of
+ the altar in this inner church belongs to Luini. Were it not for
+ darkness and decay, we should pronounce this series of the
+ Passion in nine great compositions, with saints and martyrs and
+ torch-bearing genii, to be one of his most ambitious and
+ successful efforts. As it is, we can but judge in part; the
+ adolescent beauty of Sebastian, the grave compassion of S. Rocco,
+ the classical perfection of the cupid with lighted tapers, the
+ gracious majesty of women smiling on us sideways from their
+ Lombard eyelids&mdash;these remain to haunt our memory, emerging
+ from the shadows of the vault above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inner church, as is fitting, excludes all worldly elements.
+ We are in the presence of Christ's agony, relieved and tempered
+ by the sunlight of those beauteous female faces. All is solemn
+ here, still as the convent, pure as the meditations of a novice.
+ We pass the septum, and find ourselves in the outer church
+ appropriated to the laity. Above the high altar the whole wall is
+ covered with Luini's loveliest work, in excellent light and far
+ from ill preserved. The space divides into eight compartments. A
+ Pietà, an Assumption, Saints and Founders of the church, group
+ themselves under the influence of Luini's harmonising colour into
+ one symphonious whole. But the places of distinction are reserved
+ for two great benefactors of the convent, Alessandro de'
+ Bentivogli and his wife, Ippolita Sforza. When the Bentivogli
+ were expelled from Bologna by the Papal forces, Alessandro
+ settled at Milan, where he dwelt, honoured by the Sforzas and
+ allied to them by marriage, till his death in 1532. He was buried
+ in the monastery by the side of his sister Alessandra, a nun of
+ the order. Luini has painted the illustrious exile in his habit
+ as he lived. He is kneeling, as though in ever-during adoration
+ of the altar mystery, attired in a long black senatorial robe
+ trimmed with furs. In his left hand he holds a book; and above
+ his pale, serenely noble face is a little black berretta. Saints
+ attend him, as though attesting to his act of faith. Opposite
+ kneels Ippolita, his wife, the brilliant queen of fashion, the
+ witty leader of society, to whom Bandello dedicated his Novelle,
+ and whom he praised as both incomparably beautiful and singularly
+ learned. Her queenly form is clothed from head to foot in white
+ brocade, slashed and trimmed with gold lace, and on her forehead
+ is a golden circlet. She has the proud port of a princess, the
+ beauty of a woman past her prime but stately, the indescribable
+ dignity of attitude which no one but Luini could have rendered so
+ majestically sweet. In her hand is a book; and she, like
+ Alessandro, has her saintly sponsors, Agnes and Catherine and S.
+ Scolastica.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few pictures bring the splendid Milanese Court so vividly before
+ us as these portraits of the Bentivogli: they are, moreover, very
+ precious for the light they throw on what Luini could achieve in
+ the secular style so rarely touched by him. Great, however, as
+ are these frescoes, they are far surpassed both in value and
+ interest by his paintings in the side chapel of S. Catherine.
+ Here more than anywhere else, more even than at Saronno or
+ Lugano, do we feel the true distinction of Luini&mdash;his
+ unrivalled excellence as a colourist, his power over pathos, the
+ refinement of his feeling, and the peculiar beauty of his
+ favourite types. The chapel was decorated at the expense of a
+ Milanese advocate, Francesco Besozzi, who died in 1529. It is he
+ who is kneeling, grey-haired and bareheaded, under the protection
+ of S. Catherine of Alexandria, intently gazing at Christ unbound
+ from the scourging pillar. On the other side stand S. Lawrence
+ and S. Stephen, pointing to the Christ and looking at us, as
+ though their lips were framed to say: 'Behold and see if there be
+ any sorrow like unto his sorrow.' Even the soldiers who have done
+ their cruel work, seem softened. They untie the cords tenderly,
+ and support the fainting form, too weak to stand alone. What
+ sadness in the lovely faces of S. Catherine and Lawrence! What
+ divine anguish in the loosened limbs and bending body of Christ;
+ what piety in the adoring old man! All the moods proper to this
+ supreme tragedy of the faith are touched as in some tenor song
+ with low accompaniment of viols; for it was Luini's special
+ province to feel profoundly and to express musically. The very
+ depth of the Passion is there; and yet there is no discord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just in proportion to this unique faculty for yielding a
+ melodious representation of the most intense moments of
+ stationary emotion, was his inability to deal with a dramatic
+ subject. The first episode of S. Catherine's execution, when the
+ wheel was broken and the executioners struck by lightning, is
+ painted in this chapel without energy and with a lack of
+ composition that betrays the master's indifference to his
+ subject. Far different is the second episode when Catherine is
+ about to be beheaded. The executioner has raised his sword to
+ strike. She, robed in brocade of black and gold, so cut as to
+ display the curve of neck and back, while the bosom is covered,
+ leans her head above her praying hands, and waits the blow in
+ sweetest resignation. Two soldiers stand at some distance in a
+ landscape of hill and meadow; and far up are seen the angels
+ carrying her body to its tomb upon Mount Sinai. I cannot find
+ words or summon courage to describe the beauty of this picture;
+ its atmosphere of holy peace, the dignity of its composition, the
+ golden richness of its colouring. The most tragic situation has
+ here again been alchemised by Luini's magic into a pure idyll,
+ without the loss of power, without the sacrifice of edification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ S. Catherine in this incomparable fresco is a portrait, the
+ history of which so strikingly illustrates the relation of the
+ arts to religion on the one hand, and to life on the other, in
+ the age of the Renaissance, that it cannot be omitted. At the end
+ of his fourth Novella, having related the life of the Contessa di
+ Cellant, Bandello says: 'And so the poor woman was beheaded; such
+ was the end of her unbridled desires; and he who would fain see
+ her painted to the life, let him go to the Church of the
+ Monistero Maggiore, and there will he behold her portrait.' The
+ Contessa di Cellant was the only child of a rich usurer who lived
+ at Casal Monferrato. Her mother was a Greek; and she was a girl
+ of such exquisite beauty, that, in spite of her low origin, she
+ became the wife of the noble Ermes Visconti in her sixteenth
+ year. He took her to live with him at Milan, where she frequented
+ the house of the Bentivogli, but none other. Her husband told
+ Bandello that he knew her temper better than to let her visit
+ with the freedom of the Milanese ladies. Upon his death, while
+ she was little more than twenty, she retired to Casale and led a
+ gay life among many lovers. One of these, the Count of Cellant in
+ the Val d'Aosta, became her second husband, conquered by her
+ extraordinary loveliness. They could not, however, agree
+ together. She left him, and established herself at Pavia. Rich
+ with her father's wealth and still of most seductive beauty, she
+ now abandoned herself to a life of profligacy. Three among her
+ lovers must be named: Ardizzino Valperga, Count of Masino;
+ Roberto Sanseverino, of the princely Naples family; and Don
+ Pietro di Cardona, a Sicilian. With each of the two first she
+ quarrelled, and separately besought each to murder the other.
+ They were friends and frustrated her plans by communicating them
+ to one another. The third loved her with the insane passion of a
+ very young man. What she desired, he promised to do blindly; and
+ she bade him murder his two predecessors in her favour. At this
+ time she was living at Milan, where the Duke of Bourbon was
+ acting as viceroy for the Emperor. Don Pietro took twenty-five
+ armed men of his household, and waylaid the Count of Masino, as
+ he was returning with his brother and eight or nine servants,
+ late one night from supper. Both the brothers and the greater
+ part of their suite were killed: but Don Pietro was caught. He
+ revealed the atrocity of his mistress; and she was sent to
+ prison. Incapable of proving her innocence, and prevented from
+ escaping, in spite of 15,000 golden crowns with which she hoped
+ to bribe her jailors, she was finally beheaded. Thus did a vulgar
+ and infamous Messalina, distinguished only by rare beauty,
+ furnish Luini with a S. Catherine for this masterpiece of pious
+ art! The thing seems scarcely credible. Yet Bandello lived in
+ Milan while the Church of S. Maurizio was being painted; nor does
+ he show the slightest sign of disgust at the discord between the
+ Contessa's life and her artistic presentation in the person of a
+ royal martyr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A HUMANIST'S MONUMENT
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Sculpture Gallery of the Brera is preserved a fair white
+ marble tomb, carved by that excellent Lombard sculptor, Agostino
+ Busti. The epitaph runs as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ En Virtutem Mortis nesciam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vivet Lancinus Curtius
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sĉcula per omnia
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quascunque lustrans oras,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tantum possunt Camoenĉ.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ 'Look here on Virtue that knows nought of Death! Lancinus Curtius
+ shall live through all the centuries, and visit every shore of
+ earth. Such power have the Muses.' The timeworn poet reclines, as
+ though sleeping or resting, ready to be waked; his head is
+ covered with flowing hair, and crowned with laurel; it leans upon
+ his left hand. On either side of his couch stand cupids or genii
+ with torches turned to earth. Above is a group of the three
+ Graces, flanked by winged Pegasi. Higher up are throned two
+ Victories with palms, and at the top a naked Fame. We need not
+ ask who was Lancinus Curtius. He is forgotten, and his virtue has
+ not saved him from oblivion; though he strove in his lifetime,
+ <i>pro virili parte</i>, for the palm that Busti carved upon his
+ grave. Yet his monument teaches in short compass a deep lesson;
+ and his epitaph sums up the dream which lured the men of Italy in
+ the Renaissance to their doom. We see before us sculptured in
+ this marble the ideal of the humanistic poet-scholar's life:
+ Love, Grace, the Muse, and Nakedness, and Glory. There is not a
+ single intrusive thought derived from Christianity. The end for
+ which the man lived was Pagan. His hope was earthly fame. Yet his
+ name survives, if this indeed be a survival, not in those winged
+ verses which were to carry him abroad across the earth, but in
+ the marble of a cunning craftsman, scanned now and then by a
+ wandering scholar's eye in the half-darkness of a vault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE MONUMENT OF GASTON DE FOIX IN THE BRERA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hero of Ravenna lies stretched upon his back in the hollow of
+ a bier covered with laced drapery; and his head rests on richly
+ ornamented cushions. These decorative accessories, together with
+ the minute work of his scabbard, wrought in the fanciful
+ mannerism of the <i>cinquecento</i>, serve to enhance the
+ statuesque simplicity of the young soldier's effigy. The contrast
+ between so much of richness in the merely subordinate details,
+ and this sublime severity of treatment in the person of the hero,
+ is truly and touchingly dramatic. There is a smile as of content
+ in death, upon his face; and the features are exceedingly
+ beautiful&mdash;with the beauty of a boy, almost of a woman. The
+ heavy hair is cut straight above the forehead and straight over
+ the shoulders, falling in massive clusters. A delicately
+ sculptured laurel branch is woven into a victor's crown, and laid
+ lightly on the tresses it scarcely seems to clasp. So fragile is
+ this wreath that it does not break the pure outline of the
+ boy-conqueror's head. The armour is quite plain. So is the
+ surcoat. Upon the swelling bust, that seems fit harbour for a
+ hero's heart, there lies the collar of an order composed of
+ cockle-shells; and this is all the ornament given to the figure.
+ The hands are clasped across a sword laid flat upon the breast,
+ and placed between the legs. Upon the chin is a little tuft of
+ hair, parted, and curling either way; for the victor of Ravenna,
+ like the Hermes of Homer, was &pi;&rho;&omega;&tau;&omicron;&nu;
+ &nbsp;&#971;&pi;&eta;&nu;&eta;&tau;&eta;&sigmaf;, 'a youth of
+ princely blood, whose beard hath just begun to grow, for whom the
+ season of bloom is in its prime of grace.' The whole statue is
+ the idealisation of <i>virtù</i>&mdash;that quality so highly
+ prized by the Italians and the ancients, so well fitted for
+ commemoration in the arts. It is the apotheosis of human life
+ resolved into undying memory because of one great deed. It is the
+ supreme portrait in modern times of a young hero, chiselled by
+ artists belonging to a race no longer heroic, but capable of
+ comprehending and expressing the ĉsthetic charm of heroism.
+ Standing before it, we may say of Gaston what Arrian wrote to
+ Hadrian of Achilles:&mdash;'That he was a hero, if hero ever
+ lived, I cannot doubt; for his birth and blood were noble, and he
+ was beautiful, and his spirit was mighty, and he passed in
+ youth's prime away from men.' Italian sculpture, under the
+ condition of the <i>cinquecento</i>, had indeed no more congenial
+ theme than this of bravery and beauty, youth and fame, immortal
+ honour and untimely death; nor could any sculptor of death have
+ poetised the theme more thoroughly than Agostino Busti, whose
+ simple instinct, unlike that of Michelangelo, led him to
+ subordinate his own imagination to the pathos of reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SARONNO
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church of Saronno is a pretty building with a Bramantesque
+ cupola, standing among meadows at some distance from the little
+ town. It is the object of a special cult, which draws pilgrims
+ from the neighbouring country-side; but the concourse is not
+ large enough to load the sanctuary with unnecessary wealth.
+ Everything is very quiet in the holy place, and the offerings of
+ the pious seem to have been only just enough to keep the building
+ and its treasures of art in repair. The church consists of a
+ nave, a central cupola, a vestibule leading to the choir, the
+ choir itself, and a small tribune behind the choir. No other
+ single building in North Italy can boast so much that is
+ first-rate of the work of Luini and Gandenzio Ferrari.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cupola is raised on a sort of drum composed of twelve pieces,
+ perforated with round windows and supported on four massive
+ piers. On the level of the eye are frescoes by Luini of S. Rocco,
+ S. Sebastian, S. Christopher, and S. Antony&mdash;by no means in
+ his best style, and inferior to all his other paintings in this
+ church. The Sebastian, for example, shows an effort to vary the
+ traditional treatment of this saint. He is tied in a sprawling
+ attitude to a tree; and little of Luini's special pathos or sense
+ of beauty&mdash;the melody of idyllic grace made
+ spiritual&mdash;appears in him. These four saints are on the
+ piers. Above are frescoes from the early Bible history by Lanini,
+ painted in continuation of Ferrari's medallions from the story of
+ Adam expelled from Paradise, which fill the space beneath the
+ cupola, leading the eye upward to Ferrari's masterpiece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dome itself is crowded with a host of angels singing and
+ playing upon instruments of music. At each of the twelve angles
+ of the drum stands a coryphĉus of this celestial choir, full
+ length, with waving drapery. Higher up, the golden-haired,
+ broad-winged, divine creatures are massed together, filling every
+ square inch of the vault with colour. Yet there is no confusion.
+ The simplicity of the selected motive and the necessities of the
+ place acted like a check on Ferrari, who, in spite of his
+ dramatic impulse, could not tell a story coherently or fill a
+ canvas with harmonised variety. There is no trace of his violence
+ here. Though the motion of music runs through the whole multitude
+ like a breeze, though the joy expressed is a real <i>tripudio
+ celeste</i>, not one of all these angels flings his arms abroad
+ or makes a movement that disturbs the rhythm. We feel that they
+ are keeping time and resting quietly, each in his appointed seat,
+ as though the sphere was circling with them round the throne of
+ God, who is their centre and their source of gladness. Unlike
+ Correggio and his imitators, Ferrari has introduced no clouds,
+ and has in no case made the legs of his angels prominent. It is a
+ mass of noble faces and voluminously robed figures, emerging each
+ above the other like flowers in a vase. Bach too has specific
+ character, while all are robust and full of life, intent upon the
+ service set them. Their instruments of music are all the lutes
+ and viols, flutes, cymbals, drums, fifes, citherns, organs, and
+ harps that Ferrari's day could show. The scale of colour, as
+ usual with Ferrari, is a little heavy; nor are the tints
+ satisfactorily harmonised. But the vigour and invention of the
+ whole work would atone for minor defects of far greater
+ consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is natural, beneath this dome, to turn aside and think one
+ moment of Correggio at Parma. Before the <i>macchinisti</i> of
+ the seventeenth century had vulgarised the motive, Correggio's
+ bold attempt to paint heaven in flight from earth&mdash;earth
+ left behind in the persons of the Apostles standing round the
+ empty tomb, heaven soaring upward with a spiral vortex into the
+ abyss of light above&mdash;had an originality which set at nought
+ all criticism. There is such ecstasy of jubilation, such
+ rapturous rapidity of flight, that we who strain our eyes from
+ below, feel we are in the darkness of the grave which Mary left.
+ A kind of controlling rhythm for the composition is gained by
+ placing Gabriel, Madonna, and Christ at three points in the swirl
+ of angels. Nevertheless, composition&mdash;the presiding
+ all-controlling intellect&mdash;is just what makes itself felt by
+ absence; and Correggio's special qualities of light and colour
+ have now so far vanished from the cupola of the Duomo that the,
+ constructive poverty is not disguised. Here if anywhere in
+ painting, we may apply Goethe's words&mdash;<i>Gefühl ist
+ Alles.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If then we return to Ferrari's angels at Saronno, we find that
+ the painter of Varallo chose a safer though a far more modest
+ theme. Nor did he expose himself to that most cruel of all
+ degradations which the ethereal genius of Correggio has suffered
+ from incompetent imitators. To daub a tawdry and superficial
+ reproduction of those Parmese frescoes, to fill the cupolas of
+ Italy with veritable <i>guazzetti di rane</i>, was comparatively
+ easy; and between our intelligence and what remains of that
+ stupendous masterpiece of boldness, crowd a thousand memories of
+ such ineptitude. On the other hand, nothing but solid work and
+ conscientious inspiration could enable any workman, however able,
+ to follow Ferrari in the path struck out by him at Saronno. His
+ cupola has had no imitator; and its only rival is the noble
+ pendant painted at Varallo by his own hand, of angels in adoring
+ anguish round the Cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the ante-choir of the sanctuary are Luini's priceless frescoes
+ of the 'Marriage of the Virgin,' and the 'Dispute with the
+ Doctors.'<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id=
+ "FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class=
+ "fnanchor">[11]</a> Their execution is flawless, and they are
+ perfectly preserved. If criticism before such admirable examples
+ of so excellent a master be permissible, it may be questioned
+ whether the figures are not too crowded, whether the groups are
+ sufficiently varied and connected by rhythmic lines. Yet the
+ concords of yellow and orange with blue in the 'Sposalizio,' and
+ the blendings of dull violet and red in the 'Disputa,' make up
+ for much of stiffness. Here, as in the Chapel of S. Catherine at
+ Milan, we feel that Luini was the greatest colourist among
+ <i>frescanti.</i> In the 'Sposalizio' the female heads are
+ singularly noble and idyllically graceful. Some of the young men
+ too have Luini's special grace and abundance of golden hair. In
+ the 'Disputa' the gravity and dignity of old men are above all
+ things striking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passing into the choir, we find on either hand the 'Adoration of
+ the Magi' and the 'Purification of the Virgin,' two of Luini's
+ divinest frescoes. Above them in lunettes are four Evangelists
+ and four Latin Fathers, with four Sibyls. Time and neglect have
+ done no damage here: and here, again, perforce we notice perfect
+ mastery of colour in fresco. The blues detach themselves too
+ much, perhaps, from the rest of the colouring; and that is all a
+ devil's advocate could say. It is possible that the absence of
+ blue makes the S. Catherine frescoes in the Monastero Maggiore at
+ Milan surpass all other works of Luini. But nowhere else has he
+ shown more beauty and variety in detail than here. The group of
+ women led by Joseph, the shepherd carrying the lamb upon his
+ shoulder, the girl with a basket of white doves, the child with
+ an apple on the altar-steps, the lovely youth in the foreground
+ heedless of the scene; all these are idyllic incidents treated
+ with the purest, the serenest, the most spontaneous, the truest,
+ most instinctive sense of beauty. The landscape includes a view
+ of Saronno, and an episodical picture of the 'Flight into Egypt'
+ where a white-robed angel leads the way. All these lovely things
+ are in the 'Purification,' which is dated <i>Bernardinus Lovinus
+ pinxit</i>, MDXXV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fresco of the 'Magi' is less notable in detail, and in
+ general effect is more spoiled by obtrusive blues. There is,
+ however, one young man of wholly Lionardesque loveliness, whose
+ divine innocence of adolescence, unalloyed by serious thought,
+ unstirred by passions, almost forces a comparison with Sodoma.
+ The only painter who approaches Luini in what may be called the
+ Lombard, to distinguish it from the Venetian idyll, is Sodoma;
+ and the work of his which comes nearest to Luini's masterpieces
+ is the legend of S. Benedict, at Monte Oliveto, near Siena. Yet
+ Sodoma had not all Luini's innocence or <i>naïveté.</i> If he
+ added something slightly humorous which has an indefinite charm,
+ he lacked that freshness as of 'cool, meek-blooded flowers' and
+ boyish voices, which fascinates us in Luini. Sodoma was closer to
+ the earth, and feared not to impregnate what he saw of beauty
+ with the fiercer passions of his nature. If Luini had felt
+ passion, who shall say? It appears nowhere in his work, where
+ life is toned to a religious joyousness. When Shelley compared
+ the poetry of the Theocritean amourists to the perfume of the
+ tuberose, and that of the earlier Greek poets to 'a meadow-gale
+ of June, which mingles the fragrance of all the flowers of the
+ field,' he supplied us with critical images which may not
+ unfairly be used to point the distinction between Sodoma at Monte
+ Oliveto and Luini at Saronno.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE CASTELLO OF FERRARA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it possible that the patron saints of cities should mould the
+ temper of the people to their own likeness? S. George, the
+ chivalrous, is champion of Ferrara. His is the marble group above
+ the Cathedral porch, so feudal in its medieval pomp. He and S.
+ Michael are painted in fresco over the south portcullis of the
+ Castle. His lustrous armour gleams with Giorgionesque brilliancy
+ from Dossi's masterpiece in the Pinacoteca. That Ferrara, the
+ only place in Italy where chivalry struck any root, should have
+ had S. George for patron, is at any rate significant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best preserved relic of princely feudal life in Italy is this
+ Castello of the Este family, with its sombre moat, chained
+ drawbridges, doleful dungeons, and unnumbered tragedies, each one
+ of which may be compared with Parisina's history. I do not want
+ to dwell on these things now. It is enough to remember the
+ Castello, built of ruddiest brick, time-mellowed with how many
+ centuries of sun and soft sea-air, as it appeared upon the close
+ of one tempestuous day. Just before evening the rain-clouds
+ parted and the sun flamed out across the misty Lombard plain. The
+ Castello burned like a hero's funeral pyre, and round its
+ high-built turrets swallows circled in the warm blue air. On the
+ moat slept shadows, mixed with flowers of sunset, tossed from
+ pinnacle and gable. Then the sky changed. A roof of thunder-cloud
+ spread overhead with the rapidity of tempest. The dying sun
+ gathered his last strength against it, fretting those steel-blue
+ arches with crimson; and all the fierce light, thrown from vault
+ to vault of cloud, was reflected back as from a shield, and cast
+ in blots and patches on the buildings. The Castle towered up
+ rosy-red and shadowy sombre, enshrined, embosomed in those purple
+ clouds; and momently ran lightning forks like rapiers through the
+ growing mass. Everything around, meanwhile, was quiet in the
+ grass-grown streets. The only sound was a high, clear boy's voice
+ chanting an opera tune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PETRARCH'S TOMB AT ARQUA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drive from Este along the skirts of the Euganean Hills to
+ Arqua takes one through a country which is tenderly beautiful,
+ because of its contrast between little peaked mountains and the
+ plain. It is not a grand landscape. It lacks all that makes the
+ skirts of Alps and Apennines sublime. Its charm is a certain
+ mystery and repose&mdash;an undefined sense of the neighbouring
+ Adriatic, a pervading consciousness of Venice unseen, but felt
+ from far away. From the terraces of Arqua the eye ranges across
+ olive-trees, laurels, and pomegranates on the southern slopes, to
+ the misty level land that melts into the sea, with churches and
+ tall campanili like gigantic galleys setting sail for fairyland
+ over 'the foam of perilous seas forlorn.' Let a blue-black shadow
+ from a thunder-cloud be cast upon this plain, and let one ray of
+ sunlight strike a solitary bell-tower;&mdash;it burns with palest
+ flame of rose against the steely dark, and in its slender shaft
+ and shell-like tint of pink all Venice is foreseen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The village church of Arqua stands upon one of these terraces,
+ with a full stream of clearest water flowing by. On the little
+ square before the church-door, where the peasants congregate at
+ mass-time&mdash;open to the skies with all their stars and
+ storms, girdled by the hills, and within hearing of the vocal
+ stream&mdash;is Petrarch's sepulchre. Fit resting-place for what
+ remains to earth of such a poet's clay! It is as though
+ archangels, flying, had carried the marble chest and set it down
+ here on the hillside, to be a sign and sanctuary for after-men. A
+ simple rectilinear coffin, of smooth Verona <i>mandorlato</i>,
+ raised on four thick columns, and closed by a heavy cippus-cover.
+ Without emblems, allegories, or lamenting genii, this tomb of the
+ great poet, the great awakener of Europe from mental lethargy,
+ encircled by the hills, beneath the canopy of heaven, is
+ impressive beyond the power of words. Bending here, we feel that
+ Petrarch's own winged thoughts and fancies, eternal and aërial,
+ 'forms more real than living man, nurslings of immortality,' have
+ congregated to be the ever-ministering and irremovable attendants
+ on the shrine of one who, while he lived, was purest spirit in a
+ veil of flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ON A MOUNTAIN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Milan is shining in sunset on those purple fields; and a score of
+ cities flash back the last red light, which shows each inequality
+ and undulation of Lombardy outspread four thousand feet beneath.
+ Both ranges, Alps and Apennines, are clear to view; and all the
+ silvery lakes are over-canopied and brought into one picture by
+ flame-litten mists. Monte Rosa lifts her crown of peaks above a
+ belt of clouds into light of living fire. The Mischabelhörner and
+ the Dom rest stationary angel-wings upon the rampart, which at
+ this moment is the wall of heaven. The pyramid of distant Monte
+ Viso burns like solid amethyst far, far away. Mont Cervin beckons
+ to his brother, the gigantic Finsteraarhorn, across tracts of
+ liquid ether. Bells are rising from the villages, now wrapped in
+ gloom, between me and the glimmering lake. A hush of evening
+ silence falls upon the ridges, cliffs, and forests of this
+ billowy hill, ascending into wave-like crests, and toppling with
+ awful chasms over the dark waters of Lugano. It is good to be
+ alone here at this hour. Yet I must rise and go&mdash;passing
+ through meadows, where white lilies sleep in silvery drifts, and
+ asphodel is pale with spires of faintest rose, and narcissus
+ dreams of his own beauty, loading the air with fragrance sweet as
+ some love-music of Mozart. These fields want only the white
+ figure of Persephone to make them poems: and in this twilight one
+ might fancy that the queen had left her throne by Pluto's side,
+ to mourn for her dead youth among the flowers uplifted between
+ earth and heaven. Nay, they are poems now, these fields; with
+ that unchanging background of history, romance, and human
+ life&mdash;the Lombard plain, against whose violet breadth the
+ blossoms bend their faint heads to the evening air. Downward we
+ hurry, on pathways where the beeches meet, by silent farms, by
+ meadows honey-scented, deep in dew. The columbine stands tall and
+ still on those green slopes of shadowy grass. The nightingale
+ sings now, and now is hushed again. Streams murmur through the
+ darkness, where the growth of trees, heavy with honeysuckle and
+ wild rose, is thickest. Fireflies begin to flit above the growing
+ corn. At last the plain is reached, and all the skies are
+ tremulous with starlight. Alas, that we should vibrate so
+ obscurely to these harmonies of earth and heaven! The inner finer
+ sense of them seems somehow unattainable&mdash;that spiritual
+ touch of soul evoking soul from nature, which should transfigure
+ our dull mood of self into impersonal delight. Man needs to be a
+ mytho-poet at some moments, or, better still, to be a mystic
+ steeped through half-unconsciousness in the vast wonder of the
+ world. Gold and untouched to poetry or piety by scenes that ought
+ to blend the spirit in ourselves with spirit in the world
+ without, we can but wonder how this phantom show of mystery and
+ beauty will pass away from us&mdash;how soon&mdash;and we be
+ where, see what, use all our sensibilities on aught or nought?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIC GENIUS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the picture-gallery at Modena there is a masterpiece of Dosso
+ Dossi. The frame is old and richly carved; and the painting,
+ bordered by its beautiful dull gold, shines with the lustre of an
+ emerald. In his happy moods Dosso set colour upon canvas, as no
+ other painter out of Venice ever did; and here he is at his
+ happiest. The picture is the portrait of a jester, dressed in
+ courtly clothes and with a feathered cap upon his head. He holds
+ a lamb in his arms, and carries the legend, <i>Sic Genius</i>.
+ Behind him is a landscape of exquisite brilliancy and depth. His
+ face is young and handsome. Dosso has made it one most wonderful
+ laugh. Even so perhaps laughed Yorick. Nowhere else have I seen a
+ laugh thus painted: not violent, not loud, although the lips are
+ opened to show teeth of dazzling whiteness;&mdash;but fine and
+ delicate, playing over the whole face like a ripple sent up from
+ the depths of the soul within. Who was he? What does the lamb
+ mean? How should the legend be interpreted? We cannot answer
+ these questions. He may have been the court-fool of Ferrara; and
+ his genius, the spiritual essence of the man, may have inclined
+ him to laugh at all things. That at least is the value he now has
+ for us. He is the portrait of perpetual irony, the spirit of the
+ golden Sixteenth Century which delicately laughed at the whole
+ world of thoughts and things, the quintessence of the poetry of
+ Ariosto, the wit of Berni, all condensed into one incarnation and
+ immortalised by truthfullest art. With the Gaul, the Spaniard,
+ and the German at her gates, and in her cities, and encamped upon
+ her fields, Italy still laughed; and when the voice of conscience
+ sounding through Savonarola asked her why, she only
+ smiled&mdash;<i>Sic Genius</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening in May we rowed from Venice to Torcello, and at
+ sunset broke bread and drank wine together among the rank grasses
+ just outside that ancient church. It was pleasant to sit in the
+ so-called chair of Attila and feel the placid stillness of the
+ place. Then there came lounging by a sturdy young fellow in brown
+ country clothes, with a marvellous old wide-awake upon his head,
+ and across his shoulders a bunch of massive church-keys. In
+ strange contrast to his uncouth garb he flirted a pink Japanese
+ fan, gracefully disposing it to cool his sunburned olive cheeks.
+ This made us look at him. He was not ugly. Nay, there was
+ something of attractive in his face&mdash;the smooth-curved chin,
+ the shrewd yet sleepy eyes, and finely cut thin lips&mdash;a
+ curious mixture of audacity and meekness blent upon his features.
+ Yet this impression was but the prelude to his smile. When that
+ first dawned, some breath of humour seeming to stir in him
+ unbidden, the true meaning was given to his face. Each feature
+ helped to make a smile that was the very soul's life of the man
+ expressed. I broadened, showing brilliant teeth, and grew into a
+ noiseless laugh; and then I saw before me Dosso's jester, the
+ type of Shakspere's fools, the life of that wild irony, now rude,
+ now fine, which once delighted Courts. The laughter of the whole
+ world and of all the centuries was silent in his face. What he
+ said need not be repeated. The charm was less in his words than
+ in his personality; for Momus-philosophy lay deep in every look
+ and gesture of the man. The place lent itself to irony: parties
+ of Americans and English parsons, the former agape for any
+ rubbishy old things, the latter learned in the lore of obsolete
+ Church-furniture, had thronged Torcello; and now they were all
+ gone, and the sun had set behind the Alps, while an irreverent
+ stranger drank his wine in Attila's chair, and nature's jester
+ smiled&mdash;<i>Sic Genius</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I slept that night I dreamed of an altar-piece in the Temple
+ of Folly. The goddess sat enthroned beneath a canopy hung with
+ bells and corals. On her lap was a beautiful winged smiling
+ genius, who flourished two bright torches. On her left hand stood
+ the man of Modena with his white lamb, a new S. John. On her
+ right stood the man of Torcello with his keys, a new S. Peter.
+ Both were laughing after their all-absorbent, divine, noiseless
+ fashion; and under both was written, <i>Sic Genius</i>. Are not
+ all things, even profanity, permissible in dreams?
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="COMO_AND_IL_MEDEGHINO" id=
+ "COMO_AND_IL_MEDEGHINO"></a>COMO AND IL MEDEGHINO
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ To which of the Italian lakes should the palm of beauty be
+ accorded? This question may not unfrequently have moved the idle
+ minds of travellers, wandering through that loveliest region from
+ Orta to Garda&mdash;from little Orta, with her gemlike island,
+ rosy granite crags, and chestnut-covered swards above the Colma;
+ to Garda, bluest of all waters, surveyed in majestic length from
+ Desenzano or poetic Sirmione, a silvery sleeping haze of hill and
+ cloud and heaven and clear waves bathed in modulated azure. And
+ between these extreme points what varied lovelinesses lie in
+ broad Maggiore, winding Como, Varese with the laughing face
+ upturned to heaven, Lugano overshadowed by the crested crags of
+ Monte Generoso, and Iseo far withdrawn among the rocky Alps! He
+ who loves immense space, cloud shadows slowly sailing over purple
+ slopes, island gardens, distant glimpses of snow-capped
+ mountains, breadth, air, immensity, and flooding sunlight, will
+ choose Maggiore. But scarcely has he cast his vote for this, the
+ Juno of the divine rivals, when he remembers the triple
+ lovelinesses of the Larian Aphrodite, disclosed in all their
+ placid grace from Villa Serbelloni;&mdash;the green blue of the
+ waters, clear as glass, opaque through depth; the
+ <i>millefleurs</i> roses clambering into cypresses by Cadenabbia;
+ the laburnums hanging their yellow clusters from the clefts of
+ Sasso Eancio; the oleander arcades of Varenna; the wild white
+ limestone crags of San Martiuo, which he has climbed to feast his
+ eyes with the perspective, magical, serene, Lionardesquely
+ perfect, of the distant gates of Adda. Then while this modern
+ Paris is yet doubting, perhaps a thought may cross his mind of
+ sterner, solitary Lake Iseo&mdash;the Pallas of the three. She
+ offers her own attractions. The sublimity of Monte Adamello,
+ dominating Lovere and all the lowland like Hesiod's hill of
+ Virtue reared aloft above the plain of common life, has charms to
+ tempt heroic lovers. Nor can Varese be neglected. In some
+ picturesque respects, Varese is the most perfect of the lakes.
+ Those long lines of swelling hills that lead into the level,
+ yield an infinite series of placid foregrounds, pleasant to the
+ eye by contrast with the dominant snow-summits, from Monte Viso
+ to Monte Leone: the sky is limitless to southward; the low
+ horizons are broken by bell-towers and farmhouses; while
+ armaments of clouds are ever rolling in the interval of Alps and
+ plain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of a truth, to decide which is the queen of the Italian lakes, is
+ but an <i>infinita quĉstio</i>; and the mere raising of it is
+ folly. Still each lover of the beautiful may give his vote; and
+ mine, like that of shepherd Paris, is already given to the Larian
+ goddess. Words fail in attempting to set forth charms which have
+ to be enjoyed, or can at best but lightly be touched with most
+ consummate tact, even as great poets have already touched on Como
+ Lake&mdash;from Virgil with his 'Lari maxume,' to Tennyson and
+ the Italian Manzoni. The threshold of the shrine is, however,
+ less consecrated ground; and the Cathedral of Como may form a
+ vestibule to the temple where silence is more golden than the
+ speech of a describer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cathedral of Como is perhaps the most perfect building in
+ Italy for illustrating the fusion of Gothic and Renaissance
+ styles, both of a good type and exquisite in their sobriety. The
+ Gothic ends with the nave. The noble transepts and the choir,
+ each terminating in a rounded tribune of the same dimensions, are
+ carried out in a simple and decorous Bramantesque manner. The
+ transition from the one style to the other is managed so
+ felicitously, and the sympathies between them are so well
+ developed, that there is no discord. What we here call Gothic, is
+ conceived in a truly southern spirit, without fantastic
+ efflorescence or imaginative complexity of multiplied parts;
+ while the Renaissance manner, as applied by Tommaso Rodari, has
+ not yet stiffened into the lifeless neo-Latinism of the later
+ <i>cinquecento</i>: it is still distinguished by delicate
+ inventiveness, and beautiful subordination of decorative detail
+ to architectural effect. Under these happy conditions we feel
+ that the Gothic of the nave, with its superior severity and
+ sombreness, dilates into the lucid harmonies of choir and
+ transepts like a flower unfolding. In the one the mind is tuned
+ to inner meditation and religious awe; in the other the
+ worshipper passes into a temple of the clear explicit
+ faith&mdash;as an initiated neophyte might be received into the
+ meaning of the mysteries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the collapse of the Roman Empire the district of Como seems
+ to have maintained more vividly than the rest of Northern Italy
+ some memory of classic art. <i>Magistri Comacini</i> is a title
+ frequently inscribed upon deeds and charters of the earlier
+ middle ages, as synonymous with sculptors and architects. This
+ fact may help to account for the purity and beauty of the Duomo.
+ It is the work of a race in which the tradition of delicate
+ artistic invention had never been wholly interrupted. To Tommaso
+ Rodari and his brothers, Bernardino and Jacopo, the world owes
+ this sympathetic fusion of the Gothic and the Bramantesque
+ styles; and theirs too is the sculpture with which the Duomo is
+ so richly decorated. They were natives of Maroggia, a village
+ near Mendrisio, beneath the crests of Monte Generoso, close to
+ Campione, which sent so many able craftsmen out into the world
+ between the years 1300 and 1500. Indeed the name of Campionesi
+ would probably have been given to the Rodari, had they left their
+ native province for service in Eastern Lombardy. The body of the
+ Duomo had been finished when Tommaso Rodari was appointed master
+ of the fabric in 1487. To complete the work by the addition of a
+ tribune was his duty. He prepared a wooden model and exposed it,
+ after the fashion of those times, for criticism in his
+ <i>bottega</i>; and the usual difference of opinion arose among
+ the citizens of Como concerning its merits. Cristoforo Solaro,
+ surnamed Il Gobbo, was called in to advise. It may be remembered
+ that when Michelangelo first placed his Pietà in S. Peter's,
+ rumour gave it to this celebrated Lombard sculptor, and the
+ Florentine was constrained to set his own signature upon the
+ marble. The same Solaro carved the monument of Beatrice Sforza in
+ the Certosa of Pavia. He was indeed in all points competent to
+ criticise or to confirm the design of his fellow-craftsman. Il
+ Gobbo disapproved of the proportions chosen by Rodari, and
+ ordered a new model to be made; but after much discussion, and
+ some concessions on the part of Rodari, who is said to have
+ increased the number of the windows and lightened the orders of
+ his model, the work was finally entrusted to the master of
+ Maroggia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not less creditable than the general design of the tribune is the
+ sculpture executed by the brothers. The north side door is a
+ master-work of early Renaissance chiselling, combining mixed
+ Christian and classical motives with a wealth of floral ornament.
+ Inside, over the same door, is a procession of children seeming
+ to represent the Triumph of Bacchus, with perhaps some Christian
+ symbolism. Opposite, above the south door, is a frieze of
+ fighting Tritons&mdash;horsed sea deities pounding one another
+ with bunches of fish and splashing the water, in Mantegna's
+ spirit. The doorways of the façade are decorated with the same
+ rare workmanship; and the canopies, supported by naked fauns and
+ slender twisted figures, under which the two Plinies are seated,
+ may be reckoned among the supreme achievements of delicate
+ Renaissance sculpture. The Plinies are not like the work of the
+ same master. They are older, stiffer, and more Gothic. The chief
+ interest attaching to them is that they are habited and seated
+ after the fashion of Humanists. This consecration of the two
+ Pagan saints beside the portals of the Christian temple is truly
+ characteristic of the fifteenth century in Italy. Beneath, are
+ little basreliefs representing scenes from their respective
+ lives, in the style of carved predellas on the altars of saints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole church is peopled with detached statues, among which a
+ Sebastian in the Chapel of the Madonna must be mentioned as
+ singularly beautiful. It is a finely modelled figure, with the
+ full life and exuberant adolescence of Venetian inspiration. A
+ peculiar feature of the external architecture is the series of
+ Atlantes, bearing on their shoulders urns, heads of lions, and
+ other devices, and standing on brackets round the upper cornice
+ just below the roof. They are of all sorts; young and old, male
+ and female; classically nude, and boldly outlined. These
+ water-conduits, the work of Bernardo Bianco and Francesco Rusca,
+ illustrate the departure of the earlier Renaissance from the
+ Gothic style. They are gargoyles; but they have lost the
+ grotesque element. At the same time the sculptor, while
+ discarding Gothic tradition, has not betaken himself yet to a
+ servile imitation of the antique. He has used invention, and
+ substituted for grinning dragons' heads something wild and
+ bizarre of his own in harmony with classic taste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pictures in the chapels, chiefly by Luini and
+ Ferrari&mdash;an idyllic Nativity, with faun-like shepherds and
+ choirs of angels&mdash;a sumptuous adoration of the Magi&mdash;a
+ jewelled Sposalizio with abundance of golden hair flowing over
+ draperies of green and crimson&mdash;will interest those who are
+ as yet unfamiliar with Lombard painting. Yet their architectural
+ setting, perhaps, is superior to their intrinsic merit as works
+ of art; and their chief value consists in adding rare dim flakes
+ of colour to the cool light of the lovely church. More curious,
+ because less easily matched, is the gilded woodwork above the
+ altar of S. Abondio, attributed to a German carver, but executed
+ for the most part in the purest Luinesque manner. The pose of the
+ enthroned Madonna, the type and gesture of S. Catherine, and the
+ treatment of the Pietà above, are thoroughly Lombard, showing how
+ Luini's ideal of beauty could be expressed in carving. Some of
+ the choicest figures in the Monastero Maggiore at Milan seem to
+ have descended from the walls and stepped into their tabernacles
+ on this altar. Yet the style is not maintained consistently. In
+ the reliefs illustrating the life of S. Abondio we miss Luini's
+ childlike grace, and find instead a something that reminds us of
+ Donatello&mdash;a seeking after the classical in dress, carriage,
+ and grouping of accessory figures. It may have been that the
+ carver, recognising Luini's defective composition, and finding
+ nothing in that master's manner adapted to the spirit of relief,
+ had the good taste to render what was Luinesquely lovely in his
+ female figures, and to fall back on a severer model for his
+ basreliefs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The building-fund for the Duomo was raised in Como and its
+ districts. Boxes were placed in all the churches to receive the
+ alms of those who wished to aid the work. The clergy begged in
+ Lent, and preached the duty of contributing on special days.
+ Presents of lime and bricks and other materials were thankfully
+ received. Bishops, canons, and municipal magistrates were
+ expected to make costly gifts on taking office. Notaries, under
+ penalty of paying 100 soldi if they neglected their engagement,
+ were obliged to persuade testators, <i>cum bonis modis
+ dulciter</i>, to inscribe the Duomo on their wills. Fines for
+ various offences were voted to the building by the city. Each new
+ burgher paid a certain sum; while guilds and farmers of the taxes
+ bought monopolies and privileges at the price of yearly
+ subsidies. A lottery was finally established for the benefit of
+ the fabric. Of course each payment to the good work carried with
+ it spiritual privileges; and so willingly did the people respond
+ to the call of the Church, that during the sixteenth century the
+ sums subscribed amounted to 200,000 golden crowns. Among the most
+ munificent donators are mentioned the Marchese Giacomo Gallio,
+ who bequeathed 290,000 lire, and a Benzi, who gave 10,000 ducats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the people of Como were thus straining every nerve to
+ complete a pious work, which at the same time is one of the most
+ perfect masterpieces of Italian art, their lovely lake was turned
+ into a pirate's stronghold, and its green waves stained with
+ slaughter of conflicting navies. So curious is this episode in
+ the history of the Larian lake that it is worth while to treat of
+ it at some length. Moreover, the lives of few captains of
+ adventure offer matter more rich in picturesque details and more
+ illustrative of their times than that of Gian Giacomo de' Medici,
+ the Larian corsair, long known and still remembered as Il
+ Medeghino. He was born in Milan in 1498, at the beginning of that
+ darkest and most disastrous period of Italian history, when the
+ old fabric of social and political existence went to ruin under
+ the impact of conflicting foreign armies. He lived on until the
+ year 1555, witnessing and taking part in the dismemberment of the
+ Milanese Duchy, playing a game of hazard at high stakes for his
+ own profit with the two last Sforzas, the Empire, the French, and
+ the Swiss. At the beginning of the century, while he was still a
+ youth, the rich valley of the Valtelline, with Bormio and
+ Chiavenna, had been assigned to the Grisons. The Swiss Cantons at
+ the same time had possessed themselves of Lugano and Bellinzona.
+ By these two acts of robbery the mountaineers tore a portion of
+ its fairest territory from the Duchy; and whoever ruled in Milan,
+ whether a Sforza, or a Spanish viceroy, or a French general, was
+ impatient to recover the lost jewel of the ducal crown. So much
+ has to be premised, because the scene of our hero's romantic
+ adventures was laid upon the borderland between the Duchy and the
+ Cantons. Intriguing at one time with the Duke of Milan, at
+ another with his foes the French or Spaniards, Il Medeghino found
+ free scope for his peculiar genius in a guerilla warfare, carried
+ on with the avowed purpose of restoring the Valtelline to Milan.
+ To steer a plain course through that chaos of politics, in which
+ the modern student, aided by the calm clear lights of history and
+ meditation, cannot find a clue, was of course impossible for an
+ adventurer whose one aim was to gratify his passions and exalt
+ himself at the expense of others. It is therefore of little use
+ to seek motives of statecraft or of patriotism in the conduct of
+ Il Medeghino. He was a man shaped according to Machiavelli's
+ standard of political morality&mdash;self-reliant, using craft
+ and force with cold indifference to moral ends, bent only upon
+ wringing for himself the largest share of this world's power for
+ men who, like himself, identified virtue with unflinching and
+ immitigable egotism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Il Medeghino's father was Bernardo de' Medici, a Lombard, who
+ neither claimed nor could have proved cousinship with the great
+ Medicean family of Florence. His mother was Cecilia Serbelloni.
+ The boy was educated in the fashionable humanistic studies,
+ nourishing his young imagination with the tales of Roman heroes.
+ The first exploit by which he proved his <i>virtù</i>, was the
+ murder of a man he hated, at the age of sixteen. This 'virile act
+ of vengeance,' as it was called, brought him into trouble, and
+ forced him to choose the congenial profession of arms. At a time
+ when violence and vigour passed for manliness, a spirited
+ assassination formed the best of introductions to the captains of
+ mixed mercenary troops. Il Medeghino rose in favour with his
+ generals, helped to reinstate Francesco Sforza in his capital,
+ and, returning himself to Milan, inflicted severe vengeance on
+ the enemies who had driven him to exile. It was his ambition, at
+ this early period of his life, to be made governor of the Castle
+ of Musso, on the Lake of Como. While fighting in the
+ neighbourhood, he had observed the unrivalled capacities for
+ defence presented by its site; and some pre-vision of his future
+ destinies now urged him to acquire it, as the basis for the free
+ marauding life he planned. The headland of Musso lies about
+ halfway between Gravedona and Menaggio, on the right shore of the
+ Lake of Como. Planted on a pedestal of rock, and surmounted by a
+ sheer cliff, there then stood a very ancient tower, commanding
+ this promontory on the side of the land. Between it and the water
+ the Visconti, in more recent days, had built a square fort; and
+ the headland had been further strengthened by the addition of
+ connecting walls and bastions pierced for cannon. Combining
+ precipitous cliffs, strong towers, and easy access from the lake
+ below, this fortress of Musso was exactly the fit station for a
+ pirate. So long as he kept the command of the lake, he had little
+ to fear from land attacks, and had a splendid basis for
+ aggressive operations. Il Medeghino made his request to the Duke
+ of Milan; but the foxlike Sforza would not grant him a plain
+ answer. At length he hinted that if his suitor chose to rid him
+ of a troublesome subject, the noble and popular Astore Visconti,
+ he should receive Musso for payment. Crimes of bloodshed and
+ treason sat lightly on the adventurer's conscience. In a short
+ time he compassed the young Visconti's death, and claimed his
+ reward. The Duke despatched him thereupon to Musso, with open
+ letters to the governor, commanding him to yield the castle to
+ the bearer. Private advice, also entrusted to Il Medeghino, bade
+ the governor, on the contrary, cut the bearer's throat. The young
+ man, who had the sense to read the Duke's letter, destroyed the
+ secret document, and presented the other, or, as one version of
+ the story goes, forged a ducal order in his own favour.<a name=
+ "FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> At any rate, the
+ castle was placed in his hands; and affecting to know nothing of
+ the Duke's intended treachery, Il Medeghino took possession of it
+ as a trusted servant of the ducal crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he was settled in his castle, the freebooter devoted
+ all his energies to rendering it still more impregnable by
+ strengthening the walls and breaking the cliffs into more horrid
+ precipices. In this work he was assisted by his numerous friends
+ and followers; for Musso rapidly became, like ancient Rome, an
+ asylum for the ruffians and outlaws of neighbouring provinces. It
+ is even said that his sisters, Clarina and Margherita, rendered
+ efficient aid with manual labour. The mention of Clarina's name
+ justifies a parenthetical side-glance at Il Medeghino's pedigree,
+ which will serve to illustrate the exceptional conditions of
+ Italian society during this age. She was married to the Count
+ Giberto Borromeo, and became the mother of the pious Carlo
+ Borromeo, whose shrine is still adored at Milan in the Duomo. Il
+ Medeghino's brother, Giovan Angelo, rose to the Papacy, assuming
+ the title of Pius IV. Thus this murderous marauder was the
+ brother of a Pope and the uncle of a Saint; and these three
+ persons of one family embraced the various degrees and typified
+ the several characters which flourished with peculiar lustre in
+ Renaissance Italy&mdash;the captain of adventure soaked in blood,
+ the churchman unrivalled for intrigue, and the saint aflame with
+ holiest enthusiasm. Il Medeghino was short of stature, but well
+ made and powerful; broad-chested; with a penetrating voice and
+ winning countenance. He dressed simply, like one of his own
+ soldiers; slept but little; was insensible to carnal pleasure;
+ and though he knew how to win the affection of his men by jovial
+ speech, he maintained strict discipline in his little army. In
+ all points he was an ideal bandit chief, never happy unless
+ fighting or planning campaigns, inflexible of purpose, bold and
+ cunning in the execution of his schemes, cruel to his enemies,
+ generous to his followers, sacrificing all considerations, human
+ and divine, to the one aim of his life, self-aggrandisement by
+ force and intrigue. He knew well how to make himself both feared
+ and respected. One instance of his dealing will suffice. A
+ gentleman of Bellano, Polidoro Boldoni, in return to his
+ advances, coldly replied that he cared for neither amity nor
+ relationship with thieves and robbers; whereupon Il Medeghino
+ extirpated his family, almost to a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after his settlement in Musso, Il Medeghino, wishing to
+ secure the gratitude of the Duke, his master, began war with the
+ Grisons. From Coire, from the Engadine, and from Davos, the
+ Alpine pikemen were now pouring down to swell the troops of
+ Francis I.; and their road lay through the Lake of Como. Il
+ Medeghino burned all the boats upon the lake, except those which
+ he took into his own service, and thus made himself master of the
+ water passage. He then swept the 'length of lordly Lario' from
+ Colico to Lecco, harrying the villages upon the shore, and
+ cutting off the bands of journeying Switzers at his pleasure. Not
+ content with this guerilla, he made a descent upon the territory
+ of the Trepievi, and pushed far up towards Chiavenna, forcing the
+ Grisons to recall their troops from the Milanese. These acts of
+ prowess convinced the Duke that he had found a strong ally in the
+ pirate chief. When Francis I. continued his attacks upon the
+ Duchy, and the Grisons still adhered to their French paymaster,
+ the Sforza formally invested Gian Giacomo de' Medici with the
+ perpetual governorship of Musso, the Lake of Como, and as much as
+ he could wrest from the Grisons above the lake. Furnished now
+ with a just title for his depredations, Il Medeghino undertook
+ the siege of Chiavenna. That town is the key to the valleys of
+ the Splügen and Bregaglia. Strongly fortified and well situated
+ for defence, the burghers of the Grisons well knew that upon its
+ possession depended their power in the Italian valleys. To take
+ it by assault was impossible, Il Medeghino used craft, entered
+ the castle, and soon had the city at his disposition. Nor did he
+ lose time in sweeping Val Bregaglia. The news of this conquest
+ recalled the Switzers from the Duchy; and as they hurried
+ homeward just before the battle of Pavia, it may be affirmed that
+ Gian Giacomo de' Medici was instrumental in the defeat and
+ capture of the French King. The mountaineers had no great
+ difficulty in dislodging their pirate enemy from Chiavenna, the
+ Valtelline, and Val Bregaglia. But he retained his hold on the
+ Trepievi, occupied the Valsassina, took Porlezza, and established
+ himself still more strongly in Musso as the corsair monarch of
+ the lake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tyranny of the Sforzas in Milan was fast going to pieces
+ between France and Spain; and in 1526 the Marquis of Pescara
+ occupied the capital in the name of Charles V. The Duke,
+ meanwhile, remained a prisoner in his Castello. Il Medeghino was
+ now without a master; for he refused to acknowledge the
+ Spaniards, preferring to watch events and build his own power on
+ the ruins of the dukedom. At the head of 4,000 men, recruited
+ from the lakes and neighbouring valleys, he swept the country far
+ and wide, and occupied the rich champaign of the Brianza. He was
+ now lord of the lakes of Como and Lugano, and absolute in Lecco
+ and the adjoining valleys. The town of Como itself alone belonged
+ to the Spaniards; and even Como was blockaded by the navy of the
+ corsair. Il Medeghino had a force of seven big ships, with three
+ sails and forty-eight oars, bristling with guns and carrying
+ marines. His flagship was a large brigantine, manned by picked
+ rowers, from the mast of which floated the red banner with the
+ golden palle of the Medicean arms. Besides these larger vessels,
+ he commanded a flotilla of countless small boats. It is clear
+ that to reckon with him was a necessity. If he could not be put
+ down with force, he might be bought over by concessions. The
+ Spaniards adopted the second course, and Il Medeghino, judging
+ that the cause of the Sforza family was desperate, determined in
+ 1528 to attach himself to the Empire. Charles V. invested him
+ with the Castle of Musso and the larger part of Como Lake,
+ including the town of Lecco. He now assumed the titles of Marquis
+ of Musso and Count of Lecco: and in order to prove his
+ sovereignty before the world, he coined money with his own name
+ and devices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be observed that Gian Giacomo de' Medici had hitherto
+ acted with a single-hearted view to his own interests. At the age
+ of thirty he had raised himself from nothing to a principality,
+ which, though petty, might compare with many of some name in
+ Italy&mdash;with Carpi, for example, or Mirandola, or Camerino.
+ Nor did he mean to remain quiet in the prime of life. He regarded
+ Como Lake as the mere basis for more arduous undertakings.
+ Therefore, when the whirligig of events restored Francesco Sforza
+ to his duchy in 1529, Il Medeghino refused to obey his old lord.
+ Pretending to move under the Duke's orders, but really acting for
+ himself alone, he proceeded to attack his ancient enemies, the
+ Grisons. By fraud and force he worked his way into their
+ territory, seized Morbegno, and overran the Valtelline. He was
+ destined, however, to receive a serious check. Twelve thousand
+ Switzers rose against him on the one hand, on the other the Duke
+ of Milan sent a force by land and water to subdue his rebel
+ subject, while Alessandro Gonzaga marched upon his castles in the
+ Brianza. He was thus assailed by formidable forces from three
+ quarters, converging upon the Lake of Como, and driving him to
+ his chosen element, the water. Hastily quitting the Valtelline,
+ he fell back to the Castle of Mandello on the lake, collected his
+ navy, and engaged the ducal ships in a battle off Menaggio. In
+ this battle he was worsted. But he did not lose his courage. From
+ Bellagio, from Varenna, from Bellano he drove forth his enemies,
+ rolled the cannon of the Switzers into the lake, regained Lecco,
+ defeated the troops of Alessandro Gonzaga, and took the Duke of
+ Mantua prisoner. Had he but held Como, it is probable that he
+ might have obtained such terms at this time as would have
+ consolidated his tyranny. The town of Como, however, now belonged
+ to the Duke of Milan, and formed an excellent basis for
+ operations against the pirate. Overmatched, with an exhausted
+ treasury and broken forces, Il Medeghino was at last compelled to
+ give in. Yet he retired with all the honours of war. In exchange
+ for Musso and the lake, the Duke agreed to give him 35,000 golden
+ crowns, together with the feud and marquisate of Marignano. A
+ free pardon was promised not only to himself and his brothers,
+ but to all his followers; and the Duke further undertook to
+ transport his artillery and munitions of war at his own expense
+ to Marignano. Having concluded this treaty under the auspices of
+ Charles V. and his lieutenant, Il Medeghino, in March 1532, set
+ sail from Musso, and turned his back upon the lake for ever. The
+ Switzers immediately destroyed the towers, forts, walls, and
+ bastions of the Musso promontory, leaving in the midst of their
+ ruins the little chapel of S. Eufemia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gian Giacomo de' Medici, henceforth known to Europe as the
+ Marquis of Marignano, now took service under Spain; and through
+ the favour of Anton de Leyva, Viceroy for the Duchy, rose to the
+ rank of Field Marshal. When the Marquis del Vasto succeeded to
+ the Spanish governorship of Milan in 1536, he determined to
+ gratify an old grudge against the ex-pirate, and, having invited
+ him to a banquet, made him prisoner. II Medeghino was not,
+ however, destined to languish in a dungeon. Princes and kings
+ interested themselves in his fate. He was released, and journeyed
+ to the court of Charles V. in Spain. The Emperor received him
+ kindly, and employed him first in the Low Countries, where he
+ helped to repress the burghers of Ghent, and at the siege of
+ Landrecy commanded the Spanish artillery against other Italian
+ captains of adventure: for, Italy being now dismembered and
+ enslaved, her sons sought foreign service where they found best
+ pay and widest scope for martial science. Afterwards the Medici
+ ruled Bohemia as Spanish Viceroy; and then, as general of the
+ league formed by the Duke of Florence, the Emperor, and the Pope
+ to repress the liberties of Tuscany, distinguished himself in
+ that cruel war of extermination, which turned the fair Contado of
+ Siena into a poisonous Maremma. To the last Il Medeghino
+ preserved the instincts and the passions of a brigand chief. It
+ was at this time that, acting for the Grand Duke of Tuscany, he
+ first claimed open kinship with the Medici of Florence. Heralds
+ and genealogists produced a pedigree, which seemed to authorise
+ this pretension; he was recognised, together with his brother,
+ Pius IV., as an offshoot of the great house which had already
+ given Dukes to Florence, Kings to France, and two Popes to the
+ Christian world. In the midst of all this foreign service he
+ never forgot his old dream of conquering the Valtelline; and in
+ 1547 he made proposals to the Emperor for a new campaign against
+ the Grisons. Charles V. did not choose to engage in a war, the
+ profits of which would have been inconsiderable for the master of
+ half the civilised world, and which might have proved troublesome
+ by stirring up the tameless Switzers. Il Medeghino was obliged to
+ abandon a project cherished from the earliest dawn of his
+ adventurous manhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Gian Giacomo died in 1555, his brother Battista succeeded to
+ his claims upon Lecco and the Trepievi. His monument, magnificent
+ with five bronze figures, the masterpiece of Leone Lioni, from
+ Menaggio, Michelangelesque in style, and of consummate
+ workmanship, still adorns the Duomo of Milan. It stands close by
+ the door that leads to the roof. This mausoleum, erected to the
+ memory of Gian Giacomo and his brother Gabrio, is said to have
+ cost 7800 golden crowns. On the occasion of the pirate's funeral
+ the Senate of Milan put on mourning, and the whole city followed
+ the great robber, the hero of Renaissance <i>virtù</i>, to the
+ grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between the Cathedral of Como and the corsair Medeghino there is
+ but a slight link. Yet so extraordinary were the social
+ circumstances of Renaissance Italy, that almost at every turn, on
+ her seaboard, in her cities, from her hill-tops, we are compelled
+ to blend our admiration for the loveliest and purest works of art
+ amid the choicest scenes of nature with memories of execrable
+ crimes and lawless characters. Sometimes, as at Perugia, the
+ <i>nexus</i> is but local. At others, one single figure, like
+ that of Cellini, unites both points of view in a romance of
+ unparalleled dramatic vividness. Or, again, beneath the vaults of
+ the Certosa, near Pavia, a masterpiece of the serenest beauty
+ carries our thoughts perforce back to the hideous cruelties and
+ snake-like frauds of its despotic founder. This is the excuse for
+ combining two such diverse subjects in one study.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="BERGAMO_AND_BARTOLOMMEO_COLLEONI" id=
+ "BERGAMO_AND_BARTOLOMMEO_COLLEONI"></a><i>BERGAMO AND BARTOLOMMEO
+ COLLEONI</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ From the new town of commerce to the old town of history upon the
+ hill, the road is carried along a rampart lined, with
+ horse-chestnut trees&mdash;clumps of massy foliage, and snowy
+ pyramids of bloom, expanded in the rapture of a southern spring.
+ Each pair of trees between their stems and arch of intermingling
+ leaves includes a space of plain, checkered with cloud-shadows,
+ melting blue and green in amethystine haze. To right and left the
+ last spurs of the Alps descend, jutting like promontories,
+ heaving like islands from the misty breadth below: and here and
+ there are towers, half-lost in airy azure; and cities dwarfed to
+ blots; and silvery lines where rivers flow; and distant,
+ vapour-drowned, dim crests of Apennines. The city walls above us
+ wave with snapdragons and iris among fig-trees sprouting from the
+ riven stones. There are terraces over-rioted with pergolas of
+ vine, and houses shooting forward into balconies and balustrades,
+ from which a Romeo might launch himself at daybreak, warned by
+ the lark's song. A sudden angle in the road is turned, and we
+ pass from airspace and freedom into the old town, beneath walls
+ of dark brown masonry, where wild valerians light their torches
+ of red bloom in immemorial shade. Squalor and splendour live here
+ side by side. Grand Renaissance portals grinning with Satyr masks
+ are flanked by tawdry frescoes shamming stonework, or by doorways
+ where the withered bush hangs out a promise of bad wine. The
+ Cappella Colleoni is our destination, that masterpiece of the
+ sculptor-architect's craft, with its variegated
+ marbles,&mdash;rosy and white and creamy yellow and
+ jet-black,&mdash;in patterns, basreliefs, pilasters, statuettes,
+ encrusted on the fanciful domed shrine. Upon the façade are
+ mingled, in the true Renaissance spirit of genial acceptance,
+ motives Christian and Pagan with supreme impartiality. Medallions
+ of emperors and gods alternate with virtues, angels and cupids in
+ a maze of loveliest arabesque; and round the base of the building
+ are told two stories&mdash;the one of Adam from his creation to
+ his fall, the other of Hercules and his labours. Italian
+ craftsmen of the <i>quattrocento</i> were not averse to setting
+ thus together, in one framework, the myths of our first parents
+ and Alemena's son: partly perhaps because both subjects gave
+ scope to the free treatment of the nude; but partly also, we may
+ venture to surmise, because the heroism of Hellas counterbalanced
+ the sin of Eden. Here then we see how Adam and Eve were made and
+ tempted and expelled from Paradise and set to labour, how Cain
+ killed Abel, and Lamech slew a man to his hurt, and Isaac was
+ offered on the mountain. The tale of human sin and the promise of
+ redemption are epitomised in twelve of the sixteen basreliefs.
+ The remaining four show Hercules wrestling with Antĉus, taming
+ the Nemean lion, extirpating the Hydra, and bending to his will
+ the bull of Crete. Labour, appointed for a punishment to Adam,
+ becomes a title to immortality for the hero. The dignity of man
+ is reconquered by prowess for the Greek, as it is repurchased for
+ the Christian by vicarious suffering. Many may think this
+ interpretation of Amadeo's basreliefs far-fetched; yet, such as
+ it is, it agrees with the spirit of Humanism, bent ever on
+ harmonising the two great traditions of the past. Of the
+ workmanship little need be said, except that it is wholly
+ Lombard, distinguished from the similar work of Della Quercia at
+ Bologna and Siena by a more imperfect feeling for composition,
+ and a lack of monumental gravity, yet graceful, rich in motives,
+ and instinct with a certain wayward <i>improvvisatore</i> charm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Chapel was built by the great Condottiere Bartolommeo
+ Colleoni, to be the monument of his puissance even in the grave.
+ It had been the Sacristy of S. Maria Maggiore, which, when the
+ Consiglio della Misericordia refused it to him for his
+ half-proud, half-pious purpose, he took and held by force. The
+ structure, of costliest materials, reared by Gian Antonio Amadeo,
+ cost him 50,000 golden florins. An equestrian statue of gilt
+ wood, voted to him by the town of Bergamo, surmounts his monument
+ inside the Chapel. This was the work of two German masters,
+ called 'Sisto figlio di Enrico Syri da Norimberga' and 'Leonardo
+ Tedesco.' The tomb itself is of marble, executed for the most
+ part in a Lombard style resembling Amadeo's, but scarcely worthy
+ of his genius. The whole effect is disappointing. Five figures
+ representing Mars, Hercules, and three sons-in-law of Colleoni,
+ who surround the sarcophagus of the buried general, are indeed
+ almost grotesque. The angularity and crumpled draperies of the
+ Milanese manner, when so exaggerated, produce an impression of
+ caricature. Yet many subordinate details&mdash;a row of
+ <i>putti</i> in a <i>cinquecento</i> frieze, for
+ instance&mdash;and much of the low relief work&mdash;especially
+ the Crucifixion with its characteristic episodes of the fainting
+ Maries and the soldiers casting dice&mdash;are lovely in their
+ unaffected Lombardism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is another portrait of Colleoni in a round above the great
+ door, executed with spirit, though in a <i>bravura</i> style that
+ curiously anticipates the decline of Italian sculpture. Gaunt,
+ hollow-eyed, with prominent cheek bones and strong jaws, this
+ animated, half-length statue of the hero bears the stamp of a
+ good likeness; but when or by whom it was made, I do not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far more noteworthy than Colleoni's own monument is that of his
+ daughter Medea. She died young in 1470, and her father caused her
+ tomb, carved of Carrara marble, to be placed in the Dominican
+ Church of Basella, which he had previously founded. It was not
+ until 1842 that this most precious masterpiece of Antonio
+ Amadeo's skill was transferred to Bergamo. <i>Hic jacet Medea
+ virgo.</i> Her hands are clasped across her breast. A robe of
+ rich brocade, gathered to the waist and girdled, lies in simple
+ folds upon the bier. Her throat, exceedingly long and slender, is
+ circled with a string of pearls. Her face is not beautiful, for
+ the features, especially the nose, are large and prominent; but
+ it is pure and expressive of vivid individuality. The hair curls
+ in crisp short clusters, and the ear, fine and shaped almost like
+ a Faun's, reveals the scrupulous fidelity of the sculptor.
+ Italian art has, in truth, nothing more exquisite than this still
+ sleeping figure of the girl, who, when she lived, must certainly
+ have been so rare of type and lovable in personality. If Busti's
+ Lancinus Curtius be the portrait of a humanist, careworn with
+ study, burdened by the laurel leaves that were so dry and
+ dusty&mdash;if Gaston de Foix in the Brera, smiling at death and
+ beautiful in the cropped bloom of youth, idealise the hero of
+ romance&mdash;if Michelangelo's Penseroso translate in marble the
+ dark broodings of a despot's soul&mdash;if Della Porta's Julia
+ Farnese be the Roman courtesan magnificently throned in
+ nonchalance at a Pope's footstool&mdash;if Verocchio's Colleoni
+ on his horse at Venice impersonate the pomp and circumstance of
+ scientific war&mdash;surely this Medea exhales the flower-like
+ graces, the sweet sanctities of human life, that even in that
+ turbid age were found among high-bred Italian ladies. Such power
+ have mighty sculptors, even in our modern world, to make the mute
+ stone speak in poems and clasp the soul's life of a century in
+ some five or six transcendent forms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Colleoni, or Coglioni, family were of considerable antiquity
+ and well-authenticated nobility in the town of Bergamo. Two
+ lions' heads conjoined formed one of their canting ensigns;
+ another was borrowed from the vulgar meaning of their name. Many
+ members of the house held important office during the three
+ centuries preceding the birth of the famous general, Bartolommeo.
+ He was born in the year 1400 at Solza, in the Bergamasque
+ Contado. His father Paolo, or Pùho as he was commonly called, was
+ poor and exiled from the city, together with the rest of the
+ Guelf nobles, by the Visconti. Being a man of daring spirit, and
+ little inclined to languish in a foreign state as the dependent
+ on some patron, Pùho formed the bold design of seizing the Castle
+ of Trezzo. This he achieved in 1405 by fraud, and afterwards held
+ it as his own by force. Partly with the view of establishing
+ himself more firmly in his acquired lordship, and partly out of
+ family affection, Pùho associated four of his first-cousins in
+ the government of Trezzo. They repaid his kindness with an act of
+ treason and cruelty, only too characteristic of those times in
+ Italy. One day while he was playing at draughts in a room of the
+ Castle, they assaulted him and killed him, seized his wife and
+ the boy Bartolommeo, and flung them into prison. The murdered
+ Pùho had another son, Antonio, who escaped and took refuge with
+ Giorgio Benzone, the tyrant of Crema. After a short time the
+ Colleoni brothers found means to assassinate him also; therefore
+ Bartolommeo alone, a child of whom no heed was taken, remained to
+ be his father's avenger. He and his mother lived together in
+ great indigence at Solza, until the lad felt strong enough to
+ enter the service of one of the numerous petty Lombard princes,
+ and to make himself if possible a captain of adventure. His name
+ alone was a sufficient introduction, and the Duchy of Milan,
+ dismembered upon the death of Gian Maria Visconti, was in such a
+ state that all the minor despots were increasing their forces and
+ preparing to defend by arms the fragments they had seized from
+ the Visconti heritage. Bartolommeo therefore had no difficulty in
+ recommending himself to Filippo d'Arcello, sometime general in
+ the pay of the Milanese, but now the new lord of Piacenza. With
+ this master he remained as page for two or three years, learning
+ the use of arms, riding, and training himself in the physical
+ exercises which were indispensable to a young Italian soldier.
+ Meanwhile Filippo Maria Visconti reacquired his hereditary
+ dominions; and at the age of twenty, Bartolommeo found it prudent
+ to seek a patron stronger than d'Arcello. The two great
+ Condottieri, Sforza Attendolo and Braccio, divided the military
+ glories of Italy at this period; and any youth who sought to rise
+ in his profession, had to enrol himself under the banners of the
+ one or the other. Bartolommeo chose Braccio for his master, and
+ was enrolled among his men as a simple trooper, or
+ <i>ragazzo</i>, with no better prospects than he could make for
+ himself by the help of his talents and his borrowed horse and
+ armour. Braccio at this time was in Apulia, prosecuting the war
+ of the Neapolitan Succession disputed between Alfonso of Aragon
+ and Louis of Anjou under the weak sovereignty of Queen Joan. On
+ which side of a quarrel a Condottiere fought mattered but little:
+ so great was the confusion of Italian politics, and so complete
+ was the egotism of these fraudful, violent, and treacherous party
+ leaders. Yet it may be mentioned that Braccio had espoused
+ Alfonso's cause. Bartolommeo Colleoni early distinguished himself
+ among the ranks of the Bracceschi. But he soon perceived that he
+ could better his position by deserting to another camp.
+ Accordingly he offered his services to Jacopo Caldora, one of
+ Joan's generals, and received from him a commission of twenty
+ men-at-arms. It may here be parenthetically said that the rank
+ and pay of an Italian captain varied with the number of the men
+ he brought into the field. His title 'Condottiere' was derived
+ from the circumstance that he was said to have received a
+ <i>Condotta di venti cavalli</i>, and so forth. Each
+ <i>cavallo</i> was equal to one mounted man-at-arms and two
+ attendants, who were also called <i>ragazzi</i>. It was his
+ business to provide the stipulated number of men, to keep them in
+ good discipline, and to satisfy their just demands. Therefore an
+ Italian army at this epoch consisted of numerous small armies
+ varying in size, each held together by personal engagements to a
+ captain, and all dependent on the will of a general-in-chief, who
+ had made a bargain with some prince or republic for supplying a
+ fixed contingent of fighting-men. The <i>Condottiere</i> was in
+ other words a contractor or <i>impresario</i>, undertaking to do
+ a certain piece of work for a certain price, and to furnish the
+ requisite forces for the business in good working order. It will
+ be readily seen upon this system how important were the personal
+ qualities of the captain, and what great advantages those
+ Condottieri had, who, like the petty princes of Romagna and the
+ March, the Montefeltri, Ordelaffi, Malatesti, Manfredi, Orsini,
+ and Vitelli, could rely upon a race of hardy vassals for their
+ recruits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not necessary to follow Colleoni's fortunes in the Regno,
+ at Aquila, Ancona, and Bologna. He continued in the service of
+ Caldora, who was now General of the Church, and had his
+ <i>Condotta</i> gradually increased. Meanwhile his cousins, the
+ murderers of his father, began to dread his rising power, and
+ determined, if possible, to ruin him. He was not a man to be
+ easily assassinated; so they sent a hired ruffian to Caldora's
+ camp to say that Bartolommeo had taken his name by fraud, and
+ that he was himself the real son of Pùho Colleoni. Bartolommeo
+ defied the liar to a duel; and this would have taken place before
+ the army, had not two witnesses appeared, who knew the fathers of
+ both Colleoni and the <i>bravo</i>, and who gave such evidence
+ that the captains of the army were enabled to ascertain the
+ truth. The impostor was stripped and drummed out of the camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the conclusion of a peace between the Pope and the Bolognese,
+ Bartolommeo found himself without occupation. He now offered
+ himself to the Venetians, and began to fight again under the
+ great Carmagnola against Filippo Visconti. His engagement allowed
+ him forty men, which, after the judicial murder of Carmagnola at
+ Venice in 1432, were increased to eighty. Erasmo da Narni, better
+ known as Gattamelata, was now his general-in-chief&mdash;a man
+ who had risen from the lowest fortunes to one of the most
+ splendid military positions in Italy. Colleoni spent the next
+ years of his life, until 1443, in Lombardy, manoeuvring against
+ Il Piccinino, and gradually rising in the Venetian service, until
+ his Condotta reached the number of 800 men. Upon Gattamelata's
+ death at Padua in 1440, Colleoni became the most important of the
+ generals who had fought with Caldora in the March. The lordships
+ of Romano in the Bergamasque and of Covo and Antegnate in the
+ Cremonese had been assigned to him; and he was in a position to
+ make independent engagements with princes. What distinguished him
+ as a general, was a combination of caution with audacity. He
+ united the brilliant system of his master Braccio with the more
+ prudent tactics of the Sforzeschi; and thus, though he often
+ surprised his foes by daring stratagems and vigorous assaults, he
+ rarely met with any serious check. He was a captain who could be
+ relied upon for boldly seizing an advantage, no less than for
+ using a success with discretion. Moreover he had acquired an
+ almost unique reputation for honesty in dealing with his masters,
+ and for justice combined with humane indulgence to his men. His
+ company was popular, and he could always bring capital troops
+ into the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1443 Colleoni quitted the Venetian service on account
+ of a quarrel with Gherardo Dandolo, the Provoditore of the
+ Republic. He now took a commission from Filippo Maria Visconti,
+ who received him at Milan with great honour, bestowed on him the
+ Castello Adorno at Pavia, and sent him into the March of Ancona
+ upon a military expedition. Of all Italian tyrants this Visconti
+ was the most difficult to serve. Constitutionally timid,
+ surrounded with a crowd of spies and base informers, shrinking
+ from the sight of men in the recesses of his palace, and
+ controlling the complicated affairs of his Duchy by means of
+ correspondents and intelligencers, this last scion of the
+ Milanese despots lived like a spider in an inscrutable network of
+ suspicion and intrigue. His policy was one of endless plot and
+ counterplot. He trusted no man; his servants were paid to act as
+ spies on one another; his bodyguard consisted of mutually hostile
+ mercenaries; his captains in the field were watched and thwarted
+ by commissioners appointed to check them at the point of
+ successful ambition or magnificent victory. The historian has a
+ hard task when he tries to fathom the Visconti's schemes, or to
+ understand his motives. Half the Duke's time seems to have been
+ spent in unravelling the webs that he had woven, in undoing his
+ own work, and weakening the hands of his chosen ministers.
+ Conscious that his power was artificial, that the least breath
+ might blow him back into the nothingness from which he had arisen
+ on the wrecks of his father's tyranny, he dreaded the personal
+ eminence of his generals above all things. His chief object was
+ to establish a system of checks, by means of which no one whom he
+ employed should at any moment be great enough to threaten him.
+ The most formidable of these military adventurers, Francesco
+ Sforza, had been secured by marriage with Bianca Maria Visconti,
+ his master's only daughter, in 1441; but the Duke did not even
+ trust his son-in-law. The last six years of his life were spent
+ in scheming to deprive Sforza of his lordships; and the war in
+ the March, on which he employed Colleoni, had the object of
+ ruining the principality acquired by this daring captain from
+ Pope Eugenius IV. in 1443.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colleoni was by no means deficient in those foxlike qualities
+ which were necessary to save the lion from the toils spread for
+ him by Italian intriguers. He had already shown that he knew how
+ to push his own interests, by changing sides and taking service
+ with the highest bidder, as occasion prompted. Nor, though his
+ character for probity and loyalty stood exceptionally high among
+ the men of his profession, was he the slave to any questionable
+ claims of honour or of duty. In that age of confused politics and
+ extinguished patriotism, there was not indeed much scope for
+ scrupulous honesty. But Filippo Maria Visconti proved more than a
+ match for him in craft. While Colleoni was engaged in pacifying
+ the revolted population of Bologna, the Duke yielded to the
+ suggestion of his parasites at Milan, who whispered that the
+ general was becoming dangerously powerful. He recalled him, and
+ threw him without trial into the dungeons of the Forni at Monza.
+ Here Colleoni remained a prisoner more than a year, until the
+ Duke's death in 1447, when he made his escape, and profited by
+ the disturbance of the Duchy to reacquire his lordships in the
+ Bergamasque territory. The true motive for his imprisonment
+ remains still buried in obscure conjecture. Probably it was not
+ even known to the Visconti, who acted on this, as on so many
+ other occasions, by a mere spasm of suspicious jealousy, for
+ which he could have given no account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the year 1447 to the year 1455, it is difficult to follow
+ Colleoni's movements, or to trace his policy. First, we find him
+ employed by the Milanese Republic, during its brief space of
+ independence; then he is engaged by the Venetians, with a
+ commission for 1500 horse; next, he is in the service of
+ Francesco Sforza; once more in that of the Venetians, and yet
+ again in that of the Duke of Milan. His biographer relates with
+ pride that, during this period, he was three times successful
+ against French troops in Piedmont and Lombardy. It appears that
+ he made short engagements, and changed his paymasters according
+ to convenience. But all this time he rose in personal importance,
+ acquired fresh lordships in the Bergamasque, and accumulated
+ wealth. He reached the highest point of his prosperity in 1455,
+ when the Republic of S. Mark elected him General-in-Chief of
+ their armies, with the fullest powers, and with a stipend of
+ 100,000 florins. For nearly twenty-one years, until the day of
+ his death, in 1475, Colleoni held this honourable and lucrative
+ office. In his will he charged the Signory of Venice that they
+ should never again commit into the hands of a single captain such
+ unlimited control over their military resources. It was indeed no
+ slight tribute to Colleoni's reputation for integrity, that the
+ jealous Republic, which had signified its sense of Carmagnola's
+ untrustworthiness by capital punishment, should have left him so
+ long in the undisturbed disposal of their army. The Standard and
+ the Bâton of S. Mark were conveyed to Colleoni by two
+ ambassadors, and presented to him at Brescia on June 24, 1455.
+ Three years later he made a triumphal entry into Venice, and
+ received the same ensigns of military authority from the hands of
+ the new Doge, Pasquale Malipiero. On this occasion his staff
+ consisted of some two hundred officers, splendidly armed, and
+ followed by a train of serving-men. Noblemen from Bergamo,
+ Brescia, and other cities of the Venetian territory, swelled the
+ cortege. When they embarked on the lagoons, they found the water
+ covered with boats and gondolas, bearing the population of Venice
+ in gala attire, to greet the illustrious guest with instruments
+ of music. Three great galleys of the Republic, called Bucentaurs,
+ issued from the crowd of smaller craft. On the first was the Doge
+ in his state robes, attended by the government in office, or the
+ Signoria of S. Mark. On the second were members of the Senate and
+ minor magistrates. The third carried the ambassadors of foreign
+ powers. Colleoni was received into the first state-galley, and
+ placed by the side of the Doge. The oarsmen soon cleared the
+ space between the land and Venice, passed the small canals, and
+ swept majestically up the Canalozzo among the plaudits of the
+ crowds assembled on both sides to cheer their General. Thus they
+ reached the piazzetta, where Colleoni alighted between the two
+ great pillars, and, conducted by the Doge in person, walked to
+ the Church of S. Mark. Here, after Mass had been said, and a
+ sermon had been preached, kneeling before the high altar he
+ received the truncheon from the Doge's hands. The words of his
+ commission ran as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'By authority and decree of this most excellent City of Venice,
+ of us the Prince, and of the Senate, you are to be Commander and
+ Captain General of all our forces and armaments on terra firma.
+ Take from our hands this truncheon, with good augury and fortune,
+ as sign and warrant of your power. Be it your care and effort,
+ with dignity and splendour to maintain and to defend the Majesty,
+ the Loyalty, and the Principles of this Empire. Neither
+ provoking, not yet provoked, unless at our command, shall you
+ break into open warfare with our enemies. Free jurisdiction and
+ lordship over each one of our soldiers, except in cases of
+ treason, we hereby commit to you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the ceremony of his reception, Colleoni was conducted with
+ no less pomp to his lodgings, and the next ten days were spent in
+ festivities of all sorts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commandership-in-chief of the Venetian forces was perhaps the
+ highest military post in Italy. It placed Colleoni on the
+ pinnacle of his profession, and made his camp the favourite
+ school of young soldiers. Among his pupils or lieutenants we read
+ of Ercole d'Este, the future Duke of Ferrara; Alessandro Sforza,
+ lord of Pesaro; Boniface, Marquis of Montferrat; Cicco and Pino
+ Ordelaffi, princes of Forli; Astorre Manfredi, the lord of
+ Faenza; three Counts of Mirandola; two princes of Carpi; Deifobo,
+ the Count of Anguillara; Giovanni Antonio Caldora, lord of Jesi
+ in the March; and many others of less name. Honours came thick
+ upon him. When one of the many ineffectual leagues against the
+ infidel was formed in 1468, during the pontificate of Paul II.,
+ he was named Captain-General for the Crusade. Pius II. designed
+ him for the leader of the expedition he had planned against the
+ impious and savage despot, Sigismondo Malatesta. King René of
+ Anjou, by special patent, authorised him to bear his name and
+ arms, and made him a member of his family. The Duke of Burgundy,
+ by a similar heraldic fiction, conferred upon him his name and
+ armorial bearings. This will explain why Colleoni is often styled
+ 'di Andegavia e Borgogna.' In the case of René, the honour was
+ but a barren show. But the patent of Charles the Bold had more
+ significance. In 1473 he entertained the project of employing the
+ great Italian General against his Swiss foes; nor does it seem
+ reasonable to reject a statement made by Colleoni's biographer,
+ to the effect that a secret compact had been drawn up between him
+ and the Duke of Burgundy, for the conquest and partition of the
+ Duchy of Milan. The Venetians, in whose service Colleoni still
+ remained, when they became aware of this project, met it with
+ peaceful but irresistible opposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colleoni had been engaged continually since his earliest boyhood
+ in the trade of war. It was not therefore possible that he should
+ have gained a great degree of literary culture. Yet the fashion
+ of the times made it necessary that a man in his position should
+ seek the society of scholars. Accordingly his court and camp were
+ crowded with students, in whose wordy disputations he is said to
+ have delighted. It will be remembered that his contemporaries,
+ Alfonso the Magnanimous, Francesco Sforza, Federigo of Urbino,
+ and Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta, piqued themselves at least as
+ much upon their patronage of letters, as upon their prowess in
+ the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colleoni's court, like that of Urbino, was a model of good
+ manners. As became a soldier, he was temperate in food and
+ moderate in slumber. It was recorded of him that he had never sat
+ more than one hour at meat in his own house, and that he never
+ overslept the sunrise. After dinner he would converse with his
+ friends, using commonly his native dialect of Bergamo, and
+ entertaining the company now with stories of adventure, and now
+ with pithy sayings. In another essential point he resembled his
+ illustrious contemporary, the Duke of Urbino; for he was
+ sincerely pious in an age which, however it preserved the
+ decencies of ceremonial religion, was profoundly corrupt at
+ heart. His principal lordships in the Bergamasque territory owed
+ to his munificence their fairest churches and charitable
+ institutions. At Martinengo, for example, he rebuilt and
+ re-endowed two monasteries, the one dedicated to S. Chiara, the
+ other to S. Francis. In Bergamo itself he founded an
+ establishment named' La Pieta,' for the good purpose of dowering
+ and marrying poor girls. This house he endowed with a yearly
+ income of 3000 ducats. The Sulphur baths of Trescorio, at some
+ distance from the city, were improved and opened to poor patients
+ by a hospital which he provided. At Rumano he raised a church to
+ S. Peter, and erected buildings of public utility, which on his
+ death he bequeathed to the society of the Misericordia in that
+ town. All the places of his jurisdiction owed to him such
+ benefits as good water, new walls, and irrigation works. In
+ addition to these munificent foundations must be mentioned the
+ Basella, or Monastery of Dominican friars, which he established
+ not far from Bergamo, upon the river Serio, in memory of his
+ beloved daughter Medea. Last, not least, was the Chapel of S.
+ John the Baptist, attached to the Church of S. Maria Maggiore,
+ which he endowed with fitting maintenance for two priests and
+ deacons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The one defect acknowledged by his biographer was his partiality
+ for women. Early in life he married Tisbe, of the noble house of
+ the Brescian Martinenghi, who bore him one daughter, Caterina,
+ wedded to Gasparre Martinengo. Two illegitimate daughters, Ursina
+ and Isotta, were recognised and treated by him as legitimate. The
+ first he gave in marriage to Gherardo Martinengo, and the second
+ to Jacopo of the same family. Two other natural children,
+ Doratina and Ricardona, were mentioned in his will: he left them
+ four thousand ducats a piece for dowry. Medea, the child of his
+ old age (for she was born to him when he was sixty), died before
+ her father, and was buried, as we have seen, in the Chapel of
+ Basella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout his life he was distinguished for great physical
+ strength and agility. When he first joined the troop of Braccio,
+ he could race, with his corselet on, against the swiftest runner
+ of the army; and when he was stripped, few horses could beat him
+ in speed. Far on into old age he was in the habit of taking long
+ walks every morning for the sake of exercise, and delighted in
+ feats of arms and jousting matches. 'He was tall, straight, and
+ full of flesh, well proportioned, and excellently made in all his
+ limbs. His complexion inclined somewhat to brown, but was
+ coloured with sanguine and lively carnation. His eyes were black;
+ in look and sharpness of light, they were vivid, piercing, and
+ terrible. The outlines of his nose and all his countenance
+ expressed a certain manly nobleness, combined with goodness and
+ prudence.' Such is the portrait drawn of Colleoni by his
+ biographer; and it well accords with the famous bronze statue of
+ the general at Venice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colleoni lived with a magnificence that suited his rank. His
+ favourite place of abode was Malpaga, a castle built by him at
+ the distance of about an hour's drive from Bergamo. The place is
+ worth a visit, though its courts and gates and galleries have now
+ been turned into a monster farm, and the southern rooms, where
+ Colleoni entertained his guests, are given over to the silkworms.
+ Half a dozen families, employed upon a vast estate of the
+ Martinengo family, occupy the still substantial house and
+ stables. The moat is planted with mulberry-trees; the upper rooms
+ are used as granaries for golden maize; cows, pigs, and horses
+ litter in the spacious yard. Yet the walls of the inner court and
+ of the ancient state rooms are brilliant with frescoes, executed
+ by some good Venetian hand, which represent the chief events of
+ Colleoni's life&mdash;his battles, his reception by the Signory
+ of Venice, his tournaments and hawking parties, and the great
+ series of entertainments with which he welcomed Christiern of
+ Denmark. This king had made his pilgrimage to Rome and was
+ returning westward, when the fame of Colleoni and his princely
+ state at Malpaga induced him to turn aside and spend some days as
+ the general's guest. In order to do him honour, Colleoni left his
+ castle at the king's disposal and established himself with all
+ his staff and servants in a camp at some distance from Malpaga.
+ The camp was duly furnished with tents and trenches, stockades,
+ artillery, and all the other furniture of war. On the king's
+ approach, Colleoni issued with trumpets blowing and banners
+ flying to greet his guest, gratifying him thus with a spectacle
+ of the pomp and circumstance of war as carried on in Italy. The
+ visit was further enlivened by sham fights, feats of arms, and
+ trials of strength. When it ended, Colleoni presented the king
+ with one of his own suits of armour, and gave to each of his
+ servants a complete livery of red and white, his colours. Among
+ the frescoes at Malpaga none are more interesting, and none,
+ thanks to the silkworms rather than to any other cause, are
+ fortunately in a better state of preservation, than those which
+ represent this episode in the history of the Castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colleoni died in the year 1475, at the age of seventy-five. Since
+ he left no male representative, he constituted the Republic of S.
+ Mark his heir-in-chief, after properly providing for his
+ daughters and his numerous foundations. The Venetians received
+ under this testament a sum of 100,000 ducats, together with all
+ arrears of pay due to him, and 10,000 ducats owed him by the Duke
+ of Ferrara. It set forth the testator's intention that this money
+ should be employed in defence of the Christian faith against the
+ Turk. One condition was attached to the bequest. The legatees
+ were to erect a statue to Colleoni on the Piazza of S. Mark.
+ This, however, involved some difficulty; for the proud Republic
+ had never accorded a similar honour, nor did they choose to
+ encumber their splendid square with a monument. They evaded the
+ condition by assigning the Campo in front of the Scuola di S.
+ Marco, where also stands the Church of S. Zanipolo, to the
+ purpose. Here accordingly the finest bronze equestrian statue in
+ Italy, if we except the Marcus Aurelius of the Capitol, was
+ reared upon its marble pedestal by Andrea Verocchio and
+ Alessandro Leopardi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colleoni's liberal expenditure of wealth found its reward in the
+ immortality conferred by art. While the names of Braccio, his
+ master in the art of war, and of Piccinino, his great adversary,
+ are familiar to few but professed students, no one who has
+ visited either Bergamo or Venice can fail to have learned
+ something about the founder of the Chapel of S. John and the
+ original of Leopardi's bronze. The annals of sculpture assign to
+ Verocchio, of Florence, the principal share in this statue: but
+ Verocchio died before it was cast; and even granting that he
+ designed the model, its execution must be attributed to his
+ collaborator, the Venetian Leopardi. For my own part, I am loth
+ to admit that the chief credit of this masterpiece belongs to a
+ man whose undisputed work at Florence shows but little of its
+ living spirit and splendour of suggested motion. That the Tuscan
+ science of Verocchio secured conscientious modelling for man and
+ horse may be assumed; but I am fain to believe that the
+ concentrated fire which animates them both is due in no small
+ measure to the handling of his northern fellow-craftsman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While immersed in the dreary records of crimes, treasons,
+ cruelties, and base ambitions, which constitute the bulk of
+ fifteenth-century Italian history, it is refreshing to meet with
+ a character so frank and manly, so simply pious and comparatively
+ free from stain, as Colleoni. The only general of his day who can
+ bear comparison with him for purity of public life and decency in
+ conduct, was Federigo di Montefeltro. Even here, the comparison
+ redounds to Colleoni's credit; for he, unlike the Duke of Urbino,
+ rose to eminence by his own exertion in a profession fraught with
+ peril to men of ambition and energy. Federigo started with a
+ principality sufficient to satisfy his just desires for power.
+ Nothing but his own sense of right and prudence restrained
+ Colleoni upon the path which brought Francesco Sforza to a duchy
+ by dishonourable dealings, and Carmagnola to the scaffold by
+ questionable practice against his masters.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="CREMA_AND_THE_CRUCIFIX" id=
+ "CREMA_AND_THE_CRUCIFIX"></a><i>CREMA AND THE CRUCIFIX</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ Few people visit Crema. It is a little country town of Lombardy,
+ between Cremona and Treviglio, with no historic memories but very
+ misty ones belonging to the days of the Visconti dynasty. On
+ every side around the city walls stretch smiling vineyards and
+ rich meadows, where the elms are married to the mulberry-trees by
+ long festoons of foliage hiding purple grapes, where the
+ sunflowers droop their heavy golden heads among tall stems of
+ millet and gigantic maize, and here and there a rice-crop ripens
+ in the marshy loam. In vintage time the carts, drawn by their
+ white oxen, come creaking townward in the evening, laden with
+ blue bunches. Down the long straight roads, between rows of
+ poplars, they creep on; and on the shafts beneath the pyramid of
+ fruit lie contadini stained with lees of wine. Far off across
+ that 'waveless sea' of Lombardy, which has been the battlefield
+ of countless generations, rise the dim grey Alps, or else pearled
+ domes of thunder-clouds in gleaming masses over some tall
+ solitary tower. Such backgrounds, full of peace, suggestive of
+ almost infinite distance, and dignified with colours of
+ incomparable depth and breadth, the Venetian painters loved. No
+ landscape in Europe is more wonderful than this&mdash;thrice
+ wonderful in the vastness of its arching heavens, in the
+ stillness of its level plain, and in the bulwark of huge crested
+ mountains, reared afar like bastions against the northern sky.
+ The little town is all alive in this September weather. At every
+ corner of the street, under rustling abeles and thick-foliaged
+ planes, at the doors of palaces and in the yards of inns, men,
+ naked from the thighs downward, are treading the red must into
+ vats and tuns; while their mild-eyed oxen lie beneath them in the
+ road, peaceably chewing the cud between one journey to the
+ vineyard and another. It must not be imagined that the scene of
+ Alma Tadema's 'Roman Vintage,' or what we fondly picture to our
+ fancy of the Athenian Lenaea, is repeated in the streets of
+ Crema. This modern treading of the wine-press is a very prosaic
+ affair. The town reeks with a sour smell of old casks and crushed
+ grape-skins, and the men and women at work bear no resemblance
+ whatever to Bacchus and his crew. Yet even as it is, the Lombard
+ vintage, beneath floods of sunlight and a pure blue sky, is
+ beautiful; and he who would fain make acquaintance with Crema,
+ should time his entry into the old town, if possible, on some
+ still golden afternoon of autumn. It is then, if ever, that he
+ will learn to love the glowing brickwork of its churches and the
+ quaint terra-cotta traceries that form its chief artistic charm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How the unique brick architecture of the Lombard cities took its
+ origin&mdash;whether from the precepts of Byzantine aliens in the
+ earliest middle ages, or from the native instincts of a mixed
+ race composed of Gallic, Ligurian, Roman, and Teutonic elements,
+ under the leadership of Longobardic rulers&mdash;is a question
+ for antiquarians to decide. There can, however, be no doubt that
+ the monuments of the Lombard style, as they now exist, are no
+ less genuinely local, no less characteristic of the country they
+ adorn, no less indigenous to the soil they sprang from, than the
+ Attic colonnades of Mnesicles and Ictinus. What the marble
+ quarries of Pentelicus were to the Athenian builders, the clay
+ beneath their feet was to those Lombard craftsmen. From it they
+ fashioned structures as enduring, towers as majestic, and
+ cathedral aisles as solemn, as were ever wrought from chiselled
+ stone. There is a true sympathy between those buildings and the
+ Lombard landscape, which by itself might suffice to prove the
+ originality of their almost unknown architects. The rich colour
+ of the baked clay&mdash;finely modulated from a purplish red,
+ through russet, crimson, pink, and orange, to pale yellow and
+ dull grey&mdash;harmonises with the brilliant greenery of Lombard
+ vegetation and with the deep azure of the distant Alpine range.
+ Reared aloft above the flat expanse of plain, those square
+ <i>torroni</i>, tapering into octagons and crowned with slender
+ cones, break the long sweeping lines and infinite horizons with a
+ contrast that affords relief, and yields a resting-place to tired
+ eyes; while, far away, seen haply from some bridge above Ticino,
+ or some high-built palace loggia, they gleam like columns of pale
+ rosy fire against the front of mustering storm-clouds blue with
+ rain. In that happy orchard of Italy, a pergola of vines in leaf,
+ a clump of green acacias, and a campanile soaring above its
+ church roof, brought into chance combination with the reaches of
+ the plain and the dim mountain range, make up a picture eloquent
+ in its suggestive beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those ancient builders wrought cunningly with their material. The
+ bricks are fashioned and fixed to last for all time. Exposed to
+ the icy winds of a Lombard winter, to the fierce fire of a
+ Lombard summer, and to the moist vapours of a Lombard autumn;
+ neglected by unheeding generations; with flowers clustering in
+ their crannies, and birds nesting in their eaves, and mason-bees
+ filling the delicate network of their traceries&mdash;they still
+ present angles as sharp as when they were but finished, and
+ joints as nice as when the mortar dried in the first months of
+ their building. This immunity from age and injury they owe partly
+ to the imperishable nature of baked clay; partly to the care of
+ the artists who selected and mingled the right sorts of earth,
+ burned them with scrupulous attention, and fitted them together
+ with a patience born of loving service. Each member of the
+ edifice was designed with a view to its ultimate place. The
+ proper curve was ascertained for cylindrical columns and for
+ rounded arches. Larger bricks were moulded for the supporting
+ walls, and lesser pieces were adapted to the airy vaults and
+ lanterns. In the brickfield and the kiln the whole church was
+ planned and wrought out in its details, before the hands that
+ made a unity of all these scattered elements were set to the work
+ of raising it in air. When they came to put the puzzle together,
+ they laid each brick against its neighbour, filling up the almost
+ imperceptible interstices with liquid cement composed of
+ quicklime and fine sand in water. After five centuries the seams
+ between the layers of bricks that make the bell-tower of S.
+ Gottardo at Milan, yield no point of vantage to the penknife or
+ the chisel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was it in their welding of the bricks alone that these
+ craftsmen showed their science. They were wont to enrich the
+ surface with marble, sparingly but effectively employed&mdash;as
+ in those slender detached columns, which add such beauty to the
+ octagon of S. Gottardo, or in the string-courses of strange
+ beasts and reptiles that adorn the church fronts of Pavia. They
+ called to their aid the <i>mandorlato</i> of Verona, supporting
+ their porch pillars on the backs of couchant lions, inserting
+ polished slabs on their façades, and building huge sarcophagi
+ into their cloister alleys. Between terra-cotta and this marble
+ of Verona there exists a deep and delicate affinity. It took the
+ name of <i>mandorlato</i>, I suppose, from a resemblance to
+ almond blossoms. But it is far from having the simple beauty of a
+ single hue. Like all noble veined stones, it passes by a series
+ of modulations and gradations through a gamut of associated
+ rather than contrasted tints. Not the pink of the almond blossom
+ only, but the creamy whiteness of the almond kernel, and the dull
+ yellow of the almond nut may be found in it; and yet these
+ colours are so blent and blurred to all-pervading mellowness,
+ that nowhere is there any shock of contrast or violence of a
+ preponderating tone. The veins which run in labyrinths of
+ crossing, curving, and contorted lines all over its smooth
+ surface add, no doubt, to this effect of unity. The polish,
+ lastly, which it takes, makes the <i>mandorlato</i> shine like a
+ smile upon the sober face of the brickwork: for, serviceable as
+ terra-cotta is for nearly all artistic purposes, it cannot
+ reflect light or gain the illumination which comes from surface
+ brightness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What the clay can do almost better than any crystalline material,
+ may be seen in the mouldings so characteristic of Lombard
+ architecture. Geometrical patterns of the rarest and most
+ fanciful device; scrolls of acanthus foliage, and traceries of
+ tendrils; Cupids swinging in festoons of vines; angels joining
+ hands in dance, with fluttering skirts and windy hair, and mouths
+ that symbol singing; grave faces of old men and beautiful
+ profiles of maidens leaning from medallions; wide-winged genii
+ filling the spandrils of cloister arches, and cherubs clustered
+ in the rondure of rose-windows&mdash;ornaments like these,
+ wrought from the plastic clay, and adapted with true taste to the
+ requirements of the architecture, are familiar to every one who
+ has studied the church front of Crema, the cloisters of the
+ Certosa, the courts of the Ospedale Maggiore at Milan, or the
+ public palace of Cremona.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the <i>mandorlato</i> gives a smile to those majestic Lombard
+ buildings, the terra-cotta decorations add the element of life
+ and movement. The thought of the artist in its first freshness
+ and vivacity is felt in them. They have all the spontaneity of
+ improvisation, the seductive melody of unpremeditated music.
+ Moulding the supple earth with 'hand obedient to the brain,' the
+ <i>plasticatore</i> has impressed his most fugitive dreams of
+ beauty on it without effort; and what it cost him but a few
+ fatigueless hours to fashion, the steady heat of the furnace has
+ gifted with imperishable life. Such work, no doubt, has the
+ defects of its qualities. As there are few difficulties to
+ overcome, it suffers from a fatal facility&mdash;<i>nec pluteum
+ coedit nec demorsos sapit ungues</i>. It is therefore apt to be
+ unequal, touching at times the highest point of inspiration, as
+ in the angels of Guccio at Perugia, and sinking not unfrequently
+ into the commonplace of easygoing triviality, as in the common
+ floral traceries of Milanese windows. But it is never laboured,
+ never pedantic, never dulled by the painful effort to subdue an
+ obstinate material to the artist's will. If marble is required to
+ develop the strength of the few supreme sculptors, terra-cotta
+ saves intact the fancies of a crowd of lesser men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we reflect that all the force, solemnity, and beauty of the
+ Lombard buildings was evoked from clay, we learn from them this
+ lesson: that the thought of man needs neither precious material
+ nor yet stubborn substance for the production of enduring
+ masterpieces. The red earth was enough for God when He made man
+ in His own image; and mud dried in the sun suffices for the
+ artist, who is next to God in his creative faculty&mdash;since
+ <i>non merita nome di creatore se non Iddio ed il poeta</i>.
+ After all, what is more everlasting than terra-cotta? The
+ hobnails of the boys who ran across the brickfields in the Roman
+ town of Silchester, may still be seen, mingled with the impress
+ of the feet of dogs and hoofs of goats, in the tiles discovered
+ there. Such traces might serve as a metaphor for the footfall of
+ artistic genius, when the form-giver has stamped his thought upon
+ the moist clay, and fire has made that imprint permanent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all these Lombard edifices, none is more beautiful than the
+ Cathedral of Crema, with its delicately finished campanile, built
+ of choicely tinted yellow bricks, and ending in a lantern of the
+ gracefullest, most airily capricious fancy. This bell-tower does
+ not display the gigantic force of Cremona's famous torrazzo,
+ shooting 396 feet into blue ether from the city square; nor can
+ it rival the octagon of S. Gottardo for warmth of hue. Yet it has
+ a character of elegance, combined with boldness of invention,
+ that justifies the citizens of Crema in their pride. It is
+ unique; and he who has not seen it does not know the whole
+ resources of the Lombard style. The façade of the Cathedral
+ displays that peculiar blending of Byzantine or Romanesque round
+ arches with Gothic details in the windows, and with the acute
+ angle of the central pitch, which forms the characteristic
+ quality of the late <i>trecento</i> Lombard manner. In its
+ combination of purity and richness it corresponds to the best age
+ of decorated work in English Gothic. What, however, strikes a
+ Northern observer is the strange detachment of this elaborate
+ façade from the main structure of the church. Like a frontispiece
+ cut out of cardboard and pierced with ornamental openings, it
+ shoots far above the low roof of the nave; so that at night the
+ moon, rising above the southern aisle, shines through its topmost
+ window, and casts the shadow of its tracery upon the pavement of
+ the square. This is a constructive blemish to which the Italians
+ in no part of the peninsula were sensitive. They seem to have
+ regarded their church fronts as independent of the edifice,
+ capable of separate treatment, and worthy in themselves of being
+ made the subject of decorative skill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the so-called Santuario of Crema&mdash;a circular church
+ dedicated to S. Maria della Croce, outside the walls&mdash;the
+ Lombard style has been adapted to the manner of the
+ Mid-Renaissance. This church was raised in the last years of the
+ fifteenth century by Gian Battista Battagli, an architect of
+ Lodi, who followed the pure rules of taste, bequeathed to North
+ Italian builders by Bramante. The beauty of the edifice is due
+ entirely to its tranquil dignity and harmony of parts, the
+ lightness of its circling loggia, and the just proportion
+ maintained between the central structure and the four projecting
+ porticoes. The sharp angles of these vestibules afford a contrast
+ to the simplicity of the main building, while their clustered
+ cupolas assist the general effect of roundness aimed at by the
+ architect. Such a church as this proves how much may be achieved
+ by the happy distribution of architectural masses. It was the
+ triumph of the best Renaissance style to attain lucidity of
+ treatment, and to produce beauty by geometrical proportion. When
+ Leo Battista Alberti complained to his friend, Matteo di Bastia,
+ that a slight alteration of the curves in his design for S.
+ Francesco at Rimini would 'spoil his music,' <i>ciò che tu muti
+ discorda tutta quella musica</i>, this is what he meant. The
+ melody of lines and the harmony of parts made a symphony to his
+ eyes no less agreeable than a concert of tuned lutes and voices
+ to his ears; and to this concord he was so sensitive that any
+ deviation was a discord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After visiting the churches of Crema and sauntering about the
+ streets awhile, there is nothing left to do but to take refuge in
+ the old Albergo del Pozzo. This is one of those queer Italian
+ inns, which carry you away at once into a scene of Goldoni. It is
+ part of some palace, where nobles housed their <i>bravi</i> in
+ the sixteenth century, and which the lesser people of to-day have
+ turned into a dozen habitations. Its great stone staircase leads
+ to a saloon upon which the various bedchambers open; and round
+ its courtyard runs an open balcony, and from the court grows up a
+ fig-tree poking ripe fruit against a bedroom window. Oleanders in
+ tubs and red salvias in pots, and kitchen herbs in boxes,
+ flourish on the pavement, where the ostler comes to wash his
+ carriages, and where the barber shaves the poodle of the house.
+ Visitors to the Albergo del Pozzo are invariably asked if they
+ have seen the Museo; and when they answer in the negative, they
+ are conducted with some ceremony to a large room on the
+ ground-floor of the inn, looking out upon the courtyard and the
+ fig-tree. It was here that I gained the acquaintance of Signor
+ Folcioni, and became possessor of an object that has made the
+ memory of Crema doubly interesting to me ever since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we entered the Museo, we found a little old man, gentle,
+ grave, and unobtrusive, varnishing the ugly portrait of some
+ Signor of the <i>cinquecento</i>. Round the walls hung pictures,
+ of mediocre value, in dingy frames; but all of them bore sounding
+ titles. Titians, Lionardos, Guido Renis, and Luinis, looked down
+ and waited for a purchaser. In truth this museum was a
+ <i>bric-à-brac</i> shop of a sort that is common enough in Italy,
+ where treasures of old lace, glass, armour, furniture, and
+ tapestry, may still be met with. Signor Folcioni began by
+ pointing out the merits of his pictures; and after making due
+ allowance for his zeal as amateur and dealer, it was possible to
+ join in some of his eulogiums. A would-be Titian, for instance,
+ bought in Verona from a noble house in ruins, showed Venetian
+ wealth of colour in its gemmy greens and lucid crimsons shining
+ from a background deep and glowing. Then he led us to a
+ walnut-wood bureau of late Renaissance work, profusely carved
+ with nymphs and Cupids, and armed men, among festoons of fruits
+ embossed in high relief. Deeply drilled worm-holes set a seal of
+ antiquity upon the blooming faces and luxuriant garlandslike the
+ touch of Time who 'delves the parallels in beauty's brow.' On the
+ shelves of an ebony cabinet close by he showed us a row of cups
+ cut out of rock-crystal and mounted in gilt silver, with heaps of
+ engraved gems, old snuff-boxes, coins, medals, sprays of coral,
+ and all the indescribable lumber that one age flings aside as
+ worthless for the next to pick up from the dust-heap and regard
+ as precious. Surely the genius of culture in our century might be
+ compared to a chiffonnier of Paris, who, when the night has
+ fallen, goes into the streets, bag on back and lantern in hand,
+ to rake up the waifs and strays a day of whirling life has left
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next curiosity was an ivory carving of S. Anthony preaching
+ to the fishes, so fine and small you held it on your palm, and
+ used a lens to look at it. Yet there stood the Santo
+ gesticulating, and there were the fishes in rows&mdash;the little
+ fishes first, and then the middle-sized, and last of all the
+ great big fishes almost out at sea, with their heads above the
+ water and their mouths wide open, just as the <i>Fioretti di San
+ Francesco</i> describes them. After this came some original
+ drawings of doubtful interest, and then a case of fifty-two
+ <i>nielli</i>. These were of unquestionable value; for has not
+ Cicognara engraved them on a page of his classic monograph? The
+ thin silver plates, over which once passed the burin of Maso
+ Finiguerra, cutting lines finer than hairs, and setting here a
+ shadow in dull acid-eaten grey, and there a high light of
+ exquisite polish, were far more delicate than any proofs
+ impressed from them. These frail masterpieces of Florentine
+ art&mdash;the first beginnings of line engraving&mdash;we held in
+ our hands while Signor Folcioni read out Cicognara's commentary
+ in a slow impressive voice, breaking off now and then to point at
+ the originals before us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun had set, and the room was almost dark, when he laid his
+ book down, and said: 'I have not much left to show&mdash;yet
+ stay! Here are still some little things of interest.' He then
+ opened the door into his bedroom, and took down from a nail above
+ his bed a wooden Crucifix. Few things have fascinated me more
+ than this Crucifix&mdash;produced without parade, half
+ negligently, from the dregs of his collection by a dealer in old
+ curiosities at Crema. The cross was, or is&mdash;for it is lying
+ on the table now before me&mdash;twenty-one inches in length,
+ made of strong wood, covered with coarse yellow parchment, and
+ shod at the four ends with brass. The Christ is roughly hewn in
+ reddish wood, coloured scarlet, where the blood streams from the
+ five wounds. Over the head an oval medallion, nailed into the
+ cross, serves as framework to a miniature of the Madonna, softly
+ smiling with a Correggiesque simper. The whole Crucifix is not a
+ work of art, but such as may be found in every convent. Its date
+ cannot be earlier than the beginning of the eighteenth century.
+ As I held it in my hand, I thought&mdash;perhaps this has been
+ carried to the bedside of the sick and dying; preachers have
+ brandished it from the pulpit over conscience-stricken
+ congregations; monks have knelt before it on the brick floor of
+ their cells, and novices have kissed it in the vain desire to
+ drown their yearnings after the relinquished world; perhaps it
+ has attended criminals to the scaffold, and heard the secrets of
+ repentant murderers; but why should it be shown me as a thing of
+ rarity? These thoughts passed through my mind, while Signor
+ Folcioni quietly remarked: 'I bought this Cross from the Frati
+ when their convent was dissolved in Crema.' Then he bade me turn
+ it round, and showed a little steel knob fixed into the back
+ between the arms. This was a spring. He pressed it, and the upper
+ and lower parts of the cross came asunder; and holding the top
+ like a handle, I drew out as from a scabbard a sharp steel blade,
+ concealed in the thickness of the wood, behind the very body of
+ the agonising Christ. What had been a crucifix became a deadly
+ poniard in my grasp, and the rust upon it in the twilight looked
+ like blood. 'I have often wondered,' said Signor Folcioni, 'that
+ the Frati cared to sell me this.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no need to raise the question of the genuineness of this
+ strange relic, though I confess to having had my doubts about it,
+ or to wonder for what nefarious purposes the impious weapon was
+ designed&mdash;whether the blade was inserted by some rascal monk
+ who never told the tale, or whether it was used on secret service
+ by the friars. On its surface the infernal engine carries a dark
+ certainty of treason, sacrilege, and violence. Yet it would be
+ wrong to incriminate the Order of S. Francis by any suspicion,
+ and idle to seek the actual history of this mysterious weapon. A
+ writer of fiction could indeed produce some dark tale in the
+ style of De Stendhal's 'Nouvelles,' and christen it 'The Crucifix
+ of Crema.' And how delighted would Webster have been if he had
+ chanced to hear of such a sword-sheath! He might have placed it
+ in the hands of Bosola for the keener torment of his Duchess.
+ Flamineo might have used it; or the disguised friars, who made
+ the deathbed of Bracciano hideous, might have plunged it in the
+ Duke's heart after mocking his eyes with the figure of the
+ suffering Christ. To imagine such an instrument of moral terror
+ mingled with material violence, lay within the scope of Webster's
+ sinister and powerful genius. But unless he had seen it with his
+ eyes, what poet would have ventured to devise the thing and
+ display it even in the dumb show of a tragedy? Fact is more
+ wonderful than romance. No apocalypse of Antichrist matches what
+ is told of Roderigo Borgia; and the crucifix of Crema exceeds the
+ sombre fantasy of Webster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever may be the truth about this cross, it has at any rate
+ the value of a symbol or a metaphor. The idea which it
+ materialises, the historical events of which it is a sign, may
+ well arrest attention. A sword concealed in the
+ crucifix&mdash;what emblem brings more forcibly to mind than this
+ that two-edged glaive of persecution which Dominic unsheathed to
+ mow down the populations of Provence and to make Spain destitute
+ of men? Looking upon the crucifix of Crema, we may seem to see
+ pestilence-stricken multitudes of Moors and Jews dying on the
+ coasts of Africa and Italy. The Spaniards enter Mexico; and this
+ is the cross they carry in their hands. They take possession of
+ Peru; and while the gentle people of the Incas come to kiss the
+ bleeding brows of Christ, they plunge this dagger in their sides.
+ What, again, was the temporal power of the Papacy but a sword
+ embedded in a cross? Each Papa Rè, when he ascended the Holy
+ Chair, was forced to take the crucifix of Crema and to bear it
+ till his death. A long procession of war-loving Pontiffs, levying
+ armies and paying captains with the pence of S. Peter, in order
+ to keep by arms the lands they had acquired by fraud, defiles
+ before our eyes. First goes the terrible Sixtus IV., who died of
+ grief when news was brought him that the Italian princes had made
+ peace. He it was who sanctioned the conspiracy to murder the
+ Medici in church, at the moment of the elevation of the Host. The
+ brigands hired to do this work refused at the last moment. The
+ sacrilege appalled them. 'Then,' says the chronicler, 'was found
+ a priest, who, being used to churches, had no scruple.' The
+ poignard this priest carried was this crucifix of Crema. After
+ Sixtus came the blood-stained Borgia; and after him Julius II.,
+ whom the Romans in triumphal songs proclaimed a second Mars, and
+ who turned, as Michelangelo expressed it, the chalices of Rome
+ into swords and helms. Leo X., who dismembered Italy for his
+ brother and nephew; and Clement VII., who broke the neck of
+ Florence and delivered the Eternal City to the spoiler, follow.
+ Of the antinomy between the Vicariate of Christ and an earthly
+ kingdom, incarnated by these and other Holy Fathers, what symbol
+ could be found more fitting than a dagger with a crucifix for
+ case and covering?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not easy to think or write of these matters without
+ rhetoric. When I laid my head upon my pillow that night in the
+ Albergo del Pozzo at Crema, it was full of such thoughts; and
+ when at last sleep came, it brought with it a dream begotten
+ doubtless by the perturbation of my fancy. For I thought that a
+ brown Franciscan, with hollow cheeks, and eyes aflame beneath his
+ heavy cowl, sat by my bedside, and, as he raised the crucifix in
+ his lean quivering hands, whispered a tale of deadly passion and
+ of dastardly revenge. His confession carried me away to a convent
+ garden of Palermo; and there was love in the story, and hate that
+ is stronger than love, and, for the ending of the whole matter,
+ remorse which dies not even in the grave. Each new possessor of
+ the crucifix of Crema, he told me, was forced to hear from him in
+ dreams his dreadful history. But, since it was a dream and
+ nothing more, why should I repeat it? I have wandered far enough
+ already from the vintage and the sunny churches of the little
+ Lombard town.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="CHERUBINO_AT_THE_SCALA_THEATRE" id=
+ "CHERUBINO_AT_THE_SCALA_THEATRE"></a><i>CHERUBINO AT THE SCALA
+ THEATRE</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ I
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a gala night. The opera-house of Milan was one blaze of
+ light and colour. Royalty in field-marshal's uniform and
+ diamonds, attended by decorated generals and radiant ladies of
+ the court, occupied the great box opposite the stage. The tiers
+ from pit to gallery were filled with brilliantly dressed women.
+ From the third row, where we were fortunately placed, the curves
+ of that most beautiful of theatres presented to my gaze a series
+ of retreating and approaching lines, composed of noble faces,
+ waving feathers, sparkling jewels, sculptured shoulders,
+ uniforms, robes of costly stuffs and every conceivable bright
+ colour. Light poured from the huge lustre in the centre of the
+ roof, ran along the crimson velvet cushions of the boxes, and
+ flashed upon the gilded frame of the proscenium&mdash;satyrs and
+ acanthus scrolls carved in the manner of a century ago. Pit and
+ orchestra scarcely contained the crowd of men who stood in lively
+ conversation, their backs turned to the stage, their lorgnettes
+ raised from time to time to sweep the boxes. This surging sea of
+ faces and sober costumes enhanced by contrast the glitter,
+ variety, and luminous tranquillity of the theatre above it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one took much thought of the coming spectacle, till the
+ conductor's rap was heard upon his desk, and the orchestra broke
+ into the overture to Mozart's <i>Nozze</i>. Before they were half
+ through, it was clear that we should not enjoy that evening the
+ delight of perfect music added to the enchantment of so brilliant
+ a scene. The execution of the overture was not exactly bad. But
+ it lacked absolute precision, the complete subordination of all
+ details to the whole. In rendering German music Italians often
+ fail through want of discipline, or through imperfect sympathy
+ with a style they will not take the pains to master. Nor, when
+ the curtain lifted and the play began, was the vocalisation found
+ in all parts satisfactory. The Contessa had a meagre <i>mezza
+ voce</i>. Susanna, though she did not sing false, hovered on the
+ verge of discords, owing to the weakness of an organ which had to
+ be strained in order to make any effect on that enormous stage.
+ On the other hand, the part of Almaviva was played with dramatic
+ fire, and Figaro showed a truly Southern sense of comic fun. The
+ scenes were splendidly mounted, and something of a princely
+ grandeur&mdash;the largeness of a noble train of life&mdash;was
+ added to the drama by the vast proportions of the theatre. It was
+ a performance which, in spite of drawbacks, yielded pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet it might have left me frigid but for the artist who
+ played Cherubino. This was no other than Pauline Lucca, in the
+ prime of youth and petulance. From her first appearance to the
+ last note she sang, she occupied the stage. The opera seemed to
+ have been written for her. The mediocrity of the troupe threw her
+ commanding merits&mdash;the richness of her voice, the purity of
+ her intonation, her vivid conception of character, her
+ indescribable brusquerie of movement and emotion&mdash;into that
+ relief which a sapphire gains from a setting of pearls. I can see
+ her now, after the lapse of nearly twenty years, as she stood
+ there singing in blue doublet and white mantle, with the slouched
+ Spanish hat and plume of ostrich feathers, a tiny rapier at her
+ side, and blue rosettes upon her white silk shoes! The <i>Nozze
+ di Figaro</i> was followed by a Ballo. This had for its theme the
+ favourite legend of a female devil sent from the infernal regions
+ to ruin a young man. Instead of performing the part assigned her,
+ Satanella falls in love with the hero, sacrifices herself, and is
+ claimed at last by the powers of goodness. <i>Quia multum
+ amavit</i>, her lost soul is saved. If the opera left much to be
+ desired, the Ballo was perfection. That vast stage of the Scala
+ Theatre had almost overwhelmed the actors of the play. Now,
+ thrown open to its inmost depths, crowded with glittering moving
+ figures, it became a fairyland of fantastic loveliness. Italians
+ possess the art of interpreting a serious dramatic action by
+ pantomime. A Ballo with them is no mere affair of
+ dancing&mdash;fine dresses, evolutions performed by brigades of
+ pink-legged women with a fixed smile on their faces. It takes the
+ rank of high expressive art. And the motive of this Ballo was
+ consistently worked out in an intelligible sequence of
+ well-ordered scenes. To moralise upon its meaning would be out of
+ place. It had a conflict of passions, a rhythmical progression of
+ emotions, a tragic climax in the triumph of good over evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of the performance there were five persons in our
+ box&mdash;the beautiful Miranda, and her husband, a celebrated
+ English man of letters; a German professor of biology; a young
+ Milanese gentleman, whom we called Edoardo; and myself. Edoardo
+ and the professor had joined us just before the ballet. I had
+ occupied a seat behind Miranda and my friend the critic from the
+ commencement. We had indeed dined together first at their hotel,
+ the Rebecchino; and they now proposed that we should all adjourn
+ together there on foot for supper. From the Scala Theatre to the
+ Rebecchino is a walk of some three minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we were seated at the supper-table and had talked some while
+ upon indifferent topics, the enthusiasm roused in me by Pauline
+ Lucca burst out. I broke a moment's silence by exclaiming, 'What
+ a wonder-world music creates! I have lived this evening in a
+ sphere of intellectual enjoyment raised to rapture. I never lived
+ so fast before!' 'Do you really think so?' said Miranda. She had
+ just finished a <i>beccafico</i>, and seemed disposed for
+ conversation. 'Do you really think so? For my part, music is in a
+ wholly different region from experience, thought, or feeling.
+ What does it communicate to you?' And she hummed to herself the
+ <i>motif</i> of Cherubino's 'Non so più cosa son cosa
+ faccio.'&mdash;'What does it teach me?' I broke in upon the
+ melody. 'Why, to-night, when I heard the music, and saw her
+ there, and felt the movement of the play, it seemed to me that a
+ new existence was revealed. For the first time I understood what
+ love might be in one most richly gifted for emotion.' Miranda
+ bent her eyes on the table-cloth and played with her wineglass.
+ 'I don't follow you at all. I enjoyed myself to-night. The opera,
+ indeed, might have been better rendered. The ballet, I admit, was
+ splendid. But when I remember the music&mdash;even the best of
+ it&mdash;even Pauline Lucca's part'&mdash;here she looked up, and
+ shot me a quick glance across the table&mdash;'I have mere music
+ in my ears. Nothing more. Mere music!' The professor of biology,
+ who was gifted with, a sense of music and had studied it
+ scientifically, had now crunched his last leaf of salad. Wiping
+ his lips with his napkin, he joined our <i>tête-à-tête</i>.
+ 'Gracious madam, I agree with you. He who seeks from music more
+ than music gives, is on the quest&mdash;how shall I put
+ it?&mdash;of the Holy Grail.' 'And what,' I struck in, 'is this
+ minimum or maximum that music gives?' 'Dear young friend,'
+ replied the professor, 'music gives melodies, harmonies, the many
+ beautiful forms to which sound shall be fashioned. Just as in the
+ case of shells and fossils, lovely in themselves, interesting for
+ their history and classification, so is it with music. You must
+ not seek an intellectual meaning. No; there is no <i>Inhalt</i>
+ in music' And he hummed contentedly the air of 'Voi che sapete.'
+ While he was humming, Miranda whispered to me across the table,
+ 'Separate the Lucca from the music.' 'But,' I answered rather
+ hotly, for I was nettled by Miranda's argument <i>ad hominem</i>,
+ 'But it is not possible in an opera to divide the music from the
+ words, the scenery, the play, the actor. Mozart, when he wrote
+ the score to Da Ponte's libretto, was excited to production by
+ the situations. He did not conceive his melodies out of
+ connection with a certain cast of characters, a given ethical
+ environment.' 'I do not know, my dear young friend,' responded
+ the professor, 'whether you have read Mozart's Life and letters.
+ It is clearly shown in them how he composed airs at times and
+ seasons when he had no words to deal with. These he afterwards
+ used as occasion served. Whence I conclude that music was for him
+ a free and lovely play of tone. The words of our excellent Da
+ Ponte were a scaffolding to introduce his musical creations to
+ the public. But without that carpenter's work, the melodies of
+ Cherubino are <i>Selbst-ständig</i>, sufficient in themselves to
+ vindicate their place in art. Do I interpret your meaning,
+ gracious lady?' This he said bending to Miranda. 'Yes,' she
+ replied. But she still played with her wineglass, and did not
+ look as though she were quite satisfied. I meanwhile continued:
+ 'Of course I have read Mozart's Life, and know how he went to
+ work. But Mozart was a man of feeling, of experience, of ardent
+ passions. How can you prove to me that the melodies he gave to
+ Cherubino had not been evolved from situations similar to those
+ in which Cherubino finds himself? How can you prove he did not
+ feel a natural appropriateness in the <i>motifs</i> he selected
+ from his memory for Cherubino? How can you be certain that the
+ part itself did not stimulate his musical faculty to fresh and
+ still more appropriate creativeness? And if we must fall back on
+ documents, do you remember what he said himself about the
+ love-music in <i>Die Entführung?</i> I think he tells us that he
+ meant it to express his own feeling for the woman who had just
+ become his wife.' Miranda looked up as though she were almost
+ half-persuaded. Yet she hummed again 'Non so più,' then said to
+ herself, 'Yes, it is wiser to believe with the professor that
+ these are sequences of sounds, and nothing more.' Then she
+ sighed. In the pause which followed, her husband, the famous
+ critic, filled his glass, stretched his legs out, and began: 'You
+ have embarked, I see, upon the ocean of ĉsthetics. For my part,
+ to-night I was thinking how much better fitted for the stage
+ Beaumarchais' play was than this musical mongrel&mdash;this
+ operatic adaptation. The wit, observe, is lost. And
+ Cherubino&mdash;that sparkling little <i>enfant
+ terrible</i>&mdash;becomes a sentimental fellow&mdash;a something
+ I don't know what&mdash;between a girl and a boy&mdash;a medley
+ of romance and impudence&mdash;anyhow a being quite unlike the
+ sharply outlined playwright's page. I confess I am not a
+ musician; the drama is my business, and I judge things by their
+ fitness for the stage. My wife agrees with me to differ. She
+ likes music, I like plays. To-night she was better pleased than I
+ was; for she got good music tolerably well rendered, while I got
+ nothing but a mangled comedy.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We bore the critic's monologue with patience. But once again the
+ spirit, seeking after something which neither Miranda, nor her
+ husband, nor the professor could be got to recognise, moved
+ within me. I cried out at a venture, 'People who go to an opera
+ must forget music pure and simple, must forget the drama pure and
+ simple. You must welcome a third species of art, in which the
+ play, the music, the singers with their voices, the orchestra
+ with its instruments&mdash;Pauline Lucca, if you like, with her
+ fascination' (and here I shot a side-glance at Miranda), 'are so
+ blent as to create a world beyond the scope of poetry or music or
+ acting taken by themselves. I give Mozart credit for having had
+ insight into this new world, for having brought it near to us.
+ And I hold that every fresh representation of his work is a fresh
+ revelation of its possibilities.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this the critic answered, 'You now seem to me to be
+ confounding the limits of the several arts.' 'What!' I continued,
+ 'is the drama but emotion presented in its most external forms as
+ action? And what is music but emotion, in its most genuine
+ essence, expressed by sound? Where then can a more complete
+ artistic harmony be found than in the opera?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The opera,' replied our host, 'is a hybrid. You will probably
+ learn to dislike artistic hybrids, if you have the taste and
+ sense I give you credit for. My own opinion has been already
+ expressed. In the <i>Nozze</i>, Beaumarchais' <i>Mariage de
+ Figaro</i> is simply spoiled. My friend the professor declares
+ Mozart's music to be sufficient by itself, and the libretto to be
+ a sort of machinery for its display. Miranda, I think, agrees
+ with him. You plead eloquently for the hybrid. You have a right
+ to your own view. These things are matters, in the final resort,
+ of individual taste rather than of demonstrable principles. But I
+ repeat that you are very young.' The critic drained his
+ Lambrusco, and smiled at me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, he is young,' added Miranda. 'He must learn to distinguish
+ between music, his own imagination, and a pretty woman. At
+ present he mixes them all up together. It is a sort of
+ transcendental omelette. But I think the pretty woman has more to
+ do with it than metaphysics!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this while Edoardo had bestowed devout attention on his
+ supper. But it appeared that the drift of our discourse had not
+ been lost by him. 'Well,' he said, 'you finely fibred people
+ dissect and analyse. I am content with the <i>spettacolo</i>.
+ That pleases. What does a man want more? The <i>Nozze</i> is a
+ comedy of life and manners. The music is adorable. To-night the
+ women were not bad to look at&mdash;the Lucca was divine; the
+ scenes&mdash;ingenious. I thought but little. I came away
+ delighted. You could have a better play, Caro Signore!' (with a
+ bow to our host). 'That is granted. You might have better music,
+ Cara Signora!' (with a bow to Miranda). 'That too is granted. But
+ when the play and the music come together&mdash;how shall I
+ say?&mdash;the music helps the play, and the play helps the
+ music; and we&mdash;well we, I suppose, must help both!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edoardo's little speech was so ingenuous, and, what is more, so
+ true to his Italian temperament, that it made us all laugh and
+ leave the argument just where we found it. The bottles of
+ Lambrusco supplied us each with one more glass; and while we were
+ drinking them, Miranda, woman-like, taking the last word, but
+ contradicting herself, softly hummed 'Non so più cosa son,' and
+ 'Ah!' she said, 'I shall dream of love to-night!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We rose and said good-night. But when I had reached my bedroom in
+ the Hôtel de la Ville, I sat down, obstinate and unconvinced, and
+ penned this rhapsody, which I have lately found among papers of
+ nearly twenty years ago. I give it as it stands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mozart has written the two melodramas of love&mdash;the one a
+ melo-tragedy, the other a melo-comedy. But in really noble art,
+ Comedy and Tragedy have faces of equal serenity and beauty. In
+ the Vatican there are marble busts of the two Muses, differing
+ chiefly in their head-dresses: that of Tragedy is an elaborately
+ built-up structure of fillets and flowing hair, piled high above
+ the forehead and descending in long curls upon the shoulders;
+ while Comedy wears a similar adornment, with the addition of a
+ wreath of vine-leaves and grape-bunches. The expression of the
+ sister goddesses is no less finely discriminated. Over the mouth
+ of Comedy plays a subtle smile, and her eyes are relaxed in a
+ half-merriment. A shadow rests upon the slightly heavier brows of
+ Tragedy, and her lips, though not compressed, are graver. So
+ delicately did the Greek artist indicate the division between two
+ branches of one dramatic art. And since all great art is
+ classical, Mozart's two melodramas, <i>Don Giovanni</i> and the
+ <i>Nozze di Figaro</i>, though the one is tragic and the other
+ comic, are twin-sisters, similar in form and feature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The central figure of the melo-tragedy is Don Juan, the hero of
+ unlimited desire, pursuing the unattainable through tortuous
+ interminable labyrinths, eager in appetite yet never satisfied,
+ 'for ever following and for ever foiled.' He is the incarnation
+ of lust that has become a habit of the soul&mdash;rebellious,
+ licentious, selfish, even cruel. His nature, originally noble and
+ brave, has assumed the qualities peculiar to
+ lust&mdash;rebellion, license, cruelty, defiant egotism. Yet,
+ such as he is, doomed to punishment and execration, Don Juan
+ remains a fit subject for poetry and music, because he is
+ complete, because he is impelled by some demonic influence,
+ spurred on by yearnings after an unsearchable delight. In his
+ death, the spirit of chivalry survives, metamorphosed, it is
+ true, into the spirit of revolt, yet still tragic, such as might
+ animate the desperate sinner of a haughty breed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The central figure of the melo-comedy is Cherubino, the genius of
+ love, no less insatiable, but undetermined to virtue or to vice.
+ This is the point of Cherubino, that the ethical capacities in
+ him are still potential. His passion still hovers on the
+ borderland of good and bad. And this undetermined passion is
+ beautiful because of extreme freshness; of infinite, immeasurable
+ expansibility. Cherubino is the epitome of all that belongs to
+ the amorous temperament in a state of still ascendant
+ adolescence. He is about sixteen years of age&mdash;a boy
+ yesterday, a man to-morrow&mdash;to-day both and
+ neither&mdash;something beyond boyhood, but not yet limited by
+ man's responsibility and man's absorbing passions. He partakes of
+ both ages in the primal awakening to self-consciousness. Desire,
+ which in Don Juan has become a fiend, hovers before him like a
+ fairy. His are the sixteen years, not of a Northern climate, but
+ of Spain or Italy, where manhood appears in a flash, and
+ overtakes the child with sudden sunrise of new faculties.
+ <i>Nondum amabam, sed amare amabam, quaerebam quod amarem, amans
+ amare</i>&mdash;'I loved not yet, but was in love with loving; I
+ sought what I should love, being in love with loving.' That
+ sentence, penned by S. Augustine and consecrated by Shelley,
+ describes the mood of Cherubino. He loves at every moment of his
+ life, with every pulse of his being. His object is not a beloved
+ being, but love itself&mdash;the satisfaction of an irresistible
+ desire, the paradise of bliss which merely loving has become for
+ him. What love means he hardly knows. He only knows that he must
+ love. And women love him&mdash;half as a plaything to be trifled
+ with, half as a young god to be wounded by. This rising of the
+ star of love as it ascends into the heaven of youthful fancy, is
+ revealed in the melodies Mozart has written for him. How shall we
+ describe their potency? Who shall translate those curiously
+ perfect words to which tone and rhythm have been indissolubly
+ wedded? <i>E pur mi piace languir cosi.... E se non ho chi m'
+ oda, parlo d'amor con me.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if this be so, it may be asked, Who shall be found worthy to
+ act Cherubino on the stage? You cannot have seen and heard
+ Pauline Lucca, or you would not ask this question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cherubino is by no means the most important person in the plot of
+ the <i>Nozze</i>. But he strikes the keynote of the opera. His
+ love is the standard by which we measure the sad, retrospective,
+ stately love of the Countess, who tries to win back an alienated
+ husband. By Cherubino we measure the libertine love of the Count,
+ who is a kind of Don Juan without cruelty, and the humorous love
+ of Figaro and his sprightly bride Susanna. Each of these
+ characters typifies one of the many species of love. But
+ Cherubino anticipates and harmonises all. They are conscious,
+ experienced, world-worn, disillusioned, trivial. He is all love,
+ foreseen, foreshadowed in a dream of life to be; all love,
+ diffused through brain and heart and nerves like electricity; all
+ love, merging the moods of ecstasy, melancholy, triumph, regret,
+ jealousy, joy, expectation, in a hazy sheen, as of some Venetian
+ sunrise. What will Cherubino be after three years? A Romeo, a
+ Lovelace, a Lothario, a Juan? a disillusioned rake, a
+ sentimentalist, an effete fop, a romantic lover? He may become
+ any one of these, for he contains the possibilities of all. As
+ yet, he is the dear glad angel of the May of love, the
+ nightingale of orient emotion. This moment in the unfolding of
+ character Mozart has arrested and eternalised for us in
+ Cherubino's melodies; for it is the privilege of art to render
+ things most fugitive and evanescent fixed imperishably in
+ immortal form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is indeed a rhapsodical production. Miranda was probably
+ right. Had it not been for Pauline Lucca, I might not have
+ philosophised the <i>Nozze</i> thus. Yet, in the main, I believe
+ that my instinct was well grounded. Music, especially when wedded
+ to words, more especially when those words are dramatic, cannot
+ separate itself from emotion. It will not do to tell us that a
+ melody is a certain sequence of sounds; that the composer chose
+ it for its beauty of rhythm, form, and tune, and only used the
+ words to get it vocalised. We are forced to go farther back, and
+ ask ourselves, What suggested it in the first place to the
+ composer? why did he use it precisely in connection with this
+ dramatic situation? How can we answer these questions except by
+ supposing that music was for him the utterance through art of
+ some emotion? The final fact of human nature is emotion,
+ crystallising itself in thought and language, externalising
+ itself in action and art. 'What,' said Novalis, 'are thoughts but
+ pale dead feelings?' Admitting this even in part, we cannot deny
+ to music an emotional content of some kind. I would go farther,
+ and assert that, while a merely mechanical musician may set
+ inappropriate melodies to words, and render music inexpressive of
+ character, what constitutes a musical dramatist is the conscious
+ intention of fitting to the words of his libretto such melody as
+ shall interpret character, and the power to do this with effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the Cherubino of Mozart's <i>Nozze</i> is quite different
+ from Beaumarchais' Cherubin does not affect this question. He is
+ a new creation, just because Mozart could not, or would not,
+ conceive the character of the page in Beaumarchais' sprightly
+ superficial spirit. He used the part to utter something
+ unutterable except by music about the soul of the still
+ adolescent lover. The libretto-part and the melodies, taken
+ together, constitute a new romantic ideal, consistent with
+ experience, but realised with the intensity and universality
+ whereby art is distinguished from life. Don Juan was a myth
+ before Mozart touched him with the magic wand of music. Cherubino
+ became a myth by the same Prospero's spell. Both characters have
+ the universality, the symbolic potency, which belongs to
+ legendary beings. That there remains a discrepancy between the
+ boy-page and the music made for him, can be conceded without
+ danger to my theory; for the music made for Cherubino is meant to
+ interpret his psychical condition, and is independent of his
+ boyishness of conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This further explains why there may be so many renderings of
+ Cherubino's melodies. Mozart idealised an infinite emotion. The
+ singer is forced to define; the actor also is forced to define.
+ Each introduces his own limit on the feeling. When the actor and
+ the singer meet together in one personality, this definition of
+ emotion becomes of necessity doubly specific. The condition of
+ all music is that it depends in a great measure on the
+ temperament of the interpreter for its momentary shade of
+ expression, and this dependence is of course exaggerated when the
+ music is dramatic. Furthermore, the subjectivity of the audience
+ enters into the problem as still another element of definition.
+ It may therefore be fairly said that, in estimating any
+ impression produced by Cherubino's music, the original character
+ of the page, transplanted from French comedy to Italian opera,
+ Mozart's conception of that character, Mozart's specific quality
+ of emotion and specific style of musical utterance, together with
+ the contralto's interpretation of the character and rendering of
+ the music, according to her intellectual capacity, artistic
+ skill, and timbre of voice, have collaborated with the
+ individuality of the hearer. Some of the constituents of the
+ ever-varying product&mdash;a product which is new each time the
+ part is played&mdash;are fixed. Da Ponte's Cherubino and Mozart's
+ melodies remain unalterable. All the rest is undecided; the
+ singer and the listener change on each occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To assert that the musician Mozart meant nothing by his music, to
+ assert that he only cared about it <i>quâ</i> music, is the same
+ as to say that the painter Tintoretto, when he put the
+ Crucifixion upon canvas, the sculptor Michelangelo, when he
+ carved Christ upon the lap of Mary, meant nothing, and only cared
+ about the beauty of their forms and colours. Those who take up
+ this position prove, not that the artist has no meaning to
+ convey, but that for them the artist's nature is unintelligible,
+ and his meaning is conveyed in an unknown tongue. It seems
+ superfluous to guard against misinterpretation by saying that to
+ expect clear definition from music&mdash;the definition which
+ belongs to poetry&mdash;would be absurd. The sphere of music is
+ in sensuous perception; the sphere of poetry is in intelligence.
+ Music, dealing with pure sound, must always be vaguer in
+ significance than poetry, dealing with words. Nevertheless, its
+ effect upon the sentient subject may be more intense and
+ penetrating for this very reason. We cannot fail to understand
+ what words are intended to convey; we may very easily interpret
+ in a hundred different ways the message of sound. But this is not
+ because words are wider in their reach and more alive; rather
+ because they are more limited, more stereotyped, more dead. They
+ symbolise something precise and unmistakable; but this precision
+ is itself attenuation of the something symbolised. The exact
+ value of the counter is better understood when it is a word than
+ when it is a chord, because all that a word conveys has already
+ become a thought, while all that musical sounds convey remains
+ within the region of emotion which has not been intellectualised.
+ Poetry touches emotion through the thinking faculty. If music
+ reaches the thinking faculty at all, it is through fibres of
+ emotion. But emotion, when it has become thought, has already
+ lost a portion of its force, and has taken to itself a something
+ alien to its nature. Therefore the message of music can never
+ rightly be translated into words. It is the very largeness and
+ vividness of the sphere of simple feeling which makes its
+ symbolical counterpart in sound so seeming vague. But in spite of
+ this incontestable defect of seeming vagueness, emotion expressed
+ by music is nearer to our sentient self, if we have ears to take
+ it in, than the same emotion limited by language. It is intenser,
+ it is more immediate, as compensation for being less
+ intelligible, less unmistakable in meaning. It is an infinite, an
+ indistinct, where each consciousness defines and sets a limitary
+ form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A train of thought which begins with the concrete not
+ unfrequently finds itself finishing, almost against its will, in
+ abstractions. This is the point to which the performance of
+ Cherubino's part by Pauline Lucca at the Scala twenty years ago
+ has led me&mdash;that I have to settle with myself what I mean by
+ art in general, and what I take to be the proper function of
+ music as one of the fine arts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Art,' said Goethe, 'is but form-giving.' We might vary this
+ definition, and say, 'Art is a method of expression or
+ presentation.' Then comes the question: If art gives form, if it
+ is a method of expression or presentation, to what does it give
+ form, what does it express or present? The answer certainly must
+ be: Art gives form to human consciousness; expresses or presents
+ the feeling or the thought of man. Whatever else art may do by
+ the way, in the communication of innocent pleasures, in the
+ adornment of life and the softening of manners, in the creation
+ of beautiful shapes and sounds, this, at all events, is its prime
+ function.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While investing thought, the spiritual subject-matter of all art,
+ with form, or finding for it proper modes of presentation, each
+ of the arts employs a special medium, obeying the laws of beauty
+ proper to that medium. The vehicles of the arts, roughly
+ speaking, are material substances (like stone, wood, metal),
+ pigments, sounds, and words. The masterly handling of these
+ vehicles and the realisation of their characteristic types of
+ beauty have come to be regarded as the craftsman's paramount
+ concern. And in a certain sense this is a right conclusion; for
+ dexterity in the manipulation of the chosen vehicle and power to
+ create a beautiful object, distinguish the successful artist from
+ the man who may have had like thoughts and feelings. This
+ dexterity, this power, are the properties of the artist
+ <i>quâ</i> artist. Yet we must not forget that the form created
+ by the artist for the expression of a thought or feeling is not
+ the final end of art itself. That form, after all, is but the
+ mode of presentation through which the spiritual content
+ manifests itself. Beauty, in like manner, is not the final end of
+ art, but is the indispensable condition under which the artistic
+ manifestation of the spiritual content must he made. It is the
+ business of art to create an ideal world, in which perception,
+ emotion, understanding, action, all elements of human life
+ sublimed by thought, shall reappear in concrete forms as beauty.
+ This being so, the logical criticism of art demands that we
+ should not only estimate the technical skill of artists and their
+ faculty for presenting beauty to the ĉsthetic sense, but that we
+ should also ask ourselves what portion of the human spirit he has
+ chosen to invest with form, and how he has conceived his subject.
+ It is not necessary that the ideas embodied in a work of art
+ should be the artist's own. They may be common to the race and
+ age: as, for instance, the conception of sovereign deity
+ expressed in the Olympian Zeus of Pheidias, or the conception of
+ divine maternity expressed in Raphael's 'Madonna di San Sisto.'
+ Still the personality of the artist, his own intellectual and
+ moral nature, his peculiar way of thinking and feeling, his
+ individual attitude towards the material given to him in ideas of
+ human consciousness, will modify his choice of subject and of
+ form, and will determine his specific type of beauty. To take an
+ example: supposing that an idea, common to his race and age, is
+ given to the artist for treatment; this will be the final end of
+ the work of art which he produces. But his personal qualities and
+ technical performance determine the degree of success or failure
+ to which he attains in presenting that idea and in expressing it
+ with beauty. Signorelli fails where Perugino excels, in giving
+ adequate and lovely form to the religious sentiment. Michelangelo
+ is sure of the sublime, and Raphael of the beautiful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Art is thus the presentation of the human spirit by the artist to
+ his fellow-men. The subject-matter of the arts is commensurate
+ with what man thinks and feels and does. It is as deep as
+ religion, as wide as life. But what distinguishes art from
+ religion or from life is, that this subject-matter must assume
+ beautiful form, and must be presented directly or indirectly to
+ the senses. Art is not the school or the cathedral, but the
+ playground, the paradise of humanity. It does not teach, it does
+ not preach. Nothing abstract enters into art's domain. Truth and
+ goodness are transmuted into beauty there, just as in science
+ beauty and goodness assume the shape of truth, and in religion
+ truth and beauty become goodness. The rigid definitions, the
+ unmistakable laws of science, are not to be found in art.
+ Whatever art has touched acquires a concrete sensuous embodiment,
+ and thus ideas presented to the mind in art have lost a portion
+ of their pure thought-essence. It is on this account that the
+ religious conceptions of the Greeks were so admirably fitted for
+ the art of sculpture, and certain portions of the mediĉval
+ Christian mythology lent themselves so well to painting. For the
+ same reason the metaphysics of ecclesiastical dogma defy the
+ artist's plastic faculty. Art, in a word, is a middle term
+ between reason and the senses. Its secondary aim, after the prime
+ end of presenting the human spirit in beautiful form has been
+ accomplished, is to give tranquil and innocent enjoyment.
+ </p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>
+ From what has gone before it will be seen that no human being can
+ make or mould a beautiful form without incorporating in that form
+ some portion of the human mind, however crude, however
+ elementary. In other words, there is no work of art without a
+ theme, without a motive, without a subject. The presentation of
+ that theme, that motive, that subject, is the final end of art.
+ The art is good or bad according as the subject has been well or
+ ill presented, consistently with the laws of beauty special to
+ the art itself. Thus we obtain two standards for ĉsthetic
+ criticism. We judge a statue, for example, both by the sculptor's
+ intellectual grasp upon his subject, and also by his technical
+ skill and sense of beauty. In a picture of the Last Judgment by
+ Fra Angelico we say that the bliss of the righteous has been more
+ successfully treated than the torments of the wicked, because the
+ former has been better understood, although the painter's skill
+ in each is equal. In the Perseus of Cellini we admire the
+ sculptor's spirit, finish of execution, and originality of
+ design, while we deplore that want of sympathy with the heroic
+ character which makes his type of physical beauty slightly vulgar
+ and his facial expression vacuous. If the phrase 'Art for art's
+ sake' has any meaning, this meaning is simply that the artist,
+ having chosen a theme, thinks exclusively in working at it of
+ technical dexterity or the quality of beauty. There are many
+ inducements for the artist thus to narrow his function, and for
+ the critic to assist him by applying the canons of a soulless
+ connoisseurship to his work; for the conception of the subject is
+ but the starting-point in art-production, and the artist's
+ difficulties and triumphs as a craftsman lie in the region of
+ technicalities. He knows, moreover, that, however deep or noble
+ his idea may be, his work of art will be worthless if it fail in
+ skill or be devoid of beauty. What converts a thought into a
+ statue or a picture, is the form found for it; and so the form
+ itself seems all-important. The artist, therefore, too easily
+ imagines that he may neglect his theme; that a fine piece of
+ colouring, a well-balanced composition, or, as Cellini put it,
+ 'un bel corpo ignudo,' is enough. And this is especially easy in
+ an age which reflects much upon the arts, and pursues them with
+ enthusiasm, while its deeper thoughts and feelings are not of the
+ kind which translate themselves readily into artistic form. But,
+ after all, a fine piece of colouring, a well-balanced
+ composition, a sonorous stanza, a learned essay in counterpoint,
+ are not enough. They are all excellent good things, yielding
+ delight to the artistic sense and instruction to the student. Yet
+ when we think of the really great statues, pictures, poems, music
+ of the world, we find that these are really great because of
+ something more&mdash;and that more is their theme, their
+ presentation of a noble portion of the human soul. Artists and
+ art-students may be satisfied with perfect specimens of a
+ craftsman's skill, independent of his theme; but the mass of men
+ will not be satisfied; and it is as wrong to suppose that art
+ exists for artists and art-students, as to talk of art for art's
+ sake. Art exists for humanity. Art transmutes thought and feeling
+ into terms of beautiful form. Art is great and lasting in
+ proportion as it appeals to the human consciousness at large,
+ presenting to it portions of itself in adequate and lovely form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was necessary in the first place firmly to apprehend the truth
+ that the final end of all art is the presentation of a spiritual
+ content; it is necessary in the next place to remove confusions
+ by considering the special circumstances of the several arts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each art has its own vehicle of presentation. What it can present
+ and how it must present it, depends upon the nature of this
+ vehicle. Thus, though architecture, sculpture, painting, music,
+ poetry, meet upon the common ground of spiritualised
+ experience&mdash;though the works of art produced by the
+ architect, sculptor, painter, musician, poet, emanate from the
+ spiritual nature of the race, are coloured by the spiritual
+ nature of the men who make them, and express what is spiritual in
+ humanity under concrete forms invented for them by the
+ artist&mdash;yet it is certain that all of these arts do not deal
+ exactly with the same portions of this common material in the
+ same way or with the same results. Each has its own department.
+ Each exhibits qualities of strength and weakness special to
+ itself. To define these several departments, to explain the
+ relation of these several vehicles of presentation to the common
+ subject-matter, is the next step in criticism.
+ </p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>
+ Of the fine arts, architecture alone subserves utility. We build
+ for use. But the geometrical proportions which the architect
+ observes, contain the element of beauty and powerfully influence
+ the soul. Into the language of arch and aisle and colonnade, of
+ cupola and façade and pediment, of spire and vault, the architect
+ translates emotion, vague perhaps but deep, mute but
+ unmistakable. When we say that a building is sublime or graceful,
+ frivolous or stern, we mean that sublimity or grace, frivolity or
+ sternness, is inherent in it. The emotions connected with these
+ qualities are inspired in us when we contemplate it, and are
+ presented to us by its form. Whether the architect deliberately
+ aimed at the sublime or graceful&mdash;whether the dignified
+ serenity of the Athenian genius sought to express itself in the
+ Parthenon, and the mysticism of mediĉval Christianity in the
+ gloom of Chartres Cathedral&mdash;whether it was Renaissance
+ paganism which gave its mundane pomp and glory to S. Peter's, and
+ the refined selfishness of royalty its specious splendour to the
+ palace of Versailles&mdash;need not be curiously questioned. The
+ fact that we are impelled to raise these points, that
+ architecture more almost than any art connects itself
+ indissolubly with the life, the character, the moral being of a
+ nation and an epoch, proves that we are justified in bringing it
+ beneath our general definition of the arts. In a great measure
+ because it subserves utility, and is therefore dependent upon the
+ necessities of life, does architecture present to us through form
+ the human spirit. Comparing the palace built by Giulio Romano for
+ the Dukes of Mantua with the contemporary castle of a German
+ prince, we cannot fail at once to comprehend the difference of
+ spiritual conditions, as these displayed themselves in daily
+ life, which then separated Italy from the Teutonic nations. But
+ this is not all. Spiritual quality in the architect himself finds
+ clear expression in his work. Coldness combined with violence
+ marks Brunelleschi's churches; a certain suavity and well-bred
+ taste the work of Bramante; while Michelangelo exhibits wayward
+ energy in his Library of S. Lorenzo, and Amadeo self-abandonment
+ to fancy in his Lombard chapels. I have chosen examples from one
+ nation and one epoch in order that the point I seek to make, the
+ demonstration of a spiritual quality in buildings, may be fairly
+ stated.
+ </p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>
+ Sculpture and painting distinguish themselves from the other fine
+ arts by the imitation of concrete existences in nature. They copy
+ the bodies of men and animals, the aspects of the world around
+ us, and the handiwork of men. Yet, in so far as they are rightly
+ arts, they do not make imitation an object in itself. The grapes
+ of Zeuxis at which birds pecked, the painted dog at which a cat's
+ hair bristles&mdash;if such grapes or such a dog were ever put on
+ canvas&mdash;are but evidences of the artist's skill, not of his
+ faculty as artist. These two plastic, or, as I prefer to call
+ them, figurative arts, use their imitation of the external world
+ for the expression, the presentation of internal, spiritual
+ things. The human form is for them the outward symbol of the
+ inner human spirit, and their power of presenting spirit is
+ limited by the means at their disposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sculpture employs stone, wood, clay, the precious metals, to
+ model forms, detached and independent, or raised upon a flat
+ surface in relief. Its domain is the whole range of human
+ character and consciousness, in so far as these can be indicated
+ by fixed facial expression, by physical type, and by attitude. If
+ we dwell for an instant on the greatest historical epoch of
+ sculpture, we shall understand the domain of this art in its
+ range and limitation. At a certain point of Greek development the
+ Hellenic Pantheon began to be translated by the sculptors into
+ statues; and when the genius of the Greeks expired in Rome, the
+ cycle of their <ins class="correction" title=
+ "Transcriber's note: original reads 'pyschological'">psychological</ins>
+ conceptions had been exhaustively presented through this medium.
+ During that long period of time, the most delicate gradations of
+ human personality, divinised, idealised, were presented to the
+ contemplation of the consciousness which gave them being, in
+ appropriate types. Strength and swiftness, massive force and airy
+ lightness, contemplative repose and active energy, voluptuous
+ softness and refined grace, intellectual sublimity and lascivious
+ seductiveness&mdash;the whole rhythm of qualities which can be
+ typified by bodily form&mdash;were analysed, selected, combined
+ in various degrees, to incarnate the religious conceptions of
+ Zeus, Aphrodite, Herakles, Dionysus, Pallas, Fauns and Satyrs,
+ Nymphs of woods and waves, Tritons, the genius of Death, heroes
+ and hunters, lawgivers and poets, presiding deities of minor
+ functions, man's lustful appetites and sensual needs. All that
+ men think, or do, or are, or wish for, or imagine in this world,
+ had found exact corporeal equivalents. Not physiognomy alone, but
+ all the portions of the body upon which the habits of the
+ animating soul are wont to stamp themselves, were studied and
+ employed as symbolism. Uranian Aphrodite was distinguished from
+ her Pandemic sister by chastened lust-repelling loveliness. The
+ muscles of Herakles were more ponderous than the tense sinews of
+ Achilles. The Hermes of the palĉstra bore a torso of majestic
+ depth; the Hermes, who carried messages from heaven, had limbs
+ alert for movement. The brows of Zeus inspired awe; the breasts
+ of Dionysus breathed delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A race accustomed, as the Greeks were, to read this symbolism,
+ accustomed, as the Greeks were, to note the individuality of
+ naked form, had no difficulty in interpreting the language of
+ sculpture. Nor is there now much difficulty in the task. Our
+ surest guide to the subject of a basrelief or statue is study of
+ the physical type considered as symbolical of spiritual quality.
+ From the fragment of a torso the true critic can say whether it
+ belongs to the athletic or the erotic species. A limb of Bacchus
+ differs from a limb of Poseidon. The whole psychological
+ conception of Aphrodite Pandemos enters into every muscle, every
+ joint, no less than into her physiognomy, her hair, her attitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is, however, a limit to the domain of sculpture. This art
+ deals most successfully with personified generalities. It is also
+ strong in the presentation of incarnate character. But when it
+ attempts to tell a story, we often seek in vain its meaning.
+ Battles of Amazons or Centaurs upon basreliefs, indeed, are
+ unmistakable. The subject is indicated here by some external
+ sign. The group of Laocoon appeals at once to a reader of Virgil,
+ and the divine vengeance of Leto's children upon Niobe is
+ manifest in the Uffizzi marbles. But who are the several heroes
+ of the Ĉginetan pediment, and what was the subject of the
+ Pheidian statues on the Parthenon? Do the three graceful figures
+ of a basrelief which exists at Naples and in the Villa Albani,
+ represent Orpheus, Hermes, and Eurydice, or Antiope and her two
+ sons? Was the winged and sworded genius upon the Ephesus column
+ meant for a genius of Death or a genius of Love?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This dimness of significance indicates the limitation of
+ sculpture, and inclines some of those who feel its charm to
+ assert that the sculptor seeks to convey no intellectual meaning,
+ that he is satisfied with the creation of beautiful form. There
+ is sense in this revolt against the faith which holds that art is
+ nothing but a mode of spiritual presentation. Truly the artist
+ aims at producing beauty, is satisfied if he conveys delight. But
+ it is impossible to escape from the certainty that, while he is
+ creating forms of beauty, he means something; and that something,
+ that theme for which he finds the form, is part of the world's
+ spiritual heritage. Only the crudest works of plastic art,
+ capricci and arabesques, have no intellectual content; and even
+ these are good in so far as they convey the playfulness of fancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Painting employs colours upon surfaces&mdash;walls, panels,
+ canvas. What has been said about sculpture will apply in a great
+ measure to this art. The human form, the world around us, the
+ works of man's hands, are represented in painting, not for their
+ own sake merely, but with a view to bringing thought, feeling,
+ action, home to the consciousness of the spectator from the
+ artist's consciousness on which they have been impressed.
+ Painting can tell a story better than sculpture, can represent
+ more complicated feelings, can suggest thoughts of a subtler
+ intricacy. Through colour, it can play, like music, directly on
+ powerful but vague emotion. It is deficient in fulness and
+ roundness of concrete reality. A statue stands before us, the
+ soul incarnate in ideal form, fixed and frozen for eternity. The
+ picture is a reflection cast upon a magic glass; not less
+ permanent, but reduced to a shadow of reality. To follow these
+ distinctions farther would be alien from the present purpose. It
+ is enough to repeat that, within their several spheres, according
+ to their several strengths and weaknesses, both sculpture and
+ painting present the spirit to us only as the spirit shows itself
+ immersed in things of sense. The light of a lamp enclosed within
+ an alabaster vase is still lamplight, though shorn of lustre and
+ toned to coloured softness. Even thus the spirit, immersed in
+ things of sense presented to us by the figurative arts, is still
+ spirit, though diminished in its intellectual clearness and
+ invested with hues not its own. To fashion that alabaster form of
+ art with utmost skill, to make it beautiful, to render it
+ transparent, is the artist's function. But he will have failed of
+ the highest if the light within burns dim, or if he gives the
+ world a lamp in which no spiritual flame is lighted.
+ </p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>
+ Music transports us to a different region. It imitates nothing.
+ It uses pure sound, and sound of the most wholly artificial
+ kind&mdash;so artificial that the musical sounds of one race are
+ unmusical, and therefore unintelligible, to another. Like
+ architecture, music relies upon mathematical proportions. Unlike
+ architecture, music serves no utility. It is the purest art of
+ pleasure&mdash;the truest paradise and playground of the spirit.
+ It has less power than painting, even less power than sculpture,
+ to tell a story or to communicate an idea. For we must remember
+ that when music is married to words, the words, and not the
+ music, reach our thinking faculty. And yet, in spite of all,
+ music presents man's spirit to itself through form. The domain of
+ the spirit over which music reigns, is emotion&mdash;not defined
+ emotion, not feeling even so defined as jealousy or
+ anger&mdash;but those broad bases of man's being out of which
+ emotions spring, defining themselves through action into this or
+ that set type of feeling. Architecture, we have noticed, is so
+ connected with specific modes of human existence, that from its
+ main examples we can reconstruct the life of men who used it.
+ Sculpture and painting, by limiting their presentation to the
+ imitation of external things, have all the help which experience
+ and, association render. The mere artificiality of music's
+ vehicle separates it from life and makes its message
+ untranslatable. Yet, as I have already pointed out, this very
+ disability under which it labours is the secret of its
+ extraordinary potency. Nothing intervenes between the musical
+ work of art and the fibres of the sentient being it immediately
+ thrills. We do not seek to say what music means. We feel the
+ music. And if a man should pretend that the music has not passed
+ beyond his ears, has communicated nothing but a musical delight,
+ he simply tells us that he has not felt music. The ancients on
+ this point were wiser than some moderns when, without pretending
+ to assign an intellectual significance to music, they held it for
+ an axiom that one type of music bred one type of character,
+ another type another. A change in the music of a state, wrote
+ Plato, will be followed by changes in its constitution. It is of
+ the utmost importance, said Aristotle, to provide in education
+ for the use of the ennobling and the fortifying moods. These
+ philosophers knew that music creates a spiritual world, in which
+ the spirit cannot live and move without contracting habits of
+ emotion. In this vagueness of significance but intensity of
+ feeling lies the magic of music. A melody occurs to the composer,
+ which he certainly connects with no act of the reason, which he
+ is probably unconscious of connecting with any movement of his
+ feeling, but which nevertheless is the form in sound of an
+ emotional mood. When he reflects upon the melody secreted thus
+ impromptu, he is aware, as we learn from his own lips, that this
+ work has correspondence with emotion. Beethoven calls one
+ symphony Heroic, another Pastoral; of the opening of another he
+ says, 'Fate knocks at the door.' Mozart sets comic words to the
+ mass-music of a friend, in order to mark his sense of its
+ inaptitude for religious sentiment. All composers use phrases
+ like Maestoso, Pomposo, Allegro, Lagrimoso, Con Fuoco, to express
+ the general complexion of the mood their music ought to
+ represent.
+ </p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>
+ Before passing to poetry, it may be well to turn aside and
+ consider two subordinate arts, which deserve a place in any
+ system of ĉsthetics. These are dancing and acting. Dancing uses
+ the living human form, and presents feeling or action, the
+ passions and the deeds of men, in artificially educated movements
+ of the body. The element of beauty it possesses, independently of
+ the beauty of the dancer, is rhythm. Acting or the art of mimicry
+ presents the same subject-matter, no longer under the conditions
+ of fixed rhythm but as an ideal reproduction of reality. The
+ actor is what he represents, and the element of beauty in his art
+ is perfection of realisation. It is his duty as an artist to show
+ us Orestes or Othello, not perhaps exactly as Othello and Orestes
+ were, but as the essence of their tragedies, ideally incorporate
+ in action, ought to be. The actor can do this in dumb show. Some
+ of the greatest actors of the ancient world were mimes. But he
+ usually interprets a poet's thought, and attempts to present an
+ artistic conception in a secondary form of art, which has for its
+ advantage his own personality in play.
+ </p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>
+ The last of the fine arts is literature; or, in the narrower
+ sphere of which it will be well to speak here only, is poetry.
+ Poetry employs words in fixed rhythms, which we call metres. Only
+ a small portion of its effect is derived from the beauty of its
+ sound. It appeals to the sense of hearing far less immediately
+ than music does. It makes no appeal to the eyesight, and takes no
+ help from the beauty of colour. It produces no tangible object.
+ But language being the storehouse of all human experience,
+ language being the medium whereby spirit communicates with spirit
+ in affairs of life, the vehicle which transmits to us the
+ thoughts and feelings of the past, and on which we rely for
+ continuing our present to the future, it follows that, of all the
+ arts, poetry soars highest, flies widest, and is most at home in
+ the region of the spirit. What poetry lacks of sensuous fulness,
+ it more than balances by intellectual intensity. Its significance
+ is unmistakable, because it employs the very material men use in
+ their exchange of thoughts and correspondence of emotions. To the
+ bounds of its empire there is no end. It embraces in its own more
+ abstract being all the arts. By words it does the work in turn of
+ architecture, sculpture, painting, music. It is the metaphysic of
+ the fine arts. Philosophy finds place in poetry; and life itself,
+ refined to its last utterance, hangs trembling on this thread
+ which joins our earth to heaven, this bridge between experience
+ and the realms where unattainable and imperceptible will have no
+ meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we are right in defining art as the manifestation of the human
+ spirit to man by man in beautiful form, poetry, more
+ incontestably than any other art, fulfils this definition and
+ enables us to gauge its accuracy. For words are the spirit,
+ manifested to itself in symbols with no sensual alloy. Poetry is
+ therefore the presentation, through words, of life and all that
+ life implies. Perception, emotion, thought, action, find in
+ descriptive, lyrical, reflective, dramatic, and epical poetry
+ their immediate apocalypse. In poetry we are no longer puzzled
+ with problems as to whether art has or has not of necessity a
+ spiritual content. There cannot be any poetry whatsoever without
+ a spiritual meaning of some sort: good or bad, moral, immoral, or
+ non-moral, obscure or lucid, noble or ignoble, slight or
+ weighty&mdash;such distinctions do not signify. In poetry we are
+ not met by questions whether the poet intended to convey a
+ meaning when he made it. Quite meaningless poetry (as some
+ critics would fain find melody quite meaningless, or a statue
+ meaningless, or a Venetian picture meaningless) is a
+ contradiction in terms. In poetry, life, or a portion of life,
+ lives again, resuscitated and presented to our mental faculty
+ through art. The best poetry is that which reproduces the most of
+ life, or its intensest moments. Therefore the extensive species
+ of the drama and the epic, the intensive species of the lyric,
+ have been ever held in highest esteem. Only a half-crazy critic
+ flaunts the paradox that poetry is excellent in so far as it
+ assimilates the vagueness of music, or estimates a poet by his
+ power of translating sense upon the borderland of nonsense into
+ melodious words. Where poetry falls short in the comparison with
+ other arts, is in the quality of form-giving, in the quality of
+ sensuous concreteness. Poetry can only present forms to the
+ mental eye and to the intellectual sense, stimulate the physical
+ senses by indirect suggestion. Therefore dramatic poetry, the
+ most complicated kind of poetry, relies upon the actor; and
+ lyrical poetry, the intensest kind of poetry, seeks the aid of
+ music. But these comparative deficiencies are overbalanced, for
+ all the highest purposes of art, by the width and depth, the
+ intelligibility and power, the flexibility and multitudinous
+ associations, of language. The other arts are limited in what
+ they utter. There is nothing which has entered into the life of
+ man which poetry cannot express. Poetry says everything in man's
+ own language to the mind. The other arts appeal imperatively,
+ each in its own region, to man's senses; and the mind receives
+ art's message by the help of symbols from the world of sense.
+ Poetry lacks this immediate appeal to sense. But the elixir which
+ it offers to the mind, its quintessence extracted from all things
+ of sense, reacts through intellectual perception upon all the
+ faculties that make men what they are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I used a metaphor in one of the foregoing paragraphs to indicate
+ the presence of the vital spirit, the essential element of
+ thought or feeling, in the work of art. I said it radiated
+ through the form, as lamplight through an alabaster vase. Now the
+ skill of the artist is displayed in modelling that vase, in
+ giving it shape, rich and rare, and fashioning its curves with
+ subtlest workmanship. In so far as he is a craftsman, the
+ artist's pains must be bestowed upon this precious vessel of the
+ animating theme. In so far as he has power over beauty, he must
+ exert it in this plastic act. It is here that he displays
+ dexterity; here that he creates; here that he separates himself
+ from other men who think and feel. The poet, more perhaps than
+ any other artist, needs to keep this steadily in view; for words
+ being our daily vehicle of utterance, it may well chance that the
+ alabaster vase of language should be hastily or trivially
+ modelled. This is the true reason why 'neither gods nor men nor
+ the columns either suffer mediocrity in singers.' Upon the poet
+ it is specially incumbent to see that he has something rare to
+ say and some rich mode of saying it. The figurative arts need
+ hardly be so cautioned. They run their risk in quite a different
+ direction. For sculptor and for painter, the danger is lest he
+ should think that alabaster vase his final task. He may too
+ easily be satisfied with moulding a beautiful but empty form.
+ </p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>
+ The last word on the topic of the arts is given in one sentence.
+ Let us remember that every work of art enshrines a spiritual
+ subject, and that the artist's power is shown in finding for that
+ subject a form of ideal loveliness. Many kindred points remain to
+ be discussed; as what we mean by beauty, which is a condition
+ indispensable to noble art; and what are the relations of the
+ arts to ethics. These questions cannot now be raised. It is
+ enough in one essay to have tried to vindicate the spirituality
+ of art in general.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="A_VENETIAN_MEDLEY" id="A_VENETIAN_MEDLEY"></a><i>A
+ VENETIAN MEDLEY</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ I.&mdash;FIRST IMPRESSIONS AND FAMILIARITY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is easy to feel and to say something obvious about Venice. The
+ influence of this sea-city is unique, immediate, and
+ unmistakable. But to express the sober truth of those impressions
+ which remain when the first astonishment of the Venetian
+ revelation has subsided, when the spirit of the place has been
+ harmonised through familiarity with our habitual mood, is
+ difficult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Venice inspires at first an almost Corybantic rapture. From our
+ earliest visits, if these have been measured by days rather than
+ weeks, we carry away with us the memory of sunsets emblazoned in
+ gold and crimson upon cloud and water; of violet domes and
+ bell-towers etched against the orange of a western sky; of
+ moonlight silvering breeze-rippled breadths of liquid blue; of
+ distant islands shimmering in sun-litten haze; of music and black
+ gliding boats; of labyrinthine darkness made for mysteries of
+ love and crime; of statue-fretted palace fronts; of brazen
+ clangour and a moving crowd; of pictures by earth's proudest
+ painters, cased in gold on walls of council chambers where Venice
+ sat enthroned a queen, where nobles swept the floors with robes
+ of Tyrian brocade. These reminiscences will be attended by an
+ ever-present sense of loneliness and silence in the world around;
+ the sadness of a limitless horizon, the solemnity of an unbroken
+ arch of heaven, the calm and greyness of evening on the lagoons,
+ the pathos of a marble city crumbling to its grave in mud and
+ brine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These first impressions of Venice are true. Indeed they are
+ inevitable. They abide, and form a glowing background for all
+ subsequent pictures, toned more austerely, and painted in more
+ lasting hues of truth upon the brain. Those have never felt
+ Venice at all who have not known this primal rapture, or who
+ perhaps expected more of colour, more of melodrama, from a scene
+ which nature and the art of man have made the richest in these
+ qualities. Yet the mood engendered by this first experience is
+ not destined to be permanent. It contains an element of unrest
+ and unreality which vanishes upon familiarity. From the blare of
+ that triumphal bourdon of brass instruments emerge the delicate
+ voices of violin and clarinette. To the contrasted passions of
+ our earliest love succeed a multitude of sweet and fanciful
+ emotions. It is my present purpose to recapture some of the
+ impressions made by Venice in more tranquil moods. Memory might
+ be compared to a kaleidoscope. Far away from Venice I raise the
+ wonder-working tube, allow the glittering fragments to settle as
+ they please, and with words attempt to render something of the
+ patterns I behold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II.&mdash;A LODGING IN SAN VIO
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have escaped from the hotels with their bustle of tourists and
+ crowded <i>tables-d'hôte</i>. My garden stretches down to the
+ Grand Canal, closed at the end with a pavilion, where I lounge
+ and smoke and watch the cornice of the Prefettura fretted with
+ gold in sunset light. My sitting-room and bed-room face the
+ southern sun. There is a canal below, crowded with gondolas, and
+ across its bridge the good folk of San Vio come and go the whole
+ day long&mdash;men in blue shirts with enormous hats, and jackets
+ slung on their left shoulder; women in kerchiefs of orange and
+ crimson. Barelegged boys sit upon the parapet, dangling their
+ feet above the rising tide. A hawker passes, balancing a basket
+ full of live and crawling crabs. Barges filled with Brenta water
+ or Mirano wine take up their station at the neighbouring steps,
+ and then ensues a mighty splashing and hurrying to and fro of men
+ with tubs upon their heads. The brawny fellows in the wine-barge
+ are red from brows to breast with drippings of the vat. And now
+ there is a bustle in the quarter. A <i>barca</i> has arrived from
+ S. Erasmo, the island of the market-gardens. It is piled with
+ gourds and pumpkins, cabbages and tomatoes, pomegranates and
+ pears&mdash;a pyramid of gold and green and scarlet. Brown men
+ lift the fruit aloft, and women bending from the pathway bargain
+ for it. A clatter of chaffering tongues, a ring of coppers, a
+ Babel of hoarse sea-voices, proclaim the sharpness of the
+ struggle. When the quarter has been served, the boat sheers off
+ diminished in its burden. Boys and girls are left seasoning their
+ polenta with a slice of <i>zucca</i>, while the mothers of a
+ score of families go pattering up yonder courtyard with the
+ material for their husbands' supper in their handkerchiefs.
+ Across the canal, or more correctly the <i>Rio</i>, opens a wide
+ grass-grown court. It is lined on the right hand by a row of poor
+ dwellings, swarming with gondoliers' children. A garden wall runs
+ along the other side, over which I can see pomegranate-trees in
+ fruit and pergolas of vines. Far beyond are more low houses, and
+ then the sky, swept with sea-breezes, and the masts of an
+ ocean-going ship against the dome and turrets of Palladio's
+ Redentore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is my home. By day it is as lively as a scene in
+ <i>Masaniello</i>. By night, after nine o'clock, the whole stir
+ of the quarter has subsided. Far away I hear the bell of some
+ church tell the hours. But no noise disturbs my rest, unless
+ perhaps a belated gondolier moors his boat beneath the window. My
+ one maid, Catina, sings at her work the whole day through. My
+ gondolier, Francesco, acts as valet. He wakes me in the morning,
+ opens the shutters, brings sea-water for my bath, and takes his
+ orders for the day. 'Will it do for Chioggia, Francesco?'
+ 'Sissignore! The Signorino has set off in his <i>sandolo</i>
+ already with Antonio. The Signora is to go with us in the
+ gondola.' 'Then get three more men, Francesco, and see that all
+ of them can sing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III.&mdash;TO CHIOGGIA WITH OAR AND SAIL
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The <i>sandolo</i> is a boat shaped like the gondola, but smaller
+ and lighter, without benches, and without the high steel prow or
+ <i>ferro</i> which distinguishes the gondola. The gunwale is only
+ just raised above the water, over which the little craft skims
+ with a rapid bounding motion, affording an agreeable variation
+ from the stately swanlike movement of the gondola. In one of
+ these boats&mdash;called by him the <i>Fisolo</i> or
+ Seamew&mdash;my friend Eustace had started with Antonio,
+ intending to row the whole way to Chioggia, or, if the breeze
+ favoured, to hoist a sail and help himself along. After
+ breakfast, when the crew for my gondola had been assembled,
+ Francesco and I followed with the Signora. It was one of those
+ perfect mornings which occur as a respite from broken weather,
+ when the air is windless and the light falls soft through haze on
+ the horizon. As we broke into the lagoon behind the Redentore,
+ the islands in front of us, S. Spirito, Poveglia, Malamocco,
+ seemed as though they were just lifted from the sea-line. The
+ Euganeans, far away to westward, were bathed in mist, and almost
+ blent with the blue sky. Our four rowers put their backs into
+ their work; and soon we reached the port of Malamocco, where a
+ breeze from the Adriatic caught us sideways for a while. This is
+ the largest of the breaches in the Lidi, or raised sand-reefs,
+ which protect Venice from the sea: it affords an entrance to
+ vessels of draught like the steamers of the Peninsular and
+ Oriental Company. We crossed the dancing wavelets of the port;
+ but when we passed under the lee of Pelestrina, the breeze
+ failed, and the lagoon was once again a sheet of undulating
+ glass. At S. Pietro on this island a halt was made to give the
+ oarsmen wine, and here we saw the women at their cottage doorways
+ making lace. The old lace industry of Venice has recently been
+ revived. From Burano and Pelestrina cargoes of hand-made
+ imitations of the ancient fabrics are sent at intervals to
+ Jesurun's magazine at S. Marco. He is the chief <i>impresario</i>
+ of the trade, employing hundreds of hands, and speculating for a
+ handsome profit in the foreign market on the price he gives his
+ workwomen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now we are well lost in the lagoons&mdash;Venice no longer
+ visible behind; the Alps and Euganeans shrouded in a noonday
+ haze; the lowlands at the mouth of Brenta marked by clumps of
+ trees ephemerally faint in silver silhouette against the filmy,
+ shimmering horizon. Form and colour have disappeared in
+ light-irradiated vapour of an opal hue. And yet instinctively we
+ know that we are not at sea; the different quality of the water,
+ the piles emerging here and there above the surface, the
+ suggestion of coast-lines scarcely felt in this infinity of
+ lustre, all remind us that our voyage is confined to the charmed
+ limits of an inland lake. At length the jutting headland of
+ Pelestrina was reached. We broke across the Porto di Chioggia,
+ and saw Chioggia itself ahead&mdash;a huddled mass of houses low
+ upon the water. One by one, as we rowed steadily, the
+ fishing-boats passed by, emerging from their harbour for a twelve
+ hours' cruise upon the open sea. In a long line they came, with
+ variegated sails of orange, red, and saffron, curiously chequered
+ at the corners, and cantled with devices in contrasted tints. A
+ little land-breeze carried them forward. The lagoon reflected
+ their deep colours till they reached the port. Then, slightly
+ swerving eastward on their course, but still in single file, they
+ took the sea and scattered, like beautiful bright-plumaged birds,
+ who from a streamlet float into a lake, and find their way at
+ large according as each wills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Signorino and Antonio, though want of wind obliged them to
+ row the whole way from Venice, had reached Chioggia an hour
+ before, and stood waiting to receive us on the quay. It is a
+ quaint town this Chioggia, which has always lived a separate life
+ from that of Venice. Language and race and customs have held the
+ two populations apart from those distant years when Genoa and the
+ Republic of S. Mark fought their duel to the death out in the
+ Chioggian harbours, down to these days, when your Venetian
+ gondolier will tell you that the Chioggoto loves his pipe more
+ than his <i>donna</i> or his wife. The main canal is lined with
+ substantial palaces, attesting to old wealth and comfort. But
+ from Chioggia, even more than from Venice, the tide of modern
+ luxury and traffic has retreated. The place is left to fishing
+ folk and builders of the fishing craft, whose wharves still form
+ the liveliest quarter. Wandering about its wide deserted courts
+ and <i>calli</i>, we feel the spirit of the decadent Venetian
+ nobility. Passages from Goldoni's and Casanova's Memoirs occur to
+ our memory. It seems easy to realise what they wrote about the
+ dishevelled gaiety and lawless license of Chioggia in the days of
+ powder, sword-knot, and <i>soprani</i>. Baffo walks beside us in
+ hypocritical composure of bag-wig and senatorial dignity,
+ whispering unmentionable sonnets in his dialect of <i>Xe</i> and
+ <i>Ga</i>. Somehow or another that last dotage of S. Mark's
+ decrepitude is more recoverable by our fancy than the heroism of
+ Pisani in the fourteenth century. From his prison in blockaded
+ Venice the great admiral was sent forth on a forlorn hope, and
+ blocked victorious Doria here with boats on which the nobles of
+ the Golden Book had spent their fortunes. Pietro Doria boasted
+ that with his own hands he would bridle the bronze horses of S.
+ Mark. But now he found himself between the navy of Carlo Zeno in
+ the Adriatic and the flotilla led by Vittore Pisani across the
+ lagoon. It was in vain that the Republic of S. George strained
+ every nerve to send him succour from the Ligurian sea; in vain
+ that the lords of Padua kept opening communications with him from
+ the mainland. From the 1st of January 1380 till the 21st of June
+ the Venetians pressed the blockade ever closer, grappling their
+ foemen in a grip that if relaxed one moment would have hurled him
+ at their throats. The long and breathless struggle ended in the
+ capitulation at Chioggia of what remained of Doria's forty-eight
+ galleys and fourteen thousand men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These great deeds are far away and hazy. The brief sentences of
+ mediĉval annalists bring them less near to us than the
+ <i>chroniques scandaleuses</i> of good-for-nothing scoundrels,
+ whose vulgar adventures might be revived at the present hour with
+ scarce a change of setting. Such is the force of <i>intimité</i>
+ in literature. And yet Baffo and Casanova are as much of the past
+ as Doria and Pisani. It is only perhaps that the survival of
+ decadence in all we see around us, forms a fitting framework for
+ our recollections of their vividly described corruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not far from the landing-place a balustraded bridge of ample
+ breadth and large bravura manner spans the main canal. Like
+ everything at Chioggia, it is dirty and has fallen from its first
+ estate. Yet neither time nor injury can obliterate style or
+ wholly degrade marble. Hard by the bridge there are two rival
+ inns. At one of these we ordered a seadinner&mdash;crabs,
+ cuttlefishes, soles, and turbots&mdash;which we ate at a table in
+ the open air. Nothing divided us from the street except a row of
+ Japanese privet-bushes in hooped tubs. Our banquet soon assumed a
+ somewhat unpleasant similitude to that of Dives; for the
+ Chioggoti, in all stages of decrepitude and squalor, crowded
+ round to beg for scraps&mdash;indescribable old women, enveloped
+ in their own petticoats thrown over their heads; girls hooded
+ with sombre black mantles; old men wrinkled beyond recognition by
+ their nearest relatives; jabbering, half-naked boys; slow,
+ slouching fishermen with clay pipes in their mouths and
+ philosophical acceptance on their sober foreheads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That afternoon the gondola and sandolo were lashed together side
+ by side. Two sails were raised, and in this lazy fashion we stole
+ homewards, faster or slower according as the breeze freshened or
+ slackened, landing now and then on islands, sauntering along the
+ sea-walls which bulwark Venice from the Adriatic, and
+ singing&mdash;those at least of us who had the power to sing.
+ Four of our Venetians had trained voices and memories of
+ inexhaustible music. Over the level water, with the ripple
+ plashing at our keel, their songs went abroad, and mingled with
+ the failing day. The barcaroles and serenades peculiar to Venice
+ were, of course, in harmony with the occasion. But some
+ transcripts from classical operas were even more attractive,
+ through the dignity with which these men invested them. By the
+ peculiarity of their treatment the <i>recitativo</i> of the stage
+ assumed a solemn movement, marked in rhythm, which removed it
+ from the commonplace into antiquity, and made me understand how
+ cultivated music may pass back by natural, unconscious transition
+ into the realm of popular melody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun sank, not splendidly, but quietly in banks of clouds
+ above the Alps. Stars came out, uncertainly at first, and then in
+ strength, reflected on the sea. The men of the Dogana watch-boat
+ challenged us and let us pass. Madonna's lamp was twinkling from
+ her shrine upon the harbour-pile. The city grew before us.
+ Stealing into Venice in that calm&mdash;stealing silently and
+ shadowlike, with scarce a ruffle of the water, the masses of the
+ town emerging out of darkness into twilight, till San Giorgio's
+ gun boomed with a flash athwart our stern, and the gas-lamps of
+ the Piazzetta swam into sight; all this was like a long enchanted
+ chapter of romance. And now the music of our men had sunk to one
+ faint whistling from Eustace of tunes in harmony with whispers at
+ the prow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the steps of the Palazzo Venier and the deep-scented
+ darkness of the garden. As we passed through to supper, I plucked
+ a spray of yellow Banksia rose, and put it in my buttonhole. The
+ dew was on its burnished leaves, and evening had drawn forth its
+ perfume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV.&mdash;MORNING RAMBLES
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A story is told of Poussin, the French painter, that when he was
+ asked why he would not stay in Venice, he replied, 'If I stay
+ here, I shall become a colourist!' A somewhat similar tale is
+ reported of a fashionable English decorator. While on a visit to
+ friends in Venice, he avoided every building which contains a
+ Tintoretto, averring that the sight of Tintoretto's pictures
+ would injure his carefully trained taste. It is probable that
+ neither anecdote is strictly true. Yet there is a certain
+ epigrammatic point in both; and I have often speculated whether
+ even Venice could have so warped the genius of Poussin as to shed
+ one ray of splendour on his canvases, or whether even Tintoretto
+ could have so sublimed the prophet of Queen Anne as to make him
+ add dramatic passion to a London drawing-room. Anyhow, it is
+ exceedingly difficult to escape from colour in the air of Venice,
+ or from Tintoretto in her buildings. Long, delightful mornings
+ may be spent in the enjoyment of the one and the pursuit of the
+ other by folk who have no classical or pseudo-mediĉval theories
+ to oppress them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tintoretto's house, though changed, can still be visited. It
+ formed part of the Fondamenta dei Mori, so called from having
+ been the quarter assigned to Moorish traders in Venice. A
+ spirited carving of a turbaned Moor leading a camel charged with
+ merchandise, remains above the waterline of a neighbouring
+ building; and all about the crumbling walls sprout flowering
+ weeds&mdash;samphire and snapdragon and the spiked campanula,
+ which shoots a spire of sea-blue stars from chinks of Istrian
+ stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house stands opposite the Church of Santa Maria dell' Orto,
+ where Tintoretto was buried, and where four of his chief
+ masterpieces are to be seen. This church, swept and garnished, is
+ a triumph of modern Italian restoration. They have contrived to
+ make it as commonplace as human ingenuity could manage. Yet no
+ malice of ignorant industry can obscure the treasures it
+ contains&mdash;the pictures of Cima, Gian Bellini, Palma, and the
+ four Tintorettos, which form its crowning glory. Here the master
+ may be studied in four of his chief moods: as the painter of
+ tragic passion and movement, in the huge 'Last Judgment;' as the
+ painter of impossibilities, in the 'Vision of Moses upon Sinai;'
+ as the painter of purity and tranquil pathos, in the 'Miracle of
+ S. Agnes;' as the painter of Biblical history brought home to
+ daily life, in the 'Presentation of the Virgin.' Without leaving
+ the Madonna dell' Orto, a student can explore his genius in all
+ its depth and breadth; comprehend the enthusiasm he excites in
+ those who seek, as the essentials of art, imaginative boldness
+ and sincerity; understand what is meant by adversaries who
+ maintain that, after all, Tintoretto was but an inspired Gustave
+ Doré. Between that quiet canvas of the 'Presentation,' so modest
+ in its cool greys and subdued gold, and the tumult of flying,
+ <ins class="correction" title=
+ "Transcriber's note: original reads 'ruining'">running</ins>
+ ascending figures in the 'Judgment,' what an interval there is!
+ How strangely the white lamb-like maiden, kneeling beside her
+ lamb in the picture of S. Agnes, contrasts with the dusky
+ gorgeousness of the Hebrew women despoiling themselves of jewels
+ for the golden calf! Comparing these several manifestations of
+ creative power, we feel ourselves in the grasp of a painter who
+ was essentially a poet, one for whom his art was the medium for
+ expressing before all things thought and passion. Each picture is
+ executed in the manner suited to its tone of feeling, the key of
+ its conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsewhere than in the Madonna dell' Orto there are more
+ distinguished single examples of Tintoretto's realising faculty.
+ The 'Last Supper' in San Giorgio, for instance, and the
+ 'Adoration of the Shepherds' in the Scuola di San Rocco
+ illustrate his unique power of presenting sacred history in a
+ novel, romantic framework of familiar things. The commonplace
+ circumstances of ordinary life have been employed to portray in
+ the one case a lyric of mysterious splendour; in the other, an
+ idyll of infinite sweetness. Divinity shines through the rafters
+ of that upper chamber, where round a low large table the Apostles
+ are assembled in a group translated from the social customs of
+ the painter's days. Divinity is shed upon the straw-spread
+ manger, where Christ lies sleeping in the loft, with shepherds
+ crowding through the room beneath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A studied contrast between the simplicity and repose of the
+ central figure and the tumult of passions in the multitude
+ around, may be observed in the 'Miracle of S. Agnes.' It is this
+ which gives dramatic vigour to the composition. But the same
+ effect is carried to its highest fulfilment, with even a loftier
+ beauty, in the episode of Christ before the judgment-seat of
+ Pilate, at San Rocco. Of all Tintoretto's religious pictures,
+ that is the most profoundly felt, the most majestic. No other
+ artist succeeded as he has here succeeded in presenting to us God
+ incarnate. For this Christ is not merely the just man, innocent,
+ silent before his accusers. The stationary, white-draped figure,
+ raised high above the agitated crowd, with tranquil forehead
+ slightly bent, facing his perplexed and fussy judge, is more than
+ man. We cannot say perhaps precisely why he is divine. But
+ Tintoretto has made us feel that he is. In other words, his
+ treatment of the high theme chosen by him has been adequate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must seek the Scuola di San Rocco for examples of Tintoretto's
+ liveliest imagination. Without ceasing to be Italian in his
+ attention to harmony and grace, he far exceeded the masters of
+ his nation in the power of suggesting what is weird, mysterious,
+ upon the borderland of the grotesque. And of this quality there
+ are three remarkable instances in the Scuola. No one but
+ Tintoretto could have evoked the fiend in his 'Temptation of
+ Christ.' It is an indescribable hermaphroditic genius, the genius
+ of carnal fascination, with outspread downy rose-plumed wings,
+ and flaming bracelets on the full but sinewy arms, who kneels and
+ lifts aloft great stones, smiling entreatingly to the sad, grey
+ Christ seated beneath a rugged pent-house of the desert. No one
+ again but Tintoretto could have dashed the hot lights of that
+ fiery sunset in such quivering flakes upon the golden flesh of
+ Eve, half hidden among laurels, as she stretches forth the fruit
+ of the Fall to shrinking Adam. No one but Tintoretto, till we
+ come to Blake, could have imagined yonder Jonah, summoned by the
+ beck of God from the whale's belly. The monstrous fish rolls over
+ in the ocean, blowing portentous vapour from his trump-shaped
+ nostril. The prophet's beard descends upon his naked breast in
+ hoary ringlets to the girdle. He has forgotten the past peril of
+ the deep, although the whale's jaws yawn around him. Between him
+ and the outstretched finger of Jehovah calling him again to life,
+ there runs a spark of unseen spiritual electricity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To comprehend Tintoretto's touch upon the pastoral idyll we must
+ turn our steps to San Giorgio again, and pace those meadows by
+ the running river in company with his Manna-Gatherers. Or we may
+ seek the Accademia, and notice how he here has varied the
+ 'Temptation of Adam by Eve,' choosing a less tragic motive of
+ seduction than the one so powerfully rendered at San Rocco. Or in
+ the Ducal Palace we may take our station, hour by hour, before
+ the 'Marriage of Bacchus and Ariadne.' It is well to leave the
+ very highest achievements of art untouched by criticism,
+ undescribed. And in this picture we have the most perfect of all
+ modern attempts to realise an antique myth&mdash;more perfect
+ than Raphael's 'Galatea,' or Titian's 'Meeting of Bacchus with
+ Ariadne,' or Botticelli's 'Birth of Venus from the Sea.' It may
+ suffice to marvel at the slight effect which melodies so powerful
+ and so direct as these produce upon the ordinary public. Sitting,
+ as is my wont, one Sunday morning, opposite the 'Bacchus,' four
+ Germans with a cicerone sauntered by. The subject was explained
+ to them. They waited an appreciable space of time. Then the
+ youngest opened his lips and spake: 'Bacchus war der Wein-Gott.'
+ And they all moved heavily away. <i>Bos locutus est</i>. 'Bacchus
+ was the wine-god!' This, apparently, is what a picture tells to
+ one man. To another it presents divine harmonies, perceptible
+ indeed in nature, but here by the painter-poet for the first time
+ brought together and cadenced in a work of art. For another it is
+ perhaps the hieroglyph of pent-up passions and desired
+ impossibilities. For yet another it may only mean the
+ unapproachable inimitable triumph of consummate craft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tintoretto, to be rightly understood, must be sought all over
+ Venice&mdash;in the church as well as the Scuola di San Rocco; in
+ the 'Temptation of S. Anthony' at S. Trovaso no less than in the
+ Temptations of Eve and Christ; in the decorative pomp of the Sala
+ del Senato, and in the Paradisal vision of the Sala del Gran
+ Consiglio. Yet, after all, there is one of his most
+ characteristic moods, to appreciate which fully we return to the
+ Madonna dell' Orto. I have called him 'the painter of
+ impossibilities.' At rare moments he rendered them possible by
+ sheer imaginative force. If we wish to realise this phase of his
+ creative power, and to measure our own subordination to his
+ genius in its most hazardous enterprise, we must spend much time
+ in the choir of this church. Lovers of art who mistrust this play
+ of the audacious fancy&mdash;aiming at sublimity in supersensual
+ regions, sometimes attaining to it by stupendous effort or
+ authentic revelation, not seldom sinking to the verge of bathos,
+ and demanding the assistance of interpretative sympathy in the
+ spectator&mdash;such men will not take the point of view required
+ of them by Tintoretto in his boldest flights, in the 'Worship of
+ the Golden Calf' and in the 'Destruction of the World by Water.'
+ It is for them to ponder well the flying archangel with the
+ scales of judgment in his hand, and the seraph-charioted Jehovah
+ enveloping Moses upon Sinai in lightnings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gondola has had a long rest. Were Francesco but a little more
+ impatient, he might be wondering what had become of the padrone.
+ I bid him turn, and we are soon gliding into the Sacca della
+ Misericordia. This is a protected float, where the wood which
+ comes from Cadore and the hills of the Ampezzo is stored in
+ spring. Yonder square white house, standing out to sea, fronting
+ Murano and the Alps, they call the Oasa degli Spiriti. No one
+ cares to inhabit it; for here, in old days, it was the wont of
+ the Venetians to lay their dead for a night's rest before their
+ final journey to the graveyard of S. Michele. So many generations
+ of dead folk had made that house their inn, that it is now no
+ fitting home for living men. San Michele is the island close
+ before Murano, where the Lombardi built one of their most
+ romantically graceful churches of pale Istrian stone, and where
+ the Campo Santo has for centuries received the dead into its oozy
+ clay. The cemetery is at present undergoing restoration. Its
+ state of squalor and abandonment to cynical disorder makes one
+ feel how fitting for Italians would be the custom of cremation.
+ An island in the lagoons devoted to funeral pyres is a solemn and
+ ennobling conception. This graveyard, with its ruinous walls, its
+ mangy riot of unwholesome weeds, its corpses festering in slime
+ beneath neglected slabs in hollow chambers, and the mephitic wash
+ of poisoned waters that surround it, inspires the horror of
+ disgust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morning has not lost its freshness. Antelao and Tofana,
+ guarding the vale above Cortina, show faint streaks of snow upon
+ their amethyst. Little clouds hang in the still autumn sky. There
+ are men dredging for shrimps and crabs through shoals uncovered
+ by the ebb. Nothing can be lovelier, more resting to eyes tired
+ with pictures than this tranquil, sunny expanse of the lagoon. As
+ we round the point of the Bersaglio, new landscapes of island and
+ Alp and low-lying mainland move into sight at every slow stroke
+ of the oar. A luggage-train comes lumbering along the railway
+ bridge, puffing white smoke into the placid blue. Then we strike
+ down Cannaregio, and I muse upon processions of kings and
+ generals and noble strangers, entering Venice by this water-path
+ from Mestre, before the Austrians built their causeway for the
+ trains. Some of the rare scraps of fresco upon house fronts,
+ still to be seen in Venice, are left in Cannaregio. They are
+ chiaroscuro allegories in a bold bravura manner of the sixteenth
+ century. From these and from a few rosy fragments on the Fondaco
+ dei Tedeschi, the Fabbriche Nuove, and precious fading figures in
+ a certain courtyard near San Stefano, we form some notion how
+ Venice looked when all her palaces were painted. Pictures by
+ Gentile Bellini, Mansueti, and Carpaccio help the fancy in this
+ work of restoration. And here and there, in back canals, we come
+ across coloured sections of old buildings, capped by true
+ Venetian chimneys, which for a moment seem to realise our dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A morning with Tintoretto might well be followed by a morning
+ with Carpaccio or Bellini. But space is wanting in these pages.
+ Nor would it suit the manner of this medley to hunt the Lombardi
+ through palaces and churches, pointing out their singularities of
+ violet and yellow panellings in marble, the dignity of their
+ wide-opened arches, or the delicacy of their shallow chiselled
+ traceries in cream-white Istrian stone. It is enough to indicate
+ the goal of many a pleasant pilgrimage: warrior angels of
+ Vivarini and Basaiti hidden in a dark chapel of the Frari; Fra
+ Francesco's fantastic orchard of fruits and flowers in distant S.
+ Francesco della Vigna; the golden Gian Bellini in S. Zaccaria;
+ Palma's majestic S. Barbara in S. Maria Formosa; San Giobbe's
+ wealth of sculptured frieze and floral scroll; the Ponte di
+ Paradiso, with its Gothic arch; the painted plates in the Museo
+ Civico; and palace after palace, loved for some quaint piece of
+ tracery, some moulding full of mediĉval symbolism, some fierce
+ impossible Renaissance freak of fancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bather than prolong this list, I will tell a story which drew me
+ one day past the Public Gardens to the metropolitan Church of
+ Venice, San Pietro di Castello. The novella is related by
+ Bandello. It has, as will be noticed, points of similarity to
+ that of 'Romeo and Juliet.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V.&mdash;A VENETIAN NOVELLA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the time when Carpaccio and Gentile Bellini were painting
+ those handsome youths in tight jackets, parti-coloured hose, and
+ little round caps placed awry upon their shocks of well-combed
+ hair, there lived in Venice two noblemen, Messer Pietro and
+ Messer Paolo, whose palaces fronted each other on the Grand
+ Canal. Messer Paolo was a widower, with one married daughter, and
+ an only son of twenty years or thereabouts, named Gerardo. Messer
+ Pietro's wife was still living; and this couple had but one
+ child, a daughter, called Elena, of exceeding beauty, aged
+ fourteen. Gerardo, as is the wont of gallants, was paying his
+ addresses to a certain lady; and nearly every day he had to cross
+ the Grand Canal in his gondola, and to pass beneath the house of
+ Elena on his way to visit his Dulcinea; for this lady lived some
+ distance up a little canal on which the western side of Messer
+ Pietro's palace looked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it so happened that at the very time when the story opens,
+ Messer Pietro's wife fell ill and died, and Elena was left alone
+ at home with her father and her old nurse. Across the little
+ canal of which I spoke there dwelt another nobleman, with four
+ daughters, between the years of seventeen and twenty-one. Messer
+ Pietro, desiring to provide amusement for poor little Elena,
+ besought this gentleman that his daughters might come on
+ feast-days to play with her. For you must know that, except on
+ festivals of the Church, the custom of Venice required that
+ gentlewomen should remain closely shut within the private
+ apartments of their dwellings. His request was readily granted;
+ and on the next feast-day the five girls began to play at ball
+ together for forfeits in the great saloon, which opened with its
+ row of Gothic arches and balustraded balcony upon the Grand
+ Canal. The four sisters, meanwhile, had other thoughts than for
+ the game. One or other of them, and sometimes three together,
+ would let the ball drop, and run to the balcony to gaze upon
+ their gallants, passing up and down in gondolas below; and then
+ they would drop flowers or ribands for tokens. Which negligence
+ of theirs annoyed Elena much; for she thought only of the game.
+ Wherefore she scolded them in childish wise, and one of them made
+ answer, 'Elena, if you only knew how pleasant it is to play as we
+ are playing on this balcony, you would not care so much for ball
+ and forfeits!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one of those feast-days the four sisters were prevented from
+ keeping their little friend company. Elena, with nothing to do,
+ and feeling melancholy, leaned upon the window-sill which
+ overlooked the narrow canal. And it chanced that just then
+ Gerardo, on his way to Dulcinea, went by; and Elena looked down
+ at him, as she had seen those sisters look at passers-by. Gerardo
+ caught her eye, and glances passed between them, and Gerardo's
+ gondolier, bending from the poop, said to his master, 'O master!
+ methinks that gentle maiden is better worth your wooing than
+ Dulcinea.' Gerardo pretended to pay no heed to these words; but
+ after rowing a little way, he bade the man turn, and they went
+ slowly back beneath the window. This time Elena, thinking to play
+ the game which her four friends had played, took from her hair a
+ clove carnation and let it fall close to Gerardo on the cushion
+ of the gondola. He raised the flower and put it to his lips,
+ acknowledging the courtesy with a grave bow. But the perfume of
+ the clove and the beauty of Elena in that moment took possession
+ of his heart together, and straightway he forgot Dulcinea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As yet he knew not who Elena was. Nor is this wonderful; for the
+ daughters of Venetian nobles were but rarely seen or spoken of.
+ But the thought of her haunted him awake and sleeping; and every
+ feast-day, when there was the chance of seeing her, he rowed his
+ gondola beneath her windows. And there she appeared to him in
+ company with her four friends; the five girls clustering together
+ like sister roses beneath the pointed windows of the Gothic
+ balcony. Elena, on her side, had no thought of love; for of love
+ she had heard no one speak. But she took pleasure in the game
+ those friends had taught her, of leaning from the balcony to
+ watch Gerardo. He meanwhile grew love-sick and impatient,
+ wondering how he might declare his passion. Until one day it
+ happened that, talking through a lane or <i>calle</i> which
+ skirted Messer Pietro'a palace, he caught sight of Elena's nurse,
+ who was knocking at the door, returning from some shopping she
+ had made. This nurse had been his own nurse in childhood;
+ therefore he remembered her, and cried aloud, 'Nurse, Nurse!' But
+ the old woman did not hear him, and passed into the house and
+ shut the door behind her. Whereupon Gerardo, greatly moved, still
+ called to her, and when he reached the door, began to knock upon
+ it violently. And whether it was the agitation of finding himself
+ at last so near the wish of his heart, or whether the pains of
+ waiting for his love had weakened him, I know not; but, while he
+ knocked, his senses left him, and he fell fainting in the
+ doorway. Then the nurse recognised the youth to whom she had
+ given suck, and brought him into the courtyard by the help of
+ handmaidens, and Elena came down and gazed upon him. The house
+ was now full of bustle, and Messer Pietro heard the noise, and
+ seeing the son of his neighbour in so piteous a plight, he caused
+ Gerardo to be laid upon a bed. But for all they could do with
+ him, he recovered not from his swoon. And after a while force was
+ that they should place him in a gondola and ferry him across to
+ his father's house. The nurse went with him, and informed Messer
+ Paolo of what had happened. Doctors were sent for, and the whole
+ family gathered round Gerardo's bed. After a while he revived a
+ little; and thinking himself still upon the doorstep of Pietro's
+ palace, called again, 'Nurse, Nurse!' She was near at hand, and
+ would have spoken to him. But while he summoned his senses to his
+ aid, he became gradually aware of his own kinsfolk and dissembled
+ the secret of his grief. They beholding him in better cheer,
+ departed on their several ways, and the nurse still sat alone
+ beside him. Then he explained to her what he had at heart, and
+ how he was in love with a maiden whom he had seen on feast-days
+ in the house of Messer Pietro. But still he knew not Elena's
+ name; and she, thinking it impossible that such a child had
+ inspired this passion, began to marvel which of the four sisters
+ it was Gerardo loved. Then they appointed the next Sunday, when
+ all the five girls should be together, for Gerardo by some sign,
+ as he passed beneath the window, to make known to the old nurse
+ his lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elena, meanwhile, who had watched Gerardo lying still and pale in
+ swoon beneath her on the pavement of the palace, felt the
+ stirring of a new unknown emotion in her soul. When Sunday came,
+ she devised excuses for keeping her four friends away, bethinking
+ her that she might see him once again alone, and not betray the
+ agitation which she dreaded. This ill suited the schemes of the
+ nurse, who nevertheless was forced to be content. But after
+ dinner, seeing how restless was the girl, and how she came and
+ went, and ran a thousand times to the balcony, the nurse began to
+ wonder whether Elena herself were not in love with some one. So
+ she feigned to sleep, but placed herself within sight of the
+ window. And soon Gerardo came by in his gondola; and Elena, who
+ was prepared, threw to him her nosegay. The watchful nurse had
+ risen, and peeping behind the girl's shoulder, saw at a glance
+ how matters stood. Thereupon she began to scold her charge, and
+ say, 'Is this a fair and comely thing, to stand all day at
+ balconies and throw flowers at passers-by? Woe to you if your
+ father should come to know of this! He would make you wish
+ yourself among the dead!' Elena, sore troubled at her nurse's
+ rebuke, turned and threw her arms about her neck, and called her
+ 'Nanna!' as the wont is of Venetian children. Then she told the
+ old woman how she had learned that game from the four sisters,
+ and how she thought it was not different, but far more pleasant,
+ than the game of forfeits; whereupon her nurse spoke gravely,
+ explaining what love is, and how that love should lead to
+ marriage, and bidding her search her own heart if haply she could
+ choose Gerardo for her husband. There was no reason, as she knew,
+ why Messer Paolo's son should not mate with Messer Pietro's
+ daughter. But being a romantic creature, as many women are, she
+ resolved to bring the match about in secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elena took little time to reflect, but told her nurse that she
+ was willing, if Gerardo willed it too, to have him for her
+ husband. Then went the nurse and made the young man know how
+ matters stood, and arranged with him a day, when Messer Pietro
+ should be in the Council of the Pregadi, and the servants of the
+ palace otherwise employed, for him to come and meet his Elena. A
+ glad man was Gerardo, nor did he wait to think how better it
+ would be to ask the hand of Elena in marriage from her father.
+ But when the day arrived, he sought the nurse, and she took him
+ to a chamber in the palace, where there stood an image of the
+ Blessed Virgin. Elena was there, pale and timid; and when the
+ lovers clasped hands, neither found many words to say. But the
+ nurse bade them take heart, and leading them before Our Lady,
+ joined their hands, and made Gerardo place his ring on his
+ bride's finger. After this fashion were Gerardo and Elena wedded.
+ And for some while, by the assistance of the nurse, they dwelt
+ together in much love and solace, meeting often as occasion
+ offered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Messer Paolo, who knew nothing of these things, took thought
+ meanwhile for his son's career. It was the season when the
+ Signiory of Venice sends a fleet of galleys to Beirut with
+ merchandise; and the noblemen may bid for the hiring of a ship,
+ and charge it with wares, and send whomsoever they list as factor
+ in their interest. One of these galleys, then, Messer Paolo
+ engaged, and told his son that he had appointed him to journey
+ with it and increase their wealth. 'On thy return, my son,' he
+ said, 'we will bethink us of a wife for thee.' Gerardo, when he
+ heard these words, was sore troubled, and first he told his
+ father roundly that he would not go, and flew off in the twilight
+ to pour out his perplexities to Elena. But she, who was prudent
+ and of gentle soul, besought him to obey his father in this
+ thing, to the end, moreover, that, having done his will and
+ increased his wealth, he might afterwards unfold the story of
+ their secret marriage. To these good counsels, though loth,
+ Gerardo consented. His father was overjoyed at his son's
+ repentance. The galley was straightway laden with merchandise,
+ and Gerardo set forth on his voyage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trip to Beirut and back lasted usually six months or at the
+ most seven. Now when Gerardo had been some six months away,
+ Messer Pietro, noticing how fair his daughter was, and how she
+ had grown into womanhood, looked about him for a husband for her.
+ When he had found a youth suitable in birth and wealth and years,
+ he called for Elena, and told her that the day had been appointed
+ for her marriage. She, alas! knew not what to answer. She feared
+ to tell her father that she was already married, for she knew not
+ whether this would please Gerardo. For the same reason she
+ dreaded to throw herself upon the kindness of Messer Paolo. Nor
+ was her nurse of any help in counsel; for the old woman repented
+ her of what she had done, and had good cause to believe that,
+ even if the marriage with Gerardo were accepted by the two
+ fathers, they would punish her for her own part in the affair.
+ Therefore she bade Elena wait on fortune, and hinted to her that,
+ if the worst came to the worst, no one need know she had been
+ wedded with the ring to Gerardo. Such weddings, you must know,
+ were binding; but till they had been blessed by the Church, they
+ had not taken the force of a religious sacrament. And this is
+ still the case in Italy among the common folk, who will say of a
+ man, 'Si, è ammogliato; ma il matrimonio non è stato benedetto.'
+ 'Yes, he has taken a wife, but the marriage has not yet been
+ blessed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the days flew by in doubt and sore distress for Elena. Then on
+ the night before her wedding, she felt that she could bear this
+ life no longer. But having no poison, and being afraid to pierce
+ her bosom with a knife, she lay down on her bed alone, and tried
+ to die by holding in her breath. A mortal swoon came over her;
+ her senses fled; the life in her remained suspended. And when her
+ nurse came next morning to call her, she found poor Elena cold as
+ a corpse. Messer Pietro and all the household rushed, at the
+ nurse's cries, into the room, and they all saw Elena stretched
+ dead upon her bed undressed. Physicians were called, who made
+ theories to explain the cause of death. But all believed that she
+ was really dead, beyond all help of art or medicine. Nothing
+ remained but to carry her to church for burial instead of
+ marriage. Therefore, that very evening, a funeral procession was
+ formed, which moved by torchlight up the Grand Canal, along the
+ Riva, past the blank walls of the Arsenal, to the Campo before
+ San Pietro in Castello. Elena lay beneath the black felze in one
+ gondola, with a priest beside her praying, and other boats
+ followed bearing mourners. Then they laid her in a marble chest
+ outside the church, and all departed, still with torches burning,
+ to their homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it so fell out that upon that very evening Gerardo's galley
+ had returned from Syria, and was anchoring within the port of
+ Lido, which looks across to the island of Castello. It was the
+ gentle custom of Venice at that time that, when a ship arrived
+ from sea, the friends of those on board at once came out to
+ welcome them, and take and give the news. Therefore many noble
+ youths and other citizens were on the deck of Gerardo's galley,
+ making merry with him over the safe conduct of his voyage. Of one
+ of these he asked, 'Whose is yonder funeral procession returning
+ from San Pietro?' The young man made answer, 'Alas, for poor
+ Elena, Messer Pietro's daughter! She should have been married
+ this day. But death took her, and to-night they buried her in the
+ marble monument outside the church.' A woeful man was Gerardo,
+ hearing suddenly this news, and knowing what his dear wife must
+ have suffered ere she died. Yet he restrained himself, daring not
+ to disclose his anguish, and waited till his friends had left the
+ galley. Then he called to him the captain of the oarsmen, who was
+ his friend, and unfolded to him all the story of his love and
+ sorrow, and said that he must go that night and see his wife once
+ more, if even he should have to break her tomb. The captain tried
+ to dissuade him, but in vain. Seeing him so obstinate, he
+ resolved not to desert Gerardo. The two men took one of the
+ galley's boats, and rowed together toward San Pietro. It was past
+ midnight when they reached the Campo and broke the marble
+ sepulchre asunder. Pushing back its lid, Gerardo descended into
+ the grave and abandoned himself upon the body of his Elena. One
+ who had seen them at that moment could not well have said which
+ of the two was dead and which was living&mdash;Elena or her
+ husband. Meantime the captain of the oarsmen, fearing lest the
+ watch (set by the Masters of the Night to keep the peace of
+ Venice) might arrive, was calling on Gerardo to come back.
+ Gerardo heeded him no whit. But at the last, compelled by his
+ entreaties, and as it were astonied, he arose, bearing his wife's
+ corpse in his arms, and carried her clasped against his bosom to
+ the boat, and laid her therein, and sat down by her side and
+ kissed her frequently, and suffered not his friend's
+ remonstrances. Force was for the captain, having brought himself
+ into this scrape, that he should now seek refuge by the nearest
+ way from justice. Therefore he hoved gently from the bank, and
+ plied his oar, and brought the gondola apace into the open
+ waters. Gerardo still clasped Elena, dying husband by dead wife.
+ But the sea-breeze freshened towards daybreak; and the captain,
+ looking down upon that pair, and bringing to their faces the
+ light of his boat's lantern, judged their case not desperate at
+ all. On Elena's cheek there was a flush of life less deadly even
+ than the pallor of Gerardo's forehead. Thereupon the good man
+ called aloud, and Gerardo started from his grief; and both
+ together they chafed the hands and feet of Elena; and, the
+ sea-breeze aiding with its saltness, they awoke in her the spark
+ of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dimly burned the spark. But Gerardo, being aware of it, became a
+ man again. Then, having taken counsel with the captain, both
+ resolved to bear her to that brave man's mother's house. A bed
+ was soon made ready, and food was brought; and after due time,
+ she lifted up her face and knew Gerardo. The peril of the grave
+ was past, but thought had now to be taken for the future.
+ Therefore Gerardo, leaving his wife to the captain's mother,
+ rowed back to the galley and prepared to meet his father. With
+ good store of merchandise and with great gains from his traffic,
+ he arrived in that old palace on the Grand Canal. Then having
+ opened to Messer Paolo the matters of his journey, and shown him
+ how he had fared, and set before him tables of disbursements and
+ receipts, he seized the moment of his father's gladness.
+ 'Father,' he said, and as he spoke he knelt upon his knees,
+ 'Father, I bring you not good store of merchandise and bags of
+ gold alone; I bring you also a wedded wife, whom I have saved
+ this night from death.' And when the old man's surprise was
+ quieted, he told him the whole story. Now Messer Paolo, desiring
+ no better than that his son should wed the heiress of his
+ neighbour, and knowing well that Messer Pietro would make great
+ joy receiving back his daughter from the grave, bade Gerardo in
+ haste take rich apparel and clothe Elena therewith, and fetch her
+ home. These things were swiftly done; and after evenfall Messer
+ Pietro was bidden to grave business in his neighbour's palace.
+ With heavy heart he came, from a house of mourning to a house of
+ gladness. But there, at the banquet-table's head he saw his dead
+ child Elena alive, and at her side a husband. And when the whole
+ truth had been declared, he not only kissed and embraced the pair
+ who knelt before him, but of his goodness forgave the nurse, who
+ in her turn came trembling to his feet. Then fell there joy and
+ bliss in overmeasure that night upon both palaces of the Canal
+ Grande. And with the morrow the Church blessed the spousals which
+ long since had been on both sides vowed and consummated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI.&mdash;ON THE LAGOONS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mornings are spent in study, sometimes among pictures,
+ sometimes in the Marcian Library, or again in those vast convent
+ chambers of the Frari, where the archives of Venice load
+ innumerable shelves. The afternoons invite us to a further flight
+ upon the water. Both sandolo and gondola await our choice, and we
+ may sail or row, according as the wind and inclination tempt us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yonder lies San Lazzaro, with the neat red buildings of the
+ Armenian convent. The last oleander blossoms shine rosy pink
+ above its walls against the pure blue sky as we glide into the
+ little harbour. Boats piled with coal-black grapes block the
+ landing-place, for the Padri are gathering their vintage from the
+ Lido, and their presses run with new wine. Eustace and I have not
+ come to revive memories of Byron&mdash;that curious patron saint
+ of the Armenian colony&mdash;or to inspect the printing-press,
+ which issues books of little value for our studies. It is enough
+ to pace the terrace, and linger half an hour beneath the low
+ broad arches of the alleys pleached with vines, through which the
+ domes and towers of Venice rise more beautiful by distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Malamocco lies considerably farther, and needs a full hour of
+ stout rowing to reach it. Alighting there, we cross the narrow
+ strip of land, and find ourselves upon the huge
+ sea-wall&mdash;block piled on block&mdash;of Istrian stone in
+ tiers and ranks, with cunning breathing-places for the waves to
+ wreak their fury on and foam their force away in fretful waste.
+ The very existence of Venice may be said to depend sometimes on
+ these <i>murazzi</i>, which were finished at an immense cost by
+ the Republic in the days of its decadence. The enormous monoliths
+ which compose them had to be brought across the Adriatic in
+ sailing vessels. Of all the Lidi, that of Malamocco is the
+ weakest; and here, if anywhere, the sea might effect an entrance
+ into the lagoon. Our gondoliers told us of some places where the
+ <i>murazzi</i> were broken in a gale, or <i>sciroccale</i>, not
+ very long ago. Lying awake in Venice, when the wind blows hard,
+ one hears the sea thundering upon its sandy barrier, and blesses
+ God for the <i>murazzi</i>. On such a night it happened once to
+ me to dream a dream of Venice overwhelmed by water. I saw the
+ billows roll across the smooth lagoon like a gigantic Eager. The
+ Ducal Palace crumbled, and San Marco's domes went down. The
+ Campanile rocked and shivered like a reed. And all along the
+ Grand Canal the palaces swayed helpless, tottering to their fall,
+ while boats piled high with men and women strove to stem the
+ tide, and save themselves from those impending ruins. It was a
+ mad dream, born of the sea's roar and Tintoretto's painting. But
+ this afternoon no such visions are suggested. The sea sleeps, and
+ in the moist autumn air we break tall branches of the seeded
+ yellowing samphire from hollows of the rocks, and bear them
+ homeward in a wayward bouquet mixed with cobs of Indian-corn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fusina is another point for these excursions. It lies at the
+ mouth of the Canal di Brenta, where the mainland ends in marsh
+ and meadows, intersected by broad renes. In spring the ditches
+ bloom with fleurs-de-lys; in autumn they take sober colouring
+ from lilac daisies and the delicate sea-lavender. Scores of tiny
+ plants are turning scarlet on the brown moist earth; and when the
+ sun goes down behind the Euganean hills, his crimson canopy of
+ cloud, reflected on these shallows, muddy shoals, and wilderness
+ of matted weeds, converts the common earth into a fairyland of
+ fabulous dyes. Purple, violet, and rose are spread around us. In
+ front stretches the lagoon, tinted with a pale light from the
+ east, and beyond this pallid mirror shines Venice&mdash;a long
+ low broken line, touched with the softest roseate flush. Ere we
+ reach the Giudecca on our homeward way, sunset has faded. The
+ western skies have clad themselves in green, barred with dark
+ fire-rimmed clouds. The Euganean hills stand like stupendous
+ pyramids, Egyptian, solemn, against a lemon space on the horizon.
+ The far reaches of the lagoons, the Alps, and islands assume
+ those tones of glowing lilac which are the supreme beauty of
+ Venetian evening. Then, at last, we see the first lamps glitter
+ on the Zattere. The quiet of the night has come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Words cannot be formed to express the endless varieties of
+ Venetian sunset. The most magnificent follow after wet stormy
+ days, when the west breaks suddenly into a labyrinth of fire,
+ when chasms of clear turquoise heavens emerge, and horns of flame
+ are flashed to the zenith, and unexpected splendours scale the
+ fretted clouds, step over step, stealing along the purple caverns
+ till the whole dome throbs. Or, again, after a fair day, a change
+ of weather approaches, and high, infinitely high, the skies are
+ woven over with a web of half-transparent cirrus-clouds. These in
+ the afterglow blush crimson, and through their rifts the depth of
+ heaven is of a hard and gemlike blue, and all the water turns to
+ rose beneath them. I remember one such evening on the way back
+ from Torcello. We were well out at sea between Mazzorbo and
+ Murano. The ruddy arches overhead were reflected without
+ interruption in the waveless ruddy lake below. Our black boat was
+ the only dark spot in this sphere of splendour. We seemed to hang
+ suspended; and such as this, I fancied, must be the feeling of an
+ insect caught in the heart of a fiery-petalled rose. Yet not
+ these melodramatic sunsets alone are beautiful. Even more
+ exquisite, perhaps, are the lagoons, painted in monochrome of
+ greys, with just one touch of pink upon a western cloud,
+ scattered in ripples here and there on the waves below, reminding
+ us that day has passed and evening come. And beautiful again are
+ the calm settings of fair weather, when sea and sky alike are
+ cheerful, and the topmost blades of the lagoon grass, peeping
+ from the shallows, glance like emeralds upon the surface. There
+ is no deep stirring of the spirit in a symphony of light and
+ colour; but purity, peace, and freshness make their way into our
+ hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII.&mdash;AT THE LIDO
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all these afternoon excursions, that to the Lido is most
+ frequent. It has two points for approach. The more distant is the
+ little station of San Nicoletto, at the mouth of the Porto. With
+ an ebb-tide, the water of the lagoon runs past the mulberry
+ gardens of this hamlet like a river. There is here a grove of
+ acacia-trees, shadowy and dreamy, above deep grass, which even an
+ Italian summer does not wither. The Riva is fairly broad, forming
+ a promenade, where one may conjure up the personages of a century
+ ago. For San Nicoletto used to be a fashionable resort before the
+ other points of Lido had been occupied by pleasure-seekers. An
+ artist even now will select its old-world quiet, leafy shade, and
+ prospect through the islands of Vignole and Sant' Erasmo to
+ snow-touched peaks of Antelao and Tofana, rather than the glare
+ and bustle and extended view of Venice which its rival Sant'
+ Elisabetta offers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when we want a plunge into the Adriatic, or a stroll along
+ smooth sands, or a breath of genuine sea-breeze, or a handful of
+ horned poppies from the dunes, or a lazy half-hour's
+ contemplation of a limitless horizon flecked with russet sails,
+ then we seek Sant' Elisabetta. Our boat is left at the
+ landing-place. We saunter across the island and back again.
+ Antonio and Francesco wait and order wine, which we drink with
+ them in the shade of the little <i>osteria's</i> wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain afternoon in May I well remember, for this visit to the
+ Lido was marked by one of those apparitions which are as rare as
+ they are welcome to the artist's soul. I have always held that in
+ our modern life the only real equivalent for the antique
+ mythopoeic sense&mdash;that sense which enabled the Hellenic race
+ to figure for themselves the powers of earth and air, streams and
+ forests, and the presiding genii of places, under the forms of
+ living human beings, is supplied by the appearance at some
+ felicitous moment of a man or woman who impersonates for our
+ imagination the essence of the beauty that environs us. It seems,
+ at such a fortunate moment, as though we had been waiting for
+ this revelation, although perchance the want of it had not been
+ previously felt. Our sensations and perceptions test themselves
+ at the touchstone of this living individuality. The keynote of
+ the whole music dimly sounding in our ears is struck. A melody
+ emerges, clear in form and excellent in rhythm. The landscapes we
+ have painted on our brain, no longer lack their central figure.
+ The life proper to the complex conditions we have studied is
+ discovered, and every detail, judged by this standard of
+ vitality, falls into its right relations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been musing long that day and earnestly upon the mystery of
+ the lagoons, their opaline transparencies of air and water, their
+ fretful risings and sudden subsidence into calm, the
+ treacherousness of their shoals, the sparkle and the splendour of
+ their sunlight. I had asked myself how would a Greek sculptor
+ have personified the elemental deity of these salt-water lakes,
+ so different in quality from the Ĉgean or Ionian sea? What would
+ he find distinctive of their spirit? The Tritons of these
+ shallows must be of other form and lineage than the fierce-eyed
+ youth who blows his conch upon the curled crest of a wave, crying
+ aloud to his comrades, as he bears the nymph away to caverns
+ where the billows plunge in tideless instability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had picked up shells and looked for sea-horses on the Adriatic
+ shore. Then we returned to give our boatmen wine beneath the
+ vine-clad <i>pergola</i>. Four other men were there, drinking,
+ and eating from a dish of fried fish set upon the coarse white
+ linen cloth. Two of them soon rose and went away. Of the two who
+ stayed, one was a large, middle-aged man; the other was still
+ young. He was tall and sinewy, but slender, for these Venetians
+ are rarely massive in their strength. Each limb is equally
+ developed by the exercise of rowing upright, bending all the
+ muscles to their stroke. Their bodies are elastically supple,
+ with free sway from the hips and a mercurial poise upon the
+ ankle. Stefano showed these qualities almost in exaggeration. The
+ type in him was refined to its artistic perfection. Moreover, he
+ was rarely in repose, but moved with a singular brusque grace. A
+ black broad-brimmed hat was thrown back upon his matted
+ <i>zazzera</i> of dark hair tipped with dusky brown. This shock
+ of hair, cut in flakes, and falling wilfully, reminded me of the
+ lagoon grass when it darkens in autumn upon uncovered shoals, and
+ sunset gilds its sombre edges. Fiery grey eyes beneath it gazed
+ intensely, with compulsive effluence of electricity. It was the
+ wild glance of a Triton. Short blonde moustache, dazzling teeth,
+ skin bronzed, but showing white and healthful through open front
+ and sleeves of lilac shirt. The dashing sparkle of this animate
+ splendour, who looked to me as though the sea-waves and the sun
+ had made him in some hour of secret and unquiet rapture, was
+ somehow emphasised by a curious dint dividing his square
+ chin&mdash;a cleft that harmonised with smile on lip and steady
+ flame in eyes. I hardly know what effect it would have upon a
+ reader to compare eyes to opals. Yet Stefano's eyes, as they met
+ mine, had the vitreous intensity of opals, as though the colour
+ of Venetian waters were vitalised in them. This noticeable being
+ had a rough, hoarse voice, which, to develop the parallel with a
+ sea-god, might have screamed in storm or whispered raucous
+ messages from crests of tossing billows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt, as I looked, that here, for me at least, the mythopoem of
+ the lagoons was humanised; the spirit of the saltwater lakes had
+ appeared to me; the final touch of life emergent from nature had
+ been given. I was satisfied; for I had seen a poem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we rose, and wandered through the Jews' cemetery. It is a
+ quiet place, where the flat grave-stones, inscribed in Hebrew and
+ Italian, lie deep in Lido sand, waved over with wild grass and
+ poppies. I would fain believe that no neglect, but rather the
+ fashion of this folk, had left the monuments of generations to be
+ thus resumed by nature. Yet, knowing nothing of the history of
+ this burial-ground, I dare not affirm so much. There is one
+ outlying piece of the cemetery which seems to contradict my
+ charitable interpretation. It is not far from San Nicoletto. No
+ enclosure marks it from the unconsecrated dunes. Acacia-trees
+ sprout amid the monuments, and break the tablets with their
+ thorny shoots upthrusting from the soil. Where patriarchs and
+ rabbis sleep for centuries, the fishers of the sea now wander,
+ and defile these habitations of the dead:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ Corruption most abhorred
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mingling itself with their renownèd ashes.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Some of the grave-stones have been used to fence the towing-path;
+ and one I saw, well carved with letters legible of Hebrew on fair
+ Istrian marble, which roofed an open drain leading from the
+ stable of a Christian dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII.&mdash;A VENETIAN RESTAURANT
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of a long glorious day, unhappy is that mortal whom
+ the Hermes of a cosmopolitan hotel, white-chokered and
+ white-waistcoated, marshals to the Hades of the
+ <i>table-d'hôte</i>. The world has often been compared to an inn;
+ but on my way down to this common meal I have, not unfrequently,
+ felt fain to reverse the simile. From their separate stations, at
+ the appointed hour, the guests like ghosts flit to a gloomy
+ gas-lit chamber. They are of various speech and race, preoccupied
+ with divers interests and cares. Necessity and the waiter drive
+ them all to a sepulchral syssition, whereof the cook too
+ frequently deserves that old Greek comic
+ epithet&mdash;&alpha;&delta;&omicron;&upsilon;&nbsp;
+ &mu;&#940;&gamma;&epsilon;&iota;&rho;&omicron;&sigmaf;
+ &mdash;cook of the Inferno. And just as we are told that in
+ Charon's boat we shall not be allowed to pick our society, so
+ here we must accept what fellowship the fates provide. An English
+ spinster retailing paradoxes culled to-day from Ruskin's
+ handbooks; an American citizen describing his jaunt in a gondóla
+ from the railway station; a German shopkeeper descanting in one
+ breath on Baur's Bock and the beauties of the Marcusplatz; an
+ intelligent ĉsthete bent on working into clearness his own views
+ of Carpaccio's genius: all these in turn, or all together, must
+ be suffered gladly through well-nigh two long hours. Uncomforted
+ in soul we rise from the expensive banquet; and how often rise
+ from it unfed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far other be the doom of my own friends&mdash;of pious bards and
+ genial companions, lovers of natural and lovely things! Nor for
+ these do I desire a seat at Florian's marble tables, or a perch
+ in Quadri's window, though the former supply dainty food, and the
+ latter command a bird's-eye view of the Piazza. Rather would I
+ lead them to a certain humble tavern on the Zattere. It is a
+ quaint, low-built, unpretending little place, near a bridge, with
+ a garden hard by which sends a cataract of honeysuckles sunward
+ over a too-jealous wall. In front lies a Mediterranean steamer,
+ which all day long has been discharging cargo. Gazing westward up
+ Giudecca, masts and funnels bar the sunset and the Paduan hills;
+ and from a little front room of the <i>trattoria</i> the view is
+ so marine that one keeps fancying oneself in some ship's cabin.
+ Sea-captains sit and smoke beside their glass of grog in the
+ pavilion and the <i>caffé</i>. But we do not seek their company
+ at dinner-time. Our way lies under yonder arch, and up the narrow
+ alley into a paved court. Here are oleanders in pots, and plants
+ of Japanese spindle-wood in tubs; and from the walls beneath the
+ window hang cages of all sorts of birds&mdash;a talking parrot, a
+ whistling blackbird, goldfinches, canaries, linnets. Athos, the
+ fat dog, who goes to market daily in a <i>barchetta</i> with his
+ master, snuffs around. 'Where are Porthos and Aramis, my friend?'
+ Athos does not take the joke; he only wags his stump of tail and
+ pokes his nose into my hand. What a Tartufe's nose it is! Its
+ bridge displays the full parade of leather-bound brass-nailed
+ muzzle. But beneath, this muzzle is a patent sham. The frame does
+ not even pretend to close on Athos' jaw, and the wise dog wears
+ it like a decoration. A little farther we meet that ancient grey
+ cat, who has no discoverable name, but is famous for the
+ sprightliness and grace with which she bears her eighteen years.
+ Not far from the cat one is sure to find Carlo&mdash;the
+ bird-like, bright-faced, close-cropped Venetian urchin, whose
+ duty it is to trot backwards and forwards between the cellar and
+ the dining-tables. At the end of the court we walk into the
+ kitchen, where the black-capped little <i>padrone</i> and the
+ gigantic white-capped chef are in close consultation. Here we
+ have the privilege of inspecting the larder&mdash;fish of various
+ sorts, meat, vegetables, several kinds of birds, pigeons, tordi,
+ beccafichi, geese, wild ducks, chickens, woodcock, &amp;c.,
+ according to the season. We select our dinner, and retire to eat
+ it either in the court among the birds beneath the vines, or in
+ the low dark room which occupies one side of it. Artists of many
+ nationalities and divers ages frequent this house; and the talk
+ arising from the several little tables, turns upon points of
+ interest and beauty in the life and landscape of Venice. There
+ can be no difference of opinion about the excellence of the
+ <i>cuisine</i>, or about the reasonable charges of this
+ <i>trattoria</i>. A soup of lentils, followed by boiled turbot or
+ fried soles, beefsteak or mutton cutlets, tordi or beccafichi,
+ with a salad, the whole enlivened with good red wine or Florio's
+ Sicilian Marsala from the cask, costs about four francs. Gas is
+ unknown in the establishment. There is no noise, no bustle, no
+ brutality of waiters, no <i>ahurissement</i> of tourists. And
+ when dinner is done, we can sit awhile over our cigarette and
+ coffee, talking until the night invites us to a stroll along the
+ Zattere or a <i>giro</i> in the gondola.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX.&mdash;NIGHT IN VENICE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Night in Venice! Night is nowhere else so wonderful, unless it be
+ in winter among the high Alps. But the nights of Venice and the
+ nights of the mountains are too different in kind to be compared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is the ever-recurring miracle of the full moon rising,
+ before day is dead, behind San Giorgio, spreading a path of gold
+ on the lagoon which black boats traverse with the glow-worm lamp
+ upon their prow; ascending the cloudless sky and silvering the
+ domes of the Salute; pouring vitreous sheen upon the red lights
+ of the Piazzetta; flooding the Grand Canal, and lifting the
+ Rialto higher in ethereal whiteness; piercing but penetrating not
+ the murky labyrinth of <i>rio</i> linked with <i>rio</i>, through
+ which we wind in light and shadow, to reach once more the level
+ glories and the luminous expanse of heaven beyond the
+ Misericordia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the melodrama of Venetian moonlight; and if a single
+ impression of the night has to be retained from one visit to
+ Venice, those are fortunate who chance upon a full moon of fair
+ weather. Yet I know not whether some quieter and soberer effects
+ are not more thrilling. To-night, for example, the waning moon
+ will rise late through veils of <i>scirocco</i>. Over the bridges
+ of San Cristoforo and San Gregorio, through the deserted Calle di
+ Mezzo, my friend and I walk in darkness, pass the marble
+ basements of the Salute, and push our way along its Riva to the
+ point of the Dogana. We are out at sea alone, between the
+ Canalozzo and the Giudecca. A moist wind ruffles the water and
+ cools our forehead. It is so dark that we can only see San
+ Giorgio by the light reflected on it from the Piazzetta. The same
+ light climbs the Campanile of S. Mark, and shows the golden angel
+ in a mystery of gloom. The only noise that reaches us is a
+ confused hum from the Piazza. Sitting and musing there, the
+ blackness of the water whispers in our ears a tale of death. And
+ now we hear a plash of oars, and gliding through the darkness
+ comes a single boat. One man leaps upon the landing-place without
+ a word and disappears. There is another wrapped in a military
+ cloak asleep. I see his face beneath me, pale and quiet. The
+ <i>barcaruolo</i> turns the point in silence. From the darkness
+ they came; into the darkness they have gone. It is only an
+ ordinary incident of coastguard service. But the spirit of the
+ night has made a poem of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even tempestuous and rainy weather, though melancholy enough, is
+ never sordid here. There is no noise from carriage traffic in
+ Venice, and the sea-wind preserves the purity and transparency of
+ the atmosphere. It had been raining all day, but at evening came
+ a partial clearing. I went down to the Molo, where the large
+ reach of the lagoon was all moon-silvered, and San Giorgio
+ Maggiore dark against the bluish sky, and Santa Maria della
+ Salute domed with moon-irradiated pearl, and the wet slabs of the
+ Riva shimmering in moonlight, the whole misty sky, with its
+ clouds and stellar spaces, drenched in moonlight, nothing but
+ moonlight sensible except the tawny flare of gas-lamps and the
+ orange lights of gondolas afloat upon the waters. On such a night
+ the very spirit of Venice is abroad. We feel why she is called
+ Bride of the Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take yet another night. There had been a representation of
+ Verdi's 'Forza del Destino' at the Teatro Malibran. After
+ midnight we walked homeward through the Merceria, crossed the
+ Piazza, and dived into the narrow <i>calle</i> which leads to the
+ <i>traghetto</i> of the Salute. It was a warm moist starless
+ night, and there seemed no air to breathe in those narrow alleys.
+ The gondolier was half asleep. Eustace called him as we jumped
+ into his boat, and rang our <i>soldi</i> on the gunwale. Then he
+ arose and turned the <i>ferro</i> round, and stood across towards
+ the Salute. Silently, insensibly, from the oppression of
+ confinement in the airless streets to the liberty and immensity
+ of the water and the night we passed. It was but two minutes ere
+ we touched the shore and said good-night, and went our way and
+ left the ferryman. But in that brief passage he had opened our
+ souls to everlasting things&mdash;the freshness, and the
+ darkness, and the kindness of the brooding, all-enfolding night
+ above the sea.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="THE_GONDOLIERS_WEDDING" id=
+ "THE_GONDOLIERS_WEDDING"></a><i>THE GONDOLIER'S WEDDING</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ The night before the wedding we had a supper-party in my rooms.
+ We were twelve in all. My friend Eustace brought his gondolier
+ Antonio with fair-haired, dark-eyed wife, and little Attilio,
+ their eldest child. My own gondolier, Francesco, came with his
+ wife and two children. Then there was the handsome, languid
+ Luigi, who, in his best clothes, or out of them, is fit for any
+ drawing-room. Two gondoliers, in dark blue shirts, completed the
+ list of guests, if we exclude the maid Catina, who came and went
+ about the table, laughing and joining in the songs, and sitting
+ down at intervals to take her share of wine. The big room looking
+ across the garden to the Grand Canal had been prepared for
+ supper; and the company were to be received in the smaller, which
+ has a fine open space in front of it to southwards. But as the
+ guests arrived, they seemed to find the kitchen and the cooking
+ that was going on quite irresistible. Catina, it seems, had lost
+ her head with so many cuttlefishes, <i>orai</i>, cakes, and
+ fowls, and cutlets to reduce to order. There was, therefore, a
+ great bustle below stairs; and I could hear plainly that all my
+ guests were lending their making, or their marring, hands to the
+ preparation of the supper. That the company should cook their own
+ food on the way to the dining-room, seemed a quite novel
+ arrangement, but one that promised well for their contentment
+ with the banquet. Nobody could be dissatisfied with what was
+ everybody's affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When seven o'clock struck, Eustace and I, who had been
+ entertaining the children in their mothers' absence, heard the
+ sound of steps upon the stairs. The guests arrived, bringing
+ their own <i>risotto</i> with them. Welcome was short, if hearty.
+ We sat down in carefully appointed order, and fell into such
+ conversation as the quarter of San Vio and our several interests
+ supplied. From time to time one of the matrons left the table and
+ descended to the kitchen, when a finishing stroke was needed for
+ roast pullet or stewed veal. The excuses they made their host for
+ supposed failure in the dishes, lent a certain grace and comic
+ charm to the commonplace of festivity. The entertainment was
+ theirs as much as mine; and they all seemed to enjoy what took
+ the form by degrees of curiously complicated hospitality. I do
+ not think a well-ordered supper at any <i>trattoria</i>, such as
+ at first suggested itself to my imagination, would have given any
+ of us an equal pleasure or an equal sense of freedom. The three
+ children had become the guests of the whole party. Little
+ Attilio, propped upon an air-cushion, which puzzled him
+ exceedingly, ate through his supper and drank his wine with solid
+ satisfaction, opening the large brown eyes beneath those tufts of
+ clustering fair hair which promise much beauty for him in his
+ manhood. Francesco's boy, who is older and begins to know the
+ world, sat with a semi-suppressed grin upon his face, as though
+ the humour of the situation was not wholly hidden from him.
+ Little Teresa, too, was happy, except when her mother, a severe
+ Pomona, with enormous earrings and splendid <i>fazzoletto</i> of
+ crimson and orange dyes, pounced down upon her for some supposed
+ infraction of good manners&mdash;<i>creanza</i>, as they vividly
+ express it here. Only Luigi looked a trifle bored. But Luigi has
+ been a soldier, and has now attained the supercilious superiority
+ of young-manhood, which smokes its cigar of an evening in the
+ piazza and knows the merits of the different cafés. The great
+ business of the evening began when the eating was over, and the
+ decanters filled with new wine of Mirano circulated freely. The
+ four best singers of the party drew together; and the rest
+ prepared themselves to make suggestions, hum tunes, and join with
+ fitful effect in choruses. Antonio, who is a powerful young
+ fellow, with bronzed cheeks and a perfect tempest of coal-black
+ hair in flakes upon his forehead, has a most extraordinary
+ soprano&mdash;sound as a bell, strong as a trumpet, well trained,
+ and true to the least shade in intonation. Piero, whose rugged
+ Neptunian features, sea-wrinkled, tell of a rough water-life,
+ boasts a bass of resonant, almost pathetic quality. Francesco has
+ a <i>mezzo voce</i>, which might, by a stretch of politeness, be
+ called baritone. Piero's comrade, whose name concerns us not, has
+ another of these nondescript voices. They sat together with their
+ glasses and cigars before them, sketching part-songs in outline,
+ striking the keynote&mdash;now higher and now lower&mdash;till
+ they saw their subject well in view. Then they burst into full
+ singing, Antonio leading with a metal note that thrilled one's
+ ears, but still was musical. Complicated contrapuntal pieces,
+ such as we should call madrigals, with ever-recurring refrains of
+ 'Venezia, gemma Triatica, sposa del mar,' descending probably
+ from ancient days, followed each other in quick succession.
+ Barcaroles, serenades, love-songs, and invitations to the water
+ were interwoven for relief. One of these romantic pieces had a
+ beautiful burden, 'Dormi, o bella, o fingi di dormir,' of which
+ the melody was fully worthy. But the most successful of all the
+ tunes were two with a sad motive. The one repeated incessantly
+ 'Ohimé! mia madre morì;' the other was a girl's love lament:
+ 'Perchè tradirmi, perchè lasciarmi! prima d'amarmi non eri così!'
+ Even the children joined in these; and Catina, who took the solo
+ part in the second, was inspired to a great dramatic effort. All
+ these were purely popular songs. The people of Venice, however,
+ are passionate for operas. Therefore we had duets and solos from
+ 'Ernani,' the 'Ballo in Maschera,' and the 'Forza del Destino,'
+ and one comic chorus from 'Boccaccio,' which seemed to make them
+ wild with pleasure. To my mind, the best of these more formal
+ pieces was a duet between Attila and Italia from some opera
+ unknown to me, which Antonio and Piero performed with
+ incomparable spirit. It was noticeable how, descending to the
+ people, sung by them for love at sea, or on excursions to the
+ villages round Mestre, these operatic reminiscences had lost
+ something of their theatrical formality, and assumed instead the
+ serious gravity, the quaint movement, and marked emphasis which
+ belong to popular music in Northern and Central Italy. An antique
+ character was communicated even to the recitative of Verdi by
+ slight, almost indefinable, changes of rhythm and accent. There
+ was no end to the singing. 'Siamo appassionati per il canto,'
+ frequently repeated, was proved true by the profusion and variety
+ of songs produced from inexhaustible memories, lightly tried
+ over, brilliantly performed, rapidly succeeding each other. Nor
+ were gestures wanting&mdash;lifted arms, hands stretched to
+ hands, flashing eyes, hair tossed from the
+ forehead&mdash;unconscious and appropriate action&mdash;which
+ showed how the spirit of the music and words alike possessed the
+ men. One by one the children fell asleep. Little Attilio and
+ Teresa were tucked up beneath my Scotch shawl at two ends of a
+ great sofa; and not even his father's clarion voice, in the
+ character of Italia defying Attila to harm 'le mie superbe
+ città,' could wake the little boy up. The night wore on. It was
+ past one. Eustace and I had promised to be in the church of the
+ Gesuati at six next morning. We therefore gave the guests a
+ gentle hint, which they as gently took. With exquisite, because
+ perfectly unaffected, breeding they sank for a few moments into
+ common conversation, then wrapped the children up, and took their
+ leave. It was an uncomfortable, warm, wet night of sullen
+ <i>scirocco</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, which was Sunday, Francesco called me at five.
+ There was no visible sunrise that cheerless damp October morning.
+ Grey dawn stole somehow imperceptibly between the veil of clouds
+ and leaden waters, as my friend and I, well sheltered by our
+ <i>felze</i>, passed into the Giudecca, and took our station
+ before the church of the Gesuati. A few women from the
+ neighbouring streets and courts crossed the bridges in draggled
+ petticoats on their way to first mass. A few men, shouldering
+ their jackets, lounged along the Zattere, opened the great green
+ doors, and entered. Then suddenly Antonio cried out that the
+ bridal party was on its way, not as we had expected, in boats,
+ but on foot. We left our gondola, and fell into the ranks, after
+ shaking hands with Francesco, who is the elder brother of the
+ bride. There was nothing very noticeable in her appearance,
+ except her large dark eyes. Otherwise both face and figure were
+ of a common type; and her bridal dress of sprigged grey silk,
+ large veil and orange blossoms, reduced her to the level of a
+ <i>bourgeoise</i>. It was much the same with the bridegroom. His
+ features, indeed, proved him a true Venetian gondolier; for the
+ skin was strained over the cheekbones, and the muscles of the
+ throat beneath the jaws stood out like cords, and the bright blue
+ eyes were deep-set beneath a spare brown forehead. But he had
+ provided a complete suit of black for the occasion, and wore a
+ shirt of worked cambric, which disguised what is really splendid
+ in the physique of these oarsmen, at once slender and sinewy.
+ Both bride and bridegroom looked uncomfortable in their clothes.
+ The light that fell upon them in the church was dull and leaden.
+ The ceremony, which was very hurriedly performed by an unctuous
+ priest, did not appear to impress either of them. Nobody in the
+ bridal party, crowding together on both sides of the altar,
+ looked as though the service was of the slightest interest and
+ moment. Indeed, this was hardly to be wondered at; for the
+ priest, so far as I could understand his gabble, took the larger
+ portion for read, after muttering the first words of the rubric.
+ A little carven image of an acolyte&mdash;a weird boy who seemed
+ to move by springs, whose hair had all the semblance of painted
+ wood, and whose complexion was white and red like a
+ clown's&mdash;did not make matters more intelligible by
+ spasmodically clattering responses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the ceremony we heard mass and contributed to three
+ distinct offertories. Considering how much account even two
+ <i>soldi</i> are to these poor people, I was really angry when I
+ heard the copper shower. Every member of the party had his or her
+ pennies ready, and dropped them into the boxes. Whether it was
+ the effect of the bad morning, or the ugliness of a very
+ ill-designed <i>barocco</i> building, or the fault of the fat
+ oily priest, I know not. But the <i>sposalizio</i> struck me as
+ tame and cheerless, the mass as irreverent and vulgarly
+ conducted. At the same time there is something too impressive in
+ the mass for any perfunctory performance to divest its symbolism
+ of sublimity. A Protestant Communion Service lends itself more
+ easily to degradation by unworthiness in the minister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We walked down the church in double file, led by the bride and
+ bridegroom, who had knelt during the ceremony with the best
+ man&mdash;<i>compare</i>, as he is called&mdash;at a narrow
+ <i>prie-dieu</i> before the altar. The <i>compare</i> is a person
+ of distinction at these weddings. He has to present the bride
+ with a great pyramid of artificial flowers, which is placed
+ before her at the marriage-feast, a packet of candles, and a box
+ of bonbons. The comfits, when the box is opened, are found to
+ include two magnificent sugar babies lying in their cradles. I
+ was told that a <i>compare</i>, who does the thing handsomely,
+ must be prepared to spend about a hundred francs upon these
+ presents, in addition to the wine and cigars with which he treats
+ his friends. On this occasion the women were agreed that he had
+ done his duty well. He was a fat, wealthy little man, who lived
+ by letting market-boats for hire on the Rialto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the church to the bride's house was a walk of some three
+ minutes. On the way we were introduced to the father of the
+ bride&mdash;a very magnificent personage, with points of strong
+ resemblance to Vittorio Emmanuele. He wore an enormous
+ broad-brimmed hat and emerald-green earrings, and looked
+ considerably younger than his eldest son, Francesco. Throughout
+ the <i>nozze</i> he took the lead in a grand imperious fashion of
+ his own. Wherever he went, he seemed to fill the place, and was
+ fully aware of his own importance. In Florence I think he would
+ have got the nickname of <i>Tacchin</i>, or turkey-cock. Here at
+ Venice the sons and daughters call their parent briefly
+ <i>Vecchio</i>. I heard him so addressed with a certain amount of
+ awe, expecting an explosion of bubbly-jock displeasure. But he
+ took it, as though it was natural, without disturbance. The other
+ <i>Vecchio</i>, father of the bridegroom, struck me as more
+ sympathetic. He was a gentle old man, proud of his many
+ prosperous, laborious sons. They, like the rest of the gentlemen,
+ were gondoliers. Both the <i>Vecchi</i>, indeed, continue to ply
+ their trade, day and night, at the <i>traghetto</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Traghetti</i> are stations for gondolas at different points of
+ the canals. As their name implies, it is the first duty of the
+ gondoliers upon them to ferry people across. This they do for the
+ fixed fee of five centimes. The <i>traghetti</i> are in fact
+ Venetian cab-stands. And, of course, like London cabs, the
+ gondolas may be taken off them for trips. The municipality,
+ however, makes it a condition, under penalty of fine to the
+ <i>traghetto</i>, that each station should always be provided
+ with two boats for the service of the ferry. When vacancies occur
+ on the <i>traghetti</i>, a gondolier who owns or hires a boat
+ makes application to the municipality, receives a number, and is
+ inscribed as plying at a certain station. He has now entered a
+ sort of guild, which is presided over by a <i>Capo-traghetto</i>,
+ elected by the rest for the protection of their interests, the
+ settlement of disputes, and the management of their common funds.
+ In the old acts of Venice this functionary is styled <i>Gastaldo
+ di traghetto</i>. The members have to contribute something yearly
+ to the guild. This payment varies upon different stations,
+ according to the greater or less amount of the tax levied by the
+ municipality on the <i>traghetto</i>. The highest subscription I
+ have heard of is twenty-five francs; the lowest, seven. There is
+ one <i>traghetto</i>, known by the name of Madonna del Giglio or
+ Zobenigo, which possesses near its <i>pergola</i> of vines a nice
+ old brown Venetian picture. Some stranger offered a considerable
+ sum for this. But the guild refused to part with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As may be imagined, the <i>traghetti</i> vary greatly in the
+ amount and quality of their custom. By far the best are those in
+ the neighbourhood of the hotels upon the Grand Canal. At any one
+ of these a gondolier during the season is sure of picking up some
+ foreigner or other who will pay him handsomely for comparatively
+ light service. A <i>traghetto</i> on the Giudecca, on the
+ contrary, depends upon Venetian traffic. The work is more
+ monotonous, and the pay is reduced to its tariffed minimum. So
+ far as I can gather, an industrious gondolier, with a good boat,
+ belonging to a good <i>traghetto</i>, may make as much as ten or
+ fifteen francs in a single day. But this cannot be relied on.
+ They therefore prefer a fixed appointment with a private family,
+ for which they receive by tariff five francs a day, or by
+ arrangement for long periods perhaps four francs a day, with
+ certain perquisites and small advantages. It is great luck to get
+ such an engagement for the winter. The heaviest anxieties which
+ beset a gondolier are then disposed of. Having entered private
+ service, they are not allowed to ply their trade on the
+ <i>traghetto</i>, except by stipulation with their masters. Then
+ they may take their place one night out of every six in the rank
+ and file. The gondoliers have two proverbs, which show how
+ desirable it is, while taking a fixed engagement, to keep their
+ hold on the <i>traghetto</i>. One is to this effect: <i>il
+ traghetto è un buon padrone</i>. The other satirises the meanness
+ of the poverty-stricken Venetian nobility: <i>pompa di servitù,
+ misera insegna</i>. When they combine the <i>traghetto</i> with
+ private service, the municipality insists on their retaining the
+ number painted on their gondola; and against this their employers
+ frequently object. It is therefore a great point for a gondolier
+ to make such an arrangement with his master as will leave him
+ free to show his number. The reason for this regulation is
+ obvious. Gondoliers are known more by their numbers and their
+ <i>traghetti</i> than their names. They tell me that though there
+ are upwards of a thousand registered in Venice, each man of the
+ trade knows the whole confraternity by face and number. Taking
+ all things into consideration, I think four francs a day the
+ whole year round are very good earnings for a gondolier. On this
+ he will marry and rear a family, and put a little money by. A
+ young unmarried man, working at two and a half or three francs a
+ day, is proportionately well-to-do. If he is economical, he ought
+ upon these wages to save enough in two or three years to buy
+ himself a gondola. A boy from fifteen to nineteen is called a
+ <i>mezz' uomo</i>, and gets about one franc a day. A new gondola
+ with all its fittings is worth about a thousand francs. It does
+ not last in good condition more than six or seven years. At the
+ end of that time the hull will fetch eighty francs. A new hull
+ can be had for three hundred francs. The old fittings&mdash;brass
+ sea-horses or <i>cavalli</i>, steel prow or <i>ferro</i>, covered
+ cabin or <i>felze</i>, cushions and leather-covered back-board or
+ <i>stramazetto</i>, maybe transferred to it. When a man wants to
+ start a gondola, he will begin by buying one already half past
+ service&mdash;a <i>gondola da traghetto</i> or <i>di mezza
+ età</i>. This should cost him something over two hundred francs.
+ Little by little, he accumulates the needful fittings; and when
+ his first purchase is worn out, he hopes to set up with a
+ well-appointed equipage. He thus gradually works his way from the
+ rough trade which involves hard work and poor earnings to that
+ more profitable industry which cannot be carried on without a
+ smart boat. The gondola is a source of continual expense for
+ repairs. Its oars have to be replaced. It has to be washed with
+ sponges, blacked, and varnished. Its bottom needs frequent
+ cleaning. Weeds adhere to it in the warm brackish water, growing
+ rapidly through the summer months, and demanding to be scrubbed
+ off once in every four weeks. The gondolier has no place where he
+ can do this for himself. He therefore takes his boat to a wharf,
+ or <i>squero</i>, as the place is called. At these <i>squeri</i>
+ gondolas are built as well as cleaned. The fee for a thorough
+ setting to rights of the boat is five francs. It must be done
+ upon a fine day. Thus in addition to the cost, the owner loses a
+ good day's work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These details will serve to give some notion of the sort of
+ people with whom Eustace and I spent our day. The bride's house
+ is in an excellent position on an open canal leading from the
+ Canalozzo to the Giudecca. She had arrived before us, and
+ received her friends in the middle of the room. Each of us in
+ turn kissed her cheek and murmured our congratulations. We found
+ the large living-room of the house arranged with chairs all round
+ the walls, and the company were marshalled in some order of
+ precedence, my friend and I taking place near the bride. On
+ either hand airy bedrooms opened out, and two large doors, wide
+ open, gave a view from where we sat of a good-sized kitchen. This
+ arrangement of the house was not only comfortable, but pretty;
+ for the bright copper pans and pipkins ranged on shelves along
+ the kitchen walls had a very cheerful effect. The walls were
+ whitewashed, but literally covered with all sorts of pictures. A
+ great plaster cast from some antique, an Atys, Adonis, or Paris,
+ looked down from a bracket placed between the windows. There was
+ enough furniture, solid and well kept, in all the rooms. Among
+ the pictures were full-length portraits in oils of two celebrated
+ gondoliers&mdash;one in antique costume, the other painted a few
+ years since. The original of the latter soon came and stood
+ before it. He had won regatta prizes; and the flags of four
+ discordant colours were painted round him by the artist, who had
+ evidently cared more to commemorate the triumphs of his sitter
+ and to strike a likeness than to secure the tone of his own
+ picture. This champion turned out a fine
+ fellow&mdash;Corradini&mdash;with one of the brightest little
+ gondoliers of thirteen for his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the company were seated, lemonade and cakes were handed
+ round amid a hubbub of chattering women. Then followed cups of
+ black coffee and more cakes. Then a glass of Cyprus and more
+ cakes. Then a glass of curaçoa and more cakes. Finally, a glass
+ of noyau and still more cakes. It was only a little after seven
+ in the morning. Yet politeness compelled us to consume these
+ delicacies. I tried to shirk my duty; but this discretion was
+ taken by my hosts for well-bred modesty; and instead of being let
+ off, I had the richest piece of pastry and the largest maccaroon
+ available pressed so kindly on me, that, had they been poisoned,
+ I would not have refused to eat them. The conversation grew more,
+ and more animated, the women gathering together in their dresses
+ of bright blue and scarlet, the men lighting cigars and puffing
+ out a few quiet words. It struck me as a drawback that these
+ picturesque people had put on Sunday-clothes to look as much like
+ shopkeepers as possible. But they did not all of them succeed.
+ Two handsome women, who handed the cups round&mdash;one a
+ brunette, the other a blonde&mdash;wore skirts of brilliant blue,
+ with a sort of white jacket, and white kerchief folded heavily
+ about their shoulders. The brunette had a great string of coral,
+ the blonde of amber, round her throat. Gold earrings and the long
+ gold chains Venetian women wear, of all patterns and degrees of
+ value, abounded. Nobody appeared without them; but I could not
+ see any of an antique make. The men seemed to be contented with
+ rings&mdash;huge, heavy rings of solid gold, worked with a rough
+ flower pattern. One young fellow had three upon his fingers. This
+ circumstance led me to speculate whether a certain portion at
+ least of this display of jewellery around me had not been
+ borrowed for the occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eustace and I were treated quite like friends. They called us
+ <i>I Signori</i>. But this was only, I think, because our English
+ names are quite unmanageable. The women fluttered about us and
+ kept asking whether we really liked it all? whether we should
+ come to the <i>pranzo</i>? whether it was true we danced? It
+ seemed to give them unaffected pleasure to be kind to us; and
+ when we rose to go away, the whole company crowded round, shaking
+ hands and saying: 'Si divertirà bene stasera!' Nobody resented
+ our presence; what was better, no one put himself out for us.
+ 'Vogliono veder il nostro costume,' I heard one woman say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We got home soon after eight, and, as our ancestors would have
+ said, settled our stomachs with a dish of tea. It makes me
+ shudder now to think of the mixed liquids and miscellaneous cakes
+ we had consumed at that unwonted hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At half-past three, Eustace and I again prepared ourselves for
+ action. His gondola was in attendance, covered with the
+ <i>felze</i>, to take us to the house of the <i>sposa</i>. We
+ found the canal crowded with poor people of the
+ quarter&mdash;men, women, and children lining the walls along its
+ side, and clustering like bees upon the bridges. The water itself
+ was almost choked with gondolas. Evidently the folk of San Vio
+ thought our wedding procession would be a most exciting pageant.
+ We entered the house, and were again greeted by the bride and
+ bridegroom, who consigned each of us to the control of a fair
+ tyrant. This is the most fitting way of describing our
+ introduction to our partners of the evening; for we were no
+ sooner presented, than the ladies swooped upon us like their
+ prey, placing their shawls upon our left arms, while they seized
+ and clung to what was left available of us for locomotion. There
+ was considerable giggling and tittering throughout the company
+ when Signora Fenzo, the young and comely wife of a gondolier,
+ thus took possession of Eustace, and Signora dell' Acqua, the
+ widow of another gondolier, appropriated me. The affair had been
+ arranged beforehand, and their friends had probably chaffed them
+ with the difficulty of managing two mad Englishmen. However, they
+ proved equal to the occasion, and the difficulties were entirely
+ on our side. Signora Fenzo was a handsome brunette, quiet in her
+ manners, who meant business. I envied Eustace his subjection to
+ such a reasonable being. Signora dell' Acqua, though a widow, was
+ by no means disconsolate; and I soon perceived that it would
+ require all the address and diplomacy I possessed, to make
+ anything out of her society. She laughed incessantly; darted in
+ the most diverse directions, dragging me along with her;
+ exhibited me in triumph to her cronies; made eyes at me over a
+ fan, repeated my clumsiest remarks, as though they gave her
+ indescribable amusement; and all the while jabbered Venetian at
+ express rate, without the slightest regard for my incapacity to
+ follow her vagaries. The <i>Vecchio</i> marshalled us in order.
+ First went the <i>sposa</i> and <i>comare</i> with the mothers of
+ bride and bridegroom. Then followed the <i>sposo</i> and the
+ bridesmaid. After them I was made to lead my fair tormentor. As
+ we descended the staircase there arose a hubbub of excitement
+ from the crowd on the canals. The gondolas moved turbidly upon
+ the face of the waters. The bridegroom kept muttering to himself,
+ 'How we shall be criticised! They will tell each other who was
+ decently dressed, and who stepped awkwardly into the boats, and
+ what the price of my boots was!' Such exclamations, murmured at
+ intervals, and followed by chest-drawn sighs, expressed a deep
+ preoccupation. With regard to his boots, he need have had no
+ anxiety. They were of the shiniest patent leather, much too
+ tight, and without a speck of dust upon them. But his nervousness
+ infected me with a cruel dread. All those eyes were going to
+ watch how we comported ourselves in jumping from the
+ landing-steps into the boat! If this operation, upon a
+ ceremonious occasion, has terrors even for a gondolier, how
+ formidable it ought to be to me! And here is the Signora dell'
+ Acqua's white cachemire shawl dangling on one arm, and the
+ Signora herself languishingly clinging to the other; and the
+ gondolas are fretting in a fury of excitement, like corks, upon
+ the churned green water! The moment was terrible. The
+ <i>sposa</i> and her three companions had been safely stowed away
+ beneath their <i>felze</i>. The <i>sposo</i> had successfully
+ handed the bridesmaid into the second gondola. I had to perform
+ the same office for my partner. Off she went, like a bird, from
+ the bank. I seized a happy moment, followed, bowed, and found
+ myself to my contentment gracefully ensconced in a corner
+ opposite the widow. Seven more gondolas were packed. The
+ procession moved. We glided down the little channel, broke away
+ into the Grand Canal, crossed it, and dived into a labyrinth from
+ which we finally emerged before our destination, the Trattoria di
+ San Gallo. The perils of the landing were soon over; and, with
+ the rest of the guests, my mercurial companion and I slowly
+ ascended a long flight of stairs leading to a vast upper chamber.
+ Here we were to dine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been the gallery of some palazzo in old days, was above
+ one hundred feet in length, fairly broad, with a roof of wooden
+ rafters and large windows opening on a courtyard garden. I could
+ see the tops of three cypress-trees cutting the grey sky upon a
+ level with us. A long table occupied the centre of this room. It
+ had been laid for upwards of forty persons, and we filled it.
+ There was plenty of light from great glass lustres blazing with
+ gas. When the ladies had arranged their dresses, and the
+ gentlemen had exchanged a few polite remarks, we all sat down to
+ dinner&mdash;I next my inexorable widow, Eustace beside his calm
+ and comely partner. The first impression was one of
+ disappointment. It looked so like a public dinner of middle-class
+ people. There was no local character in costume or customs. Men
+ and women sat politely bored, expectant, trifling with their
+ napkins, yawning, muttering nothings about the weather or their
+ neighbours. The frozen commonplaceness of the scene was made for
+ me still more oppressive by Signora dell' Acqua. She was
+ evidently satirical, and could not be happy unless continually
+ laughing at or with somebody. 'What a stick the woman will think
+ me!' I kept saying to myself. 'How shall I ever invent jokes in
+ this strange land? I cannot even flirt with her in Venetian! And
+ here I have condemned myself&mdash;and her too, poor
+ thing&mdash;to sit through at least three hours of mortal
+ dulness!' Yet the widow was by no means unattractive. Dressed in
+ black, she had contrived by an artful arrangement of lace and
+ jewellery to give an air of lightness to her costume. She had a
+ pretty little pale face, a <i>minois chiffonné</i>, with slightly
+ turned-up nose, large laughing brown eyes, a dazzling set of
+ teeth, and a tempestuously frizzled mop of powdered hair. When I
+ managed to get a side-look at her quietly, without being giggled
+ at or driven half mad by unintelligible incitements to a
+ jocularity I could not feel, it struck me that, if we once found
+ a common term of communication we should become good friends. But
+ for the moment that <i>modus vivendi</i> seemed unattainable. She
+ had not recovered from the first excitement of her capture of me.
+ She was still showing me off and trying to stir me up. The
+ arrival of the soup gave me a momentary relief; and soon the
+ serious business of the afternoon began. I may add that before
+ dinner was over, the Signora dell' Acqua and I were fast friends.
+ I had discovered the way of making jokes, and she had become
+ intelligible. I found her a very nice, though flighty, little
+ woman; and I believe she thought me gifted with the faculty of
+ uttering eccentric epigrams in a grotesque tongue. Some of my
+ remarks were flung about the table, and had the same success as
+ uncouth Lombard carvings have with connoisseurs in
+ <i>naïvetés</i> of art. By that time we had come to be
+ <i>compare</i> and <i>comare</i> to each other&mdash;the sequel
+ of some clumsy piece of jocularity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a heavy entertainment, copious in quantity, excellent in
+ quality, plainly but well cooked. I remarked there was no fish.
+ The widow replied that everybody present ate fish to satiety at
+ home. They did not join a marriage feast at the San Gallo, and
+ pay their nine francs, for that! It should be observed that each
+ guest paid for his own entertainment. This appears to be the
+ custom. Therefore attendance is complimentary, and the married
+ couple are not at ruinous charges for the banquet. A curious
+ feature in the whole proceeding had its origin in this custom. I
+ noticed that before each cover lay an empty plate, and that my
+ partner began with the first course to heap upon it what she had
+ not eaten. She also took large helpings, and kept advising me to
+ do the same. I said: 'No; I only take what I want to eat; if I
+ fill that plate in front of me as you are doing, it will be great
+ waste.' This remark elicited shrieks of laughter from all who
+ heard it; and when the hubbub had subsided, I perceived an
+ apparently official personage bearing down upon Eustace, who was
+ in the same perplexity. It was then circumstantially explained to
+ us that the empty plates were put there in order that we might
+ lay aside what we could not conveniently eat, and take it home
+ with us. At the end of the dinner the widow (whom I must now call
+ my <i>comare</i>) had accumulated two whole chickens, half a
+ turkey, and a large assortment of mixed eatables. I performed my
+ duty and won her regard by placing delicacies at her disposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crudely stated, this proceeding moves disgust. But that is only
+ because one has not thought the matter out. In the performance
+ there was nothing coarse or nasty. These good folk had made a
+ contract at so much a head&mdash;so many fowls, so many pounds of
+ beef, &amp;c, to be supplied; and what they had fairly bought,
+ they clearly had a right to. No one, so far as I could notice,
+ tried to take more than his proper share; except, indeed, Eustace
+ and myself. In our first eagerness to conform to custom, we both
+ overshot the mark, and grabbed at disproportionate helpings. The
+ waiters politely observed that we were taking what was meant for
+ two; and as the courses followed in interminable sequence, we
+ soon acquired the tact of what was due to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the room grew warm. The gentlemen threw off their
+ coats&mdash;a pleasant liberty of which I availed myself, and was
+ immediately more at ease. The ladies divested themselves of their
+ shoes (strange to relate!) and sat in comfort with their
+ stockinged feet upon the <i>scagliola</i> pavement. I observed
+ that some cavaliers by special permission were allowed to remove
+ their partners' slippers. This was not my lucky fate. My
+ <i>comare</i> had not advanced to that point of intimacy. Healths
+ began to be drunk. The conversation took a lively turn; and women
+ went fluttering round the table, visiting their friends, to sip
+ out of their glass, and ask each other how they were getting on.
+ It was not long before the stiff veneer of <i>bourgeoisie</i>
+ which bored me had worn off. The people emerged in their true
+ selves: natural, gentle, sparkling with enjoyment, playful.
+ Playful is, I think, the best word to describe them. They played
+ with infinite grace and innocence, like kittens, from the old men
+ of sixty to the little boys of thirteen. Very little wine was
+ drunk. Each guest had a litre placed before him. Many did not
+ finish theirs; and for very few was it replenished. When at last
+ the dessert arrived, and the bride's comfits had been handed
+ round, they began to sing. It was very pretty to see a party of
+ three or four friends gathering round some popular beauty, and
+ paying her compliments in verse&mdash;they grouped behind her
+ chair, she sitting back in it and laughing up to them, and
+ joining in the chorus. The words, 'Brunetta mia simpatica, ti amo
+ sempre più,' sung after this fashion to Eustace's handsome
+ partner, who puffed delicate whiffs from a Russian cigarette, and
+ smiled her thanks, had a peculiar appropriateness. All the
+ ladies, it may be observed in passing, had by this time lit their
+ cigarettes. The men were smoking Toscani, Sellas, or Cavours, and
+ the little boys were dancing round the table breathing smoke from
+ their pert nostrils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dinner, in fact, was over. Other relatives of the guests
+ arrived, and then we saw how some of the reserved dishes were to
+ be bestowed. A side-table was spread at the end of the gallery,
+ and these late-comers were regaled with plenty by their friends.
+ Meanwhile, the big table at which we had dined was taken to
+ pieces and removed. The <i>scagliola</i> floor was swept by the
+ waiters. Musicians came streaming in and took their places. The
+ ladies resumed their shoes. Every one prepared to dance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My friend and I were now at liberty to chat with the men. He knew
+ some of them by sight, and claimed acquaintance with others.
+ There was plenty of talk about different boats, gondolas, and
+ sandolos and topos, remarks upon the past season, and inquiries
+ as to chances of engagements in the future. One young fellow told
+ us how he had been drawn for the army, and should be obliged to
+ give up his trade just when he had begun to make it answer. He
+ had got a new gondola, and this would have to be hung up during
+ the years of his service. The warehousing of a boat in these
+ circumstances costs nearly one hundred francs a year, which is a
+ serious tax upon the pockets of a private in the line. Many
+ questions were put in turn to us, but all of the same tenor. 'Had
+ we really enjoyed the <i>pranzo</i>? Now, really, were we amusing
+ ourselves? And did we think the custom of the wedding <i>un bel
+ costume</i>?' We could give an unequivocally hearty response to
+ all these interrogations. The men seemed pleased. Their interest
+ in our enjoyment was unaffected. It is noticeable how often the
+ word <i>divertimento</i> is heard upon the lips of the Italians.
+ They have a notion that it is the function in life of the
+ <i>Signori</i> to amuse themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ball opened, and now we were much besought by the ladies. I
+ had to deny myself with a whole series of comical excuses.
+ Eustace performed his duty after a stiff English
+ fashion&mdash;once with his pretty partner of the <i>pranzo</i>,
+ and once again with a fat gondolier. The band played waltzes and
+ polkas, chiefly upon patriotic airs&mdash;the Marcia Reale,
+ Garibaldi's Hymn, &amp;c. Men danced with men, women with women,
+ little boys and girls together. The gallery whirled with a
+ laughing crowd. There was plenty of excitement and
+ enjoyment&mdash;not an unseemly or extravagant word or gesture.
+ My <i>comare</i> careered about with a light mĉnadic impetuosity,
+ which made me regret my inability to accept her pressing
+ invitations. She pursued me into every corner of the room, but
+ when at last I dropped excuses and told her that my real reason
+ for not dancing was that it would hurt my health, she waived her
+ claims at once with an <i>Ah, poverino!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some time after midnight we felt that we had had enough of
+ <i>divertimento</i>. Francesco helped us to slip out unobserved.
+ With many silent good wishes we left the innocent playful people
+ who had been so kind to us. The stars were shining from a watery
+ sky as we passed into the piazza beneath the Campanile and the
+ pinnacles of S. Mark. The Riva was almost empty, and the little
+ waves fretted the boats moored to the piazzetta, as a warm moist
+ breeze went fluttering by. We smoked a last cigar, crossed our
+ <i>traghetto</i>, and were soon sound asleep at the end of a long
+ pleasant day. The ball, we heard next morning, finished about
+ four.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since that evening I have had plenty of opportunities for seeing
+ my friends the gondoliers, both in their own homes and in my
+ apartment. Several have entertained me at their mid-day meal of
+ fried fish and amber-coloured polenta. These repasts were always
+ cooked with scrupulous cleanliness, and served upon a table
+ covered with coarse linen. The polenta is turned out upon a
+ wooden platter, and cut with a string called <i>lassa</i>. You
+ take a large slice of it on the palm of the left hand, and break
+ it with the fingers of the right. Wholesome red wine of the
+ Paduan district and good white bread were never wanting. The
+ rooms in which we met to eat looked out on narrow lanes or over
+ pergolas of yellowing vines. Their whitewashed walls were hung
+ with photographs of friends and foreigners, many of them
+ souvenirs from English or American employers. The men, in broad
+ black hats and lilac shirts, sat round the table, girt with the
+ red waist-wrapper, or <i>fascia</i>, which marks the ancient
+ faction of the Castellani. The other faction, called Nicolotti,
+ are distinguished by a black <i>assisa</i>. The quarters of the
+ town are divided unequally and irregularly into these two
+ parties. What was once a formidable rivalry between two sections
+ of the Venetian populace, still survives in challenges to trials
+ of strength and skill upon the water. The women, in their
+ many-coloured kerchiefs, stirred polenta at the smoke-blackened
+ chimney, whose huge pent-house roof projects two feet or more
+ across the hearth. When they had served the table they took their
+ seat on low stools, knitted stockings, or drank out of glasses
+ handed across the shoulder to them by their lords. Some of these
+ women were clearly notable housewives, and I have no reason to
+ suppose that they do not take their full share of the housework.
+ Boys and girls came in and out, and got a portion of the dinner
+ to consume where they thought best. Children went tottering about
+ upon the red-brick floor, the playthings of those hulking
+ fellows, who handled them very gently and spoke kindly in a sort
+ of confidential whisper to their ears. These little ears were
+ mostly pierced for earrings, and the light blue eyes of the
+ urchins peeped maliciously beneath shocks of yellow hair. A dog
+ was often of the party. He ate fish like his masters, and was
+ made to beg for it by sitting up and rowing with his paws.
+ <i>Voga, Azzò, voga!</i> The Anzolo who talked thus to his little
+ brown Spitz-dog has the hoarse voice of a Triton and the movement
+ of an animated sea-wave. Azzo performed his trick, swallowed his
+ fish-bones, and the fiery Anzolo looked round approvingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On all these occasions I have found these gondoliers the same
+ sympathetic, industrious, cheery affectionate folk. They live in
+ many respects a hard and precarious life. The winter in
+ particular is a time of anxiety, and sometimes of privation, even
+ to the well-to-do among them. Work then is scarce, and what there
+ is, is rendered disagreeable to them by the cold. Yet they take
+ their chance with facile temper, and are not soured by hardships.
+ The amenities of the Venetian sea and air, the healthiness of the
+ lagoons, the cheerful bustle of the poorer quarters, the
+ brilliancy of this Southern sunlight, and the beauty which is
+ everywhere apparent, must be reckoned as important factors in the
+ formation of their character. And of that character, as I have
+ said, the final note is playfulness. In spite of difficulties,
+ their life has never been stern enough to sadden them. Bare
+ necessities are marvellously cheap, and the pinch of real bad
+ weather&mdash;such frost as locked the lagoons in ice two years
+ ago, or such south-western gales as flooded the basement floors
+ of all the houses on the Zattere&mdash;is rare and does not last
+ long. On the other hand, their life has never been so lazy as to
+ reduce them to the savagery of the traditional Neapolitan
+ lazzaroni. They have had to work daily for small earnings, but
+ under favourable conditions, and their labour has been lightened
+ by much good-fellowship among themselves, by the amusements of
+ their <i>feste</i> and their singing clubs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course it is not easy for a stranger in a very different
+ social position to feel that he has been admitted to their
+ confidence. Italians have an ineradicable habit of making
+ themselves externally agreeable, of bending in all indifferent
+ matters to the whims and wishes of superiors, and of saying what
+ they think <i>Signori</i> like. This habit, while it smoothes the
+ surface of existence, raises up a barrier of compliment and
+ partial insincerity, against which the more downright natures of
+ us Northern folk break in vain efforts. Our advances are met with
+ an imperceptible but impermeable resistance by the very people
+ who are bent on making the world pleasant to us. It is the very
+ reverse of that dour opposition which a Lowland Scot or a North
+ English peasant offers to familiarity; but it is hardly less
+ insurmountable. The treatment, again, which Venetians of the
+ lower class have received through centuries from their own
+ nobility, makes attempts at fraternisation on the part of
+ gentlemen unintelligible to them. The best way, here and
+ elsewhere, of overcoming these obstacles is to have some bond of
+ work or interest in common&mdash;of service on the one side
+ rendered, and goodwill on the other honestly displayed. The men
+ of whom I have been speaking will, I am convinced, not shirk
+ their share of duty or make unreasonable claims upon the
+ generosity of their employers.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="A_CINQUE_CENTO_BRUTUS" id=
+ "A_CINQUE_CENTO_BRUTUS"></a><i>A CINQUE CENTO BRUTUS</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ I.&mdash;THE SESTIERE DI SAN POLO
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a quarter of Venice not much visited by tourists, lying
+ as it does outside their beat, away from the Rialto, at a
+ considerable distance from the Frari and San Rocco, in what might
+ almost pass for a city separated by a hundred miles from the
+ Piazza. This is the quarter of San Polo, one corner of which,
+ somewhere between the back of the Palazzo Foscari and the Campo
+ di San Polo, was the scene of a memorable act of vengeance in the
+ year 1546. Here Lorenzino de' Medici, the murderer of his cousin
+ Alessandro, was at last tracked down and put to death by paid
+ cut-throats. How they succeeded in their purpose, we know in
+ every detail from the narrative dictated by the chief assassin.
+ His story so curiously illustrates the conditions of life in
+ Italy three centuries ago, that I have thought it worthy of
+ abridgment. But, in order to make it intelligible, and to paint
+ the manners of the times more fully, I must first relate the
+ series of events which led to Lorenzino's murder of his cousin
+ Alessandro, and from that to his own subsequent assassination.
+ Lorenzino de' Medici, the Florentine Brutus of the sixteenth
+ century, is the hero of the tragedy. Some of his relatives,
+ however, must first appear upon the scene before he enters with a
+ patriot's knife concealed beneath a court-fool's bauble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II.&mdash;THE MURDER OF IPPOLITO DE' MEDICI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the final extinction of the Florentine Republic, the hopes
+ of the Medici, who now aspired to the dukedom of Tuscany, rested
+ on three bastards&mdash;Alessandro, the reputed child of Lorenzo,
+ Duke of Urbino; Ippolito, the natural son of Giuliano, Duke of
+ Nemours; and Giulio, the offspring of an elder Giuliano, who was
+ at this time Pope, with the title of Clement VII. Clement had
+ seen Rome sacked in 1527 by a horde of freebooters fighting under
+ the Imperial standard, and had used the remnant of these troops,
+ commanded by the Prince of Orange, to crush his native city in
+ the memorable siege of 1529-30. He now determined to rule
+ Florence from the Papal chair by the help of the two bastard
+ cousins I have named. Alessandro was created Duke of Cività di
+ Penna, and sent to take the first place in the city. Ippolito was
+ made a cardinal; since the Medici had learned that Rome was the
+ real basis of their power, and it was undoubtedly in Clement's
+ policy to advance this scion of his house to the Papacy. The sole
+ surviving representative of the great Lorenzo de' Medici's
+ legitimate blood was Catherine, daughter of the Duke of Urbino by
+ Madeleine de la Tour d'Auvergne. She was pledged in marriage to
+ the Duke of Orleans, who was afterwards Henry II. of France. A
+ natural daughter of the Emperor Charles V. was provided for her
+ putative half-brother Alessandro. By means of these alliances the
+ succession of Ippolito to the Papal chair would have been
+ secured, and the strength of the Medici would have been confirmed
+ in Tuscany, but for the disasters which have now to be related.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between the cousins Alessandro and Ippolito there was no love
+ lost. As boys, they had both played the part of princes in
+ Florence under the guardianship of the Cardinal Passerini da
+ Cortona. The higher rank had then been given to Ippolito, who
+ bore the title of Magnifico, and seemed thus designated for the
+ lordship of the city. Ippolito, though only half a Medici, was of
+ more authentic lineage than Alessandro; for no proof positive
+ could be adduced that the latter was even a spurious child of the
+ Duke of Urbino. He bore obvious witness to his mother's blood
+ upon his mulatto's face; but this mother was the wife of a groom,
+ and it was certain that in the court of Urbino she had not been
+ chary of her favours. The old magnificence of taste, the
+ patronage of art and letters, and the preference for liberal
+ studies which distinguished Casa Medici, survived in Ippolito;
+ whereas Alessandro manifested only the brutal lusts of a
+ debauched tyrant. It was therefore with great reluctance that,
+ moved by reasons of state and domestic policy, Ippolito saw
+ himself compelled to accept the scarlet hat. Alessandro having
+ been recognised as a son of the Duke of Urbino, had become
+ half-brother to the future Queen of France. To treat him as the
+ head of the family was a necessity thrust, in the extremity of
+ the Medicean fortunes, upon Clement. Ippolito, who more entirely
+ represented the spirit of the house, was driven to assume the
+ position of a cadet, with all the uncertainties of an
+ ecclesiastical career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In these circumstances Ippolito had not strength of character to
+ sacrifice himself for the consolidation of the Medicean power,
+ which could only have been effected by maintaining a close bond
+ of union between its members. The death of Clement in 1534
+ obscured his prospects in the Church. He was still too young to
+ intrigue for the tiara. The new Pope, Alessandro Farnese, soon
+ after his election, displayed a vigour which was unexpected from
+ his age, together with a nepotism which his previous character
+ had scarcely warranted. The Cardinal de' Medici felt himself
+ excluded and oppressed. He joined the party of those numerous
+ Florentine exiles, headed by Filippo Strozzi, and the Cardinals
+ Salviati and Ridolfi, all of whom were connected by marriage with
+ the legitimate Medici, and who unanimously hated and were jealous
+ of the Duke of Cività di Penna. On the score of policy it is
+ difficult to condemn this step. Alessandro's hold upon Florence
+ was still precarious, nor had he yet married Margaret of Austria.
+ Perhaps Ippolito was right in thinking he had less to gain from
+ his cousin than from the anti-Medicean faction and the princes of
+ the Church who favoured it. But he did not play his cards well.
+ He quarrelled with the new Pope, Paul III., and by his
+ vacillations led the Florentine exiles to suspect he might betray
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the summer of 1535 Ippolito was at Itri, a little town not far
+ from Gaeta and Terracina, within easy reach of Fondi, where dwelt
+ the beautiful Giulia Gonzaga. To this lady the Cardinal paid
+ assiduous court, passing his time with her in the romantic
+ scenery of that world-famous Capuan coast. On the 5th of August
+ his seneschal, Giovann' Andrea, of Borgo San Sepolcro, brought
+ him a bowl of chicken-broth, after drinking which he exclaimed to
+ one of his attendants, 'I have been poisoned, and the man who did
+ it is Giovann' Andrea.' The seneschal was taken and tortured, and
+ confessed that he had mixed a poison with the broth. Four days
+ afterwards the Cardinal died, and a post-mortem examination
+ showed that the omentum had been eaten by some corrosive
+ substance. Giovann' Andrea was sent in chains to Rome; but in
+ spite of his confession, more than once repeated, the court
+ released him. He immediately took refuge with Alessandro de'
+ Medici in Florence, whence he repaired to Borgo San Sepolcro, and
+ was, at the close of a few months, there murdered by the people
+ of the place. From these circumstances it was conjectured, not
+ without good reason, that Alessandro had procured his cousin's
+ death; and a certain Captain Pignatta, of low birth in Florence,
+ a bravo and a coward, was believed to have brought the poison to
+ Itri from the Duke. The Medicean courtiers at Florence did not
+ disguise their satisfaction; and one of them exclaimed, with
+ reference to the event, 'We know how to brush flies from our
+ noses!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III.&mdash;THE MURDER OF ALESSANDRO DE' MEDICI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having removed his cousin and rival from the scene, Alessandro
+ de' Medici plunged with even greater effrontery into the
+ cruelties and debaucheries which made him odious in Florence. It
+ seemed as though fortune meant to smile on him; for in this same
+ year (1535) Charles V. decided at Naples in his favour against
+ the Florentine exiles, who were pleading their own cause and that
+ of the city injured by his tyrannies; and in February of the
+ following year he married Margaret of Austria, the Emperor's
+ natural daughter. Francesco Guicciardini, the first statesman and
+ historian of his age, had undertaken his defence, and was ready
+ to support him by advice and countenance in the conduct of his
+ government. Within the lute of this prosperity, however, there
+ was one little rift. For some months past he had closely attached
+ to his person a certain kinsman, Lorenzo de' Medici, who was
+ descended in the fourth generation from Lorenzo, the brother of
+ Cosimo Pater Patriĉ. This Lorenzo, or Lorenzino, or Lorenzaccio,
+ as his most intimate acquaintances called him, was destined to
+ murder Alessandro; and it is worthy of notice that the Duke had
+ received frequent warnings of his fate. A Perugian page, for
+ instance, who suffered from some infirmity, saw in a dream that
+ Lorenzino would kill his master. Astrologers predicted that the
+ Duke must die by having his throat cut. One of them is said to
+ have named Lorenzo de' Medici as the assassin; and another
+ described him so accurately that there was no mistaking the man.
+ Moreover, Madonna Lucrezia Salviati wrote to the Duke from Rome
+ that he should beware of a certain person, indicating Lorenzino;
+ and her daughter, Madonna Maria, told him to his face she hated
+ the young man, 'because I know he means to murder you, and murder
+ you he will.' Nor was this all. The Duke's favourite
+ body-servants mistrusted Lorenzino. On one occasion, when
+ Alessandro and Lorenzino, attended by a certain Giomo, were
+ escalading a wall at night, as was their wont upon illicit
+ love-adventures, Giomo whispered to his master: 'Ah, my lord, do
+ let me cut the rope, and rid ourselves of him!' To which the Duke
+ replied: 'No, I do not want this; but if he could, I know he'd
+ twist it round my neck.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite, then, of these warnings and the want of confidence he
+ felt, the Duke continually lived with Lorenzino, employing him as
+ pander in his intrigues, and preferring his society to that of
+ simpler men. When he rode abroad, he took this evil friend upon
+ his crupper; although he knew for certain that Lorenzino had
+ stolen a tight-fitting vest of mail he used to wear, and, while
+ his arms were round his waist, was always meditating how to stick
+ a poignard in his body. He trusted, so it seems, to his own great
+ strength and to the other's physical weakness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point, since Lorenzino is the principal actor in the
+ two-act drama which follows, it will be well to introduce him to
+ the reader in the words of Varchi, who was personally acquainted
+ with him. Born at Florence in 1514, he was left early by his
+ father's death to the sole care of his mother, Maria Soderini, 'a
+ lady of rare prudence and goodness, who attended with the utmost
+ pains and diligence to his education. No sooner, however, had he
+ acquired the rudiments of humane learning, which, being of very
+ quick parts, he imbibed with incredible facility, than he began
+ to display a restless mind, insatiable and appetitive of vice.
+ Soon afterwards, under the rule and discipline of Filippo
+ Strozzi, he made open sport of all things human and divine; and
+ preferring the society of low persons, who not only flattered him
+ but were congenial to his tastes, he gave free rein to his
+ desires, especially in affairs of love, without regard for sex or
+ age or quality, and in his secret soul, while he lavished feigned
+ caresses upon every one he saw, felt no esteem for any living
+ being. He thirsted strangely for glory, and omitted no point of
+ deed or word that might, he thought, procure him the reputation
+ of a man of spirit or of wit. He was lean of person, somewhat
+ slightly built, and on this account people called him Lorenzino.
+ He never laughed, but had a sneering smile; and although he was
+ rather distinguished by grace than beauty, his countenance being
+ dark and melancholy, still in the flower of his age he was
+ beloved beyond all measure by Pope Clement; in spite of which he
+ had it in his mind (according to what he said himself after
+ killing the Duke Alessandro) to have murdered him. He brought
+ Francesco di Raffaello de' Medici, the Pope's rival, who was a
+ young man of excellent attainments and the highest hope, to such
+ extremity that he lost his wits, and became the sport of the
+ whole court at Rome, and was sent back, as a lesser evil, as a
+ confirmed madman to Florence.' Varchi proceeds to relate how
+ Lorenzino fell into disfavour with the Pope and the Romans by
+ chopping the heads off statues from the arch of Constantine and
+ other monuments; for which act of vandalism Molsa impeached him
+ in the Roman Academy, and a price was set upon his head. Having
+ returned to Florence, he proceeded to court Duke Alessandro, into
+ whose confidence he wormed himself, pretending to play the spy
+ upon the exiles, and affecting a personal timidity which put the
+ Prince off his guard. Alessandro called him 'the philosopher,'
+ because he conversed in solitude with his own thoughts and seemed
+ indifferent to wealth and office. But all this while Lorenzino
+ was plotting how to murder him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Giovio's account of this strange intimacy may be added, since it
+ completes the picture I have drawn from Varchi:&mdash;'Lorenzo
+ made himself the accomplice and instrument of those amorous
+ amusements for which the Duke had an insatiable appetite, with
+ the object of deceiving him. He was singularly well furnished
+ with all the scoundrelly arts and trained devices of the pander's
+ trade; composed fine verses to incite to lust; wrote and
+ represented comedies in Italian; and pretended to take pleasure
+ only in such tricks and studies. Therefore he never carried arms
+ like other courtiers, and feigned to be afraid of blood, a man
+ who sought tranquillity at any price. Besides, he bore a pallid
+ countenance and melancholy brow, walking alone, talking very
+ little and with few persons. He haunted solitary places apart
+ from the city, and showed such plain signs of hypochondria that
+ some began covertly to pass jokes on him. Certain others, who
+ were more acute, suspected that he was harbouring and devising in
+ his mind some terrible enterprise.' The Prologue to Lorenzino's
+ own comedy of 'Aridosiso' brings the sardonic, sneering, ironical
+ man vividly before us. He calls himself 'un certo omiciatto, che
+ non è nessun di voi che veggendolo non l'avesse a noia, pensando
+ che egli abbia fatto una commedia;' and begs the audience to damn
+ his play to save him the tedium of writing another. Criticised by
+ the light of his subsequent actions, this prologue may even be
+ understood to contain a covert promise of the murder he was
+ meditating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In this way,' writes Varchi, 'the Duke had taken such
+ familiarity with Lorenzo, that, not content with making use of
+ him as a ruffian in his dealings with women, whether religious or
+ secular, maidens or wives or widows, noble or plebeian, young or
+ elderly, as it might happen, he applied to him to procure for his
+ pleasure a half-sister of Lorenzo's own mother, a young lady of
+ marvellous beauty, but not less chaste than beautiful, who was
+ the wife of Lionardo Ginori, and lived not far from the back
+ entrance to the palace of the Medici.' Lorenzino undertook this
+ odious commission, seeing an opportunity to work his designs
+ against the Duke. But first he had to form an accomplice, since
+ he could not hope to carry out the murder without help. A bravo,
+ called Michele del Tavolaccino, but better known by the nickname
+ of Scoronconcolo, struck him as a fitting instrument. He had
+ procured this man's pardon for a homicide, and it appears that
+ the fellow retained a certain sense of gratitude. Lorenzino began
+ by telling the man there was a courtier who put insults upon him,
+ and Scoronconcolo professed his readiness to kill the knave. 'Sia
+ chi si voglia; io l'ammazzerò, se fosse Cristo.' Up to the last
+ minute the name of Alessandro was not mentioned. Having thus
+ secured his assistant, Lorenzino chose a night when he knew that
+ Alessandro Vitelli, captain of the Duke's guard, would be from
+ home. Then, after supper, he whispered in Alessandro's ear that
+ at last he had seduced his aunt with an offer of money, and that
+ she would come to his, Lorenzo's chamber at the service of the
+ Duke that night. Only the Duke must appear at the rendezvous
+ alone, and when he had arrived, the lady should be fetched.
+ 'Certain it is,' says Varchi, 'that the Duke, having donned a
+ cloak of satin in the Neapolitan style, lined with sable, when he
+ went to take his gloves, and there were some of mail and some of
+ perfumed leather, hesitated awhile and said: "Which shall I
+ choose, those of war, or those of love-making?"' He took the
+ latter and went out with only four attendants, three of whom he
+ dismissed upon the Piazza di San Marco, while one was stationed
+ just opposite Lorenzo's house, with strict orders not to stir if
+ he should see folk enter or issue thence. But this fellow, called
+ the Hungarian, after waiting a great while, returned to the
+ Duke's chamber, and there went to sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Lorenzino received Alessandro in his bedroom, where
+ there was a good fire. The Duke unbuckled his sword, which
+ Lorenzino took, and having entangled the belt with the hilt, so
+ that it should not readily be drawn, laid it on the pillow. The
+ Duke had flung himself already on the bed, and hid himself among
+ the curtains&mdash;doing this, it is supposed, to save himself
+ from the trouble of paying compliments to the lady when she
+ should arrive. For Caterina Ginori had the fame of a fair
+ speaker, and Alessandro was aware of his own incapacity to play
+ the part of a respectful lover. Nothing could more strongly point
+ the man's brutality than this act, which contributed in no small
+ measure to his ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lorenzino left the Duke upon the bed, and went at once for
+ Scoronconcolo. He told him that the enemy was caught, and bade
+ him only mind the work he had to do. 'That will I do,' the bravo
+ answered, 'even though it were the Duke himself.' 'You've hit the
+ mark,' said Lorenzino with a face of joy; 'he cannot slip through
+ our fingers. Come!' So they mounted to the bedroom, and
+ Lorenzino, knowing where the Duke was laid, cried: 'Sir, are you
+ asleep?' and therewith ran him through the back. Alessandro was
+ sleeping, or pretending to sleep, face downwards, and the sword
+ passed through his kidneys and diaphragm. But it did not kill
+ him. He slipped from the bed, and seized a stool to parry the
+ next blow. Scoronconcolo now stabbed him in the face, while
+ Lorenzino forced him back upon the bed; and then began a hideous
+ struggle. In order to prevent his cries, Lorenzino doubled his
+ fist into the Duke's mouth. Alessandro seized the thumb between
+ his teeth, and held it in a vice until he died. This disabled
+ Lorenzino, who still lay upon his victim's body, and
+ Scoronconcolo could not strike for fear of wounding his master.
+ Between the writhing couple he made, however, several passes with
+ his sword, which only pierced the mattress. Then he drew a knife
+ and drove it into the Duke's throat, and bored about till he had
+ severed veins and windpipe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV.&mdash;THE FLIGHT OF LORENZINO DE' MEDICI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alessandro was dead. His body fell to earth. The two murderers,
+ drenched with blood, lifted it up, and placed it on the bed,
+ wrapped in the curtains, as they had found him first. Then
+ Lorenzino went to the window, which looked out upon the Via
+ Larga, and opened it to rest and breathe a little air. After this
+ he called for Scoronconcolo's boy, Il Freccia, and bade him look
+ upon the dead man. Il Freccia recognised the Duke. But why
+ Lorenzino did this, no one knew. It seemed, as Varchi says, that,
+ having planned the murder with great ability, and executed it
+ with daring, his good sense and good luck forsook him. He made no
+ use of the crime he had committed; and from that day forward till
+ his own assassination, nothing prospered with him. Indeed, the
+ murder of Alessandro appears to have been almost motiveless,
+ considered from the point of view of practical politics. Varchi
+ assumes that Lorenzino's burning desire of glory prompted the
+ deed; and when he had acquired the notoriety he sought, there was
+ an end to his ambition. This view is confirmed by the Apology he
+ wrote and published for his act. It remains one of the most
+ pregnant, bold, and brilliant pieces of writing which we possess
+ in favour of tyrannicide from that epoch of insolent crime and
+ audacious rhetoric. So energetic is the style, and so biting the
+ invective of this masterpiece, in which the author stabs a second
+ time his victim, that both Giordani and Leopardi affirmed it to
+ be the only true monument of eloquence in the Italian language.
+ If thirst for glory was Lorenzino's principal incentive,
+ immediate glory was his guerdon. He escaped that same night with
+ Scoronconcolo and Freccia to Bologna, where he stayed to dress
+ his thumb, and then passed forward to Venice. Filippo Strozzi
+ there welcomed him as the new Brutus, gave him money, and
+ promised to marry his two sons to the two sisters of the
+ tyrant-killer. Poems were written and published by the most
+ famous men of letters, including Benedetto Varchi and Francesco
+ Maria Molsa, in praise of the Tuscan Brutus, the liberator of his
+ country from a tyrant. A bronze medal was struck bearing his
+ name, with a profile copied from Michelangelo's bust of Brutus.
+ On the obverse are two daggers and a cup, and the date viii. id.
+ Jan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The immediate consequence of Alessandro's murder was the
+ elevation of Cosimo, son of Giovanni delle Bande Nere, and second
+ cousin of Lorenzino, to the duchy. At the ceremony of his
+ investiture with the ducal honours, Cosimo solemnly undertook to
+ revenge Alessandro's murder. In the following March he buried his
+ predecessor with pomp in San Lorenzo. The body was placed beside
+ the bones of the Duke of Urbino in the marble chest of
+ Michelangelo, and here not many years ago it was discovered. Soon
+ afterwards Lorenzino was declared a rebel. His portrait was
+ painted according to old Tuscan precedent, head downwards, and
+ suspended by one foot, upon the wall of the fort built by
+ Alessandro. His house was cut in twain from roof to pavement, and
+ a narrow lane was driven through it, which received the title of
+ Traitor's Alley, <i>Chiasso del Traditore</i>. The price of four
+ thousand golden florins was put upon his head, together with the
+ further sum of one hundred florins per annum in perpetuity to be
+ paid to the murderer and his direct heirs in succession, by the
+ Otto di Balia. Moreover, the man who killed Lorenzino was to
+ enjoy all civic privileges; exemption from all taxes, ordinary
+ and extraordinary; the right of carrying arms, together with two
+ attendants, in the city and the whole domain of Florence; and the
+ further prerogative of restoring ten outlaws at his choice. If
+ Lorenzino could be captured and brought alive to Florence, the
+ whole of this reward would be doubled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This decree was promulgated in April 1537, and thenceforward
+ Lorenzino de' Medici lived a doomed man. The assassin, who had
+ been proclaimed a Brutus by Tuscan exiles and humanistic
+ enthusiasts, was regarded as a Judas by the common people.
+ Ballads were written on him with the title of the 'Piteous and
+ sore lament made unto himself by Lorenzino de' Medici, who
+ murdered the most illustrious Duke Alessandro.' He had become a
+ wild beast, whom it was honourable to hunt down, a pest which it
+ was righteous to extirpate. Yet fate delayed nine years to
+ overtake him. What remains to be told about his story must be
+ extracted from the narrative of the bravo who succeeded, with the
+ aid of an accomplice, in despatching him at Venice.<a name=
+ "FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> So far as possible, I
+ shall use the man's own words, translating them literally, and
+ omitting only unimportant details. The narrative throws brilliant
+ light upon the manners and movements of professional cut-throats
+ at that period in Italy. It seems to have been taken down from
+ the hero Francesco, or Cecco, Bibboni's lips; and there is no
+ doubt that we possess in it a valuable historical document for
+ the illustration of contemporary customs. It offers in all points
+ a curious parallel to Cellini's account of his own homicides and
+ hair-breadth escapes. Moreover, it is confirmed in its minutest
+ circumstances by the records of the criminal courts of Venice in
+ the sixteenth century. This I can attest from recent examination
+ of MSS. relating to the <i>Signori di Notte</i> and the
+ <i>Esecutori contro la Bestemmia</i>, which are preserved among
+ the Archives at the Frari.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V.&mdash;THE MURDER OF LORENZINO DE' MEDICI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When I returned from Germany,' begins Bibboni, 'where I had been
+ in the pay of the Emperor, I found at Vicenza Bebo da Volterra,
+ who was staying in the house of M. Antonio da Roma, a nobleman of
+ that city. This gentleman employed him because of a great feud he
+ had; and he was mighty pleased, moreover, at my coming, and
+ desired that I too should take up my quarters in his palace.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This paragraph strikes the keynote of the whole narrative, and
+ introduces us to the company we are about to keep. The noblemen
+ of that epoch, if they had private enemies, took into their
+ service soldiers of adventure, partly to protect their persons,
+ but also to make war, when occasion offered, on their foes. The
+ <i>bravi</i>, as they were styled, had quarters assigned them in
+ the basement of the palace, where they might be seen swaggering
+ about the door or flaunting their gay clothes behind the massive
+ iron bars of the windows which opened on the streets. When their
+ master went abroad at night they followed him, and were always at
+ hand to perform secret services in love affairs, assassination,
+ and espial. For the rest, they haunted taverns, and kept up
+ correspondence with prostitutes. An Italian city had a whole
+ population of such fellows, the offscourings of armies, drawn
+ from all nations, divided by their allegiance of the time being
+ into hostile camps, but united by community of interest and
+ occupation, and ready to combine against the upper class, upon
+ whose vices, enmities, and cowardice they throve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bibboni proceeds to say how another gentleman of Vicenza, M.
+ Francesco Manente, had at this time a feud with certain of the
+ Guazzi and the Laschi, which had lasted several years, and cost
+ the lives of many members of both parties and their following. M.
+ Francesco being a friend of M. Antonio, besought that gentleman
+ to lend him Bibboni and Bebo for a season; and the two
+ <i>bravi</i> went together with their new master to Celsano, a
+ village in the neighbourhood. 'There both parties had estates,
+ and all of them kept armed men in their houses, so that not a day
+ passed without feats of arms, and always there was some one
+ killed or wounded. One day, soon afterwards, the leaders of our
+ party resolved to attack the foe in their house, where we killed
+ two, and the rest, numbering five men, entrenched themselves in a
+ ground-floor apartment; whereupon we took possession of their
+ harquebuses and other arms, which forced them to abandon the
+ villa and retire to Vicenza; and within a short space of time
+ this great feud was terminated by an ample peace.' After this
+ Bebo took service with the Rector of the University in Padua, and
+ was transferred by his new patron to Milan. Bibboni remained at
+ Vicenza with M. Galeazzo della Seta, who stood in great fear of
+ his life, notwithstanding the peace which had been concluded
+ between the two factions. At the end of ten months he returned to
+ M. Antonio da Roma and his six brothers, 'all of whom being very
+ much attached to me, they proposed that I should live my life
+ with them, for good or ill, and be treated as one of the family;
+ upon the understanding that if war broke out and I wanted to take
+ part in it, I should always have twenty-five crowns and arms and
+ horse, with welcome home, so long as I lived; and in case I did
+ not care to join the troops, the same provision for my
+ maintenance.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these details we comprehend the sort of calling which a
+ bravo of Bibboni's species followed. Meanwhile Bebo was at Milan.
+ 'There it happened that M. Francesco Vinta, of Volterra, was on
+ embassy from the Duke of Florence. He saw Bebo, and asked him
+ what he was doing in Milan, and Bebo answered that he was a
+ knight errant.' This phrase, derived no doubt from the romantic
+ epics then in vogue, was a pretty euphemism for a rogue of Bebo's
+ quality. The ambassador now began cautiously to sound his man,
+ who seems to have been outlawed from the Tuscan duchy, telling
+ him he knew a way by which he might return with favour to his
+ home, and at last disclosing the affair of Lorenzo. Bebo was
+ puzzled at first, but when he understood the matter, he professed
+ his willingness, took letters from the envoy to the Duke of
+ Florence, and, in a private audience with Cosimo, informed him
+ that he was ready to attempt Lorenzino's assassination. He added
+ that 'he had a comrade fit for such a job, whose fellow for the
+ business could not easily be found.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bebo now travelled to Vicenza, and opened the whole matter to
+ Bibboni, who weighed it well, and at last, being convinced that
+ the Duke's commission to his comrade was <i>bona fide</i>,
+ determined to take his share in the undertaking. The two agreed
+ to have no accomplices. They went to Venice, and 'I,' says
+ Bibboni, 'being most intimately acquainted with all that city,
+ and provided there with many friends, soon quietly contrived to
+ know where Lorenzino lodged, and took a room in the
+ neighbourhood, and spent some days in seeing how we best might
+ rule our conduct.' Bibboni soon discovered that Lorenzino never
+ left his palace; and he therefore remained in much perplexity,
+ until, by good luck, Ruberto Strozzi arrived from France in
+ Venice, bringing in his train a Navarrese servant, who had the
+ nickname of Spagnoletto. This fellow was a great friend of the
+ bravo. They met, and Bibboni told him that he should like to go
+ and kiss the hands of Messer Ruberto, whom he had known in Rome.
+ Strozzi inhabited the same palace as Lorenzino. 'When we arrived
+ there, both Messer Ruberto and Lorenzo were leaving the house,
+ and there were around them so many gentlemen and other persons,
+ that I could not present myself, and both straightway stepped
+ into the gondola. Then I, not having seen Lorenzo for a long
+ while past, and because he was very quietly attired, could not
+ recognise the man exactly, but only as it were between certainty
+ and doubt. Wherefore I said to Spagnoletto, "I think I know that
+ gentleman, but don't remember where I saw him." And Messer
+ Ruberto was giving him his right hand. Then Spagnoletto answered,
+ "You know him well enough; he is Messer Lorenzo. But see you tell
+ this to nobody. He goes by the name of Messer Dario, because he
+ lives in great fear for his safety, and people don't know that he
+ is now in Venice." I answered that I marvelled much, and if I
+ could have helped him, would have done so willingly. Then I asked
+ where they were going, and he said, to dine with Messer Giovanni
+ della Casa, who was the Pope's Legate. I did not leave the man
+ till I had drawn from him all I required.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus spoke the Italian Judas. The appearance of La Casa on the
+ scene is interesting. He was the celebrated author of the
+ scandalous 'Capitolo del Forno,' the author of many sublime and
+ melancholy sonnets, who was now at Venice, prosecuting a charge
+ of heresy against Pier Paolo Vergerio, and paying his addresses
+ to a noble lady of the Quirini family. It seems that on the
+ territory of San Marco he made common cause with the exiles from
+ Florence, for he was himself by birth a Florentine, and he had no
+ objection to take Brutus-Lorenzino by the hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the noblemen had rowed off in their gondola to dine with
+ the Legate, Bibboni and his friend entered their palace, where he
+ found another old acquaintance, the house-steward, or
+ <i>spenditore</i> of Lorenzo. From him he gathered much useful
+ information. Pietro Strozzi, it seems, had allowed the
+ tyrannicide one thousand five hundred crowns a year, with the
+ keep of three brave and daring companions (<i>tre compagni bravi
+ e facinorosi</i>), and a palace worth fifty crowns on lease. But
+ Lorenzo had just taken another on the Campo di San Polo at three
+ hundred crowns a year, for which swagger (<i>altura</i>) Pietro
+ Strozzi had struck a thousand crowns off his allowance. Bibboni
+ also learned that he was keeping house with his uncle, Alessandro
+ Soderini, another Florentine outlaw, and that he was ardently in
+ love with a certain beautiful Barozza. This woman was apparently
+ one of the grand courtesans of Venice. He further ascertained the
+ date when he was going to move into the palace at San Polo, and,
+ 'to put it briefly, knew everything he did, and, as it were, how
+ many times a day he spit.' Such were the intelligences of the
+ servants' hall, and of such value were they to men of Bibboni's
+ calling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Carnival of 1546 Lorenzo meant to go masqued in the habit
+ of a gipsy woman to the square of San Spirito, where there was to
+ be a joust. Great crowds of people would assemble, and Bibboni
+ hoped to do his business there. The assassination, however,
+ failed on this occasion, and Lorenzo took up his abode in the
+ palace he had hired upon the Campo di San Polo. This Campo is one
+ of the largest open places in Venice, shaped irregularly, with a
+ finely curving line upon the western side, where two of the
+ noblest private houses in the city are still standing. Nearly
+ opposite these, in the south-western angle, stands, detached, the
+ little old church of San Polo. One of its side entrances opens
+ upon the square; the other on a lane, which leads eventually to
+ the Frari. There is nothing in Bibboni's narrative to make it
+ clear where Lorenzo hired his dwelling. But it would seem from
+ certain things which he says later on, that in order to enter the
+ church his victim had to cross the square. Meanwhile Bibboni took
+ the precaution of making friends with a shoemaker, whose shop
+ commanded the whole Campo, including Lorenzo's palace. In this
+ shop he began to spend much of his time; 'and oftentimes I
+ feigned to be asleep; but God knows whether I was sleeping, for
+ my mind, at any rate, was wide-awake.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second convenient occasion for murdering Lorenzo soon seemed to
+ offer. He was bidden to dine with Monsignor della Casa; and
+ Bibboni, putting a bold face on, entered the Legate's palace,
+ having left Bebo below in the loggia, fully resolved to do the
+ business. 'But we found,' he says, 'that, they had gone to dine
+ at Murano, so that we remained with our tabors in their bag.' The
+ island of Murano at that period was a favourite resort of the
+ Venetian nobles, especially of the more literary and artistic,
+ who kept country-houses there, where they enjoyed the fresh air
+ of the lagoons and the quiet of their gardens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The third occasion, after all these weeks of watching, brought
+ success to Bibboni's schemes. He had observed how Lorenzo
+ occasionally so far broke his rules of caution as to go on foot,
+ past the church of San Polo, to visit the beautiful Barozza; and
+ he resolved, if possible, to catch him on one of these journeys.
+ 'It so chanced on the 28th of February, which was the second
+ Sunday of Lent, that having gone, as was my wont, to pry out
+ whether Lorenzo would give orders for going abroad that day, I
+ entered the shoemaker's shop, and stayed awhile, until Lorenzo
+ came to the window with a napkin round his neck for he was
+ combing his hair&mdash;and at the same moment I saw a certain
+ Giovan Battista Martelli, who kept his sword for the defence of
+ Lorenzo's person, enter and come forth again. Concluding that
+ they would probably go abroad, I went home to get ready and
+ procure the necessary weapons, and there I found Bebo asleep in
+ bed, and made him get up at once, and we came to our accustomed
+ post of observation, by the church of San Polo, where our men
+ would have to pass.' Bibboni now retired to his friend the
+ shoemaker's, and Bebo took up his station at one of the
+ side-doors of San Polo; 'and, as good luck would have it, Giovan
+ Battista Martelli came forth, and walked a piece in front, and
+ then Lorenzo came, and then Alessandro Soderini, going the one
+ behind the other, like storks, and Lorenzo, on entering the
+ church, and lifting up the curtain of the door, was seen from the
+ opposite door by Bebo, who at the same time noticed how I had
+ left the shop, and so we met upon the street as we had agreed,
+ and he told me that Lorenzo was inside the church.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To any one who knows the Campo di San Polo, it will be apparent
+ that Lorenzo had crossed from the western side of the piazza and
+ entered the church by what is technically called its northern
+ door. Bebo, stationed at the southern door, could see him when he
+ pushed the heavy <i>stoia</i> or leather curtain aside, and at
+ the same time could observe Bibboni's movements in the cobbler's
+ shop. Meanwhile Lorenzo walked across the church and came to the
+ same door where Bebo had been standing. 'I saw him issue from the
+ church and take the main street; then came Alessandro Soderini,
+ and I walked last of all; and when we reached the point we had
+ determined on, I jumped in front of Alessandro with the poignard
+ in my hand, crying, "Hold hard, Alessandro, and get along with
+ you in God's name, for we are not here for you!" He then threw
+ himself around my waist, and grasped my arms, and kept on calling
+ out. Seeing how wrong I had been to try to spare his life, I
+ wrenched myself as well as I could from his grip, and with my
+ lifted poignard struck him, as God willed, above the eyebrow, and
+ a little blood trickled from the wound. He, in high fury, gave me
+ such a thrust that I fell backward, and the ground besides was
+ slippery from having rained a little. Then Alessandro drew his
+ sword, which he carried in its scabbard, and thrust at me in
+ front, and struck me on the corslet, which for my good fortune
+ was of double mail. Before I could get ready I received three
+ passes, which, had I worn a doublet instead of that mailed
+ corslet, would certainly have run me through. At the fourth pass
+ I had regained my strength and spirit, and closed with him, and
+ stabbed him four times in the head, and being so close he could
+ not use his sword, but tried to parry with his hand and hilt, and
+ I, as God willed, struck him at the wrist below the sleeve of
+ mail, and cut his hand off clean, and gave him then one last
+ stroke on his head. Thereupon he begged for God's sake spare his
+ life, and I, in trouble about Bebo, left him in the arms of a
+ Venetian nobleman, who held him back from jumping into the
+ canal.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who this Venetian nobleman, found unexpectedly upon the scene,
+ was, does not appear. Nor, what is still more curious, do we hear
+ anything of that Martelli, the bravo, 'who kept his sword for the
+ defence of Lorenzo's person.' The one had arrived accidentally,
+ it seems. The other must have been a coward and escaped from the
+ scuffle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When I turned,' proceeds Bibboni, 'I found Lorenzo on his knees.
+ He raised himself, and I, in anger, gave him a great cut across
+ the head, which split it in two pieces, and laid him at my feet,
+ and he never rose again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI.&mdash;THE ESCAPE OF THE BRAVI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bebo, meanwhile, had made off from the scene of action. And
+ Bibboni, taking to his heels, came up with him in the little
+ square of San Marcello. They now ran for their lives till they
+ reached the traghetto di San Spirito, where they threw their
+ poignards into the water, remembering that no man might carry
+ these in Venice under penalty of the galleys. Bibboni's white
+ hose were drenched with blood. He therefore agreed to separate
+ from Bebo, having named a rendezvous. Left alone, his ill luck
+ brought him face to face with twenty constables (<i>sbirri</i>).
+ 'In a moment I conceived that they knew everything, and were come
+ to capture me, and of a truth I saw that it was over with me. As
+ swiftly as I could I quickened pace and got into a church, near
+ to which was the house of a Compagnia, and the one opened into
+ the other, and knelt down and prayed, commending myself with
+ fervour to God for my deliverance and safety. Yet while I prayed,
+ I kept my eyes well open and saw the whole band pass the church,
+ except one man who entered, and I strained my sight so that I
+ seemed to see behind as well as in front, and then it was I
+ longed for my poignard, for I should not have heeded being in a
+ church.' But the constable, it soon appeared, was not looking for
+ Bibboni. So he gathered up his courage, and ran for the Church of
+ San Spirito, where the Padre Andrea Volterrano was preaching to a
+ great congregation. He hoped to go in by one door and out by the
+ other, but the crowd prevented him, and he had to turn back and
+ face the <i>sbirrí</i>. One of them followed him, having probably
+ caught sight of the blood upon his hose. Then Bibboni resolved to
+ have done with the fellow, and rushed at him, and flung him down
+ with his head upon the pavement, and ran like mad and came at
+ last, all out of breath, to San Marco. It seems clear that before
+ Bibboni separated from Bebo they had crossed the water, for the
+ Sestiere di San Polo is separated from the Sestiere di San Marco
+ by the Grand Canal. And this they must have done at the traghetto
+ di San Spirito. Neither the church nor the traghetto are now in
+ existence, and this part of the story is therefore
+ obscure.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> Having reached San
+ Marco, he took a gondola at the Ponte della Paglia, where
+ tourists are now wont to stand and contemplate the Ducal Palace
+ and the Bridge of Sighs. First, he sought the house of a woman of
+ the town who was his friend; then changed purpose, and rowed to
+ the palace of the Count Salici da Collalto. 'He was a great
+ friend and intimate of ours, because Bebo and I had done him many
+ and great services in times passed. There I knocked; and Bebo
+ opened the door, and when he saw me dabbled with blood, he
+ marvelled that I had not come to grief and fallen into the hands
+ of justice, and, indeed, had feared as much because I had
+ remained so long away.' It appears, therefore, that the Palazzo
+ Collalto was their rendezvous. 'The Count was from home; but
+ being known to all his people, I played the master and went into
+ the kitchen to the fire, and with soap and water turned my hose,
+ which had been white, to a grey colour.' This is a very delicate
+ way of saying that he washed out the blood of Alessandro and
+ Lorenzo!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the Count returned, and 'lavished caresses' upon Bebo
+ and his precious comrade. They did not tell him what they had
+ achieved that morning, but put him off with a story of having
+ settled a <i>sbirro</i> in a quarrel about a girl. Then the Count
+ invited them to dinner; and being himself bound to entertain the
+ first physician of Venice, requested them to take it in an upper
+ chamber. He and his secretary served them with their own hands at
+ table. When the physician arrived, the Count went downstairs; and
+ at this moment a messenger came from Lorenzo's mother, begging
+ the doctor to go at once to San Polo, for that her son had been
+ murdered and Soderini wounded to the death. It was now no longer
+ possible to conceal their doings from the Count, who told them to
+ pluck up courage and abide in patience. He had himself to dine
+ and take his siesta, and then to attend a meeting of the Council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the hour of vespers, Bibboni determined to seek better
+ refuge. Followed at a discreet distance by Bebo, he first called
+ at their lodgings and ordered supper. Two priests came in and
+ fell into conversation with them. But something in the behaviour
+ of one of these good men roused his suspicions. So they left the
+ house, took a gondola, and told the man to row hard to S. Maria
+ Zobenigo. On the way he bade him put them on shore, paid him
+ well, and ordered him to wait for them. They landed near the
+ palace of the Spanish embassy; and here Bibboni meant to seek
+ sanctuary. For it must be remembered that the houses of
+ ambassadors, no less than of princes of the Church, were
+ inviolable. They offered the most convenient harbouring-places to
+ rascals. Charles V., moreover, was deeply interested in the
+ vengeance taken on Alessandro de' Medici's murderer, for his own
+ natural daughter was Alessandro's widow and Duchess of Florence.
+ In the palace they were met with much courtesy by about forty
+ Spaniards, who showed considerable curiosity, and told them that
+ Lorenzo and Alessandro Soderini had been murdered that morning by
+ two men whose description answered to their appearance. Bibboni
+ put their questions by and asked to see the ambassador. He was
+ not at home. In that case, said Bibboni, take us to the
+ secretary. Attended by some thirty Spaniards, 'with great joy and
+ gladness,' they were shown into the secretary's chamber. He sent
+ the rest of the folk away, 'and locked the door well, and then
+ embraced and kissed us before we had said a word, and afterwards
+ bade us talk freely without any fear.' When Bibboni had told the
+ whole story, he was again embraced and kissed by the secretary,
+ who thereupon left them and went to the private apartment of the
+ ambassador. Shortly after he returned and led them by a winding
+ staircase into the presence of his master. The ambassador greeted
+ them with great honour, told them he would strain all the power
+ of the empire to hand them in safety over to Duke Cosimo, and
+ that he had already sent a courier to the Emperor with the good
+ news.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they remained in hiding in the Spanish embassy; and in ten
+ days' time commands were received from Charles himself that
+ everything should be done to convey them safely to Florence. The
+ difficulty was how to smuggle them out of Venice, where the
+ police of the Republic were on watch, and Florentine outlaws were
+ mounting guard on sea and shore to catch them. The ambassador
+ began by spreading reports on the Rialto every morning of their
+ having been seen at Padua, at Verona, in Friuli. He then hired a
+ palace at Malghera, near Mestre, and went out daily with fifty
+ Spaniards, and took carriage or amused himself with horse
+ exercise and shooting. The Florentines, who were on watch, could
+ only discover from his people that he did this for amusement.
+ When he thought that he had put them sufficiently off their
+ guard, the ambassador one day took Bibboni and Bebo out by
+ Canaregio and Mestre to Malghera, concealed in his own gondola,
+ with the whole train of Spaniards in attendance. And though, on
+ landing, the Florentines challenged them, they durst not
+ interfere with an ambassador or come to battle with his men. So
+ Bebo and Bibboni were hustled into a coach, and afterwards
+ provided with two comrades and four horses. They rode for ninety
+ miles without stopping to sleep, and on the day following this
+ long journey reached Trento, having probably threaded the
+ mountain valleys above Bassano, for Bibboni speaks of a certain
+ village where the people talked half German. The Imperial
+ Ambassador at Trento forwarded them next day to Mantua; from
+ Mantua they came to Piacenza; thence, passing through the valley
+ of the Taro, crossing the Apennines at Cisa, descending on
+ Pontremoli, and reaching Pisa at night, the fourteenth day after
+ their escape from Venice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they arrived at Pisa, Duke Cosimo was supping. So they went
+ to an inn, and next morning presented themselves to his Grace.
+ Cosimo received them kindly, assured them of his gratitude,
+ confirmed them in the enjoyment of their rewards and privileges,
+ and swore that they might rest secure of his protection in all
+ parts of his dominion. We may imagine how the men caroused
+ together after this reception. As Bibboni adds, 'We were now able
+ for the whole time of life left us to live splendidly, without a
+ thought or care.' The last words of his narrative are these:
+ 'Bebo from Pisa, at what date I know not, went home to Volterra,
+ his native town, and there finished his days; while I abode in
+ Florence, where I have had no further wish to hear of wars, but
+ to live my life in holy peace.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So ends the story of the two <i>bravi</i>. We have reason to
+ believe, from some contemporary documents which Cantù has brought
+ to light, that Bibboni exaggerated his own part in the affair.
+ Luca Martelli, writing to Varchi, says that it was Bebo who clove
+ Lorenzo's skull with a cutlass. He adds this curious detail, that
+ the weapons of both men were poisoned, and that the wound
+ inflicted by Bibboni on Soderini's hand was a slight one. Yet,
+ the poignard being poisoned, Soderini died of it. In other
+ respects Martelli's brief account agrees with that given by
+ Bibboni, who probably did no more, his comrade being dead, than
+ claim for himself, at some expense of truth, the lion's share of
+ their heroic action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII.&mdash;LORENZINO BRUTUS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It remains to ask ourselves, What opinion can be justly formed of
+ Lorenzino's character and motives? When he murdered his cousin,
+ was he really actuated by the patriotic desire to rid his country
+ of a monster? Did he imitate the Roman Brutus in the noble spirit
+ of his predecessors, Olgiati and Boscoli, martyrs to the creed of
+ tyrannicide? Or must this crowning action of a fretful life be
+ explained, like his previous mutilation of the statues on the
+ Arch of Constantine, by a wild thirst for notoriety? Did he hope
+ that the exiles would return to Florence, and that he would enjoy
+ an honourable life, an immortality of glorious renown? Did envy
+ for his cousin's greatness and resentment of his undisguised
+ contempt&mdash;the passions of one who had been used for vile
+ ends&mdash;conscious of self-degradation and the loss of honour,
+ yet mindful of his intellectual superiority&mdash;did these
+ emotions take fire in him and mingle with a scholar's
+ reminiscences of antique heroism, prompting him to plan a deed
+ which should at least assume the show of patriotic zeal, and
+ prove indubitable courage in its perpetrator? Did he, again,
+ perhaps imagine, being next in blood to Alessandro and direct
+ heir to the ducal crown by the Imperial Settlement of 1530, that
+ the city would elect her liberator for her ruler? Alfieri and
+ Niccolini, having taken, as it were, a brief in favour of
+ tyrannicide, praised Lorenzino as a hero. De Musset, who wrote a
+ considerable drama on his story, painted him as a <i>roué</i>
+ corrupted by society, enfeebled by circumstance, soured by
+ commerce with an uncongenial world, who hides at the bottom of
+ his mixed nature enough of real nobility to make him the leader
+ of a forlorn hope for the liberties of Florence. This is the most
+ favourable construction we can put upon Lorenzo's conduct. Yet
+ some facts of the case warn us to suspend our judgment. He seems
+ to have formed no plan for the liberation of his fellow-citizens.
+ He gave no pledge of self-devotion by avowing his deed and
+ abiding by its issues. He showed none of the qualities of a
+ leader, whether in the cause of freedom or of his own dynastic
+ interests, after the murder. He escaped as soon as he was able,
+ as secretly as he could manage, leaving the city in confusion,
+ and exposing himself to the obvious charge of abominable treason.
+ So far as the Florentines knew, his assassination of their Duke
+ was but a piece of private spite, executed with infernal craft.
+ It is true that when he seized the pen in exile, he did his best
+ to claim the guerdon of a patriot, and to throw the blame of
+ failure on the Florentines. In his Apology, and in a letter
+ written to Francesco de' Medici, he taunts them with lacking the
+ spirit to extinguish tyranny when he had slain the tyrant. He
+ summons plausible excuses to his aid&mdash;the impossibility of
+ taking persons of importance into his confidence, the loss of
+ blood he suffered from his wound, the uselessness of rousing
+ citizens whom events proved over-indolent for action. He declares
+ that he has nothing to regret. Having proved by deeds his will to
+ serve his country, he has saved his life in order to spend it for
+ her when occasion offered. But these arguments, invented after
+ the catastrophe, these words, so bravely penned when action ought
+ to have confirmed his resolution, do not meet the case. It was no
+ deed of a true hero to assassinate a despot, knowing or half
+ knowing that the despot's subjects would immediately elect
+ another. Their languor could not, except rhetorically, be
+ advanced in defence of his own flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The historian is driven to seek both the explanation and
+ palliation of Lorenzo's failure in the temper of his times. There
+ was enough daring left in Florence to carry through a plan of
+ brilliant treason, modelled on an antique Roman tragedy. But
+ there was not moral force in the protagonist to render that act
+ salutary, not public energy sufficient in his fellow-citizens to
+ accomplish his drama of deliverance. Lorenzo was corrupt.
+ Florence was flaccid. Evil manners had emasculated the hero. In
+ the state the last spark of independence had expired with
+ Ferrucci.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still I have not without forethought dubbed this man a Cinque
+ Cento Brutus. Like much of the art and literature of his century,
+ his action may be regarded as a <i>bizarre</i> imitation of the
+ antique manner. Without the force and purpose of a Roman, Lorenzo
+ set himself to copy Plutarch's men&mdash;just as sculptors carved
+ Neptunes and Apollos without the dignity and serenity of the
+ classic style. The antique faith was wanting to both murderer and
+ craftsman in those days. Even as Renaissance work in art is too
+ often aimless, decorative, vacant of intention, so Lorenzino's
+ Brutus tragedy seems but the snapping of a pistol in void air. He
+ had the audacity but not the ethical consistency of his crime. He
+ played the part of Brutus like a Roscius, perfect in its
+ histrionic details. And it doubtless gave to this skilful actor a
+ supreme satisfaction&mdash;salving over many wounds of vanity,
+ quenching the poignant thirst for things impossible and draughts
+ of fame&mdash;that he could play it on no mimic stage, but on the
+ theatre of Europe. The weakness of his conduct was the central
+ weakness of his age and country. Italy herself lacked moral
+ purpose, sense of righteous necessity, that consecration of self
+ to a noble cause, which could alone have justified Lorenzo's
+ perfidy. Confused memories of Judith, Jael, Brutus, and other
+ classical tyrannicides, exalted his imagination. Longing for
+ violent emotions, jaded with pleasure which had palled,
+ discontented with his wasted life, jealous of his brutal cousin,
+ appetitive to the last of glory, he conceived his scheme. Having
+ conceived, he executed it with that which never failed in Cinque
+ Cento Italy&mdash;the artistic spirit of perfection. When it was
+ over, he shrugged his shoulders, wrote his magnificent Apology
+ with a style of adamant upon a plate of steel, and left it for
+ the outlaws of Filippo Strozzi's faction to deal with the crisis
+ he had brought about. For some years he dragged out an ignoble
+ life in obscurity, and died at last, as Varchi puts it, more by
+ his own carelessness than by the watchful animosity of others.
+ Over the wild, turbid, clever, incomprehensible, inconstant
+ hero-artist's grave we write our <i>Requiescat</i>. Clio, as she
+ takes the pen in hand to record this prayer, smiles disdainfully
+ and turns to graver business.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="TWO_DRAMATISTS_OF_THE_LAST_CENTURY" id=
+ "TWO_DRAMATISTS_OF_THE_LAST_CENTURY"></a><i>TWO DRAMATISTS OF THE
+ LAST CENTURY</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ There are few contrasts more striking than that which is
+ presented by the memoirs of Goldoni and Alfieri. Both of these
+ men bore names highly distinguished in the history of Italian
+ literature. Both of them were framed by nature with strongly
+ marked characters, and fitted to perform a special work in the
+ world. Both have left behind them records of their lives and
+ literary labours, singularly illustrative of their peculiar
+ differences. There is no instance in which we see more clearly
+ the philosophical value of autobiographies, than in these vivid
+ pictures which the great Italian tragedian and comic author have
+ delineated. Some of the most interesting works of Lionardo da
+ Vinci, Giorgione, Albert Dürer, Rembrandt, Rubens, and Andrea del
+ Sarto, are their portraits painted by themselves. These pictures
+ exhibit not only the lineaments of the masters, but also their
+ art. The hand which drew them was the hand which drew the 'Last
+ Supper,' or the 'Madonna of the Tribune:' colour, method,
+ chiaroscuro, all that makes up manner in painting, may be studied
+ on the same canvas as that which faithfully represents the
+ features of the man whose genius gave his style its special
+ character. We seem to understand the clear calm majesty of
+ Lionardo's manner, the silver-grey harmonies and smooth facility
+ of Andrea's Madonnas, the better for looking at their faces drawn
+ by their own hands at Florence. And if this be the case with a
+ dumb picture, how far higher must be the interest and importance
+ of the written life of a known author! Not only do we recognise
+ in its composition the style and temper and habits of thought
+ which are familiar to us in his other writings; but we also hear
+ from his own lips how these were formed, how his tastes took
+ their peculiar direction, what circumstances acted on his
+ character, what hopes he had, and where he failed. Even should
+ his autobiography not bear the marks of uniform candour, it
+ probably reveals more of the actual truth, more of the man's real
+ nature in its height and depth, than any memoir written by friend
+ or foe. Its unconscious admissions, its general spirit, and the
+ inferences which we draw from its perusal, are far more valuable
+ than any mere statement of facts or external analysis, however
+ scientific. When we become acquainted with the series of events
+ which led to the conception or attended the production of some
+ masterpiece of literature, a new light is thrown upon its
+ beauties, fresh life bursts forth from every chapter, and we seem
+ to have a nearer and more personal interest in its success. What
+ a powerful sensation, for instance, is that which we experience
+ when, after studying the 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,'
+ Gibbon tells us how the thought of writing it came to him upon
+ the Capitol, among the ruins of dead Rome, and within hearing of
+ the mutter of the monks of Ara Coeli, and how he finished it one
+ night by Lake Geneva, and laid his pen down and walked forth and
+ saw the stars above his terrace at Lausanne!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The memoirs of Alfieri and Goldoni are not deficient in any of
+ the characteristics of good autobiography. They seem to bear upon
+ their face the stamp of truthfulness, they illustrate their
+ authors' lives with marvellous lucidity, and they are full of
+ interest as stories. But it is to the contrast which they present
+ that our attention should be chiefly drawn. Other biographies may
+ be as interesting and amusing. None show in a more marked manner
+ two distinct natures endowed with genius for one art, and yet
+ designed in every possible particular for different branches of
+ that art. Alfieri embodies Tragedy; Goldoni is the spirit of
+ Comedy. They are both Italians: their tragedies and comedies are
+ by no means cosmopolitan; but this national identity of character
+ only renders more remarkable the individual divergences by which
+ they were impelled into their different paths. Thalia seems to
+ have made the one, body, soul, and spirit; and Melpomene the
+ other; each goddess launched her favourite into circumstances
+ suited to the evolution of his genius, and presided over his
+ development, so that at his death she might exclaim,&mdash;Behold
+ the living model of my Art!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Goldoni was born at Venice in the year 1707; he had already
+ reached celebrity when Alfieri saw the light for the first time,
+ in 1749, at Asti. Goldoni's grandfather was a native of Modena,
+ who had settled in Venice, and there lived with the prodigality
+ of a rich and ostentatious 'bourgeois.' 'Amid riot and luxury did
+ I enter the world,' says the poet, after enumerating the banquets
+ and theatrical displays with which the old Goldoni entertained
+ his guests in his Venetian palace and country-house. Venice at
+ that date was certainly the proper birthplace for a comic poet.
+ The splendour of the Renaissance had thoroughly habituated her
+ nobles to pleasures of the sense, and had enervated their proud,
+ maritime character, while the great name of the republic robbed
+ them of the caution for which they used to be conspicuous. Yet
+ the real strength of Venice was almost spent, and nothing
+ remained but outward insolence and prestige. Everything was gay
+ about Goldoni in his earliest childhood. Puppet-shows were built
+ to amuse him by his grandfather. 'My mother,' he says, 'took
+ charge of my education, and my father of my amusements.' Let us
+ turn to the opening scene in Alfieri's life, and mark the
+ difference. A father above sixty, 'noble, wealthy, and
+ respectable,' who died before his son had reached the age of one
+ year old. A mother devoted to religion, the widow of one marquis,
+ and after the death of a second husband, Alfieri's father,
+ married for the third time to a nobleman of ancient birth. These
+ were Alfieri's parents. He was born in a solemn palazzo in the
+ country town of Asti, and at the age of five already longed for
+ death as an escape from disease and other earthly troubles. So
+ noble and so wealthy was the youthful poet that an abbé was
+ engaged to carry out his education, but not to teach him more
+ than a count should know. Except this worthy man he had no
+ companions whatever. Strange ideas possessed the boy. He
+ ruminated on his melancholy, and when eight years old attempted
+ suicide. At this age he was sent to the academy at Turin,
+ attended, as befitted a lad of his rank, by a man-servant, who
+ was to remain and wait on him at school. Alfieri stayed here
+ several years without revisiting his home, tyrannised over by the
+ valet who added to his grandeur, constantly subject to sickness,
+ and kept in almost total ignorance by his incompetent preceptors.
+ The gloom and pride and stoicism of his temperament were
+ augmented by this unnatural discipline. His spirit did not break,
+ but took a haughtier and more disdainful tone. He became familiar
+ with misfortunes. He learned to brood over and intensify his
+ passions. Every circumstance of his life seemed strung up to a
+ tragic pitch. This at least is the impression which remains upon
+ our mind after reading in his memoirs the narrative of what must
+ in many of its details have been a common schoolboy's life at
+ that time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, what had become of young Goldoni? His boyhood was as
+ thoroughly plebeian, various, and comic as Alfieri's had been
+ patrician, monotonous, and tragical. Instead of one place of
+ residence, we read of twenty. Scrape succeeds to scrape,
+ adventure to adventure. Knowledge of the world, and some book
+ learning also, flow in upon the boy, and are eagerly caught up by
+ him and heterogeneously amalgamated in his mind. Alfieri learned
+ nothing, wrote nothing, in his youth, and heard his parents
+ say&mdash;'A nobleman need never strive to be a doctor of the
+ faculties.' Goldoni had a little medicine and much law thrust
+ upon him. At eight he wrote a comedy, and ere long began to read
+ the plays of Plautus, Terence, Aristophanes, and Machiavelli.
+ Between the nature of the two poets there was a marked and
+ characteristic difference as to their mode of labour and of
+ acquiring knowledge. Both of them loved fame, and wrought for it;
+ but Alfieri did so from a sense of pride and a determination to
+ excel; while Goldoni loved the approbation of his fellows, sought
+ their compliments, and basked in the sunshine of smiles. Alfieri
+ wrote with labour. Each tragedy he composed went through a triple
+ process of composition, and received frequent polishing when
+ finished. Goldoni dashed off his pieces with the greatest ease on
+ every possible subject. He once produced sixteen comedies in one
+ theatrical season. Alfieri's were like lion's
+ whelps&mdash;brought forth with difficulty, and at long
+ intervals; Goldoni's, like the brood of a hare&mdash;many,
+ frequent, and as agile as their parent. Alfieri amassed knowledge
+ scrupulously, but with infinite toil. He mastered Greek and
+ Hebrew when he was past forty. Goldoni never gave himself the
+ least trouble to learn anything, but trusted to the ready wit,
+ good memory, and natural powers, which helped him in a hundred
+ strange emergencies. Power of will and pride sustained the one;
+ facility and a good-humoured vanity the other. This contrast was
+ apparent at a very early age. We have seen how Alfieri passed his
+ time at Turin, in a kind of aristocratic prison of educational
+ ignorance. Goldoni's grandfather died when he was five years old,
+ and left his family in great embarrassment. The poet's father
+ went off to practise medicine at Perugia. His son followed him,
+ acquired the rudiments of knowledge in that town, and then
+ proceeded to study philosophy alone at Rimini. There was no
+ man-servant or academy in his case. He was far too plebeian and
+ too free. The boy lodged with a merchant, and got some smattering
+ of Thomas Aquinas and the Peripatetics into his small brain,
+ while he contrived to form a friendship with an acting company.
+ They were on the wing for Venice in a coasting boat, which would
+ touch at Chiozza, where Goldoni's mother then resided. The boy
+ pleased them. Would he like the voyage? This offer seemed too
+ tempting, and away he rushed, concealed himself on board, and
+ made one of a merry motley shipload. 'Twelve persons, actors as
+ well as actresses, a prompter, a machinist, a storekeeper, eight
+ domestics, four chambermaids, two nurses, children of every age,
+ cats, dogs, monkeys, parrots, birds, pigeons, and a lamb; it was
+ another Noah's ark.' The young poet felt at home; how could a
+ comic poet feel otherwise? They laughed, they sang, they danced;
+ they ate and drank, and played at cards. 'Macaroni! Every one
+ fell on it, and three dishes were devoured. We had also alamode
+ beef, cold fowl, a loin of veal, a dessert, and excellent wine.
+ What a charming dinner! No cheer like a good appetite.' Their
+ harmony, however, was disturbed. The 'première amoureuse,' who,
+ in spite of her rank and title, was ugly and cross, and required
+ to be coaxed with cups of chocolate, lost her cat. She tried to
+ kill the whole boat-load of beasts&mdash;cats, dogs, monkeys,
+ parrots, pigeons, even the lamb stood in danger of her wrath. A
+ regular quarrel ensued, was somehow set at peace, and all began
+ to laugh again. This is a sample of Goldoni's youth. Comic
+ pleasures, comic dangers; nothing deep or lasting, but light and
+ shadow cheerfully distributed, clouds lowering with storm, a
+ distant growl of thunder, then a gleam of light and sunshine
+ breaking overhead. He gets articled to an attorney at Venice,
+ then goes to study law at Pavia; studies society instead, and
+ flirts, and finally is expelled for writing satires. Then he
+ takes a turn at medicine with his father in Friuli, and acts as
+ clerk to the criminal chancellor at Chiozza.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every employment seems easy to him, but he really cares for none
+ but literature. He spends all his spare time in reading and in
+ amusements, and begins to write a tragic opera. This proves,
+ however, eminently unsuccessful, and he burns it in a comic fit
+ of anger. One laughable love-affair in which he engaged at Udine
+ exhibits his adventures in their truly comic aspect. It reminds
+ us of the scene in 'Don Giovanni,' where Leporello personates the
+ Don and deceives Donna Elvira. Goldoni had often noticed a
+ beautiful young lady at church and on the public drives: she was
+ attended by a waiting-maid, who soon perceived that her mistress
+ had excited the young man's admiration, and who promised to
+ befriend him in his suit. Goldoni was told to repair at night to
+ the palace of his mistress, and to pour his passion forth beneath
+ her window. Impatiently he waited for the trysting hour, conned
+ his love-sentences, and gloried in the romance of the adventure.
+ When night came, he found the window, and a veiled figure of a
+ lady in the moonlight, whom he supposed at once to be his
+ mistress. Her he eloquently addressed in the true style of
+ Romeo's rapture, and she answered him. Night after night this
+ happened, but sometimes he was a little troubled by a sound of
+ ill-suppressed laughter interrupting the <i>tête-à-tête</i>.
+ Meanwhile Teresa, the waiting-maid, received from his hands
+ costly presents for her mistress, and made him promises on her
+ part in exchange. As she proved unable to fulfil them, Goldoni
+ grew suspicious, and at last discovered that the veiled figure to
+ whom he had poured out his tale of love was none other than
+ Teresa, and that the laughter had proceeded from her mistress,
+ whom the faithless waiting-maid regaled at her lover's expense.
+ Thus ended this ridiculous matter. Goldoni was not, however,
+ cured by his experience. One other love-affair rendered Udine too
+ hot to hold him, and in consequence of a third he had to fly from
+ Venice just when he was beginning to flourish there. At length he
+ married comfortably and suitably, settling down into a quiet life
+ with a woman whom, if he did not love her with passion, he at
+ least respected and admired. Goldoni, in fact, had no real
+ passion in his nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alfieri, on the other hand, was given over to volcanic
+ ebullitions of the most ungovernable hate and affection, joy and
+ sorrow. The chains of love which Goldoni courted so willingly,
+ Alfieri regarded with the greatest shyness. But while Goldoni
+ healed his heart of all its bruises in a week or so, the tragic
+ poet bore about him wounds that would not close. He enumerates
+ three serious passions which possessed his whole nature, and at
+ times deprived him almost of his reason. A Dutch lady first won
+ his heart, and when he had to leave her, Alfieri suffered so
+ intensely that he never opened his lips during the course of a
+ long journey through Germany, Switzerland, and Piedmont. Fevers,
+ and suicides attempted but interrupted, marked the termination of
+ this tragic amour. His second passion had for its object an
+ English lady, with whose injured husband he fought a duel,
+ although his collarbone was broken at the time. The lady proved
+ unworthy of Alfieri as well as of her husband, and the poet left
+ her in a most deplorable state of hopelessness and intellectual
+ prostration. At last he formed a permanent affection for the wife
+ of Prince Charles Edward, the Countess of Albany, in close
+ friendship with whom he lived after her husband's death. The
+ society of this lady gave him perfect happiness; but it was
+ founded on her lofty beauty, the pathos of her situation, and her
+ intellectual qualities. Melpomene presided at this union, while
+ Thalia blessed the nuptials of Goldoni. How characteristic also
+ were the adventures which these two pairs of lovers encountered!
+ Goldoni once carried his wife upon his back across two rivers in
+ their flight from the Spanish to the Austrian camp at Rimini,
+ laughing and groaning, and perceiving the humour of his situation
+ all the time. Alfieri, on an occasion of even greater difficulty,
+ was stopped with his illustrious friend at the gates of Paris in
+ 1792. They were flying in post-chaises, with their servants and
+ their baggage, from the devoted city, when a troop of
+ <i>sansculottes</i> rushed on them, surged around the carriage,
+ called them aristocrats, and tried to drag them off to prison.
+ Alfieri, with his tall gaunt figure, pallid face, and red
+ voluminous hair, stormed, raged, and raised his deep bass voice
+ above the tumult. For half an hour he fought with them, then made
+ his coachmen gallop through the gates, and scarcely halted till
+ they got to Gravelines. By this prompt movement they escaped
+ arrest and death at Paris. These two scenes would make agreeable
+ companion pictures: Goldoni staggering beneath his wife across
+ the muddy bed of an Italian stream&mdash;the smiling writer of
+ agreeable plays, with his half-tearful helpmate ludicrous in her
+ disasters; Alfieri mad with rage among Parisian Mĉnads, his
+ princess quaking in her carriage, the air hoarse with cries, and
+ death and safety trembling in the balance. It is no wonder that
+ the one man wrote 'La Donna di Garbo' and the 'Cortese
+ Veneziano,' while the other was inditing essays on Tyranny and
+ dramas of 'Antigone,' 'Timoleon,' and 'Brutus.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The difference between the men is seen no less remarkably in
+ regard to courage. Alfieri was a reckless rider, and astonished
+ even English huntsmen by his desperate leaps. In one of them he
+ fell and broke his collar-bone, but not the less he held his
+ tryst with a fair lady, climbed her park gates, and fought a duel
+ with her husband. Goldoni was a pantaloon for cowardice. In the
+ room of an inn at Desenzano which he occupied together with a
+ female fellow-traveller, an attempt was made to rob them by a
+ thief at night. All Goldoni was able to do consisted in crying
+ out for help, and the lady called him 'M. l'Abbé' ever after for
+ his want of pluck. Goldoni must have been by far the more
+ agreeable of the two. In all his changes from town to town of
+ Italy he found amusement and brought gaiety. The sights, the
+ theatres, the society aroused his curiosity. He trembled with
+ excitement at the performance of his pieces, made friends with
+ the actors, taught them, and wrote parts to suit their qualities.
+ At Pisa he attended as a stranger the meeting of the Arcadian
+ Academy, and at its close attracted all attention to himself by
+ his clever improvisation. He was in truth a ready-witted man,
+ pliable, full of resource, bred half a valet, half a Roman
+ <i>grĉculus</i>. Alfieri saw more of Europe than Goldoni. France,
+ Germany, Holland, Switzerland, England, Spain, all parts of Italy
+ he visited with restless haste. From land to land he flew,
+ seeking no society, enjoying nothing, dashing from one inn door
+ to another with his servants and his carriages, and thinking
+ chiefly of the splendid stud of horses which he took about with
+ him upon his travels. He was a lonely, stiff, self-engrossed,
+ indomitable man. He could not rest at home: he could not bear to
+ be the vassal of a king and breathe the air of courts. So he
+ lived always on the wing, and ended by exiling himself from
+ Sardinia in order to escape the trammels of paternal government.
+ As for his tragedies, he wrote them to win laurels from
+ posterity. He never cared to see them acted; he bullied even his
+ printers and correctors; he cast a glove down in defiance of his
+ critics. Goldoni sought the smallest meed of approbation. It
+ pleased him hugely in his old age to be Italian master to a
+ French princess. Alfieri openly despised the public. Goldoni
+ wrote because he liked to write; Alfieri, for the sake of proving
+ his superior powers. Against Alfieri's hatred of Turin and its
+ trivial solemnities, we have to set Goldoni's love of Venice and
+ its petty pleasures. He would willingly have drunk chocolate and
+ played at dominoes or picquet all his life on the Piazza di San
+ Marco, when Alfieri was crossing the sierras on his Andalusian
+ horse, and devouring a frugal meal of rice in solitude. Goldoni
+ glided through life an easy man, with genial, venial thoughts;
+ with a clear, gay, gentle temper; a true sense of what is good
+ and just; and a heart that loved diffusively, if not too warmly.
+ Many were the checks and obstacles thrown on his path; but round
+ them or above them he passed nimbly, without scar or scathe.
+ Poverty went close behind him, but he kept her off, and never
+ felt the pinch of need. Alfieri strained and strove against the
+ barriers of fate; a sombre, rugged man, proud, candid, and
+ self-confident, who broke or bent all opposition; now moving
+ solemnly with tragic pomp, now dashing passionately forward by
+ the might of will. Goldoni drew his inspirations from the moment
+ and surrounding circumstances. Alfieri pursued an ideal, slowly
+ formed, but strongly fashioned and resolutely followed. Of wealth
+ he had plenty and to spare, but he disregarded it, and was a
+ Stoic in his mode of life. He was an unworldly man, and hated
+ worldliness. Goldoni, but for his authorship, would certainly
+ have grown a prosperous advocate, and died of gout in Venice.
+ Goldoni liked smart clothes; Alfieri went always in black.
+ Goldoni's fits of spleen&mdash;for he <i>was</i> melancholy now
+ and then&mdash;lasted a day or two, and disappeared before a
+ change of place. Alfieri dragged his discontent about with him
+ all over Europe, and let it interrupt his work and mar his
+ intellect for many months together. Alfieri was a patriot, and
+ hated France. Goldoni never speaks of politics, and praises Paris
+ as a heaven on earth. The genial moralising of the latter appears
+ childish by the side of Alfieri's terse philosophy and pregnant
+ remarks on the development of character. What suits the page of
+ Plautus would look poor in 'Oedipus' or 'Agamemnon.' Goldoni's
+ memoirs are diffuse and flippant in their light French dress.
+ They seem written to please. Alfieri's Italian style marches with
+ dignity and Latin terseness. He rarely condescends to smile. He
+ writes to instruct the world and to satisfy himself. Grim humour
+ sometimes flashes out, as when he tells the story of the Order of
+ Homer, which he founded. How different from Goldoni's naïve
+ account of his little ovation in the theatre at Paris!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it would be idle to carry on this comparison, already
+ tedious. The life of Goldoni was one long scene of shifts and
+ jests, of frequent triumphs and some failures, of lessons hard at
+ times, but kindly. Passions and <i>ennui</i>, flashes of heroic
+ patriotism, constant suffering and stoical endurance, art and
+ love idealised, fill up the life of Alfieri. Goldoni clung much
+ to his fellow-men, and shared their pains and pleasures. Alfieri
+ spent many of his years in almost absolute solitude. On the whole
+ character and deeds of the one man was stamped Comedy: the other
+ was own son of Tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, after reading the autobiographies of Alfieri and Goldoni, we
+ turn to the perusal of their plays, we shall perceive that there
+ is no better commentary on the works of an artist than his life,
+ and no better life than one written by himself. The old style of
+ criticism, which strove to separate an author's productions from
+ his life, and even from the age in which he lived, to set up an
+ arbitrary canon of taste, and to select one or two great painters
+ or poets as ideals because they seemed to illustrate that canon,
+ has passed away. We are beginning to feel that art is a part of
+ history and of physiology. That is to say, the artist's work can
+ only be rightly understood by studying his age and temperament.
+ Goldoni's versatility and want of depth induced him to write
+ sparkling comedies. The merry life men passed at Venice in its
+ years of decadence proved favourable to his genius. Alfieri's
+ melancholy and passionate qualities, fostered in solitude, and
+ aggravated by a tyranny he could not bear, led him irresistibly
+ to tragic composition. Though a noble, his nobility only added to
+ his pride, and insensibly his intellect had been imbued with the
+ democratic sentiments which were destined to shake Europe in his
+ lifetime. This, in itself, was a tragic circumstance, bringing
+ him into close sympathy with the Brutus, the Prometheus, the
+ Timoleon of ancient history. Goldoni's <i>bourgeoisie</i>, in the
+ atmosphere of which he was born and bred, was essentially comic.
+ The true comedy of manners, which is quite distinct from
+ Shakspere's fancy or from Aristophanic satire, is always laid in
+ middle life. Though Goldoni tried to write tragedies, they were
+ unimpassioned, dull, and tame. He lacked altogether the fire,
+ high-wrought nobility of sentiment, and sense of form essential
+ for tragic art. On the other hand, Alfieri composed some comedies
+ before his death which were devoid of humour, grace, and
+ lightness. A strange elephantine eccentricity is their utmost
+ claim to comic character. Indeed, the temper of Alfieri, ever in
+ extremes, led him even to exaggerate the qualities of tragedy. He
+ carried its severity to a pitch of dulness and monotony. His
+ chiaroscuro was too strong; virtue and villany appearing in pure
+ black and white upon his pages. His hatred of tyrants induced him
+ to transgress the rules of probability, so that it has been well
+ said that if his wicked kings had really had such words of scorn
+ and hatred thrown at them by their victims, they were greatly to
+ be pitied. On the other hand, his pithy laconisms have often a
+ splendidly tragical effect. There is nothing in the modern drama
+ more rhetorically impressive, though spasmodic, than the
+ well-known dialogue between Antigone and Creon:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '<i>Cr</i>. Scegliesti?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '<i>Ant</i>. Ho scelto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '<i>Cr</i>. Emon?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '<i>Ant</i>. Morte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '<i>Cr</i>. L'avrai!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Goldoni's comedies, again, have not enough of serious thought or
+ of true creative imagination to be works of high art. They lean
+ too much to the side of farce; they have none of the tragic salt
+ which gives a dignity to Tartuffe. They are, in a word, almost
+ too enethistically comic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contrast between these authors might lead us to raise the
+ question long ago discussed by Socrates at Agathon's
+ banquet&mdash;Can the same man write both comedies and tragedies?
+ We in England are accustomed to read the serious and comic plays
+ of Shakspere, Fletcher, Jonson, and to think that one poet could
+ excel in either branch. The custom of the Elizabethan theatre
+ obliged this double authorship; yet it must be confessed that
+ Shakspere's comedies are not such comedies as Greek or Romnan or
+ French critics would admit. They are works of the purest
+ imagination, wholly free from the laws of this world; while the
+ tragedies of Fletcher have a melodramatic air equally at variance
+ with the classical Melpomene. It may very seriously be doubted
+ whether the same mind could produce, with equal power, a comedy
+ like the 'Cortese Veneziano' and a tragedy like Alfieri's
+ 'Brutus.' At any rate, returning to our old position, we find in
+ these two men the very opposite conditions of dramatic genius.
+ They are, as it were, specimens prepared by Nature for the
+ instruction of those who analyse genius in its relations to
+ temperament, to life, and to external circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="#CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a>
+ </h5>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+ <h2>
+ <a name="FOOTNOTES" id="FOOTNOTES"></a><i>FOOTNOTES:</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+ <br />
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This Essay
+ was written in 1866, and published in 1867. Reprinting it in
+ 1879, after eighteen months spent continuously in one high
+ valley of the Grisons, I feel how slight it is. For some
+ amends, I take this opportunity of printing at the end of it a
+ description of Davos in winter.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> See,
+ however, what is said about Leo Battista Alberti in the sketch
+ of Rimini in the second series.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> The Grisons
+ surname Campèll may derive from the Romansch Campo Bello. The
+ founder of the house was one Kaspar Campèll, who in the first
+ half of the sixteenth century preached the Reformed religion in
+ the Engadine.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> I have
+ translated and printed at the end of the second volume some
+ sonnets of Petrarch as a kind of palinode for this
+ impertinence.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> This begs
+ the question whether
+ &lambda;&epsilon;&upsilon;&kappa;&#972;&#970;&omicron;&nu; does
+ not properly mean snowflake, or some such flower. Violets in
+ Greece, however, were often used for crowns:
+ &#912;&omicron;&sigma;&tau;&#941;&phi;&alpha;&nu;&omicron;&sigmaf;
+ is the epithet of Homer for Aphrodite, and of Aristophanes for
+ Athens.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Olive-trees
+ must be studied at Mentone or San Remo, in Corfu, at Tivoli, on
+ the coast between Syracuse and Catania, or on the lowlands of
+ Apulia. The stunted but productive trees of the Rhone valley,
+ for example, are no real measure of the beauty they can
+ exhibit.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Dante, Par.
+ xi. 106.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> It is but
+ just to Doctor Pasta to remark that the above sentence was
+ written more than ten years ago. Since then he has enlarged and
+ improved his house in many ways, furnished it more luxuriously,
+ made paths through the beechwoods round it, and brought
+ excellent water at a great cost from a spring near the summit
+ of the mountain. A more charming residence from early spring to
+ late autumn can scarcely be discovered.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> 'The down
+ upon their cheeks and chin was yellower than helichrysus, and
+ their breasts gleamed whiter far than thou, O Moon.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> 'Thy
+ tresses have I oftentimes compared to Ceres' yellow autumn
+ sheaves, wreathed in curled bands around thy head.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Both
+ these and the large frescoes in the choir have been
+ chromolithographed by the Arundel Society.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> I cannot
+ see clearly through these transactions, the muddy waters of
+ decadent Italian plot and counterplot being inscrutable to
+ senses assisted by nothing more luminous than mere tradition.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Those who
+ are interested in such matters may profitably compare this
+ description of a planned murder in the sixteenth century with
+ the account written by Ambrogio Tremazzi of the way in which he
+ tracked and slew Troilo Orsini in Paris in the year 1577. It is
+ given by Gnoli in his <i>Vittoria Accoramboni</i>, pp. 404-414.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> So far as
+ I can discover, the only church of San Spirito in Venice was a
+ building on the island of San Spirito, erected by Sansavino,
+ which belonged to the Sestiere di S. Croce, and which was
+ suppressed in 1656. Its plate and the fine pictures which
+ Titian painted there were transferred at that date to S.M.
+ della Salute. I cannot help inferring that either Bibboni's
+ memory failed him, or that his words were wrongly understood by
+ printer or amanuensis. If for S. Spirito we substitute S.
+ Stefano, the account would be intelligible.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 100%;' />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
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+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece
+by John Addington Symonds
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece
+
+Author: John Addington Symonds
+
+Release Date: February 8, 2005 [EBook #14972]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SKETCHES IN ITALY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ted Garvin, Leonard Johnson and the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SKETCHES AND STUDIES IN ITALY AND GREECE
+
+
+
+
+
+ BY JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS
+
+ AUTHOR OF "RENAISSANCE IN ITALY", "STUDIES OF THE GREEK POETS," ETC
+
+
+
+
+
+ FIRST SERIES
+
+
+
+
+ NEW EDITION
+
+ LONDON
+ JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
+ 1914
+
+
+
+
+PREFATORY NOTE
+
+
+In preparing this new edition of the late J.A. Symonds's three volumes
+of travels, 'Sketches in Italy and Greece,' 'Sketches and Studies
+in Italy,' and 'Italian Byways,' nothing has been changed except the
+order of the Essays. For the convenience of travellers a topographical
+arrangement has been adopted. This implied a new title to cover the
+contents of all three volumes, and 'Sketches and Studies in Italy
+and Greece' has been chosen as departing least from the author's own
+phraseology.
+
+HORATIO F. BROWN.
+Venice: _June_ 1898.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ THE LOVE OF THE ALPS
+
+ WINTER NIGHTS AT DAVOS
+
+ BACCHUS IN GRAUBUeNDEN
+
+ OLD TOWNS OF PROVENCE
+
+ THE CORNICE
+
+ AJACCIO
+
+ MONTE GENEROSO
+
+ LOMBARD VIGNETTES
+
+ COMO AND IL MEDEGHINO
+
+ BERGAMO AND BARTOLOMMEO COLLEONI
+
+ CREMA AND THE CRUCIFIX
+
+ CHERUBINO AT THE SCALA THEATRE
+
+ A VENETIAN MEDLEY
+
+ THE GONDOLIER'S WEDDING
+
+ A CINQUE CENTO BRUTUS
+
+ TWO DRAMATISTS OF THE LAST CENTURY
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SKETCHES AND STUDIES
+
+ IN
+
+ ITALY AND GREECE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+_THE LOVE OF THE ALPS_[1]
+
+
+Of all the joys in life, none is greater than the joy of arriving on
+the outskirts of Switzerland at the end of a long dusty day's journey
+from Paris. The true epicure in refined pleasures will never travel
+to Basle by night. He courts the heat of the sun and the monotony
+of French plains,--their sluggish streams and never-ending poplar
+trees--for the sake of the evening coolness and the gradual approach
+to the great Alps, which await him at the close of the day. It is
+about Mulhausen that he begins to feel a change in the landscape.
+The fields broaden into rolling downs, watered by clear and running
+streams; the green Swiss thistle grows by riverside and cowshed; pines
+begin to tuft the slopes of gently rising hills; and now the sun has
+set, the stars come out, first Hesper, then the troop of lesser lights;
+and he feels--yes, indeed, there is now no mistake--the well-known,
+well-loved magical fresh air, that never fails to blow from snowy
+mountains and meadows watered by perennial streams. The last hour is
+one of exquisite enjoyment, and when he reaches Basle, he scarcely
+sleeps all night for hearing the swift Rhine beneath the balconies,
+and knowing that the moon is shining on its waters, through the town,
+beneath the bridges, between pasture-lands and copses, up the still
+mountain-girdled valleys to the ice-caves where the water springs.
+There is nothing in all experience of travelling like this. We may
+greet the Mediterranean at Marseilles with enthusiasm; on entering
+Rome by the Porta del Popolo, we may reflect with pride that we
+have reached the goal of our pilgrimage, and are at last among
+world-shaking memories. But neither Rome nor the Riviera wins our
+hearts like Switzerland. We do not lie awake in London thinking of
+them; we do not long so intensely, as the year comes round, to revisit
+them. Our affection is less a passion than that which we cherish for
+Switzerland.
+
+Why, then, is this? What, after all, is the love of the Alps, and when
+and where did it begin? It is easier to ask these questions than to
+answer them. The classic nations hated mountains. Greek and Roman
+poets talk of them with disgust and dread. Nothing could have been
+more depressing to a courtier of Augustus than residence at Aosta,
+even though he found his theatres and triumphal arches there. Wherever
+classical feeling has predominated, this has been the case. Cellini's
+Memoirs, written in the height of pagan Renaissance, well express
+the aversion which a Florentine or Roman felt for the inhospitable
+wildernesses of Switzerland.[2] Dryden, in his dedication to 'The
+Indian Emperor,' says, 'High objects, it is true, attract the sight;
+but it looks up with pain on craggy rocks and barren mountains, and
+continues not intent on any object which is wanting in shades and
+green to entertain it.' Addison and Gray had no better epithets than
+'rugged,' 'horrid,' and the like for Alpine landscape. The classic
+spirit was adverse to enthusiasm for mere nature. Humanity was too
+prominent, and city life absorbed all interests,--not to speak of what
+perhaps is the weightiest reason--that solitude, indifferent
+accommodation, and imperfect means of travelling, rendered mountainous
+countries peculiarly disagreeable. It is impossible to enjoy art or
+nature while suffering from fatigue and cold, dreading the attacks of
+robbers, and wondering whether you will find food and shelter at the
+end of your day's journey. Nor was it different in the Middle Ages.
+Then individuals had either no leisure from war or strife with the
+elements, or else they devoted themselves to the salvation of their
+souls. But when the ideas of the Middle Ages had decayed, when
+improved arts of life had freed men from servile subjection to daily
+needs, when the bondage of religious tyranny had been thrown off and
+political liberty allowed the full development of tastes and
+instincts, when, moreover, the classical traditions had lost their
+power, and courts and coteries became too narrow for the activity of
+man,--then suddenly it was discovered that Nature in herself possessed
+transcendent charms. It may seem absurd to class them all together;
+yet there is no doubt that the French Revolution, the criticism of the
+Bible, Pantheistic forms of religious feeling, landscape-painting,
+Alpine travelling, and the poetry of Nature, are all signs of the same
+movement--of a new Renaissance. Limitations of every sort have been
+shaken off during the last century; all forms have been destroyed, all
+questions asked. The classical spirit loved to arrange, model,
+preserve traditions, obey laws. We are intolerant of everything that
+is not simple, unbiassed by prescription, liberal as the wind, and
+natural as the mountain crags. We go to feed this spirit of freedom
+among the Alps. What the virgin forests of America are to the
+Americans, the Alps are to us. What there is in these huge blocks and
+walls of granite crowned with ice that fascinates us, it is hard to
+analyse. Why, seeing that we find them so attractive, they should have
+repelled our ancestors of the fourth generation and all the world
+before them, is another mystery. We cannot explain what rapport there
+is between our human souls and these inequalities in the surface of
+the earth which we call Alps. Tennyson speaks of
+
+ Some vague emotion of delight
+ In gazing up an Alpine height,
+
+and its vagueness eludes definition. The interest which physical
+science has created for natural objects has something to do with it.
+Curiosity and the charm of novelty increase this interest. No towns,
+no cultivated tracts of Europe however beautiful, form such a contrast
+to our London life as Switzerland. Then there is the health and joy
+that comes from exercise in open air; the senses freshened by good
+sleep; the blood quickened by a lighter and rarer atmosphere. Our
+modes of life, the breaking down of class privileges, the extension of
+education, which contribute to make the individual greater and society
+less, render the solitude of mountains refreshing. Facilities of
+travelling and improved accommodation leave us free to enjoy the
+natural beauty which we seek. Our minds, too, are prepared to
+sympathise with the inanimate world; we have learned to look on the
+universe as a whole, and ourselves as a part of it, related by close
+ties of friendship to all its other members Shelley's, Wordsworth's,
+Goethe's poetry has taught us this; we are all more or less
+Pantheists, worshippers of 'God in Nature,' convinced of the
+omnipresence of the informing mind.
+
+Thus, when we admire the Alps, we are after all but children of
+the century. We follow its inspiration blindly; and while we think
+ourselves spontaneous in our ecstasy, perform the part for which we
+have been trained from childhood by the atmosphere in which we live.
+It is this very unconsciousness and universality of the impulse we
+obey which makes it hard to analyse. Contemporary history is difficult
+to write; to define the spirit of the age in which we live is still
+more difficult; to account for 'impressions which owe all their force
+to their identity with themselves' is most difficult of all. We must
+be content to feel, and not to analyse.
+
+Rousseau has the credit of having invented the love of Nature. Perhaps
+he first expressed, in literature, the pleasures of open life among
+the mountains, of walking tours, of the '_ecole buissonniere_,'
+away from courts, and schools, and cities, which it is the fashion now
+to love. His bourgeois birth and tastes, his peculiar religious
+and social views, his intense self-engrossment,--all favoured the
+development of Nature-worship. But Rousseau was not alone, nor yet
+creative, in this instance. He was but one of the earliest to seize
+and express a new idea of growing humanity. For those who seem to be
+the most original in their inauguration of periods are only such
+as have been favourably placed by birth and education to imbibe the
+floating creeds of the whole race. They resemble the first cases of an
+epidemic, which become the centres of infection and propagate disease.
+At the time of Rousseau's greatness the French people were initiative.
+In politics, in literature, in fashions, and in philosophy, they had
+for some time led the taste of Europe. But the sentiment which first
+received a clear and powerful expression in the works of Rousseau,
+soon declared itself in the arts and literature of other nations.
+Goethe, Wordsworth, and the earlier landscape-painters, proved that
+Germany and England were not far behind the French. In England this
+love of Nature for its own sake is indigenous, and has at all times
+been peculiarly characteristic of our genius. Therefore it is not
+surprising that our life and literature and art have been foremost
+in developing the sentiment of which we are speaking. Our poets,
+painters, and prose writers gave the tone to European thought in this
+respect. Our travellers in search of the adventurous and picturesque,
+our Alpine Club, have made of Switzerland an English playground.
+
+The greatest period in our history was but a foreshadowing of this.
+To return to Nature-worship was but to reassume the habits of the
+Elizabethan age, altered indeed by all the changes of religion,
+politics, society, and science which the last three centuries have
+wrought, yet still, in its original love of free open life among the
+fields and woods, and on the sea, the same. Now the French national
+genius is classical. It reverts to the age of Louis XIV., and
+Rousseauism in their literature is as true an innovation and
+parenthesis as Pope-and-Drydenism was in ours. As in the age of the
+Reformation, so in this, the German element of the modern character
+predominates. During the two centuries from which we have emerged, the
+Latin element had the upper hand. Our love of the Alps is a Gothic, a
+Teutonic, instinct; sympathetic with all that is vague, infinite, and
+insubordinate to rules, at war with all that is defined and systematic
+in our genius. This we may perceive in individuals as well as in the
+broader aspects of arts and literatures. The classically minded man,
+the reader of Latin poets, the lover of brilliant conversation,
+the frequenter of clubs and drawing-rooms, nice in his personal
+requirements, scrupulous in his choice of words, averse to unnecessary
+physical exertion, preferring town to country life, _cannot_
+deeply feel the charm of the Alps. Such a man will dislike German art,
+and however much he may strive to be Catholic in his tastes, will find
+as he grows older that his liking for Gothic architecture and modern
+painting diminish almost to aversion before an increasing admiration
+for Greek peristyles and the Medicean Venus. If in respect of
+speculation all men are either Platonists or Aristotelians, in respect
+of taste all men are either Greek or German.
+
+At present the German, the indefinite, the natural, commands; the
+Greek, the finite, the cultivated, is in abeyance. We who talk so
+much about the feeling of the Alps, are creatures, not creators of our
+_cultus_,--a strange reflection, proving how much greater man is
+than men, the common reason of the age in which we live than our own
+reasons, its constituents and subjects.
+
+Perhaps it is our modern tendency to 'individualism' which makes the
+Alps so much to us. Society is there reduced to a vanishing point--no
+claims are made on human sympathies--there is no need to toil in
+yoke-service with our fellows. We may be alone, dream our own
+dreams, and sound the depths of personality without the reproach of
+selfishness, without a restless wish to join in action or money-making
+or the pursuit of fame. To habitual residents among the Alps this
+absence of social duties and advantages may be barbarising, even
+brutalising. But to men wearied with too much civilisation,
+and deafened by the noise of great cities, it is beyond measure
+refreshing. Then, again, among the mountains history finds no place.
+The Alps have no past nor present nor future. The human beings who
+live upon their sides are at odds with nature, clinging on for bare
+existence to the soil, sheltering themselves beneath protecting rocks
+from avalanches, damming up destructive streams, all but annihilated
+every spring. Man, who is paramount in the plain, is nothing here. His
+arts and sciences, and dynasties, and modes of life, and mighty works,
+and conquests and decays, demand our whole attention in Italy or
+Egypt. But here the mountains, immemorially the same, which were,
+which are, and which are to be, present a theatre on which the soul
+breathes freely and feels herself alone. Around her on all sides is
+God, and Nature, who is here the face of God and not the slave of man.
+The spirit of the world hath here not yet grown old. She is as young
+as on the first day; and the Alps are a symbol of the self-creating,
+self-sufficing, self-enjoying universe which lives for its own ends.
+For why do the slopes gleam with flowers, and the hillsides deck
+themselves with grass, and the inaccessible ledges of black rock bear
+their tufts of crimson primroses and flaunting tiger-lilies? Why,
+morning after morning, does the red dawn flush the pinnacles of Monte
+Rosa above cloud and mist unheeded? Why does the torrent shout, the
+avalanche reply in thunder to the music of the sun, the trees and
+rocks and meadows cry their 'Holy, Holy, Holy'? Surely not for us.
+We are an accident here, and even the few men whose eyes are fixed
+habitually upon these things are dead to them--the peasants do not
+even know the names of their own flowers, and sigh with envy when you
+tell them of the plains of Lincolnshire or Russian steppes.
+
+But indeed there is something awful in the Alpine elevation above
+human things. We do not love Switzerland merely because we associate
+its thought with recollections of holidays and joyfulness. Some of
+the most solemn moments of life are spent high up above among the
+mountains, on the barren tops of rocky passes, where the soul has
+seemed to hear in solitude a low controlling voice. It is almost
+necessary for the development of our deepest affections that some sad
+and sombre moments should be interchanged with hours of merriment and
+elasticity. It is this variety in the woof of daily life which endears
+our home to us; and perhaps none have fully loved the Alps who have
+not spent some days of meditation, or it may be of sorrow, among their
+solitudes. Splendid scenery, like music, has the power to make 'of
+grief itself a fiery chariot for mounting above the sources of grief,'
+to ennoble and refine our passions, and to teach us that our lives
+are merely moments in the years of the eternal Being. There are many,
+perhaps, who, within sight of some great scene among the Alps, upon
+the height of the Stelvio or the slopes of Muerren, or at night in
+the valley of Courmayeur, have felt themselves raised above cares
+and doubts and miseries by the mere recognition of unchangeable
+magnificence; have found a deep peace in the sense of their own
+nothingness. It is not granted to us everyday to stand upon these
+pinnacles of rest and faith above the world. But having once stood
+there, how can we forget the station? How can we fail, amid the
+tumult of our common cares, to feel at times the hush of that far-off
+tranquillity? When our life is most commonplace, when we are ill or
+weary in city streets, we can remember the clouds upon the mountains
+we have seen, the sound of innumerable waterfalls, and the scent of
+countless flowers. A photograph of Bisson's or of Braun's, the name of
+some well-known valley, the picture of some Alpine plant, rouses the
+sacred hunger in our souls, and stirs again the faith in beauty and
+in rest beyond ourselves which no man can take from us. We owe a
+deep debt of gratitude to everything which enables us to rise above
+depressing and enslaving circumstances, which brings us nearer in some
+way or other to what is eternal in the universe, and which makes us
+know that, whether we live or die, suffer or enjoy, life and gladness
+are still strong in the world. On this account, the proper attitude
+of the soul among the Alps is one of silence. It is almost impossible
+without a kind of impiety to frame in words the feelings they inspire.
+Yet there are some sayings, hallowed by long usage, which throng
+the mind through a whole summer's day, and seem in harmony with its
+emotions--some portions of the Psalms or lines of greatest poets,
+inarticulate hymns of Beethoven and Mendelssohn, waifs and strays not
+always apposite, but linked by strong and subtle chains of feeling
+with the grandeur of the mountains. This reverential feeling for
+the Alps is connected with the Pantheistic form of our religious
+sentiments to which I have before alluded. It is a trite remark, that
+even devout men of the present generation prefer temples _not_
+made with hands to churches, and worship God in the fields more
+contentedly than in their pews. What Mr. Ruskin calls 'the instinctive
+sense of the divine presence not formed into distinct belief' lies at
+the root of our profound veneration for the nobler aspects of mountain
+scenery. This instinctive sense has been very variously expressed by
+Goethe in Faust's celebrated confession of faith, by Shelley in the
+stanzas of 'Adonais,' which begin 'He is made one with nature,' by
+Wordsworth in the lines on Tintern Abbey, and lately by Mr. Roden Noel
+in his noble poems of Pantheism. It is more or less strongly felt by
+all who have recognised the indubitable fact that religious belief is
+undergoing a sure process of change from the dogmatic distinctness of
+the past to some at present dimly descried creed of the future. Such
+periods of transition are of necessity full of discomfort, doubt, and
+anxiety, vague, variable, and unsatisfying. The men in whose spirits
+the fermentation of the change is felt, who have abandoned their
+old moorings, and have not yet reached the haven for which they are
+steering, cannot but be indistinct and undecided in their faith. The
+universe of which they form a part becomes important to them in its
+infinite immensity. The principles of beauty, goodness, order and law,
+no longer connected in their minds with definite articles of faith,
+find symbols in the outer world. They are glad to fly at certain
+moments from mankind and its oppressive problems, for which religion
+no longer provides a satisfactory solution, to Nature, where they
+vaguely localise the spirit that broods over us controlling all our
+being. To such men Goethe's hymn is a form of faith, and born of such
+a mood are the following far humbler verses:--
+
+ At Muerren let the morning lead thee out
+ To walk upon the cold and cloven hills,
+ To hear the congregated mountains shout
+ Their paean of a thousand foaming rills.
+ Raimented with intolerable light
+ The snow-peaks stand above thee, row on row
+ Arising, each a seraph in his might;
+ An organ each of varied stop doth blow.
+ Heaven's azure dome trembles through all her spheres,
+ Feeling that music vibrate; and the sun
+ Raises his tenor as he upward steers,
+ And all the glory-coated mists that run
+ Below him in the valley, hear his voice,
+ And cry unto the dewy fields, Rejoice!
+
+There is a profound sympathy between music and fine scenery: they both
+affect us in the same way, stirring strong but undefined emotions,
+which express themselves in 'idle tears,' or evoking thoughts 'which
+lie,' as Wordsworth says, 'too deep for tears,' beyond the reach
+of any words. How little we know what multitudes of mingling
+reminiscences, held in solution by the mind, and colouring its fancy
+with the iridescence of variable hues, go to make up the sentiments
+which music or which mountains stir! It is the very vagueness,
+changefulness, and dreamlike indistinctness of these feelings which
+cause their charm; they harmonise with the haziness of our beliefs and
+seem to make our very doubts melodious. For this reason it is obvious
+that unrestrained indulgence in the pleasures of music or of scenery
+may tend to destroy habits of clear thinking, sentimentalise the mind,
+and render it more apt to entertain embryonic fancies than to bring
+ideas to definite perfection.
+
+If hours of thoughtfulness and seclusion are necessary to the
+development of a true love for the Alps, it is no less essential to a
+right understanding of their beauty that we should pass some wet and
+gloomy days among the mountains. The unclouded sunsets and sunrises
+which often follow one another in September in the Alps, have
+something terrible. They produce a satiety of splendour, and oppress
+the mind with a sense of perpetuity. I remember spending such a season
+in one of the Oberland valleys, high up above the pine-trees, in
+a little chalet. Morning after morning I awoke to see the sunbeams
+glittering on the Eiger and the Jungfrau; noon after noon the
+snow-fields blazed beneath a steady fire; evening after evening they
+shone like beacons in the red light of the setting sun. Then peak by
+peak they lost the glow; the soul passed from them, and they stood
+pale yet weirdly garish against the darkened sky. The stars came out,
+the moon shone, but not a cloud sailed over the untroubled heavens.
+Thus day after day for several weeks there was no change, till I was
+seized with an overpowering horror of unbroken calm. I left the valley
+for a time; and when I returned to it in wind and rain, I found that
+the partial veiling of the mountain heights restored the charm which
+I had lost and made me feel once more at home. The landscape takes a
+graver tone beneath the mist that hides the higher peaks, and
+comes drifting, creeping, feeling, through the pines upon their
+slopes--white, silent, blinding vapour-wreaths around the sable
+spires. Sometimes the cloud descends and blots out everything. Again
+it lifts a little, showing cottages and distant Alps beneath its
+skirts. Then it sweeps over the whole valley like a veil, just broken
+here and there above a lonely chalet or a thread of distant dangling
+torrent foam. Sounds, too, beneath the mist are more strange. The
+torrent seems to have a hoarser voice and grinds the stones more
+passionately against its boulders. The cry of shepherds through the
+fog suggests the loneliness and danger of the hills. The bleating
+of penned sheep or goats, and the tinkling of the cowbells, are
+mysteriously distant and yet distinct in the dull dead air. Then,
+again, how immeasurably high above our heads appear the domes and
+peaks of snow revealed through chasms in the drifting cloud; how
+desolate the glaciers and the avalanches in gleams of light that
+struggle through the mist! There is a leaden glare peculiar to clouds,
+which makes the snow and ice more lurid. Not far from the house where
+I am writing, the avalanche that swept away the bridge last winter is
+lying now, dripping away, dank and dirty, like a rotting whale. I can
+see it from my window, green beech-boughs nodding over it, forlorn
+larches bending their tattered branches by its side, splinters of
+broken pine protruding from its muddy caves, the boulders on its
+flank, and the hoarse hungry torrent tossing up its tongues to lick
+the ragged edge of snow. Close by, the meadows, spangled with yellow
+flowers and red and blue, look even more brilliant than if the sun
+were shining on them. Every cup and blade of grass is drinking. But
+the scene changes; the mist has turned into rain-clouds, and the
+steady rain drips down, incessant, blotting out the view. Then, too,
+what a joy it is if the clouds break towards evening with a north
+wind, and a rainbow in the valley gives promise of a bright to-morrow!
+We look up to the cliffs above our heads, and see that they have just
+been powdered with the snow that is a sign of better weather.
+
+Such rainy days ought to be spent in places like Seelisberg and
+Muerren, at the edge of precipices, in front of mountains, or above a
+lake. The cloud-masses crawl and tumble about the valleys like a brood
+of dragons; now creeping along the ledges of the rock with sinuous
+self-adjustment to its turns and twists; now launching out into
+the deep, repelled by battling winds, or driven onward in a coil of
+twisted and contorted serpent curls. In the midst of summer these wet
+seasons often end in a heavy fall of snow. You wake some morning to
+see the meadows which last night were gay with July flowers huddled
+up in snow a foot in depth. But fair weather does not tarry long to
+reappear. You put on your thickest boots and sally forth to find the
+great cups of the gentians full of snow, and to watch the rising of
+the cloud-wreaths under the hot sun. Bad dreams or sickly thoughts,
+dissipated by returning daylight or a friend's face, do not fly away
+more rapidly and pleasantly than those swift glory-coated mists that
+lose themselves we know not where in the blue depths of the sky.
+
+In contrast with these rainy days nothing can be more perfect than
+clear moonlight nights. There is a terrace upon the roof of the inn at
+Courmayeur where one may spend hours in the silent watches, when all
+the world has gone to sleep beneath. The Mont Chetif and the Mont
+de la Saxe form a gigantic portal not unworthy of the pile that lies
+beyond. For Mont Blanc resembles a vast cathedral; its countless
+spires are scattered over a mass like that of the Duomo at Milan,
+rising into one tower at the end. By night the glaciers glitter in the
+steady moon; domes, pinnacles, and buttresses stand clear of clouds.
+Needles of every height and most fantastic shapes rise from the
+central ridge, some solitary, like sharp arrows shot against the sky,
+some clustering into sheaves. On every horn of snow and bank of grassy
+hill stars sparkle, rising, setting, rolling round through the long
+silent night. Moonlight simplifies and softens the landscape. Colours
+become scarcely distinguishable, and forms, deprived of half their
+detail, gain in majesty and size. The mountains seem greater far by
+night than day--higher heights and deeper depths, more snowy pyramids,
+more beetling crags, softer meadows, and darker pines. The whole
+valley is hushed, but for the torrent and the chirping grasshopper and
+the striking of the village clocks. The black tower and the houses of
+Courmayeur in the foreground gleam beneath the moon until she reaches
+the edge of the Cramont, and then sinks quietly away, once more
+to reappear among the pines, then finally to leave the valley dark
+beneath the shadow of the mountain's bulk. Meanwhile the heights of
+snow still glitter in the steady light: they, too, will soon be dark,
+until the dawn breaks, tinging them with rose.
+
+But it is not fair to dwell exclusively upon the more sombre aspect of
+Swiss beauty when there are so many lively scenes of which to speak.
+The sunlight and the freshness and the flowers of Alpine meadows form
+more than half the charm of Switzerland. The other day we walked to a
+pasture called the Col de Checruit, high up the valley of Courmayeur,
+where the spring was still in its first freshness. Gradually we
+climbed, by dusty roads and through hot fields where the grass had
+just been mown, beneath the fierce light of the morning sun. Not a
+breath of air was stirring, and the heavy pines hung overhead upon
+their crags, as if to fence the gorge from every wandering breeze.
+There is nothing more oppressive than these scorching sides of narrow
+rifts, shut in by woods and precipices. But suddenly the valley
+broadened, the pines and larches disappeared, and we found ourselves
+upon a wide green semicircle of the softest meadows. Little rills of
+water went rushing through them, rippling over pebbles, rustling under
+dock leaves, and eddying against their wooden barriers. Far and wide
+'you scarce could see the grass for flowers,' while on every side
+the tinkling of cow-bells, and the voices of shepherds calling to one
+another from the Alps, or singing at their work, were borne across the
+fields. As we climbed we came into still fresher pastures, where the
+snow had scarcely melted. There the goats and cattle were collected,
+and the shepherds sat among them, fondling the kids and calling them
+by name. When they called, the creatures came, expecting salt and
+bread. It was pretty to see them lying near their masters, playing and
+butting at them with their horns, or bleating for the sweet rye-bread.
+The women knitted stockings, laughing among themselves, and singing
+all the while. As soon as we reached them, they gathered round to
+talk. An old herdsman, who was clearly the patriarch of this Arcadia,
+asked us many questions in a slow deliberate voice. We told him who
+we were, and tried to interest him in the cattle-plague, which he
+appeared to regard as an evil very unreal and far away--like the
+murrain upon Pharaoh's herds which one reads about in Exodus. But
+he was courteous and polite, doing the honours of his pasture with
+simplicity and ease. He took us to his chalet and gave us bowls of
+pure cold milk. It was a funny little wooden house, clean and dark.
+The sky peeped through its tiles, and if shepherds were not in the
+habit of sleeping soundly all night long, they might count the setting
+and rising stars without lifting their heads from the pillow. He told
+us how far pleasanter they found the summer season than the long cold
+winter which they have to spend in gloomy houses in Courmayeur. This,
+indeed, is the true pastoral life which poets have described--a happy
+summer holiday among the flowers, well occupied with simple cares, and
+harassed by 'no enemy but winter and rough weather.'
+
+Very much of the charm of Switzerland belongs to simple things--to
+greetings from the herdsmen, the 'Guten Morgen,' and 'Guten Abend,'
+that are invariably given and taken upon mountain paths; to the tame
+creatures, with their large dark eyes, who raise their heads one
+moment from the pasture while you pass; and to the plants that grow
+beneath your feet. The latter end of May is the time when spring
+begins in the high Alps. Wherever sunlight smiles away a patch of
+snow, the brown turf soon becomes green velvet, and the velvet stars
+itself with red and white and gold and blue. You almost see the grass
+and lilies grow. First come pale crocuses and lilac soldanellas. These
+break the last dissolving clods of snow, and stand upon an island,
+with the cold wall they have thawed all round them. It is the fate
+of these poor flowers to spring and flourish on the very skirts
+of retreating winter; they soon wither--the frilled chalice of the
+soldanella shrivels up and the crocus fades away before the grass
+has grown; the sun, which is bringing all the other plants to life,
+scorches their tender petals. Often when summer has fairly come,
+you still may see their pearly cups and lilac bells by the side of
+avalanches, between the chill snow and the fiery sun, blooming and
+fading hour by hour. They have as it were but a Pisgah view of the
+promised land, of the spring which they are foremost to proclaim. Next
+come the clumsy gentians and yellow anemones, covered with soft
+down like fledgling birds. These are among the earliest and hardiest
+blossoms that embroider the high meadows with a diaper of blue and
+gold. About the same time primroses and auriculas begin to tuft the
+dripping rocks, while frail white fleur-de-lis, like flakes of
+snow forgotten by the sun, and golden-balled ranunculuses join with
+forget-me-nots and cranesbill in a never-ending dance upon the grassy
+floor. Happy, too, is he who finds the lilies-of-the-valley clustering
+about the chestnut boles upon the Colma, or in the beechwood by
+the stream at Macugnaga, mixed with garnet-coloured columbines and
+fragrant white narcissus, which the people of the villages call
+'Angiolini.' There, too, is Solomon's seal, with waxen bells and
+leaves expanded like the wings of hovering butterflies. But these
+lists of flowers are tiresome and cold; it would be better to draw
+the portrait of one which is particularly fascinating. I think that
+botanists have called it _Saxifraga cotyledon_; yet, in spite
+of its long name, it is beautiful and poetic. London-pride is the
+commonest of all the saxifrages; but the one of which I speak is as
+different from London-pride as a Plantagenet upon his throne from that
+last Plantagenet who died obscure and penniless some years ago. It is
+a great majestic flower, which plumes the granite rocks of Monte Rosa
+in the spring. At other times of the year you see a little tuft of
+fleshy leaves set like a cushion on cold ledges and dark places of
+dripping cliffs. You take it for a stonecrop--one of those weeds
+doomed to obscurity, and safe from being picked because they are so
+uninviting--and you pass it by incuriously. But about June it puts
+forth its power, and from the cushion of pale leaves there springs a
+strong pink stem, which rises upward for a while, and then curves
+down and breaks into a shower of snow-white blossoms. Far away the
+splendour gleams, hanging like a plume of ostrich-feathers from the
+roof of rock, waving to the wind, or stooping down to touch the water
+of the mountain stream that dashes it with dew. The snow at evening,
+glowing with a sunset flush, is not more rosy-pure than this cascade
+of pendent blossoms. It loves to be alone--inaccessible ledges, chasms
+where winds combat, or moist caverns overarched near thundering falls,
+are the places that it seeks. I will not compare it to a spirit of the
+mountains or to a proud lonely soul, for such comparisons desecrate
+the simplicity of nature, and no simile can add a glory to the flower.
+It seems to have a conscious life of its own, so large and glorious
+it is, so sensitive to every breath of air, so nobly placed upon its
+bending stem, so royal in its solitude. I first saw it years ago on
+the Simplon, feathering the drizzling crags above Isella. Then we
+found it near Baveno, in a crack of sombre cliff beneath the mines.
+The other day we cut an armful opposite Varallo, by the Sesia, and
+then felt like murderers; it was so sad to hold in our hands the
+triumph of those many patient months, the full expansive life of
+the flower, the splendour visible from valleys and hillsides, the
+defenceless creature which had done its best to make the gloomy places
+of the Alps most beautiful.
+
+After passing many weeks among the high Alps it is a pleasure to
+descend into the plains. The sunset, and sunrise, and the stars of
+Lombardy, its level horizons and vague misty distances, are a source
+of absolute relief after the narrow skies and embarrassed prospects of
+a mountain valley. Nor are the Alps themselves ever more imposing than
+when seen from Milan or the church-tower of Chivasso or the terrace
+of Novara, with a foreground of Italian cornfields and old city towers
+and rice-ground, golden-green beneath a Lombard sun. Half veiled
+by clouds, the mountains rise like visionary fortress walls of a
+celestial city--unapproachable, beyond the range of mortal feet.
+But those who know by old experience what friendly chalets, and cool
+meadows, and clear streams are hidden in their folds and valleys,
+send forth fond thoughts and messages, like carrier-pigeons, from the
+marble parapets of Milan, crying, 'Before another sun has set, I too
+shall rest beneath the shadow of their pines!' It is in truth not more
+than a day's journey from Milan to the brink of snow at Macugnaga. But
+very sad it is to _leave_ the Alps, to stand upon the terraces
+of Berne and waft ineffectual farewells. The unsympathising Aar
+rushes beneath; and the snow-peaks, whom we love like friends, abide
+untroubled by the coming and the going of the world. The clouds drift
+over them--the sunset warms them with a fiery kiss. Night comes, and
+we are hurried far away to wake beside the Seine, remembering, with a
+pang of jealous passion, that the flowers on Alpine meadows are still
+blooming, and the rivulets still flowing with a ceaseless song, while
+Paris shops are all we see, and all we hear is the dull clatter of a
+Paris crowd.
+
+
+_THE ALPS IN WINTER_
+
+
+The gradual approach of winter is very lovely in the high Alps. The
+valley of Davos, where I am writing, more than five thousand feet
+above the sea, is not beautiful, as Alpine valleys go, though it has
+scenery both picturesque and grand within easy reach. But when summer
+is passing into autumn, even the bare slopes of the least romantic
+glen are glorified. Golden lights and crimson are cast over the
+grey-green world by the fading of innumerable plants. Then the larches
+begin to put on sallow tints that deepen into orange, burning against
+the solid blue sky like amber. The frosts are severe at night, and the
+meadow grass turns dry and wan. The last lilac crocuses die upon the
+fields. Icicles, hanging from watercourse or mill-wheel, glitter in
+the noonday sunlight. The wind blows keenly from the north, and now
+the snow begins to fall and thaw and freeze, and fall and thaw again.
+The seasons are confused; wonderful days of flawless purity are
+intermingled with storm and gloom. At last the time comes when a great
+snowfall has to be expected. There is hard frost in the early morning,
+and at nine o'clock the thermometer stands at 2 deg.. The sky is clear,
+but it clouds rapidly with films of cirrus and of stratus in the south
+and west. Soon it is covered over with grey vapour in a level sheet,
+all the hill-tops standing hard against the steely heavens. The cold
+wind from the west freezes the moustache to one's pipe-stem. By noon
+the air is thick with a coagulated mist; the temperature meanwhile has
+risen, and a little snow falls at intervals. The valleys are filled
+with a curious opaque blue, from which the peaks rise, phantom-like
+and pallid, into the grey air, scarcely distinguishable from their
+background. The pine-forests on the mountain-sides are of darkest
+indigo. There is an indescribable stillness and a sense of incubation.
+The wind has fallen. Later on, the snow-flakes flutter silently and
+sparely through the lifeless air. The most distant landscape is quite
+blotted out. After sunset the clouds have settled down upon the hills,
+and the snow comes in thick, impenetrable fleeces. At night our hair
+crackles and sparkles when we brush it. Next morning there is a foot
+and a half of finely powdered snow, and still the snow is falling.
+Strangely loom the chalets through the semi-solid whiteness. Yet the
+air is now dry and singularly soothing. The pines are heavy with their
+wadded coverings; now and again one shakes himself in silence, and his
+burden falls in a white cloud, to leave a black-green patch upon the
+hillside, whitening again as the imperturbable fall continues. The
+stakes by the roadside are almost buried. No sound is audible. Nothing
+is seen but the snow-plough, a long raft of planks with a heavy stone
+at its stem and a sharp prow, drawn by four strong horses, and driven
+by a young man erect upon the stem.
+
+So we live through two days and nights, and on the third a north wind
+blows. The snow-clouds break and hang upon the hills in scattered
+fleeces; glimpses of blue sky shine through, and sunlight glints along
+the heavy masses. The blues of the shadows are everywhere intense. As
+the clouds disperse, they form in moulded domes, tawny like sunburned
+marble in the distant south lands. Every chalet is a miracle of
+fantastic curves, built by the heavy hanging snow. Snow lies mounded
+on the roads and fields, writhed into loveliest wreaths, or outspread
+in the softest undulations. All the irregularities of the hills are
+softened into swelling billows like the mouldings of Titanic statuary.
+
+It happened once or twice last winter that such a clearing after
+snowfall took place at full moon. Then the moon rose in a swirl of
+fleecy vapour--clouds above, beneath, and all around. The sky was
+blue as steel, and infinitely deep with mist-entangled stars. The horn
+above which she first appears stood carved of solid black, and through
+the valley's length from end to end yawned chasms and clefts of liquid
+darkness. As the moon rose, the clouds were conquered, and massed into
+rolling waves upon the ridges of the hills. The spaces of open sky
+grew still more blue. At last the silver light came flooding over all,
+and here and there the fresh snow glistened on the crags. There is
+movement, palpitation, life of light through earth and sky. To walk
+out on such a night, when the perturbation of storm is over and the
+heavens are free, is one of the greatest pleasures offered by this
+winter life. It is so light that you can read the smallest print with
+ease. The upper sky looks quite black, shading by violet and sapphire
+into turquoise upon the horizon. There is the colour of ivory upon
+the nearest snow-fields, and the distant peaks sparkle like silver,
+crystals glitter in all directions on the surface of the snow, white,
+yellow, and pale blue. The stars are exceedingly keen, but only a few
+can shine in the intensity of moonlight. The air is perfectly still,
+and though icicles may be hanging from beard and moustache to the furs
+beneath one's chin, there is no sensation of extreme cold.
+
+During the earlier frosts of the season, after the first snows have
+fallen, but when there is still plenty of moisture in the ground,
+the loveliest fern-fronds of pure rime may be found in myriads on the
+meadows. They are fashioned like perfect vegetable structures, opening
+fan-shaped upon crystal stems, and catching the sunbeams with the
+brilliancy of diamonds. Taken at certain angles, they decompose light
+into iridescent colours, appearing now like emeralds, rubies, or
+topazes, and now like Labrador spar, blending all hues in a wondrous
+sheen. When the lake freezes for the first time, its surface is of
+course quite black, and so transparent that it is easy to see the
+fishes swimming in the deep beneath; but here and there, where rime
+has fallen, there sparkle these fantastic flowers and ferns and mosses
+made of purest frost. Nothing, indeed, can be more fascinating than
+the new world revealed by frost. In shaded places of the valley you
+may walk through larches and leafless alder thickets by silent farms,
+all silvered over with hoar spangles--fairy forests, where the flowers
+and foliage are rime. The streams are flowing half-frozen over rocks
+sheeted with opaque green ice. Here it is strange to watch the swirl
+of water freeing itself from these frost-shackles, and to see it
+eddying beneath the overhanging eaves of frailest crystal-frosted
+snow. All is so silent, still, and weird in this white world, that one
+marvels when the spirit of winter will appear, or what shrill voices
+in the air will make his unimaginable magic audible. Nothing happens,
+however, to disturb the charm, save when a sunbeam cuts the chain of
+diamonds on an alder bough, and down they drift in a thin cloud of
+dust. It may be also that the air is full of floating crystals,
+like tiniest most restless fire-flies rising and falling and passing
+crosswise in the sun-illumined shade of tree or mountain-side.
+
+It is not easy to describe these beauties of the winter-world; and yet
+one word must be said about the sunsets. Let us walk out, therefore,
+towards the lake at four o'clock in mid-December. The thermometer is
+standing at 3 deg., and there is neither breath of wind nor cloud. Venus
+is just visible in rose and sapphire, and the thin young moon is
+beside her. To east and south the snowy ranges burn with yellow fire,
+deepening to orange and crimson hues, which die away and leave a
+greenish pallor. At last, the higher snows alone are livid with a last
+faint tinge of light, and all beneath is quite white. But the tide
+of glory turns. While the west grows momently more pale, the eastern
+heavens flush with afterglow, suffuse their spaces with pink and
+violet. Daffodil and tenderest emerald intermingle; and these colours
+spread until the west again has rose and primrose and sapphire
+wonderfully blent, and from the burning skies a light is cast upon the
+valley--a phantom light, less real, more like the hues of molten
+gems, than were the stationary flames of sunset. Venus and the moon
+meanwhile are silvery clear. Then the whole illumination fades like
+magic.
+
+All the charms of which I have been writing are combined in a
+sledge-drive. With an arrowy gliding motion one passes through the
+snow-world as through a dream. In the sunlight the snow surface
+sparkles with its myriad stars of crystals. In the shadow it ceases
+to glitter, and assumes a blueness scarcely less blue than the sky.
+So the journey is like sailing through alternate tracts of light
+irradiate heavens, and interstellar spaces of the clearest and most
+flawless ether. The air is like the keen air of the highest glaciers.
+As we go, the bells keep up a drowsy tinkling at the horse's head.
+The whole landscape is transfigured--lifted high up out of
+commonplaceness. The little hills are Monte Rosas and Mont Blancs.
+Scale is annihilated, and nothing tells but form. There is hardly
+any colour except the blue of sky and shadow. Everything is traced in
+vanishing tints, passing from the almost amber of the distant sunlight
+through glowing white into pale greys and brighter blues and deep
+ethereal azure. The pines stand in black platoons upon the hillsides,
+with a tinge of red or orange on their sable. Some carry masses of
+snow. Others have shaken their plumes free. The chalets are like fairy
+houses or toys, waist-deep in stores of winter fuel. With their mellow
+tones of madder and umber on the weather-beaten woodwork relieved
+against the white, with fantastic icicles and folds of snow depending
+from their eaves, or curled like coverlids from roof and window-sill,
+they are far more picturesque than in the summer. Colour, wherever it
+is found, whether in these cottages or in a block of serpentine by
+the roadside, or in the golden bulrush blades by the lake shore, takes
+more than double value. It is shed upon the landscape like a spiritual
+and transparent veil. Most beautiful of all are the sweeping lines of
+pure untroubled snow, fold over fold of undulating softness, billowing
+along the skirts of the peaked hills. There is no conveying the
+charm of immaterial, aerial, lucid beauty, the feeling of purity and
+aloofness from sordid things, conveyed by the fine touch on all our
+senses of light, colour, form, and air, and motion, and rare tinkling
+sound. The magic is like a spirit mood of Shelley's lyric verse. And,
+what is perhaps most wonderful, this delicate delight may be enjoyed
+without fear in the coldest weather. It does not matter how low the
+temperature may be, if the sun is shining, the air dry, and the wind
+asleep.
+
+Leaving the horse-sledges on the verge of some high hill-road, and
+trusting oneself to the little hand-sledge which the people of the
+Grisons use, and which the English have christened by the Canadian
+term 'toboggan,' the excitement becomes far greater. The hand-sledge
+is about three feet long, fifteen inches wide, and half a foot above
+the ground, on runners shod with iron. Seated firmly at the back,
+and guiding with the feet in front, the rider skims down precipitous
+slopes and round perilous corners with a rapidity that beats a horse's
+pace. Winding through sombre pine-forests, where the torrent roars
+fitfully among caverns of barbed ice, and the glistening mountains
+tower above in their glory of sun-smitten snow, darting round the
+frozen ledges at the turnings of the road, silently gliding at a speed
+that seems incredible, it is so smooth, he traverses two or three
+miles without fatigue, carried onward by the mere momentum of his
+weight. It is a strange and great joy. The toboggan, under these
+conditions, might be compared to an enchanted boat shooting the rapids
+of a river; and what adds to its fascination is the entire loneliness
+in which the rider passes through those weird and ever-shifting scenes
+of winter radiance. Sometimes, when the snow is drifting up the pass,
+and the world is blank behind, before, and all around, it seems like
+plunging into chaos. The muffled pines loom fantastically through
+the drift as we rush past them, and the wind, ever and anon, detaches
+great masses of snow in clouds from their bent branches. Or again at
+night, when the moon is shining, and the sky is full of flaming
+stars, and the snow, frozen to the hardness of marble, sparkles with
+innumerable crystals, a new sense of strangeness and of joy is given
+to the solitude, the swiftness, and the silence of the exercise.
+No other circumstances invest the poetry of rapid motion with more
+fascination. Shelley, who so loved the fancy of a boat inspired with
+its own instinct of life, would have delighted in the game, and would
+probably have pursued it recklessly. At the same time, as practised
+on a humbler scale nearer home, in company, and on a run selected for
+convenience rather than for picturesqueness, tobogganing is a very
+Bohemian amusement. No one who indulges in it can count on avoiding
+hard blows and violent upsets, nor will his efforts to maintain his
+equilibrium at the dangerous corners be invariably graceful.
+
+Nothing, it might be imagined, could be more monotonous than an Alpine
+valley covered up with snow. And yet to one who has passed many months
+in that seclusion Nature herself presents no monotony; for the changes
+constantly wrought by light and cloud and alternations of weather
+on this landscape are infinitely various. The very simplicity of the
+conditions seems to assist the supreme artist. One day is wonderful
+because of its unsullied purity; not a cloud visible, and the pines
+clothed in velvet of rich green beneath a faultless canopy of light.
+The next presents a fretwork of fine film, wrought by the south wind
+over the whole sky, iridescent with delicate rainbow tints within the
+influences of the sun, and ever-changing shape. On another, when the
+turbulent Foehn is blowing, streamers of snow may be seen flying from
+the higher ridges against a pallid background of slaty cloud, while
+the gaunt ribs of the hills glisten below with fitful gleams of lurid
+light. At sunrise, one morning, stealthy and mysterious vapours clothe
+the mountains from their basement to the waist, while the peaks are
+glistening serenely in clear daylight. Another opens with silently
+falling snow. A third is rosy through the length and breadth of the
+dawn-smitten valley. It is, however, impossible to catalogue the
+indescribable variety of those beauties, which those who love nature
+may enjoy by simply waiting on the changes of the winter in a single
+station of the Alps.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_WINTER NIGHTS AT DAVOS_
+
+
+I
+
+Light, marvellously soft yet penetrating, everywhere diffused,
+everywhere reflected without radiance, poured from the moon high above
+our heads in a sky tinted through all shades and modulations of blue,
+from turquoise on the horizon to opaque sapphire at the zenith--_dolce
+color_. (It is difficult to use the word _colour_ for this scene
+without suggesting an exaggeration. The blue is almost indefinable,
+yet felt. But if possible, the total effect of the night landscape
+should be rendered by careful exclusion of tints from the
+word-palette. The art of the etcher is more needed than that of the
+painter.) Heaven overhead is set with stars, shooting intensely,
+smouldering with dull red in Aldeboran, sparkling diamond-like in
+Sirius, changing from orange to crimson and green in the swart fire of
+yonder double star. On the snow this moonlight falls tenderly, not in
+hard white light and strong black shadow, but in tones of cream and
+ivory, rounding the curves of drift. The mountain peaks alone glisten
+as though they were built of silver burnished by an agate. Far away
+they rise diminished in stature by the all-pervading dimness of bright
+light, that erases the distinctions of daytime. On the path before our
+feet lie crystals of many hues, the splinters of a thousand gems. In
+the wood there are caverns of darkness, alternating with spaces of
+star-twinkled sky, or windows opened between russet stems and solid
+branches for the moony sheen. The green of the pines is felt, although
+invisible, so soft in substance that it seems less like velvet than
+some materialised depth of dark green shadow.
+
+II
+
+Snow falling noiseless and unseen. One only knows that it is falling
+by the blinking of our eyes as the flakes settle on their lids and
+melt. The cottage windows shine red, and moving lanterns of belated
+wayfarers define the void around them. Yet the night is far from dark.
+The forests and the mountain-bulk beyond the valley loom softly large
+and just distinguishable through a pearly haze. The path is purest
+trackless whiteness, almost dazzling though it has no light. This was
+what Dante felt when he reached the lunar sphere:
+
+ Parova a me, che nube ne coprisse
+ Lucida, spessa, solida e pulita.
+
+Walking silent, with insensible footfall, slowly, for the snow is deep
+above our ankles, we wonder what the world would be like if this were
+all. Could the human race be acclimatised to this monotony (we say)
+perhaps emotion would be rarer, yet more poignant, suspended brooding
+on itself, and wakening by flashes to a quintessential mood. Then
+fancy changes, and the thought occurs that even so must be a planet,
+not yet wholly made, nor called to take her place among the sisterhood
+of light and song.
+
+III
+
+Sunset was fading out upon the Rhaetikon and still reflected from the
+Seehorn on the lake, when we entered the gorge of the Fluela--dense
+pines on either hand, a mounting drift of snow in front, and faint
+peaks, paling from rose to saffron, far above, beyond. There was
+no sound but a tinkling stream and the continual jingle of our
+sledge-bells. We drove at a foot's pace, our horse finding his own
+path. When we left the forest, the light had all gone except for some
+almost imperceptible touches of primrose on the eastern horns. It was
+a moonless night, but the sky was alive with stars, and now and then
+one fell. The last house in the valley was soon passed, and we entered
+those bleak gorges where the wind, fine, noiseless, penetrating like
+an edge of steel, poured slantwise on us from the north. As we rose,
+the stars to west seemed far beneath us, and the Great Bear sprawled
+upon the ridges of the lower hills outspread. We kept slowly moving
+onward, upward, into what seemed like a thin impalpable mist, but
+was immeasurable tracts of snow. The last cembras were left behind,
+immovable upon dark granite boulders on our right. We entered a
+formless and unbillowed sea of greyness, from which there rose dim
+mountain-flanks that lost themselves in air. Up, ever up, and
+still below us westward sank the stars. We were now 7500 feet above
+sea-level, and the December night was rigid with intensity of frost.
+The cold, and movement, and solemnity of space, drowsed every sense.
+
+IV
+
+The memory of things seen and done in moonlight is like the memory of
+dreams. It is as a dream that I recall the night of our tobogganing to
+Klosters, though it was full enough of active energy. The moon was in
+her second quarter, slightly filmed with very high thin clouds, that
+disappeared as night advanced, leaving the sky and stars in all their
+lustre. A sharp frost, sinking to three degrees above zero Fahrenheit,
+with a fine pure wind, such wind as here they call 'the mountain
+breath.' We drove to Wolfgang in a two-horse sledge, four of us
+inside, and our two Christians on the box. Up there, where the Alps of
+Death descend to join the Lakehorn Alps, above the Wolfswalk, there
+is a world of whiteness--frozen ridges, engraved like cameos of aerial
+onyx upon the dark, star-tremulous sky; sculptured buttresses of snow,
+enclosing hollows filled with diaphanous shadow, and sweeping aloft
+into the upland fields of pure clear drift. Then came the swift
+descent, the plunge into the pines, moon-silvered on their frosted
+tops. The battalions of spruce that climb those hills defined the
+dazzling snow from which they sprang, like the black tufts upon an
+ermine robe. At the proper moment we left our sledge, and the big
+Christian took his reins in hand to follow us. Furs and greatcoats
+were abandoned. Each stood forth tightly accoutred, with short coat,
+and clinging cap, and gaitered legs for the toboggan. Off we started
+in line, with but brief interval between, at first slowly, then
+glidingly, and when the impetus was gained, with darting, bounding,
+almost savage swiftness--sweeping round corners, cutting the hard
+snow-path with keen runners, avoiding the deep ruts, trusting to
+chance, taking advantage of smooth places, till the rush and swing and
+downward swoop became mechanical. Space was devoured. Into the massy
+shadows of the forest, where the pines joined overhead, we pierced
+without a sound, and felt far more than saw the great rocks with their
+icicles; and out again, emerging into moonlight, met the valley spread
+beneath our feet, the mighty peaks of the Silvretta and the vast blue
+sky. On, on, hurrying, delaying not, the woods and hills rushed by.
+Crystals upon the snow-banks glittered to the stars. Our souls would
+fain have stayed to drink these marvels of the moon-world, but our
+limbs refused. The magic of movement was upon us, and eight minutes
+swallowed the varying impressions of two musical miles. The village
+lights drew near and nearer, then the sombre village huts, and soon
+the speed grew less, and soon we glided to our rest into the sleeping
+village street.
+
+V
+
+It was just past midnight. The moon had fallen to the western horns.
+Orion's belt lay bar-like on the opening of the pass, and Sirius shot
+flame on the Seehorn. A more crystalline night, more full of fulgent
+stars, was never seen, stars everywhere, but mostly scattered in large
+sparkles on the snow. Big Christian went in front, tugging toboggans
+by their strings, as Gulliver, in some old woodcut, drew the fleets
+of Lilliput. Through the brown wood-chalets of Selfrangr, up to the
+undulating meadows, where the snow slept pure and crisp, he led us.
+There we sat awhile and drank the clear air, cooled to zero, but
+innocent and mild as mother Nature's milk. Then in an instant, down,
+down through the hamlet, with its chalets, stables, pumps, and logs,
+the slumbrous hamlet, where one dog barked, and darkness dwelt upon
+the path of ice, down with the tempest of a dreadful speed, that
+shot each rider upward in the air, and made the frame of the toboggan
+tremble--down over hillocks of hard frozen snow, dashing and bounding,
+to the river and the bridge. No bones were broken, though the race was
+thrice renewed, and men were spilt upon the roadside by some furious
+plunge. This amusement has the charm of peril and the unforeseen. In
+no wise else can colder, keener air be drunken at such furious speed.
+The joy, too, of the engine-driver and the steeplechaser is upon us.
+Alas, that it should be so short! If only roads were better made for
+the purpose, there would be no end to it; for the toboggan cannot lose
+his wind. But the good thing fails at last, and from the silence of
+the moon we pass into the silence of the fields of sleep.
+
+VI
+
+The new stable is a huge wooden building, with raftered lofts to stow
+the hay, and stalls for many cows and horses. It stands snugly in an
+angle of the pine-wood, bordering upon the great horse-meadow. Here
+at night the air is warm and tepid with the breath of kine. Returning
+from my forest walk, I spy one window yellow in the moonlight with a
+lamp. I lift the latch. The hound knows me, and does not bark. I enter
+the stable, where six horses are munching their last meal. Upon the
+corn-bin sits a knecht. We light our pipes and talk. He tells me of
+the valley of Arosa (a hawk's flight westward over yonder hills), how
+deep in grass its summer lawns, how crystal-clear its stream, how blue
+its little lakes, how pure, without a taint of mist, 'too beautiful to
+paint,' its sky in winter! This knecht is an Ardueser, and the valley
+of Arosa lifts itself to heaven above his Langwies home. It is his
+duty now to harness a sleigh for some night-work. We shake hands and
+part--I to sleep, he for the snow.
+
+VII
+
+The lake has frozen late this year, and there are places in it where
+the ice is not yet firm. Little snow has fallen since it froze--about
+three inches at the deepest, driven by winds and wrinkled like the
+ribbed sea-sand. Here and there the ice-floor is quite black and
+clear, reflecting stars, and dark as heaven's own depths. Elsewhere it
+is of a suspicious whiteness, blurred in surface, with jagged cracks
+and chasms, treacherously mended by the hand of frost. Moving slowly,
+the snow cries beneath our feet, and the big crystals tinkle. These
+are shaped like fern-fronds, growing fan-wise from a point, and set
+at various angles, so that the moonlight takes them with capricious
+touch. They flash, and are quenched, and flash again, light darting to
+light along the level surface, while the sailing planets and the stars
+look down complacent at this mimicry of heaven. Everything above,
+around, beneath, is very beautiful--the slumbrous woods, the snowy
+fells, and the far distance painted in faint blue upon the tender
+background of the sky. Everything is placid and beautiful; and yet the
+place is terrible. For, as we walk, the lake groans, with throttled
+sobs, and sudden cracklings of its joints, and sighs that shiver,
+undulating from afar, and pass beneath our feet, and die away in
+distance when they reach the shore. And now and then an upper crust
+of ice gives way; and will the gulfs then drag us down? We are in
+the very centre of the lake. There is no use in thinking or in taking
+heed. Enjoy the moment, then, and march. Enjoy the contrast between
+this circumambient serenity and sweetness, and the dreadful sense of
+insecurity beneath. Is not, indeed, our whole life of this nature?
+A passage over perilous deeps, roofed by infinity and sempiternal
+things, surrounded too with evanescent forms, that like these
+crystals, trodden underfoot, or melted by the Foehn-wind into dew,
+flash, in some lucky moment, with a light that mimics stars! But to
+allegorise and sermonise is out of place here. It is but the expedient
+of those who cannot etch sensation by the burin of their art of words.
+
+VIII
+
+It is ten o'clock upon Sylvester Abend, or New Year's Eve. Herr Buol
+sits with his wife at the head of his long table. His family and
+serving folk are round him. There is his mother, with little Ursula,
+his child, upon her knee. The old lady is the mother of four comely
+daughters and nine stalwart sons, the eldest of whom is now a grizzled
+man. Besides our host, four of the brothers are here to-night; the
+handsome melancholy Georg, who is so gentle in his speech; Simeon,
+with his diplomatic face; Florian, the student of medicine; and
+my friend, colossal-breasted Christian. Palmy came a little later,
+worried with many cares, but happy to his heart's core. No optimist
+was ever more convinced of his philosophy than Palmy. After them,
+below the salt, were ranged the knechts and porters, the marmiton
+from the kitchen, and innumerable maids. The board was tesselated with
+plates of birnen-brod and eier-brod, kuechli and cheese and butter; and
+Georg stirred grampampuli in a mighty metal bowl. For the uninitiated,
+it may be needful to explain these Davos delicacies. Birnen-brod
+is what the Scotch would call a 'bun,' or massive cake, composed of
+sliced pears, almonds, spices, and a little flour. Eier-brod is a
+saffron-coloured sweet bread, made with eggs; and kuechli is a kind
+of pastry, crisp and flimsy, fashioned into various devices of cross,
+star, and scroll. Grampampuli is simply brandy burnt with sugar, the
+most unsophisticated punch I ever drank from tumblers. The frugal
+people of Davos, who live on bread and cheese and dried meat all the
+year, indulge themselves but once with these unwonted dainties in the
+winter.
+
+The occasion was cheerful, and yet a little solemn. The scene was
+feudal. For these Buols are the scions of a warrior race:
+
+ A race illustrious for heroic deeds;
+ Humbled, but not degraded.
+
+During the six centuries through which they have lived nobles in
+Davos, they have sent forth scores of fighting men to foreign lands,
+ambassadors to France and Venice and the Milanese, governors to
+Chiavenna and Bregaglia and the much-contested Valtelline. Members of
+their house are Counts of Buol-Schauenstein in Austria, Freiherrs of
+Muhlingen and Berenberg in the now German Empire. They keep the patent
+of nobility conferred on them by Henri IV. Their ancient coat--parted
+per pale azure and argent, with a dame of the fourteenth century
+bearing in her hand a rose, all counterchanged--is carved in wood and
+monumental marble on the churches and old houses hereabouts. And from
+immemorial antiquity the Buol of Davos has sat thus on Sylvester Abend
+with family and folk around him, summoned from alp and snowy field to
+drink grampampuli and break the birnen-brod.
+
+These rites performed, the men and maids began to sing--brown arms
+lounging on the table, and red hands folded in white aprons--serious
+at first in hymn-like cadences, then breaking into wilder measures
+with a jodel at the close. There is a measured solemnity in the
+performance, which strikes the stranger as somewhat comic. But the
+singing was good; the voices strong and clear in tone, no hesitation
+and no shirking of the melody. It was clear that the singers enjoyed
+the music for its own sake, with half-shut eyes, as they take dancing,
+solidly, with deep-drawn breath, sustained and indefatigable. But
+eleven struck; and the two Christians, my old friend, and Palmy, said
+we should be late for church. They had promised to take me with them
+to see bell-ringing in the tower. All the young men of the village
+meet, and draw lots in the Stube of the Rathhaus. One party tolls the
+old year out; the other rings the new year in. He who comes last is
+sconced three litres of Veltliner for the company. This jovial fine
+was ours to pay to-night.
+
+When we came into the air, we found a bitter frost; the whole sky
+clouded over; a north wind whirling snow from alp and forest through
+the murky gloom. The benches and broad walnut tables of the Bathhaus
+were crowded with men, in shaggy homespun of brown and grey frieze.
+Its low wooden roof and walls enclosed an atmosphere of smoke, denser
+than the external snow-drift. But our welcome was hearty, and we found
+a score of friends. Titanic Fopp, whose limbs are Michelangelesque in
+length; spectacled Morosani; the little tailor Kramer, with a French
+horn on his knees; the puckered forehead of the Baumeister; the
+Troll-shaped postman; peasants and woodmen, known on far excursions
+upon pass and upland valley. Not one but carried on his face the
+memory of winter strife with avalanche and snow-drift, of horses
+struggling through Fluela whirlwinds, and wine-casks tugged across
+Bernina, and haystacks guided down precipitous gullies at thundering
+speed 'twixt pine and pine, and larches felled in distant glens beside
+the frozen watercourses. Here we were, all met together for one hour
+from our several homes and occupations, to welcome in the year with
+clinked glasses and cries of _Prosit Neujahr!_
+
+The tolling bells above us stopped. Our turn had come. Out into the
+snowy air we tumbled, beneath the row of wolves' heads that adorn the
+pent-house roof. A few steps brought us to the still God's acre,
+where the snow lay deep and cold upon high-mounded graves of many
+generations. We crossed it silently, bent our heads to the low Gothic
+arch, and stood within the tower. It was thick darkness there. But
+far above, the bells began again to clash and jangle confusedly, with
+volleys of demonic joy. Successive flights of ladders, each ending in
+a giddy platform hung across the gloom, climb to the height of some
+hundred and fifty feet; and all their rungs were crusted with frozen
+snow, deposited by trampling boots. For up and down these stairs,
+ascending and descending, moved other than angels--the friezejacketed
+Buerschen, Grisons bears, rejoicing in their exercise, exhilarated with
+the tingling noise of beaten metal. We reached the first room safely,
+guided by firm-footed Christian, whose one candle just defined the
+rough walls and the slippery steps. There we found a band of boys,
+pulling ropes that set the bells in motion. But our destination
+was not reached. One more aerial ladder, perpendicular in darkness,
+brought us swiftly to the home of sound. It is a small square chamber,
+where the bells are hung, filled with the interlacement of enormous
+beams, and pierced to north and south by open windows, from whose
+parapets I saw the village and the valley spread beneath. The fierce
+wind hurried through it, charged with snow, and its narrow space was
+thronged with men. Men on the platform, men on the window-sills,
+men grappling the bells with iron arms, men brushing by to reach the
+stairs, crossing, recrossing, shouldering their mates, drinking
+red wine from gigantic beakers, exploding crackers, firing squibs,
+shouting and yelling in corybantic chorus. They yelled and shouted,
+one could see it by their open mouths and glittering eyes; but not
+a sound from human lungs could reach our ears. The overwhelming
+incessant thunder of the bells drowned all. It thrilled the tympanum,
+ran through the marrow of the spine, vibrated in the inmost entrails.
+Yet the brain was only steadied and excited by this sea of brazen
+noise. After a few moments I knew the place and felt at home in it.
+Then I enjoyed a spectacle which sculptors might have envied. For they
+ring the bells in Davos after this fashion:--The lads below set them
+going with ropes. The men above climb in pairs on ladders to the beams
+from which they are suspended. Two mighty pine-trees, roughly squared
+and built into the walls, extend from side to side across the belfry.
+Another from which the bells hang, connects these massive trunks
+at right angles. Just where the central beam is wedged into the
+two parallel supports, the ladders reach them from each side of the
+belfry, so that, bending from the higher rung of the ladder, and
+leaning over, stayed upon the lateral beam, each pair of men can keep
+one bell in movement with their hands. Each comrade plants one leg
+upon the ladder, and sets the other knee firmly athwart the horizontal
+pine. Then round each other's waist they twine left arm and right. The
+two have thus become one man. Right arm and left are free to grasp the
+bell's horns, sprouting at its crest beneath the beam. With a grave
+rhythmic motion, bending sideward in a close embrace, swaying and
+returning to their centre from the well-knit loins, they drive the
+force of each strong muscle into the vexed bell. The impact is earnest
+at first, but soon it becomes frantic. The men take something from
+each other of exalted enthusiasm. This efflux of their combined
+energies inspires them and exasperates the mighty resonance of metal
+which they rule. They are lost in a trance of what approximates to
+dervish passion--so thrilling is the surge of sound, so potent are the
+rhythms they obey. Men come and tug them by the heels. One grasps
+the starting thews upon their calves. Another is impatient for their
+place. But they strain still, locked together, and forgetful of the
+world. At length they have enough: then slowly, clingingly unclasp,
+turn round with gazing eyes, and are resumed, sedately, into the
+diurnal round of common life. Another pair is in their room upon the
+beam.
+
+The Englishman who saw these things stood looking up, enveloped in his
+ulster with the grey cowl thrust upon his forehead, like a monk. One
+candle cast a grotesque shadow of him on the plastered wall. And when
+his chance came, though he was but a weakling, he too climbed and for
+some moments hugged the beam, and felt the madness of the swinging
+bell. Descending, he wondered long and strangely whether he
+ascribed too much of feeling to the men he watched. But no, that was
+impossible. There are emotions deeply seated in the joy of exercise,
+when the body is brought into play, and masses move in concert, of
+which the subject is but half conscious. Music and dance, and the
+delirium of battle or the chase, act thus upon spontaneous natures.
+The mystery of rhythm and associated energy and blood tingling
+in sympathy is here. It lies at the root of man's most tyrannous
+instinctive impulses.
+
+It was past one when we reached home, and now a meditative man might
+well have gone to bed. But no one thinks of sleeping on Sylvester
+Abend. So there followed bowls of punch in one friend's room, where
+English, French, and Germans blent together in convivial Babel; and
+flasks of old Montagner in another. Palmy, at this period, wore an
+archdeacon's hat, and smoked a churchwarden's pipe; and neither were
+his own, nor did he derive anything ecclesiastical or Anglican from
+the association. Late in the morning we must sally forth, they said,
+and roam the town. For it is the custom here on New Year's night to
+greet acquaintances, and ask for hospitality, and no one may
+deny these self-invited guests. We turned out again into the grey
+snow-swept gloom, a curious Comus--not at all like Greeks, for we had
+neither torches in our hands nor rose-wreaths to suspend upon a lady's
+door-posts. And yet I could not refrain, at this supreme moment
+of jollity, in the zero temperature, amid my Grisons friends, from
+humming to myself verses from the Greek Anthology:--
+
+ The die is cast! Nay, light the torch!
+ I'll take the road! Up, courage, ho!
+ Why linger pondering in the porch?
+ Upon Love's revel we will go!
+
+ Shake off those fumes of wine! Hang care
+ And caution! What has Love to do
+ With prudence? Let the torches flare!
+ Quick, drown the doubts that hampered you!
+
+ Cast weary wisdom to the wind!
+ One thing, but one alone, I know:
+ Love bent e'en Jove and made him blind
+ Upon Love's revel we will go!
+
+And then again:--
+
+ I've drunk sheer madness! Not with wine,
+ But old fantastic tales, I'll arm
+ My heart in heedlessness divine,
+ And dare the road, nor dream of harm!
+
+ I'll join Love's rout! Let thunder break,
+ Let lightning blast me by the way!
+ Invulnerable Love shall shake
+ His aegis o'er my head to-day.
+
+This last epigram was not inappropriate to an invalid about to begin
+the fifth act in a roystering night's adventure. And still once
+more:--
+
+ Cold blows the winter wind; 'tis Love,
+ Whose sweet eyes swim with honeyed tears,
+ That bears me to thy doors, my love,
+ Tossed by the storm of hopes and fears.
+
+ Cold blows the blast of aching Love;
+ But be thou for my wandering sail,
+ Adrift upon these waves of love,
+ Safe harbour from the whistling gale!
+
+However, upon this occasion, though we had winter-wind enough, and
+cold enough, there was not much love in the business. My arm was
+firmly clenched in Christian Buol's, and Christian Palmy came
+behind, trolling out songs in Italian dialect, with still recurring
+_canaille_ choruses, of which the facile rhymes seemed mostly
+made on a prolonged _amu-u-u-r_. It is noticeable that Italian
+ditties are specially designed for fellows shouting in the streets at
+night. They seem in keeping there, and nowhere else that I could ever
+see. And these Davosers took to them naturally when the time for Comus
+came. It was between four and five in the morning, and nearly all the
+houses in the place were dark. The tall church-tower and spire loomed
+up above us in grey twilight. The tireless wind still swept thin
+snow from fell and forest. But the frenzied bells had sunk into their
+twelvemonth's slumber, which shall be broken only by decorous tollings
+at less festive times. I wondered whether they were tingling still
+with the heart-throbs and with the pressure of those many arms? Was
+their old age warmed, as mine was, with that gust of life--the young
+men who had clung to them like bees to lily-bells, and shaken all
+their locked-up tone and shrillness into the wild winter air? Alas!
+how many generations of the young have handled them; and they are
+still there, frozen in their belfry; and the young grow middle-aged,
+and old, and die at last; and the bells they grappled in their lust
+of manhood toll them to their graves, on which the tireless wind will,
+winter after winter, sprinkle snow from alps and forests which they
+knew.
+
+'There is a light,' cried Christian, 'up in Anna's window!' 'A light!
+a light!' the Comus shouted. But how to get at the window, which is
+pretty high above the ground, and out of reach of the most ardent
+revellers? We search a neighbouring shed, extract a stable-ladder, and
+in two seconds Palmy has climbed to the topmost rung, while Christian
+and Georg hold it firm upon the snow beneath. Then begins a passage
+from some comic opera of Mozart's or Cimarosa's--an escapade familiar
+to Spanish or Italian students, which recalls the stage. It is an
+episode from 'Don Giovanni,' translated to this dark-etched scene
+of snowy hills, and Gothic tower, and mullioned windows deep embayed
+beneath their eaves and icicles. _Deh vieni alla finestra!_ sings
+Palmy-Leporello; the chorus answers: _Deh vieni! Perche non vieni
+ancora?_ pleads Leporello; the chorus shouts: _Perche? Mio
+amu-u-u-r_, sighs Leporello; and Echo cries, _amu-u-u-r!_ All
+the wooing, be it noticed, is conducted in Italian. But the actors
+murmur to each other in Davoser Deutsch, 'She won't come, Palmy! It is
+far too late; she is gone to bed. Come down; you'll wake the village
+with your caterwauling!' But Leporello waves his broad archdeacon's
+hat, and resumes a flood of flexible Bregaglian. He has a shrewd
+suspicion that the girl is peeping from behind the window curtain;
+and tells us, bending down from the ladder, in a hoarse stage-whisper,
+that we must have patience; 'these girls are kittle cattle, who take
+long to draw: but if your lungs last out, they're sure to show.' And
+Leporello is right. Faint heart ne'er won fair lady. From the summit
+of his ladder, by his eloquent Italian tongue, he brings the shy bird
+down at last. We hear the unbarring of the house door, and a comely
+maiden, in her Sunday dress, welcomes us politely to her ground-floor
+sitting-room. The Comus enters, in grave order, with set speeches,
+handshakes, and inevitable _Prosits_! It is a large low chamber,
+with a huge stone stove, wide benches fixed along the walls, and a
+great oval table. We sit how and where we can. Red wine is produced,
+and eier-brod and kuechli. Fraeulein Anna serves us sedately, holding
+her own with decent self-respect against the inrush of the revellers.
+She is quite alone; but are not her father and mother in bed above,
+and within earshot? Besides, the Comus, even at this abnormal hour and
+after an abnormal night, is well conducted. Things seem slipping into
+a decorous wine-party, when Leporello readjusts the broad-brimmed
+hat upon his head, and very cleverly acts a little love-scene for our
+benefit. Fraeulein Anna takes this as a delicate compliment, and the
+thing is so prettily done in truth, that not the sternest taste could
+be offended. Meanwhile another party of night-wanderers, attracted by
+our mirth, break in. More _Prosits_ and clinked glasses follow;
+and with a fair good-morning to our hostess, we retire.
+
+It is too late to think of bed. 'The quincunx of heaven,' as Sir
+Thomas Browne phrased it on a dissimilar occasion, 'runs low.... The
+huntsmen are up in America; and not in America only, for the huntsmen,
+if there are any this night in Graubuenden, have long been out upon the
+snow, and the stable-lads are dragging the sledges from their sheds
+to carry down the mails to Landquart. We meet the porters from the
+various hotels, bringing letter-bags and luggage to the post. It is
+time to turn in and take a cup of black coffee against the rising sun.
+
+IX
+
+Some nights, even in Davos, are spent, even by an invalid, in bed.
+A leaflet, therefore, of 'Sleep-chasings' may not inappropriately
+be flung, as envoy to so many wanderings on foot and sledge upon the
+winter snows.
+
+The first is a confused medley of things familiar and things strange.
+I have been dreaming of far-away old German towns, with gabled houses
+deep in snow; dreaming of chalets in forgotten Alpine glens, where
+wood-cutters come plunging into sleepy light from gloom, and sinking
+down beside the stove to shake the drift from their rough shoulders;
+dreaming of vast veils of icicles upon the gaunt black rocks in places
+where no foot of man will pass, and where the snow is weaving eyebrows
+over the ledges of grey whirlwind-beaten precipices; dreaming
+of Venice, forlorn beneath the windy drip of rain, the gas lamps
+flickering on the swimming piazzetta, the barche idle, the gondolier
+wrapped in his thread-bare cloak, alone; dreaming of Apennines, with
+world-old cities, brown, above the brown sea of dead chestnut boughs;
+dreaming of stormy tides, and watchers aloft in lighthouses when day
+is finished; dreaming of dead men and women and dead children in the
+earth, far down beneath the snow-drifts, six feet deep. And then
+I lift my face, awaking, from my pillow; the pallid moon is on the
+valley, and the room is filled with spectral light.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. This is a hospice in an unfrequented
+pass, between sad peaks, beside a little black lake, overdrifted with
+soft snow. I pass into the house-room, gliding silently. An old man
+and an old woman are nodding, bowed in deepest slumber, by the stove.
+A young man plays the zither on a table. He lifts his head, still
+modulating with his fingers on the strings. He looks right through me
+with wide anxious eyes. He does not see me, but sees Italy, I know,
+and some one wandering on a sandy shore.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. This is S. Stephen's Church in Wien.
+Inside, the lamps are burning dimly in the choir. There is fog in the
+aisles; but through the sleepy air and over the red candles flies a
+wild soprano's voice, a boy's soul in its singing sent to heaven.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. From the mufflers in which his
+father, the mountebank, has wrapped the child, to carry him across
+the heath, a little tumbling-boy emerges in soiled tights. He is half
+asleep. His father scrapes the fiddle. The boy shortens his red belt,
+kisses his fingers to us, and ties himself into a knot among the
+glasses on the table.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. I am on the parapet of a huge
+circular tower, hollow like a well, and pierced with windows at
+irregular intervals. The parapet is broad, and slabbed with red
+Verona marble. Around me are athletic men, all naked, in the strangest
+attitudes of studied rest, down-gazing, as I do, into the depths
+below. There comes a confused murmur of voices, and the tower is
+threaded and rethreaded with great cables. Up these there climb to us
+a crowd of young men, clinging to the ropes and flinging their bodies
+sideways on aerial trapezes. My heart trembles with keen joy and
+terror. For nowhere else could plastic forms be seen more beautiful,
+and nowhere else is peril more apparent. Leaning my chin upon the
+utmost verge, I wait. I watch one youth, who smiles and soars to me;
+and when his face is almost touching mine, he speaks, but what he says
+I know not.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. The whole world rocks to its
+foundations. The mountain summits that I know are shaken. They bow
+their bristling crests. They are falling, falling on us, and the earth
+is riven. I wake in terror, shouting: INSOLITIS TREMUERUNT MOTIBUS
+ALPES! An earthquake, slight but real, has stirred the ever-wakeful
+Vesta of the brain to this Virgilian quotation.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. Once more at night I sledge alone
+upon the Klosters road. It is the point where the woods close over it
+and moonlight may not pierce the boughs. There come shrill cries of
+many voices from behind, and rushings that pass by and vanish. Then
+on their sledges I behold the phantoms of the dead who died in Davos,
+longing for their homes; and each flies past me, shrieking in the
+still cold air; and phosphorescent like long meteors, the pageant
+turns the windings of the road below and disappears.
+
+I sleep, and change my dreaming. This is the top of some high
+mountain, where the crags are cruelly tortured and cast in enormous
+splinters on the ledges of cliffs grey with old-world ice. A ravine,
+opening at my feet, plunges down immeasurably to a dim and distant
+sea. Above me soars a precipice embossed with a gigantic ice-bound
+shape. As I gaze thereon, I find the lineaments and limbs of a Titanic
+man chained and nailed to the rock. His beard has grown for centuries,
+and flowed this way and that, adown his breast and over to the stone
+on either side; and the whole of him is covered with a greenish ice,
+ancient beyond the memory of man. 'This is Prometheus,' I whisper to
+myself, 'and I am alone on Caucasus.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+BACCHUS IN GRAUBUeNDEN
+
+
+I
+
+Some years' residence in the Canton of the Grisons made me familiar
+with all sorts of Valtelline wine; with masculine but rough _Inferno_,
+generous _Forzato_, delicate _Sassella_, harsher _Montagner_, the
+raspberry flavour of _Grumello_, the sharp invigorating twang of
+_Villa_. The colour, ranging from garnet to almandine or ruby, told me
+the age and quality of wine; and I could judge from the crust it forms
+upon the bottle, whether it had been left long enough in wood to
+ripen. I had furthermore arrived at the conclusion that the best
+Valtelline can only be tasted in cellars of the Engadine or Davos,
+where this vintage matures slowly in the mountain air, and takes a
+flavour unknown at lower levels. In a word, it had amused my leisure
+to make or think myself a connoisseur. My literary taste was tickled
+by the praise bestowed in the Augustan age on Rhaetic grapes by Virgil:
+
+ Et quo te carmine dicam,
+ Rhaetica? nec cellis ideo contende Falernis.
+
+I piqued myself on thinking that could the poet but have drank
+one bottle at Samaden--where Stilicho, by the way, in his famous
+recruiting expedition may perhaps have drank it--he would have been
+less chary in his panegyric. For the point of inferiority on which he
+seems to insist, namely, that Valtelline wine does not keep well
+in cellar, is only proper to this vintage in Italian climate. Such
+meditations led my fancy on the path of history. Is there truth,
+then, in the dim tradition that this mountain land was colonised
+by Etruscans? Is _Ras_ the root of Rhaetia? The Etruscans were
+accomplished wine-growers, we know. It was their Montepulciano which
+drew the Gauls to Rome, if Livy can be trusted. Perhaps they first
+planted the vine in Valtelline. Perhaps its superior culture in that
+district may be due to ancient use surviving in a secluded Alpine
+valley. One thing is certain, that the peasants of Sondrio and Tirano
+understand viticulture better than the Italians of Lombardy.
+
+Then my thoughts ran on to the period of modern history, when the
+Grisons seized the Valtelline in lieu of war-pay from the Dukes of
+Milan. For some three centuries they held it as a subject province.
+From the Rathhaus at Davos or Chur they sent their nobles--Von
+Salis and Buol, Planta and Sprecher von Bernegg--across the hills as
+governors or podestas to Poschiavo, Sondrio, Tirano, and Morbegno.
+In those old days the Valtelline wines came duly every winter over
+snow-deep passes to fill the cellars of the Signori Grigioni. That
+quaint traveller Tom Coryat, in his so-called 'Crudities,' notes
+the custom early in the seventeenth century. And as that custom
+then obtained, it still subsists with little alteration. The
+wine-carriers--Weinfuehrer, as they are called--first scaled
+the Bernina pass, halting then as now, perhaps at Poschiavo and
+Pontresina. Afterwards, in order to reach Davos, the pass of the
+Scaletta rose before them--a wilderness of untracked snow-drifts. The
+country-folk still point to narrow, light hand-sledges, on which the
+casks were charged before the last pitch of the pass. Some wine came,
+no doubt, on pack-saddles. A meadow in front of the Dischma-Thal,
+where the pass ends, still bears the name of the Ross-Weid, or
+horse-pasture. It was here that the beasts of burden used for this
+wine-service, rested after their long labours. In favourable weather
+the whole journey from Tirano would have occupied at least four days,
+with scanty halts at night.
+
+The Valtelline slipped from the hands of the Grisons early in this
+century. It is rumoured that one of the Von Salis family negotiated
+matters with Napoleon more for his private benefit than for the
+interests of the state. However this may have been, when the
+Graubuenden became a Swiss Canton, after four centuries of sovereign
+independence, the whole Valtelline passed to Austria, and so
+eventually to Italy. According to modern and just notions of
+nationality, this was right. In their period of power, the Grisons
+masters had treated their Italian dependencies with harshness. The
+Valtelline is an Italian valley, connected with the rest of
+the peninsula by ties of race and language. It is, moreover,
+geographically linked to Italy by the great stream of the Adda, which
+takes its rise upon the Stelvio, and after passing through the Lake of
+Como, swells the volume of the Po.
+
+But, though politically severed from the Valtelline, the Engadiners
+and Davosers have not dropped their old habit of importing its best
+produce. What they formerly levied as masters, they now acquire by
+purchase. The Italian revenue derives a large profit from the frontier
+dues paid at the gate between Tirano and Poschiavo on the Bernina
+road. Much of the same wine enters Switzerland by another route,
+travelling from Sondrio to Chiavenna and across the Spluegen. But until
+quite recently, the wine itself could scarcely be found outside the
+Canton. It was indeed quoted upon Lombard wine-lists. Yet no one drank
+it; and when I tasted it at Milan, I found it quite unrecognisable.
+The fact seems to be that the Graubuendeners alone know how to deal
+with it; and, as I have hinted, the wine requires a mountain climate
+for its full development.
+
+II
+
+The district where the wine of Valtellina is grown extends, roughly
+speaking, from Tirano to Morbegno, a distance of some fifty-four
+miles. The best sorts come from the middle of this region. High up
+in the valley, soil and climate are alike less favourable. Low down
+a coarser, earthier quality springs from fat land where the valley
+broadens. The northern hillsides to a very considerable height above
+the river are covered with vineyards. The southern slopes on the left
+bank of the Adda, lying more in shade, yield but little. Inferno,
+Grumello, and Perla di Sassella are the names of famous vineyards.
+Sassella is the general name for a large tract. Buying an Inferno,
+Grumello, or Perla di Sassella wine, it would be absurd to suppose
+that one obtained it precisely from the eponymous estate. But as each
+of these vineyards yields a marked quality of wine, which is taken
+as standard-giving, the produce of the whole district may be broadly
+classified as approaching more or less nearly to one of these accepted
+types. The Inferno, Grumello, and Perla di Sassella of commerce are
+therefore three sorts of good Valtelline, ticketed with famous names
+to indicate certain differences of quality. Montagner, as the
+name implies, is a somewhat lighter wine, grown higher up in the
+hill-vineyards. And of this class there are many species, some
+approximating to Sassella in delicacy of flavour, others approaching
+the tart lightness of the Villa vintage. This last takes its title
+from a village in the neighbourhood of Tirano, where a table-wine is
+chiefly grown.
+
+Forzato is the strongest, dearest, longest-lived of this whole family
+of wines. It is manufactured chiefly at Tirano; and, as will be
+understood from its name, does not profess to belong to any one of the
+famous localities. Forzato or Sforzato, forced or enforced, is in fact
+a wine which has undergone a more artificial process. In German the
+people call it Strohwein, which also points to the method of its
+preparation. The finest grapes are selected and dried in the sun
+(hence the _Stroh_) for a period of eight or nine weeks. When
+they have almost become raisins, they are pressed. The must is heavily
+charged with sugar, and ferments powerfully. Wine thus made requires
+several years to ripen. Sweet at first, it takes at last a very fine
+quality and flavour, and is rough, almost acid, on the tongue. Its
+colour too turns from a deep rich crimson to the tone of tawny port,
+which indeed it much resembles.
+
+Old Forzato, which has been long in cask, and then perhaps three years
+in bottle, will fetch at least six francs, or may rise to even ten
+francs a flask. The best Sassella rarely reaches more than five
+francs. Good Montagner and Grumello can be had perhaps for four
+francs; and Inferno of a special quality for six francs. Thus the
+average price of old Valtelline wine may be taken as five francs a
+bottle. These, I should observe, are hotel prices.
+
+Valtelline wines bought in the wood vary, of course, according to
+their age and year of vintage. I have found that from 2.50 fr. to 3.50
+fr. per litre is a fair price for sorts fit to bottle. The new wine of
+1881 sold in the following winter at prices varying from 1.05 fr. to
+1.80 fr. per litre.
+
+It is customary for the Graubuenden wine-merchants to buy up the whole
+produce of a vineyard from the peasants at the end of the vintage.
+They go in person or depute their agents to inspect the wine, make
+their bargains, and seal the cellars where the wine is stored. Then,
+when the snow has fallen, their own horses with sleighs and trusted
+servants go across the passes to bring it home. Generally they have
+some local man of confidence at Tirano, the starting-point for the
+homeward journey, who takes the casks up to that place and sees them
+duly charged. Merchants of old standing maintain relations with the
+same peasants, taking their wine regularly; so that from Lorenz Gredig
+at Pontresina or Andreas Gredig at Davos Doerfli, from Fanconi at
+Samaden, or from Giacomi at Chiavenna, special qualities of wine, the
+produce of certain vineyards, are to be obtained. Up to the present
+time this wine trade has been conducted with simplicity and honesty by
+both the dealers and the growers. One chief merit of Valtelline wine
+is that it is pure. How long so desirable a state of things will
+survive the slow but steady development of an export business may be
+questioned.
+
+III
+
+With so much practical and theoretical interest in the produce of
+the Valtelline to stimulate my curiosity, I determined to visit the
+district at the season when the wine was leaving it. It was the winter
+of 1881-82, a winter of unparalleled beauty in the high Alps. Day
+succeeded day without a cloud. Night followed night with steady
+stars, gliding across clear mountain ranges and forests of dark pines
+unstirred by wind. I could not hope for a more prosperous season; and
+indeed I made such use of it, that between the months of January and
+March I crossed six passes of the Alps in open sleighs--the Fluela
+Bernina, Spluegen, Julier, Maloja, and Albula--with less difficulty and
+discomfort in mid-winter than the traveller may often find on them in
+June.
+
+At the end of January, my friend Christian and I left Davos long
+before the sun was up, and ascended for four hours through the
+interminable snow-drifts of the Fluela in a cold grey shadow. The
+sun's light seemed to elude us. It ran along the ravine through which
+we toiled; dipped down to touch the topmost pines above our heads;
+rested in golden calm upon the Schiahorn at our back; capriciously
+played here and there across the Weisshorn on our left, and made the
+precipices of the Schwartzhorn glitter on our right. But athwart our
+path it never fell until we reached the very summit of the pass.
+Then we passed quietly into the full glory of the winter morning--a
+tranquil flood of sunbeams, pouring through air of crystalline purity,
+frozen and motionless. White peaks and dark brown rocks soared up,
+cutting a sky of almost purple blueness. A stillness that might be
+felt brooded over the whole world; but in that stillness there was
+nothing sad, no suggestion of suspended vitality. It was the stillness
+rather of untroubled health, of strength omnipotent but unexerted.
+
+From the Hochspitz of the Fluela the track plunges at one bound into
+the valley of the Inn, following a narrow cornice carved from the
+smooth bank of snow, and hung, without break or barrier, a
+thousand feet or more above the torrent. The summer road is lost in
+snow-drifts. The galleries built as a protection from avalanches,
+which sweep in rivers from those grim, bare fells above, are blocked
+with snow. Their useless arches yawn, as we glide over or outside
+them, by paths which instinct in our horse and driver traces. As a fly
+may creep along a house-roof, slanting downwards we descend. One whisk
+from the swinged tail of an avalanche would hurl us, like a fly, into
+the ruin of the gaping gorge. But this season little snow has fallen
+on the higher hills; and what still lies there, is hard frozen.
+Therefore we have no fear, as we whirl fast and faster from the
+snow-fields into the black forests of gnarled cembras and wind-wearied
+pines. Then Suess is reached, where the Inn hurries its shallow waters
+clogged with ice-floes through a sleepy hamlet. The stream is pure and
+green; for the fountains of the glaciers are locked by winter frosts;
+and only clear rills from perennial sources swell its tide. At Suess
+we lost the sun, and toiled in garish gloom and silence, nipped by the
+ever-deepening cold of evening, upwards for four hours to Samaden.
+
+The next day was spent in visiting the winter colony at San Moritz,
+where the Kulm Hotel, tenanted by some twenty guests, presented in its
+vastness the appearance of a country-house. One of the prettiest spots
+in the world is the ice-rink, fashioned by the skill of Herr Caspar
+Badrutt on a high raised terrace, commanding the valley of the Inn and
+the ponderous bulwarks of Bernina. The silhouettes of skaters, defined
+against that landscape of pure white, passed to and fro beneath a
+cloudless sky. Ladies sat and worked or read on seats upon the ice.
+Not a breath of wind was astir, and warm beneficent sunlight flooded
+the immeasurable air. Only, as the day declined, some iridescent films
+overspread the west; and just above Maloja the apparition of a
+mock sun--a well-defined circle of opaline light, broken at regular
+intervals by four globes--seemed to portend a change of weather. This
+forecast fortunately proved delusive. We drove back to Samaden across
+the silent snow, enjoying those delicate tints of rose and violet and
+saffron which shed enchantment for one hour over the white monotony of
+Alpine winter.
+
+At half-past eight next morning, the sun was rising from behind Pitz
+Languard, as we crossed the Inn and drove through Pontresina in the
+glorious light, with all its huge hotels quite empty and none but a
+few country-folk abroad. Those who only know the Engadine in summer
+have little conception of its beauty. Winter softens the hard details
+of bare rock, and rounds the melancholy grassless mountain flanks,
+suspending icicles to every ledge and spangling the curved surfaces
+of snow with crystals. The landscape gains in purity, and, what sounds
+unbelievable, in tenderness. Nor does it lose in grandeur. Looking
+up the valley of the Morteratsch that morning, the glaciers were
+distinguishable in hues of green and sapphire through their veil of
+snow; and the highest peaks soared in a transparency of amethystine
+light beneath a blue sky traced with filaments of windy cloud. Some
+storm must have disturbed the atmosphere in Italy, for fan-shaped
+mists frothed out around the sun, and curled themselves above the
+mountains in fine feathery wreaths, melting imperceptibly into air,
+until, when we had risen above the cembras, the sky was one deep solid
+blue.
+
+All that upland wilderness is lovelier now than in the summer; and on
+the morning of which I write, the air itself was far more summery than
+I have ever known it in the Engadine in August. We could scarcely
+bear to place our hands upon the woodwork of the sleigh because of
+the fierce sun's heat. And yet the atmosphere was crystalline with
+windless frost. As though to increase the strangeness of these
+contrasts, the pavement of beaten snow was stained with red drops
+spilt from wine-casks which pass over it.
+
+The chief feature of the Bernina--what makes it a dreary pass enough
+in summer, but infinitely beautiful in winter--is its breadth;
+illimitable undulations of snow-drifts; immensity of open sky;
+unbroken lines of white, descending in smooth curves from glittering
+ice-peaks.
+
+A glacier hangs in air above the frozen lakes, with all its green-blue
+ice-cliffs glistening in intensest light. Pitz Palu shoots aloft
+like sculptured marble, delicately veined with soft aerial shadows of
+translucent blue. At the summit of the pass all Italy seems to burst
+upon the eyes in those steep serried ranges, with their craggy crests,
+violet-hued in noonday sunshine, as though a bloom of plum or grape
+had been shed over them, enamelling their jagged precipices.
+
+The top of the Bernina is not always thus in winter. It has a bad
+reputation for the fury of invading storms, when falling snow
+hurtles together with snow scooped from the drifts in eddies, and the
+weltering white sea shifts at the will of whirlwinds. The Hospice then
+may be tenanted for days together by weather-bound wayfarers; and a
+line drawn close beneath its roof shows how two years ago the whole
+building was buried in one snow-shroud. This morning we lounged about
+the door, while our horses rested and postillions and carters pledged
+one another in cups of new Veltliner.
+
+The road takes an awful and sudden dive downwards, quite irrespective
+of the carefully engineered post-track. At this season the path is
+badly broken into ruts and chasms by the wine traffic. In some places
+it was indubitably perilous: a narrow ledge of mere ice skirting
+thinly clad hard-frozen banks of snow, which fell precipitately
+sideways for hundreds of sheer feet. We did not slip over this
+parapet, though we were often within an inch of doing so. Had our
+horse stumbled, it is not probable that I should have been writing
+this.
+
+When we came to the galleries which defend the road from avalanches,
+we saw ahead of us a train of over forty sledges ascending, all
+charged with Valtelline wine. Our postillions drew up at the inner
+side of the gallery, between massive columns of the purest ice
+dependent from the rough-hewn roof and walls of rock. A sort of open
+_loggia_ on the farther side framed vignettes of the Valtelline
+mountains in their hard cerulean shadows and keen sunlight. Between
+us and the view defiled the wine-sledges; and as each went by, the
+men made us drink out of their _trinketti_. These are oblong,
+hexagonal wooden kegs, holding about fourteen litres, which the carter
+fills with wine before he leaves the Valtelline, to cheer him on the
+homeward journey. You raise it in both hands, and when the bung has
+been removed, allow the liquor to flow stream-wise down your throat.
+It was a most extraordinary Bacchic procession--a pomp which, though
+undreamed of on the banks of the Ilissus, proclaimed the deity of
+Dionysos in authentic fashion. Struggling horses, grappling at the
+ice-bound floor with sharp-spiked shoes; huge, hoarse drivers, some
+clad in sheepskins from Italian valleys, some brown as bears in rough
+Graubuenden homespun; casks, dropping their spilth of red wine on the
+snow; greetings, embracings; patois of Bergamo, Romansch, and German
+roaring around the low-browed vaults and tingling ice pillars;
+pourings forth of libations of the new strong Valtelline on breasts
+and beards;--the whole made up a scene of stalwart jollity and
+manful labour such as I have nowhere else in such wild circumstances
+witnessed. Many Davosers were there, the men of Andreas Gredig, Valaer,
+and so forth; and all of these, on greeting Christian, forced us to
+drain a _Schluck_ from their unmanageable cruses. Then on they
+went, crying, creaking, struggling, straining through the corridor,
+which echoed deafeningly, the gleaming crystals of those hard Italian
+mountains in their winter raiment building a background of still
+beauty to the savage Bacchanalian riot of the team.
+
+How little the visitors who drink Valtelline wine at S. Moritz or
+Davos reflect by what strange ways it reaches them. A sledge can
+scarcely be laden with more than one cask of 300 litres on the ascent;
+and this cask, according to the state of the road, has many times to
+be shifted from wheels to runners and back again before the journey
+is accomplished. One carter will take charge of two horses, and
+consequently of two sledges and two casks, driving them both by voice
+and gesture rather than by rein. When they leave the Valtelline, the
+carters endeavour, as far as possible, to take the pass in gangs, lest
+bad weather or an accident upon the road should overtake them singly.
+At night they hardly rest three hours, and rarely think of sleeping,
+but spend the time in drinking and conversation. The horses are fed
+and littered; but for them too the night-halt is little better than
+a baiting-time. In fair weather the passage of the mountain is not
+difficult, though tiring. But woe to men and beasts alike if they
+encounter storms! Not a few perish in the passes; and it frequently
+happens that their only chance is to unyoke the horses and leave the
+sledges in a snow-wreath, seeking for themselves such shelter as
+may possibly be gained, frost-bitten, after hours of battling with
+impermeable drifts. The wine is frozen into one solid mass of rosy ice
+before it reaches Pontresina. This does not hurt the young vintage,
+but it is highly injurious to wine of some years' standing. The perils
+of the journey are aggravated by the savage temper of the drivers.
+Jealousies between the natives of rival districts spring up; and there
+are men alive who have fought the whole way down from Fluela Hospice
+to Davos Platz with knives and stones, hammers and hatchets, wooden
+staves and splintered cart-wheels, staining the snow with blood, and
+bringing broken pates, bruised limbs, and senseless comrades home to
+their women to be tended.
+
+Bacchus Alpinus shepherded his train away from us to northward, and we
+passed forth into noonday from the gallery. It then seemed clear that
+both conductor and postillion were sufficiently merry. The plunge they
+took us down those frozen parapets, with shriek and _jauchzen_
+and cracked whips, was more than ever dangerous. Yet we reached La
+Rosa safely. This is a lovely solitary spot, beside a rushing stream,
+among grey granite boulders grown with spruce and rhododendron: a
+veritable rose of Sharon blooming in the desert. The wastes of the
+Bernina stretch above, and round about are leaguered some of the most
+forbidding sharp-toothed peaks I ever saw. Onwards, across the silent
+snow, we glided in immitigable sunshine, through opening valleys and
+pine-woods, past the robber-huts of Pisciadella, until at evenfall we
+rested in the roadside inn at Poschiavo.
+
+IV
+
+The snow-path ended at Poschiavo; and when, as usual, we started on
+our journey next day at sunrise, it was in a carriage upon wheels.
+Yet even here we were in full midwinter. Beyond Le Prese the lake
+presented one sheet of smooth black ice, reflecting every peak and
+chasm of the mountains, and showing the rocks and water-weeds in the
+clear green depths below. The glittering floor stretched away for
+acres of untenanted expanse, with not a skater to explore those dark
+mysterious coves, or strike across the slanting sunlight poured
+from clefts in the impendent hills. Inshore the substance of the
+ice sparkled here and there with iridescence like the plumelets of
+a butterfly's wing under the microscope, wherever light happened to
+catch the jagged or oblique flaws that veined its solid crystal.
+
+From the lake the road descends suddenly for a considerable distance
+through a narrow gorge, following a torrent which rushes among granite
+boulders. Chestnut trees begin to replace the pines. The sunnier
+terraces are planted with tobacco, and at a lower level vines appear
+at intervals in patches. One comes at length to a great red gate
+across the road, which separates Switzerland from Italy, and where the
+export dues on wine are paid. The Italian custom-house is
+romantically perched above the torrent. Two courteous and elegant
+_finanzieri_, mere boys, were sitting wrapped in their military
+cloaks and reading novels in the sun as we drove up. Though they made
+some pretence of examining the luggage, they excused themselves with
+sweet smiles and apologetic eyes--it was a disagreeable duty!
+
+A short time brought us to the first village in the Valtelline,
+where the road bifurcates northward to Bormio and the Stelvio pass,
+southward to Sondrio and Lombardy. It is a little hamlet, known by
+the name of La Madonna di Tirano, having grown up round a pilgrimage
+church of great beauty, with tall Lombard bell-tower, pierced with
+many tiers of pilastered windows, ending in a whimsical spire, and
+dominating a fantastic cupola building of the earlier Renaissance.
+Taken altogether, this is a charming bit of architecture,
+picturesquely set beneath the granite snow-peaks of the Valtelline.
+The church, they say, was raised at Madonna's own command to stay the
+tide of heresy descending from the Engadine; and in the year 1620, the
+bronze statue of S. Michael, which still spreads wide its wings above
+the cupola, looked down upon the massacre of six hundred Protestants
+and foreigners, commanded by the patriot Jacopo Robustelli.
+
+From Madonna the road leads up the valley through a narrow avenue of
+poplar-trees to the town of Tirano. We were now in the district where
+Forzato is made, and every vineyard had a name and history. In Tirano
+we betook ourself to the house of an old acquaintance of the Buol
+family, Bernardo da Campo, or, as the Graubuendeners call him, Bernard
+Campbell. We found him at dinner with his son and grandchildren in a
+vast, dark, bare Italian chamber. It would be difficult to find a more
+typical old Scotchman of the Lowlands than he looked, with his clean
+close-shaven face, bright brown eyes, and snow-white hair escaping
+from a broad-brimmed hat. He might have sat to a painter for some
+Covenanter's portrait, except that there was nothing dour about him,
+or for an illustration to Burns's 'Cotter's Saturday Night.' The air
+of probity and canniness combined with a twinkle of dry humour was
+completely Scotch; and when he tapped his snuff-box, telling stories
+of old days, I could not refrain from asking him about his pedigree.
+It should be said that there is a considerable family of Campells or
+Campbells in the Graubuenden, who are fabled to deduce their stock from
+a Scotch Protestant of Zwingli's time; and this made it irresistible
+to imagine that in our friend Bernardo I had chanced upon a notable
+specimen of atavism. All he knew, however, was, that his first
+ancestor had been a foreigner, who came across the mountains to Tirano
+two centuries ago.[3]
+
+This old gentleman is a considerable wine-dealer. He sent us with his
+son, Giacomo, on a long journey underground through his cellars, where
+we tasted several sorts of Valtelline, especially the new Forzato,
+made a few weeks since, which singularly combines sweetness with
+strength, and both with a slight effervescence. It is certainly the
+sort of wine wherewith to tempt a Polyphemus, and not unapt to turn a
+giant's head.
+
+Leaving Tirano, and once more passing through the poplars by Madonna,
+we descended the valley all along the vineyards of Villa and the vast
+district of Sassella. Here and there, at wayside inns, we stopped to
+drink a glass of some particular vintage; and everywhere it seemed as
+though god Bacchus were at home. The whole valley on the right side of
+the Adda is one gigantic vineyard, climbing the hills in tiers and
+terraces, which justify its Italian epithet of _Teatro di Bacco_. The
+rock is a greyish granite, assuming sullen brown and orange tints
+where exposed to sun and weather. The vines are grown on stakes, not
+trellised over trees or carried across boulders, as is the fashion at
+Chiavenna or Terlan. Yet every advantage of the mountain is adroitly
+used; nooks and crannies being specially preferred, where the sun's
+rays are deflected from hanging cliffs. The soil seems deep, and is of
+a dull yellow tone. When the vines end, brushwood takes up the growth,
+which expires at last in crag and snow. Some alps and chalets, dimly
+traced against the sky, are evidences that a pastoral life prevails
+above the vineyards. Pan there stretches the pine-thyrsus down to
+vine-garlanded Dionysos.
+
+The Adda flows majestically among willows in the midst, and the valley
+is nearly straight. The prettiest spot, perhaps, is at Tresenda or
+S. Giacomo, where a pass from Edolo and Brescia descends from the
+southern hills. But the Valtelline has no great claim to beauty of
+scenery. Its chief town, Sondrio, where we supped and drank some
+special wine called _il vino de' Signori Grigioni_, has been
+modernised in dull Italian fashion.
+
+V
+
+The hotel at Sondrio, La Maddalena, was in carnival uproar of
+masquers, topers, and musicians all night through. It was as much as
+we could do to rouse the sleepy servants and get a cup of coffee
+ere we started in the frozen dawn. 'Verfluchte Maddalena!' grumbled
+Christian as he shouldered our portmanteaus and bore them in hot haste
+to the post. Long experience only confirms the first impression, that,
+of all cold, the cold of an Italian winter is most penetrating. As
+we lumbered out of Sondrio in a heavy diligence, I could have fancied
+myself back once again at Radicofani or among the Ciminian hills. The
+frost was penetrating. Fur-coats would not keep it out; and we longed
+to be once more in open sledges on Bernina rather than enclosed in
+that cold coupe. Now we passed Grumello, the second largest of the
+renowned vine districts; and always keeping the white mass of Monte di
+Disgrazia in sight, rolled at last into Morbegno. Here the Valtelline
+vintage properly ends, though much of the ordinary wine is probably
+supplied from the inferior produce of these fields. It was past
+noon when we reached Colico, and saw the Lake of Como glittering in
+sunlight, dazzling cloaks of snow on all the mountains, which look as
+dry and brown as dead beech-leaves at this season. Our Bacchic journey
+had reached its close; and it boots not here to tell in detail how we
+made our way across the Spluegen, piercing its avalanches by low-arched
+galleries scooped from the solid snow, and careering in our sledges
+down perpendicular snow-fields, which no one who has crossed that
+pass from the Italian side in winter will forget. We left the refuge
+station at the top together with a train of wine-sledges, and passed
+them in the midst of the wild descent. Looking back, I saw two of
+their horses stumble in the plunge and roll headlong over. Unluckily
+in one of these somersaults a man was injured. Flung ahead into the
+snow by the first lurch, the sledge and wine-cask crossed him like a
+garden-roller. Had his bed not been of snow, he must have been crushed
+to death; and as it was, he presented a woeful appearance when he
+afterwards arrived at Spluegen.
+
+VI
+
+Though not strictly connected with the subject of this paper, I shall
+conclude these notes of winter wanderings in the high Alps with an
+episode which illustrates their curious vicissitudes.
+
+It was late in the month of March, and nearly all the mountain roads
+were open for wheeled vehicles. A carriage and four horses came to
+meet us at the termination of a railway journey in Bagalz. We spent
+one day in visiting old houses of the Grisons aristocracy at Mayenfeld
+and Zizers, rejoicing in the early sunshine, which had spread the
+fields with spring flowers--primroses and oxlips, violets, anemones,
+and bright blue squills. At Chur we slept, and early next morning
+started for our homeward drive to Davos. Bad weather had declared
+itself in the night. It blew violently, and the rain soon changed to
+snow, frozen by a bitter north blast. Crossing the dreary heath of
+Lenz was both magnificent and dreadful. By the time we reached Wiesen,
+all the forests were laden with snow, the roads deep in snow-drifts,
+the whole scene wintrier than it had been the winter through.
+
+At Wiesen we should have stayed, for evening was fast setting in. But
+in ordinary weather it is only a two hours drive from Wiesen to Davos.
+Our coachman made no objections to resuming the journey, and our four
+horses had but a light load to drag. So we telegraphed for supper to
+be prepared, and started between five and six.
+
+A deep gorge has to be traversed, where the torrent cleaves its way
+between jaws of limestone precipices. The road is carried along ledges
+and through tunnels in the rock. Avalanches, which sweep this passage
+annually from the hills above, give it the name of Zuege, or the
+Snow-Paths. As we entered the gorge darkness fell, the horses dragged
+more heavily, and it soon became evident that our Tyrolese driver was
+hopelessly drunk. He nearly upset us twice by taking sharp turns in
+the road, banged the carriage against telegraph posts and jutting
+rocks, shaved the very verge of the torrent in places where there
+was no parapet, and, what was worst of all, refused to leave his box
+without a fight. The darkness by this time was all but total, and a
+blinding snow-storm swept howling through the ravine. At length we
+got the carriage to a dead-stop, and floundered out in deep wet
+snow toward some wooden huts where miners in old days made their
+habitation. The place, by a curious, perhaps unconscious irony, is
+called Hoffnungsau, or the Meadow of Hope. Indeed, it is not ill
+named; for many wanderers, escaping, as we did, from the dreadful
+gorge of Avalanches on a stormy night, may have felt, as we now felt,
+their hope reviving when they reached this shelter.
+
+There was no light; nothing above, beneath, around, on any side, but
+tearing tempest and snow whirled through the ravine. The horses
+were taken out of the carriage; on their way to the stable, which
+fortunately in these mountain regions will be always found beside the
+poorest habitation, one of them fell back across a wall and nearly
+broke his spine. Hoffnungsau is inhabited all through the year. In its
+dismal dark kitchen we found a knot of workmen gathered together, and
+heard there were two horses on the premises besides our own. It then
+occurred to us that we might accomplish the rest of the journey with
+such sledges as they bring the wood on from the hills in winter, if
+coal-boxes or boxes of any sort could be provided. These should be
+lashed to the sledges and filled with hay. We were only four persons;
+my wife and a friend should go in one, myself and my little girl in
+the other. No sooner thought of than put into practice. These original
+conveyances were improvised, and after two hours' halt on the Meadow
+of Hope, we all set forth again at half-past eight.
+
+I have rarely felt anything more piercing than the grim cold of that
+journey. We crawled at a foot's pace through changeful snow-drifts.
+The road was obliterated, and it was my duty to keep a petroleum
+stable-lamp swinging to illuminate the untracked wilderness. My little
+girl was snugly nested in the hay, and sound asleep with a deep white
+covering of snow above her. Meanwhile, the drift clave in frozen
+masses to our faces, lashed by a wind so fierce and keen that it
+was difficult to breathe it. My forehead-bone ached, as though with
+neuralgia, from the mere mask of icy snow upon it, plastered on with
+frost. Nothing could be seen but millions of white specks, whirled
+at us in eddying concentric circles. Not far from the entrance to the
+village we met our house-folk out with lanterns to look for us. It was
+past eleven at night when at last we entered warm rooms and refreshed
+ourselves for the tiring day with a jovial champagne supper. Horses,
+carriage, and drunken driver reached home next morning.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+OLD TOWNS OF PROVENCE
+
+
+Travellers journeying southward from Paris first meet with olive-trees
+near Montdragon or Monselimart--little towns, with old historic names,
+upon the road to Orange. It is here that we begin to feel ourselves
+within the land of Provence, where the Romans found a second Italy,
+and where the autumn of their antique civilisation was followed,
+almost without an intermediate winter of barbarism, by the light and
+delicate springtime of romance. Orange itself is full of Rome. Indeed,
+the ghost of the dead empire seems there to be more real and living
+than the actual flesh and blood of modern time, as represented by
+narrow dirty streets and mean churches. It is the shell of the huge
+theatre, hollowed from the solid hill, and fronted with a wall that
+seems made rather to protect a city than to form a sounding-board for
+a stage, which first tells us that we have reached the old Arausio. Of
+all theatres this is the most impressive, stupendous, indestructible,
+the Colosseum hardly excepted; for in Rome herself we are prepared
+for something gigantic, while in the insignificant Arausio--a sort
+of antique Tewkesbury--to find such magnificence, durability, and
+vastness, impresses one with a nightmare sense that the old lioness
+of Empire can scarcely yet be dead. Standing before the colossal,
+towering, amorphous precipice which formed the background of the
+scena, we feel as if once more the 'heart-shaking sound of Consul
+Romanus' might be heard; as if Roman knights and deputies, arisen from
+the dead, with faces hard and stern as those of the warriors carved on
+Trajan's frieze, might take their seats beneath us in the orchestra,
+and, after proclamation made, the mortmain of imperial Rome be laid
+upon the comforts, liberties, and little gracefulnesses of our modern
+life. Nor is it unpleasant to be startled from such reverie by the
+voice of the old guardian upon the stage beneath, sonorously devolving
+the vacuous Alexandrines with which he once welcomed his ephemeral
+French emperor from Algiers. The little man is dim with distance,
+eclipsed and swallowed up by the shadows and grotesque fragments of
+the ruin in the midst of which he stands. But his voice--thanks to the
+inimitable constructive art of the ancient architect, which, even
+in the desolation of at least thirteen centuries, has not lost its
+cunning-emerges from the pigmy throat, and fills the whole vast hollow
+with its clear, if tiny, sound. Thank heaven, there is no danger of
+Roman resurrection here! The illusion is completely broken, and we
+turn to gather the first violets of February, and to wonder at the
+quaint postures of a praying mantis on the grass grown tiers and
+porches fringed with fern.
+
+The sense of Roman greatness which is so oppressive in Orange and in
+many other parts of Provence, is not felt at Avignon. Here we exchange
+the ghost of Imperial for the phantom of Ecclesiastical Rome. The
+fixed epithet of Avignon is Papal; and as the express train rushes
+over its bleak and wind-tormented plain, the heavy dungeon-walls and
+battlemented towers of its palace fortress seem to warn us off, and
+bid us quickly leave the Babylon of exiled impious Antichrist. Avignon
+presents the bleakest, barest, greyest scene upon a February morning,
+when the incessant mistral is blowing, and far and near, upon desolate
+hillside and sandy plain, the scanty trees are bent sideways, the
+crumbling castle turrets shivering like bleached skeletons in the dry
+ungenial air. Yet inside the town, all is not so dreary. The Papal
+palace, with its terrible Glaciere, its chapel painted by Simone
+Memmi, its endless corridors and staircases, its torture-chamber,
+funnel-shaped to drown and suffocate--so runs tradition--the shrieks
+of wretches on the rack, is now a barrack, filled with lively little
+French soldiers, whose politeness, though sorely taxed, is never
+ruffled by the introduction of inquisitive visitors into their
+dormitories, eating-places, and drill-grounds. And strange, indeed,
+it is to see the lines of neat narrow barrack beds, between which the
+red-legged little men are shaving, polishing their guns, or mending
+their trousers, in those vaulted halls of popes and cardinals, those
+vast presence-chambers and audience-galleries, where Urban entertained
+S. Catherine, where Rienzi came, a prisoner, to be stared at. Pass by
+the Glaciere with a shudder, for it has still the reek of blood about
+it; and do not long delay in the cheerless dungeon of Rienzi. Time and
+regimental whitewash have swept these lurking-places of old crime very
+bare; but the parable of the seven devils is true in more senses than
+one, and the ghosts that return to haunt a deodorised, disinfected,
+garnished sepulchre are almost more ghastly than those which have
+never been disturbed from their old habitations.
+
+Little by little the eye becomes accustomed to the bareness and
+greyness of this Provencal landscape; and then we find that the
+scenery round Avignon is eminently picturesque. The view from Les
+Doms--which is a hill above the Pope's palace, the Acropolis, as it
+were, of Avignon--embraces a wide stretch of undulating champaign,
+bordered by low hills, and intersected by the flashing waters of the
+majestic Rhone. Across the stream stands Villeneuve, like a castle
+of romance, with its round stone towers fronting the gates and
+battlemented walls of the Papal city. A bridge used to connect the two
+towns, but it is now broken. The remaining fragment is of solid build,
+resting on great buttresses, one of which rises fantastically above
+the bridge into a little chapel. Such, one might fancy, was the
+bridge which Ariosto's Rodomonte kept on horse against the Paladins of
+Charlemagne, when angered by the loss of his love. Nor is it difficult
+to imagine Bradamante spurring up the slope against him with her magic
+lance in rest, and tilting him into the tawny waves beneath.
+
+On a clear October morning, when the vineyards are taking their last
+tints of gold and crimson, and the yellow foliage of the poplars by
+the river mingles with the sober greys of olive-trees and willows,
+every square inch of this landscape, glittering as it does with light
+and with colour, the more beautiful for its subtlety and rarity, would
+make a picture. Out of many such vignettes let us choose one. We are
+on the shore close by the ruined bridge, the rolling muddy Rhone in
+front; beyond it, by the towing-path, a tall strong cypress-tree rises
+beside a little house, and next to it a crucifix twelve feet or more
+in height, the Christ visible afar, stretched upon His red cross;
+arundo donax is waving all around, and willows near; behind, far off,
+soar the peaked hills, blue and pearled with clouds; past the cypress,
+on the Rhone, comes floating a long raft, swift through the stream,
+its rudder guided by a score of men: one standing erect upon the prow
+bends forward to salute the cross; on flies the raft, the tall reeds
+rustle, and the cypress sleeps.
+
+For those who have time to spare in going to or from the south it
+is worth while to spend a day or two in the most comfortable and
+characteristic of old French inns, the Hotel de l'Europe, at Avignon.
+Should it rain, the museum of the town is worth a visit. It contains
+Horace Vernet's not uncelebrated picture of Mazeppa, and another, less
+famous, but perhaps more interesting, by swollen-cheeked David, the
+'genius in convulsion,' as Carlyle has christened him. His canvas
+is unfinished. Who knows what cry of the Convention made the painter
+fling his palette down and leave the masterpiece he might have
+spoiled? For in its way the picture is a masterpiece. There lies Jean
+Barrad, drummer, aged fourteen, slain in La Vendee, a true patriot,
+who, while his life-blood flowed away, pressed the tricolor cockade
+to his heart, and murmured 'Liberty!' David has treated his subject
+classically. The little drummer-boy, though French enough in feature
+and in feeling, lies, Greek-like, naked on the sand--a very Hyacinth
+of the Republic, La Vendee's Ilioneus. The tricolor cockade and the
+sentiment of upturned patriotic eyes are the only indications of his
+being a hero in his teens, a citizen who thought it sweet to die for
+France.
+
+In fine weather a visit to Vaucluse should by no means be omitted,
+not so much, perhaps, for Petrarch's sake as for the interest of the
+drive, and for the marvel of the fountain of the Sorgues. For some
+time after leaving Avignon you jog along the level country between
+avenues of plane-trees; then comes a hilly ridge, on which the olives,
+mulberries, and vineyards join their colours and melt subtly into
+distant purple. After crossing this we reach L'Isle, an island
+village girdled by the gliding Sorgues, overshadowed with gigantic
+plane-boughs, and echoing to the plash of water dripped from mossy
+fern-tufted millwheels. Those who expect Petrarch's Sorgues to be
+some trickling poet's rill emerging from a damp grotto, may well be
+astounded at the rush and roar of this azure river so close upon
+its fountain-head. It has a volume and an arrow-like rapidity that
+communicate the feeling of exuberance and life. In passing, let it not
+be forgotten that it was somewhere or other in this 'chiaro fondo di
+Sorga,' as Carlyle describes, that Jourdain, the hangman-hero of the
+Glaciere, stuck fast upon his pony when flying from his foes, and had
+his accursed life, by some diabolical providence, spared for future
+butcheries. On we go across the austere plain, between fields of
+madder, the red roots of the 'garance' lying in swathes along the
+furrows. In front rise ash-grey hills of barren rock, here and there
+crimsoned with the leaves of the dwarf sumach. A huge cliff stands up
+and seems to bar all passage. Yet the river foams in torrents at our
+side. Whence can it issue? What pass or cranny in that precipice is
+cloven for its escape? These questions grow in interest as we enter
+the narrow defile of limestone rocks which leads to the cliff-barrier,
+and find ourselves among the figs and olives of Vaucluse. Here is the
+village, the little church, the ugly column to Petrarch's memory,
+the inn, with its caricatures of Laura, and its excellent trout, the
+bridge and the many-flashing, eddying Sorgues, lashed by millwheels,
+broken by weirs, divided in its course, channelled and dyked, yet
+flowing irresistibly and undefiled. Blue, purple, greened by moss and
+water-weeds, silvered by snow-white pebbles, on its pure smooth bed
+the river runs like elemental diamond, so clear and fresh. The rocks
+on either side are grey or yellow, terraced into oliveyards, with here
+and there a cypress, fig, or mulberry tree. Soon the gardens cease,
+and lentisk, rosemary, box, and ilex--shrubs of Provence--with here
+and there a sumach out of reach, cling to the hard stone. And so at
+last we are brought face to face with the sheer impassable precipice.
+At its basement sleeps a pool, perfectly untroubled; a lakelet in
+which the sheltering rocks and nestling wild figs are glassed as in a
+mirror--a mirror of blue-black water, like amethyst or fluor-spar--so
+pure, so still, that where it laps the pebbles you can scarcely say
+where air begins and water ends. This, then, is Petrarch's 'grotto;'
+this is the fountain of Vaucluse. Up from its deep reservoirs, from
+the mysterious basements of the mountain, wells the silent stream;
+pauseless and motionless it fills its urn, rises unruffled, glides
+until the brink is reached, then overflows, and foams, and dashes
+noisily, a cataract, among the boulders of the hills. Nothing at
+Vaucluse is more impressive than the contrast between the tranquil
+silence of the fountain and the roar of the released impetuous river.
+Here we can realise the calm clear eyes of sculptured water-gods,
+their brimming urns, their gushing streams, the magic of the
+mountain-born and darkness-cradled flood. Or again, looking up at the
+sheer steep cliff, 800 feet in height, and arching slightly roofwise,
+so that no rain falls upon the cavern of the pool, we seem to see the
+stroke of Neptune's trident, the hoof of Pegasus, the force of Moses'
+rod, which cleft rocks and made water gush forth in the desert. There
+is a strange fascination in the spot. As our eyes follow the white
+pebble which cleaves the surface and falls visibly, until the veil
+of azure is too thick for sight to pierce, we feel as if some glamour
+were drawing us, like Hylas, to the hidden caves. At least, we long to
+yield a prized and precious offering to the spring, to grace the nymph
+of Vaucluse with a pearl of price as token of our reverence and love.
+
+Meanwhile nothing has been said about Petrarch, who himself said much
+about the spring, and complained against those very nymphs to whom we
+have in wish, at least, been scattering jewels, that they broke his
+banks and swallowed up his gardens every winter. At Vaucluse Petrarch
+loved, and lived, and sang. He has made Vaucluse famous, and will
+never be forgotten there. But for the present the fountain is even
+more attractive than the memory of the poet.[4]
+
+The change from Avignon to Nismes is very trying to the latter place;
+for Nismes is not picturesquely or historically interesting. It is a
+prosperous modern French town with two almost perfect Roman
+monuments--Les Arenes and the Maison Carree. The amphitheatre is a
+complete oval, visible at one glance. Its smooth white stone, even
+where it has not been restored, seems unimpaired by age; and Charles
+Martel's conflagration, when he burned the Saracen hornet's nest
+inside it, has only blackened the outer walls and arches venerably.
+Utility and perfect adaptation of means to ends form the beauty of
+Roman buildings. The science of construction and large intelligence
+displayed in them, their strength, simplicity, solidity, and purpose,
+are their glory. Perhaps there is only one modern edifice--Palladio's
+Palazzo della Ragione at Vicenza--which approaches the dignity and
+loftiness of Roman architecture; and this it does because of its
+absolute freedom from ornament, the vastness of its design, and the
+durability of its material. The temple, called the Maison Carree, at
+Nismes, is also very perfect, and comprehended at one glance. Light,
+graceful, airy, but rather thin and narrow, it reminds one of the
+temple of Fortuna Virilis at Rome.
+
+But if Nismes itself is not picturesque, its environs contain the
+wonderful Pont du Gard. A two or three hours' drive leads through a
+desolate country to the valley of the Cardon, where suddenly, at a
+turn of the road, one comes upon the aqueduct. It is not within the
+scope of words to describe the impression produced by those vast
+arches, row above row, cutting the deep blue sky. The domed summer
+clouds sailing across them are comprehended in the gigantic span of
+their perfect semicircles, which seem rather to have been described
+by Miltonic compasses of Deity than by merely human mathematics. Yet,
+standing beneath one of the vaults and looking upward, you may read
+Roman numerals in order from I. to X., which prove their human origin
+well enough. Next to their strength, regularity, and magnitude, the
+most astonishing point about this triple tier of arches, piled one
+above the other to a height of 180 feet above a brawling stream
+between two barren hills, is their lightness. The arches are not
+thick; the causeway on the top is only just broad enough for three men
+to walk abreast. So smooth and perpendicular are the supporting walls
+that scarcely a shrub or tuft of grass has grown upon the aqueduct
+in all these years. And yet the huge fabric is strengthened by no
+buttress, has needed no repair. This lightness of structure, combined
+with such prodigious durability, produces the strongest sense of
+science and self-reliant power in the men who designed it. None but
+Romans could have built such a monument, and have set it in such a
+place--a wilderness of rock and rolling hill, scantily covered with
+low brushwood, and browsed over by a few sheep--for such a purpose,
+too, in order to supply Nemausus with pure water. The modern town does
+pretty well without its water; but here subsists the civilisation
+of eighteen centuries past intact: the human labour yet remains,
+the measuring, contriving mind of man, shrinking from no obstacles,
+spanning the air, and in one edifice combining gigantic strength and
+perfect beauty. It is impossible not to echo Rousseau's words in such
+a place, and to say with him: 'Le retentissement de mes pas dans ces
+immenses voutes me faisait croire entendre la forte voix de ceux
+qui les avaient baties. Je me perdais comme un insecte dans cette
+immensite. Je sentais, tout en me faisant petit, je ne sais quoi
+qui m'elevait l'ame; et je me disais en soupirant, Que ne suis-je ne
+Romain!'
+
+There is nothing at Arles which produces the same deep and indelible
+impression. Yet Arles is a far more interesting town than Nismes,
+partly because of the Rhone delta which begins there, partly because
+of its ruinous antiquity, and partly also because of the strong local
+character of its population. The amphitheatre of Arles is vaster and
+more sublime in its desolation than the tidy theatre at Nismes; the
+crypts, and dens, and subterranean passages suggest all manner of
+speculation as to the uses to which they may have been appropriated;
+while the broken galleries outside, intricate and black and cavernous,
+like Piranesi's etchings of the 'Carceri,' present the wildest
+pictures of greatness in decay, fantastic dilapidation. The ruins of
+the smaller theatre, again, with their picturesquely grouped fragments
+and their standing columns, might be sketched for a frontispiece to
+some dilettante work on classical antiquities. For the rest, perhaps
+the Aliscamps, or ancient Roman burial-ground, is the most interesting
+thing at Arles, not only because of Dante's celebrated lines in the
+canto of 'Farinata:'--
+
+ Si come ad Arli ove 'l Rodano stagna,
+ Fanno i sepolcri tutto 'l loco varo;
+
+but also because of the intrinsic picturesqueness of this avenue of
+sepulchres beneath green trees upon a long soft grassy field.
+
+But as at Avignon and Nismes, so also at Arles, one of the chief
+attractions of the place lies at a distance, and requires a special
+expedition. The road to Les Baux crosses a true Provencal desert where
+one realises the phrase, 'Vieux comme les rochers de Provence,'--a
+wilderness of grey stone, here and there worn into cart-tracks, and
+tufted with rosemary, box, lavender, and lentisk. On the way it passes
+the Abbaye de Mont Majeur, a ruin of gigantic size, embracing all
+periods of architecture; where nothing seems to flourish now but
+henbane and the wild cucumber, or to breathe but a mumble-toothed and
+terrible old hag. The ruin stands above a desolate marsh, its vast
+Italian buildings of Palladian splendour looking more forlorn in their
+decay than the older and austerer mediaeval towers, which rise up proud
+and patient and defiantly erect beneath the curse of time. When at
+length what used to be the castle town of Les Baux is reached, you
+find a naked mountain of yellow sandstone, worn away by nature into
+bastions and buttresses and coigns of vantage, sculptured by ancient
+art into palaces and chapels, battlements and dungeons. Now art and
+nature are confounded in one ruin. Blocks of masonry lie cheek by jowl
+with masses of the rough-hewn rock; fallen cavern vaults are heaped
+round fragments of fan-shaped spandrel and clustered column-shaft; the
+doors and windows of old pleasure-rooms are hung with ivy and wild fig
+for tapestry; winding staircases start midway upon the cliff, and lead
+to vacancy. High overhead suspended in mid-air hang chambers--lady's
+bower or poet's singing-room--now inaccessible, the haunt of hawks and
+swallows. Within this rocky honeycomb--'cette ville en monolithe,'
+as it has been aptly called, for it is literally scooped out of one
+mountain block--live about two hundred poor people, foddering their
+wretched goats at carved piscina and stately sideboards, erecting mud
+beplastered hovels in the halls of feudal princes. Murray is wrong in
+calling the place a mediaeval town in its original state, for anything
+more purely ruinous, more like a decayed old cheese, cannot possibly
+be conceived. The living only inhabit the tombs of the dead. At
+the end of the last century, when revolutionary effervescence was
+beginning to ferment, the people of Arles swept all its feudality
+away, defacing the very arms upon the town gate, and trampling the
+palace towers to dust.
+
+The castle looks out across a vast extent of plain over Arles, the
+stagnant Rhone, the Camargue, and the salt pools of the lingering sea.
+In old days it was the eyrie of an eagle race called Seigneurs of Les
+Baux; and whether they took their title from the rock, or whether,
+as genealogists would have it, they gave the name of Oriental
+Balthazar--their reputed ancestor, one of the Magi--to the rock
+itself, remains a mystery not greatly worth the solving.
+
+Anyhow, here they lived and flourished, these feudal princes, bearing
+for their ensign a silver comet of sixteen rays upon a field of
+gules--themselves a comet race, baleful to the neighbouring lowlands,
+blazing with lurid splendour over wide tracts of country, a burning,
+raging, fiery-souled, swift-handed tribe, in whom a flame unquenchable
+glowed from son to sire through twice five hundred years until, in
+the sixteenth century, they were burned out, and nothing remained but
+cinders--these broken ruins of their eyrie, and some outworn and dusty
+titles. Very strange are the fate and history of these same titles:
+King of Arles, for instance, savouring of troubadour and high romance;
+Prince of Tarentum, smacking of old plays and Italian novels; Prince
+of Orange, which the Nassaus, through the Chalons, seized in all its
+emptiness long after the real principality had passed away, and came
+therewith to sit on England's throne.
+
+The Les Baux in their heyday were patterns of feudal nobility. They
+warred incessantly with Counts of Provence, archbishops and burghers
+of Arles, Queens of Naples, Kings of Aragon. Crusading, pillaging,
+betraying, spending their substance on the sword, and buying it again
+by deeds of valour or imperial acts of favour, tuning troubadour
+harps, presiding at courts of love,--they filled a large page in the
+history of Southern France. The Les Baux were very superstitious. In
+the fulness of their prosperity they restricted the number of their
+dependent towns, or _places baussenques_, to seventy-nine,
+because these numbers in combination were thought to be of good omen
+to their house. Beral des Baux, Seigneur of Marseilles, was one day
+starting on a journey with his whole force to Avignon. He met an old
+woman herb-gathering at daybreak, and said, 'Mother, hast thou seen
+a crow or other bird?' 'Yea,' answered the crone, 'on the trunk of a
+dead willow.' Beral counted upon his fingers the day of the year, and
+turned bridle. With troubadours of name and note they had dealings,
+but not always to their own advantage, as the following story
+testifies. When the Baux and Berengers were struggling for the
+countship of Provence, Raymond Berenger, by his wife's counsel, went,
+attended by troubadours, to meet the Emperor Frederick at Milan.
+There he sued for the investiture and ratification of Provence. His
+troubadours sang and charmed Frederick; and the Emperor, for the joy
+he had in them, wrote his celebrated lines beginning--
+
+ Plas mi cavalier Francez.
+
+And when Berenger made his request he met with no refusal. Hearing
+thereof, the lords of Baux came down in wrath with a clangour of armed
+men. But music had already gained the day; and where the Phoebus of
+Provence had shone, the AEolus of storm-shaken Les Baux was powerless.
+Again, when Blacas, a knight of Provence, died, the great Sordello
+chanted one of his most fiery hymns, bidding the princes of
+Christendom flock round and eat the heart of the dead lord. 'Let
+Rambaude des Baux,' cries the bard, with a sarcasm that is clearly
+meant, but at this distance almost unintelligible, 'take also a good
+piece, for she is fair and good and truly virtuous; let her keep it
+well who knows so well to husband her own weal.' But the poets were
+not always adverse to the house of Baux. Fouquet, the beautiful and
+gentle melodist whom Dante placed in paradise, served Adelaisie, wife
+of Berald, with long service of unhappy love, and wrote upon her
+death 'The Complaint of Berald des Baux for Adelaisie.' Guillaume de
+Cabestan loved Berangere des Baux, and was so loved by her that she
+gave him a philtre to drink, whereof he sickened and grew mad. Many
+more troubadours are cited as having frequented the castle of Les
+Baux, and among the members of the princely house were several poets.
+
+Some of them were renowned for beauty. We hear of a Cecile, called
+Passe Rose, because of her exceeding loveliness; also of an unhappy
+Francois, who, after passing eighteen years in prison, yet won the
+grace and love of Joan of Naples by his charms. But the real temper of
+this fierce tribe was not shown among troubadours, or in the courts of
+love and beauty. The stern and barren rock from which they sprang, and
+the comet of their scutcheon, are the true symbols of their nature.
+History records no end of their ravages and slaughters. It is a
+tedious catalogue of blood--how one prince put to fire and sword the
+whole town of Courthezon; how another was stabbed in prison by his
+wife; how a third besieged the castle of his niece, and sought to
+undermine her chamber, knowing her the while to be in childbed; how a
+fourth was flayed alive outside the walls of Avignon. There is nothing
+terrible, splendid, and savage, belonging to feudal history, of which
+an example may not be found in the annals of Les Baux, as narrated by
+their chronicler, Jules Canonge.
+
+However abrupt may seem the transition from these memories of
+the ancient nobles of Les Baux to mere matters of travel and
+picturesqueness, it would be impossible to take leave of the old
+towns of Provence without glancing at the cathedrals of S. Trophime
+at Arles, and of S. Gilles--a village on the border of the dreary
+flamingo-haunted Camargue. Both of these buildings have porches
+splendidly encrusted with sculptures, half classical, half mediaeval,
+marking the transition from ancient to modern art. But that of S.
+Gilles is by far the richer and more elaborate. The whole facade of
+this church is one mass of intricate decoration; Norman arches
+and carved lions, like those of Lombard architecture, mingling
+fantastically with Greek scrolls of fruit and flowers, with elegant
+Corinthian columns jutting out upon the church steps, and with the old
+conventional wave-border that is called Etruscan in our modern jargon.
+From the midst of florid fret and foliage lean mild faces of saints
+and Madonnas. Symbols of evangelists with half-human, half-animal
+eyes and wings, are interwoven with the leafy bowers of cupids. Grave
+apostles stand erect beneath acanthus wreaths that ought to crisp the
+forehead of a laughing Faun or Bacchus. And yet so full, exuberant,
+and deftly chosen are these various elements, that there remains no
+sense of incongruity or discord. The mediaeval spirit had much trouble
+to disentangle itself from classic reminiscences; and fortunately for
+the picturesqueness of S. Gilles, it did not succeed. How strangely
+different is the result of this transition in the south from those
+severe and rigid forms which we call Romanesque in Germany and
+Normandy and England!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE CORNICE
+
+
+It was a dull afternoon in February when we left Nice, and drove
+across the mountains to Mentone. Over hill and sea hung a thick mist.
+Turbia's Roman tower stood up in cheerless solitude, wreathed round
+with driving vapour, and the rocky nest of Esa seemed suspended in
+a chaos between sea and sky. Sometimes the fog broke and showed us
+Villafranca, lying green and flat in the deep blue below: sometimes a
+distant view of higher peaks swam into sight from the shifting cloud.
+But the whole scene was desolate. Was it for this that we had left our
+English home, and travelled from London day and night? At length we
+reached the edge of the cloud, and jingled down by Roccabruna and the
+olive-groves, till one by one Mentone's villas came in sight, and at
+last we found ourselves at the inn door. That night, and all next day
+and the next night, we heard the hoarse sea beat and thunder on the
+beach. The rain and wind kept driving from the south, but we consoled
+ourselves with thinking that the orange-trees and every kind of flower
+were drinking in the moisture and waiting to rejoice in sunlight which
+would come.
+
+It was a Sunday morning when we woke and found that the rain had gone,
+the sun was shining brightly on the sea, and a clear north wind was
+blowing cloud and mist away. Out upon the hills we went, not caring
+much what path we took; for everything was beautiful, and hill
+and vale were full of garden walks. Through lemon-groves,--pale,
+golden-tender trees,--and olives, stretching their grey boughs against
+the lonely cottage tiles, we climbed, until we reached the pines and
+heath above. Then I knew the meaning of Theocritus for the first time.
+We found a well, broad, deep, and clear, with green herbs growing at
+the bottom, a runlet flowing from it down the rocky steps, maidenhair,
+black adiantum, and blue violets, hanging from the brink and mirrored
+in the water. This was just the well in _Hylas_. Theocritus
+has been badly treated. They call him a court poet, dead to Nature,
+artificial in his pictures. Yet I recognised this fountain by his
+verse, just as if he had showed me the very spot. Violets grow
+everywhere, of every shade, from black to lilac. Their stalks are
+long, and the flowers 'nod' upon them, so that I see how the Greeks
+could make them into chaplets--how Lycidas wore his crown of white
+violets[5] lying by the fireside elbow-deep in withered asphodel,
+watching the chestnuts in the embers, and softly drinking deep healths
+to Ageanax far off upon the waves. It is impossible to go wrong in
+these valleys. They are cultivated to the height of about five hundred
+feet above the sea, in terraces laboriously built up with walls,
+earthed and manured, and irrigated by means of tanks and aqueducts.
+Above this level, where the virgin soil has not been yet reclaimed,
+or where the winds of winter bring down freezing currents from the
+mountains through a gap or gully of the lower hills, a tangled growth
+of heaths and arbutus, and pines, and rosemarys, and myrtles, continue
+the vegetation, till it finally ends in bare grey rocks and peaks some
+thousand feet in height. Far above all signs of cultivation on these
+arid peaks, you still may see villages and ruined castles, built
+centuries ago for a protection from the Moorish pirates. To these
+mountain fastnesses the people of the coast retreated when they
+descried the sails of their foes on the horizon. In Mentone, not very
+long ago, old men might be seen who in their youth were said to have
+been taken captive by the Moors; and many Arabic words have found
+their way into the patois of the people.
+
+There is something strangely fascinating in the sight of these ruins
+on the burning rocks, with their black sentinel cypresses, immensely
+tall and far away. Long years and rain and sunlight have made these
+castellated eyries one with their native stone. It is hard to trace
+in their foundations where Nature's workmanship ends and where man's
+begins. What strange sights the mountain villagers must see! The vast
+blue plain of the unfurrowed deep, the fairy range of Corsica hung
+midway between the sea and sky at dawn or sunset, the stars so close
+above their heads, the deep dew-sprinkled valleys, the green pines! On
+penetrating into one of these hill-fortresses, you find that it is
+a whole village, with a church and castle and piazza, some few feet
+square, huddled together on a narrow platform. We met one day three
+magnates of Gorbio taking a morning stroll backwards and forwards,
+up and down their tiny square. Vehemently gesticulating, loudly
+chattering, they talked as though they had not seen each other for ten
+years, and were but just unloading their budgets of accumulated news.
+Yet these three men probably had lived, eaten, drunk, and talked
+together from the cradle to that hour: so true it is that use
+and custom quicken all our powers, especially of gossiping and
+scandal-mongering. S. Agnese is the highest and most notable of all
+these villages. The cold and heat upon its absolutely barren rock
+must be alike intolerable. In appearance it is not unlike the Etruscan
+towns of Central Italy; but there is something, of course, far more
+imposing in the immense antiquity and the historical associations of
+a Narni, a Fiesole, a Chiusi, or an Orvieto. Sea-life and rusticity
+strike a different note from that of those Apennine-girdled seats of
+dead civilisation, in which nations, arts, and religions have gone by
+and left but few traces,--some wrecks of giant walls, some excavated
+tombs, some shrines, where monks still sing and pray above the relics
+of the founders of once world-shaking, now almost forgotten, orders.
+Here at Mentone there is none of this; the idyllic is the true note,
+and Theocritus is still alive.
+
+We do not often scale these altitudes, but keep along the terraced
+glades by the side of olive-shaded streams. The violets, instead of
+peeping shyly from hedgerows, fall in ripples and cascades over mossy
+walls among maidenhair and spleen-worts. They are very sweet, and the
+sound of trickling water seems to mingle with their fragrance in a
+most delicious harmony. Sound, smell, and hue make up one chord, the
+sense of which is pure and perfect peace. The country-people are
+kind, letting us pass everywhere, so that we make our way along their
+aqueducts and through their gardens, under laden lemon-boughs, the
+pale fruit dangling at our ears, and swinging showers of scented dew
+upon us as we pass. Far better, however, than lemon or orange trees,
+are the olives. Some of these are immensely old, numbering, it is
+said, five centuries, so that Petrarch may almost have rested beneath
+their shade on his way to Avignon. These veterans are cavernous with
+age: gnarled, split, and twisted trunks, throwing out arms that break
+into a hundred branches; every branch distinct, and feathered with
+innumerable sparks and spikelets of white, wavy, greenish light.
+These are the leaves, and the stems are grey with lichens. The sky and
+sea--two blues, one full of sunlight and the other purple--set these
+fountains of perennial brightness like gems in lapis-lazuli. At a
+distance the same olives look hoary and soft--a veil of woven light
+or luminous haze. When the wind blows their branches all one way,
+they ripple like a sea of silver. But underneath their covert, in
+the shade, grey periwinkles wind among the snowy drift of allium. The
+narcissus sends its arrowy fragrance through the air, while, far and
+wide, red anemones burn like fire, with interchange of blue and lilac
+buds, white arums, orchises, and pink gladiolus. Wandering there, and
+seeing the pale flowers, stars white and pink and odorous, we dream
+of Olivet, or the grave Garden of the Agony, and the trees seem always
+whispering of sacred things. How people can blaspheme against the
+olives, and call them imitations of the willow, or complain that they
+are shabby shrubs, I do not know.[6]
+
+This shore would stand for Shelley's Island of Epipsychidion, or
+the golden age which Empedocles describes, when the mild nations
+worshipped Aphrodite with incense and the images of beasts and
+yellow honey, and no blood was spilt upon her altars--when 'the trees
+flourished with perennial leaves and fruit, and ample crops adorned
+their boughs through all the year.' This even now is literally true of
+the lemon-groves, which do not cease to flower and ripen. Everything
+fits in to complete the reproduction of Greek pastoral life. The goats
+eat cytisus and myrtle on the shore; a whole flock gathered round me
+as I sat beneath a tuft of golden green euphorbia the other day, and
+nibbled bread from my hands. The frog still croaks by tank and
+fountain, 'whom the Muses have ordained to sing for aye,' in
+spite of Bion's death. The narcissus, anemone, and hyacinth still tell
+their tales of love and death. Hesper still gazes on the shepherd
+from the mountain-head. The slender cypresses still vibrate, the pines
+murmur. Pan sleeps in noontide heat, and goat-herds and wayfaring
+men lie down to slumber by the roadside, under olive-boughs in which
+cicadas sing. The little villages high up are just as white, the
+mountains just as grey and shadowy when evening falls. Nothing is
+changed--except ourselves. I expect to find a statue of Priapus or
+pastoral Pan, hung with wreaths of flowers--the meal cake, honey, and
+spilt wine upon his altar, and young boys and maidens dancing round.
+Surely, in some far-off glade, by the side of lemon-grove or garden,
+near the village, there must be still a pagan remnant of glad
+Nature-worship. Surely I shall chance upon some Thyrsis piping in the
+pine-tree shade, or Daphne flying from the arms of Phoebus. So I dream
+until I come upon the Calvary set on a solitary hillock, with its
+prayer-steps lending a wide prospect across the olives and the
+orange-trees, and the broad valleys, to immeasurable skies and purple
+seas. There is the iron cross, the wounded heart, the spear, the reed,
+the nails, the crown of thorns, the cup of sacrificial blood, the
+title, with its superscription royal and divine. The other day we
+crossed a brook and entered a lemon-field, rich with blossoms
+and carpeted with red anemones. Everything basked in sunlight and
+glittered with exceeding brilliancy of hue. A tiny white chapel stood
+in a corner of the enclosure. Two iron-grated windows let me
+see inside: it was a bare place, containing nothing but a wooden
+praying-desk, black and worm-eaten, an altar with its candles and no
+flowers, and above the altar a square picture brown with age. On the
+floor were scattered several pence, and in a vase above the holy-water
+vessel stood some withered hyacinths. As my sight became accustomed to
+the gloom, I could see from the darkness of the picture a pale Christ
+nailed to the cross with agonising upward eyes and ashy aureole above
+the bleeding thorns. Thus I stepped suddenly away from the outward
+pomp and bravery of nature to the inward aspirations, agonies,
+and martyrdoms of man--from Greek legends of the past to the real
+Christian present--and I remembered that an illimitable prospect has
+been opened to the world, that in spite of ourselves we must turn our
+eyes heavenward, inward, to the infinite unseen beyond us and within
+our souls. Nothing can take us back to Phoebus or to Pan. Nothing
+can again identify us with the simple natural earth. '_Une immense
+esperance a traverse la terre_,' and these chapels, with their deep
+significances, lurk in the fair landscape like the cares of real life
+among our dreams of art, or like a fear of death and the hereafter in
+the midst of opera music. It is a strange contrast. The worship of men
+in those old times was symbolised by dances in the evening, banquets,
+libations, and mirth-making. 'Euphrosyne' was alike the goddess of
+the righteous mind and of the merry heart. Old withered women telling
+their rosaries at dusk; belated shepherds crossing themselves beneath
+the stars when they pass the chapel; maidens weighed down with
+Margaret's anguish of unhappy love; youths vowing their life to
+contemplation in secluded cloisters,--these are the human forms which
+gather round such chapels; and the motto of the worshippers consists
+in this, 'Do often violence to thy desire.' In the Tyrol we have seen
+whole villages praying together at daybreak before their day's work,
+singing their _Miserere_ and their _Gloria_ and their _Dies Irae_, to
+the sound of crashing organs and jangling bells; appealing in the
+midst of Nature's splendour to the Spirit which is above Nature, which
+dwells in darkness rather than light, and loves the yearnings and
+contentions of our soul more than its summer gladness and peace. Even
+the olives here tell more to us of Olivet and the Garden than of the
+oil-press and the wrestling-ground. The lilies carry us to the Sermon
+on the Mount, and teach humility, instead of summoning up some legend
+of a god's love for a mortal. The hillside tanks and running streams,
+and water-brooks swollen by sudden rain, speak of Palestine. We call
+the white flowers stars of Bethlehem. The large sceptre-reed; the
+fig-tree, lingering in barrenness when other trees are full of fruit;
+the locust-beans of the Caruba:--for one suggestion of Greek idylls
+there is yet another, of far deeper, dearer power.
+
+But who can resist the influence of Greek ideas at the Cap S. Martin?
+Down to the verge of the sea stretch the tall, twisted stems of Levant
+pines, and on the caverned limestone breaks the deep blue water.
+Dazzling as marble are these rocks, pointed and honeycombed with
+constant dashing of the restless sea, tufted with corallines and grey
+and purple seaweeds in the little pools, but hard and dry and rough
+above tide level. Nor does the sea always lap them quietly; for the
+last few days it has come tumbling in, roaring and raging on the beach
+with huge waves crystalline in their transparency, and maned with
+fleecy spray. Such were the rocks and such the swell of breakers when
+Ulysses grasped the shore after his long swim. Samphire, very salt and
+fragrant, grows in the rocky honeycomb; then lentisk and beach-loving
+myrtle, both exceeding green and bushy; then rosemary and euphorbia
+above the reach of spray. Fishermen, with their long reeds, sit lazily
+perched upon black rocks above blue waves, sunning themselves as much
+as seeking sport. One distant tip of snow, seen far away behind the
+hills, reminds us of an alien, unremembered winter. While dreaming
+there, this fancy came into my head: Polyphemus was born yonder in
+the Gorbio Valley. There he fed his sheep and goats, and on the hills
+found scanty pasture for his kine. He and his mother lived in the
+white house by the cypress near the stream where tulips grow. Young
+Galatea, nursed in the caverns of these rocks, white as the foam, and
+shy as the sea fishes, came one morning up the valley to pick mountain
+hyacinths, and little Polyphemus led the way. He knew where violets
+and sweet narcissus grew, as well as Galatea where pink coralline
+and spreading sea-flowers with their waving arms. But Galatea, having
+filled her lap with bluebells, quite forgot the leaping kids, and
+piping Cyclops, and cool summer caves, and yellow honey, and black
+ivy, and sweet vine, and water cold as Alpine snow. Down the swift
+streamlet she danced laughingly, and made herself once more bitter
+with the sea. But Polyphemus remained,--hungry, sad, gazing on the
+barren sea, and piping to the mockery of its waves.
+
+Filled with these Greek fancies, it is strange to come upon a little
+sandstone dell furrowed by trickling streams and overgrown with
+English primroses; or to enter the village of Roccabruna, with its
+mediaeval castle and the motto on its walls, _Tempora labuntur
+tacitisque senescimus annis_. A true motto for the town, where the
+butcher comes but once a week, and where men and boys, and dogs, and
+palms, and lemon-trees grow up and flourish and decay in the same
+hollow of the sunny mountain-side. Into the hard conglomerate of the
+hill the town is built; house walls and precipices mortised into one
+another, dovetailed by the art of years gone by, and riveted by
+age. The same plants grow from both alike--spurge, cistus, rue, and
+henbane, constant to the desolation of abandoned dwellings. From the
+castle you look down on roofs, brown tiles and chimney-pots, set one
+above the other like a big card-castle. Each house has its foot on a
+neighbour's neck, and its shoulder set against the native stone. The
+streets meander in and out, and up and down, overarched and balconied,
+but very clean. They swarm with children, healthy, happy, little
+monkeys, who grow fat on salt fish and yellow polenta, with oil and
+sun _ad libitum_.
+
+At night from Roccabruna you may see the flaring gas-lamps of the
+gaming-house at Monaco, that Armida's garden of the nineteenth
+century. It is the sunniest and most sheltered spot of all the coast.
+Long ago Lucan said of Monaco, '_Non Corus in illum jus habet aut
+Zephyrus_;' winter never comes to nip its tangled cactuses, and
+aloes, and geraniums. The air swoons with the scent of lemon-groves;
+tall palm-trees wave their graceful branches by the shore; music of
+the softest and the loudest swells from the palace; cool corridors
+and sunny seats stand ready for the noontide heat or evening calm;
+without, are olive-gardens, green and fresh and full of flowers. But
+the witch herself holds her high court and never-ending festival of
+sin in the painted banquet-halls and among the green tables.
+
+Let us leave this scene and turn with the country-folk of Roccabruna
+to S. Michael's Church at Mentone. High above the sea it stands,
+and from its open doors you look across the mountains with their
+olive-trees. Inside the church is a seething mass of country-folk and
+townspeople, mostly women, and these almost all old, but picturesque
+beyond description; kerchiefs of every colour, wrinkles of every shape
+and depth, skins of every tone of brown and yellow, voices of every
+gruffness, shrillness, strength, and weakness. Wherever an empty
+corner can be found, it is soon filled by tottering babies and
+mischievous children. The country-women come with their large dangling
+earrings of thin gold, wearing pink tulips or lemon-buds in their
+black hair. A low buzz of gossiping and mutual recognition keeps the
+air alive. The whole service seems a holiday--a general enjoyment of
+gala dresses and friendly greetings, very different from the
+silence, immobility, and _noli me tangere_ aspect of an English
+congregation. Over all drones, rattles, snores, and shrieks the organ;
+wailing, querulous, asthmatic, incomplete, its everlasting nasal
+chant--always beginning, never ending, through a range of two or three
+notes ground into one monotony. The voices of the congregation
+rise and sink above it. These southern people, like the Arabs, the
+Apulians, and the Spaniards, seem to find their music in a hurdy-gurdy
+swell of sound. The other day we met a little girl, walking and
+spinning, and singing all the while, whose song was just another
+version of this chant. It has a discontented plaintive wail, as if it
+came from some vast age, and were a cousin of primeval winds.
+
+At first sight, by the side of Mentone, San Remo is sadly prosaic. The
+valleys seem to sprawl, and the universal olives are monotonously grey
+upon their thick clay soil. Yet the wealth of flowers in the fat
+earth is wonderful. One might fancy oneself in a weedy farm flower-bed
+invaded by stray oats and beans and cabbages and garlic from the
+kitchen-garden. The country does not suggest a single Greek idea.
+It has no form or outline--no barren peaks, no spare and difficult
+vegetation. The beauty is rich but tame--valleys green with oats and
+corn, blossoming cherry-trees, and sweet bean-fields, figs coming into
+leaf, and arrowy bay-trees by the side of sparkling streams: here and
+there a broken aqueduct or rainbow bridge hung with maidenhair and
+briar and clematis and sarsaparilla.
+
+In the cathedral church of San Siro on Good Friday they hang the
+columns and the windows with black; they cover the pictures and deface
+the altar; above the high altar they raise a crucifix, and below they
+place a catafalque with the effigy of the dead Christ. To this sad
+symbol they address their prayers and incense, chant their 'litanies
+and lurries,' and clash the rattles, which commemorate their rage
+against the traitor Judas. So far have we already passed away from the
+Greek feeling of Mentone. As I listened to the hideous din, I could
+not but remember the Theocritean burial of Adonis. Two funeral beds
+prepared: two feasts recurring in the springtime of the year. What a
+difference beneath this superficial similarity--[Greek: kalos nekus
+oia katheudon]--_attritus aegra macie_. But the fast of Good
+Friday is followed by the festival of Easter. That, after all, is the
+chief difference.
+
+After leaving the cathedral we saw a pretty picture in a dull old
+street of San Remo--three children leaning from a window, blowing
+bubbles. The bubbles floated down the street, of every colour, round
+and trembling, like the dreams of life which children dream. The town
+is certainly most picturesque. It resembles a huge glacier of houses
+poured over a wedge of rock, running down the sides and along the
+ridge, and spreading itself into a fan between two torrents on the
+shore below. House over house, with balcony and staircase, convent
+turret and church tower, palm-trees and olives, roof gardens and
+clinging creepers--this white cataract of buildings streams downward
+from the lazar-house, and sanctuary, and sandstone quarries on the
+hill. It is a mass of streets placed close above each other, and
+linked together with arms and arches of solid masonry, as a protection
+from the earthquakes, which are frequent at San Remo. The walls are
+tall, and form a labyrinth of gloomy passages and treacherous blind
+alleys, where the Moors of old might meet with a ferocious welcome.
+Indeed, San Remo is a fortress as well as a dwelling-place. Over its
+gateways may still be traced the pipes for molten lead, and on its
+walls the eyeloops for arrows, with brackets for the feet of archers.
+Masses of building have been shaken down by earthquakes. The ruins of
+what once were houses gape with blackened chimneys and dark forlorn
+cellars; mazes of fungus and unhealthy weeds among the still secure
+habitations. Hardly a ray of light penetrates the streets; one learns
+the meaning of the Italian word _uggia_ from their cold and
+gloom. During the day they are deserted by every one but babies and
+witchlike old women--some gossiping, some sitting vacant at the house
+door, some spinning or weaving, or minding little children--ugly and
+ancient as are their own homes, yet clean as are the streets. The
+younger population goes afield; the men on mules laden for the hills,
+the women burdened like mules with heavy and disgusting loads. It is
+an exceptionally good-looking race; tall, well-grown, and strong.--But
+to the streets again. The shops in the upper town are few, chiefly
+wine-booths and stalls for the sale of salt fish, eggs, and bread,
+or cobblers' and tinkers' ware. Notwithstanding the darkness of their
+dwellings, the people have a love of flowers; azaleas lean from their
+windows, and vines, carefully protected by a sheath of brickwork,
+climb the six stories, to blossom out into a pergola upon the roof.
+Look at that mass of greenery and colours, dimly seen from beneath,
+with a yellow cat sunning herself upon the parapet! To reach such a
+garden and such sunlight who would not mount six stories and thread
+a labyrinth of passages? I should prefer a room upon the east side of
+the town, looking southward to the Molo and the sea, with a sound
+of water beneath, and a palm soaring up to fan my window with his
+feathery leaves.
+
+The shrines are little spots of brightness in the gloomy streets.
+Madonna with a sword; Christ holding His pierced and bleeding heart;
+l'Eterno Padre pointing to the dead Son stretched upon His knee; some
+souls in torment; S. Roch reminding us of old plagues by the spot upon
+his thigh;--these are the symbols of the shrines. Before them stand
+rows of pots filled with gillyflowers, placed there by pious, simple,
+praying hands--by maidens come to tell their sorrows to our Lady rich
+in sorrow, by old women bent and shrivelled, in hopes of paradise or
+gratitude for happy days, when Madonna kept Cecchino faithful to his
+home, or saved the baby from the fever.
+
+Lower down, between the sea and the hill, is the municipal,
+aristocratic, ecclesiastical quarter of San Remo. There stands the
+Palace Borea--a truly princely pile, built in the last Renaissance
+style of splendour, with sea-nymphs and dolphins, and satyric heads,
+half lips, half leafage, round about its doors and windows. Once it
+formed the dwelling of a feudal family, but now it is a roomy
+anthill of a hundred houses, shops, and offices, the Boreas of to-day
+retaining but a portion of one flat, and making profit of the rest.
+There, too, are the barracks and the syndic's hall; the Jesuits'
+school, crowded with boys and girls; the shops for clothes,
+confectionery, and trinkets; the piazza, with its fountain and
+tasselled planes, and flowery chestnut-trees, a mass of greenery.
+Under these trees the idlers lounge, boys play at leap-frog, men at
+bowls. Women in San Remo work all day, but men and boys play for the
+most part at bowls or toss-penny or leap-frog or morra. San Siro, the
+cathedral, stands at one end of the square. Do not go inside; it has
+a sickly smell of immemorial incense and garlic, undefinable and
+horrible. Far better looks San Siro from the parapet above the
+torrent. There you see its irregular half-Gothic outline across a
+tangle of lemon-trees and olives. The stream rushes by through high
+walls, covered with creepers, spanned by ferny bridges, feathered by
+one or two old tufty palms. And over all rises the ancient turret of
+San Siro, like a Spanish giralda, a minaret of pinnacles and pyramids
+and dome bubbles, with windows showing heavy bells, old clocks, and
+sundials painted on the walls, and a cupola of green and yellow tiles
+like serpent-scales, to crown the whole. The sea lies beyond, and
+the house-roofs break it with grey horizontal lines. Then there are
+convents, legions of them, large white edifices, Jesuitical apparently
+for the most part, clanging importunate bells, leaning rose-blossoms
+and cypress-boughs over their jealous walls.
+
+Lastly, there is the port--the mole running out into the sea, the quay
+planted with plane-trees, and the fishing-boats--by which San Remo is
+connected with the naval glory of the past--with the Riviera that gave
+birth to Columbus--with the Liguria that the Dorias ruled--with the
+great name of Genoa. The port is empty enough now; but from the pier
+you look back on San Remo and its circling hills, a jewelled town
+set in illimitable olive greyness. The quay seems also to be the
+cattle-market. There the small buff cows of North Italy repose after
+their long voyage or march, kneeling on the sandy ground or rubbing
+their sides against the wooden cross awry with age and shorn of all
+its symbols. Lambs frisk among the boats; impudent kids nibble
+the drooping ears of patient mules. Hinds in white jackets and
+knee-breeches made of skins, lead shaggy rams and fiercely bearded
+goats, ready to butt at every barking dog, and always seeking
+opportunities of flight. Farmers and parish priests in black
+petticoats feel the cattle and dispute about the price, or whet their
+bargains with a draught of wine. Meanwhile the nets are brought on
+shore glittering with the fry of sardines, which are cooked like
+whitebait, with cuttlefish--amorphous objects stretching shiny feelers
+on the hot dry sand--and prickly purple eggs of the sea-urchin. Women
+go about their labour through the throng, some carrying stones upon
+their heads, or unloading boats and bearing planks of wood in single
+file, two marching side by side beneath one load of lime, others
+scarcely visible under a stack of oats, another with her baby in its
+cradle fast asleep.
+
+San Remo has an elder brother among the hills, which is called San
+Romolo, after one of the old bishops of Genoa. Who San Remo was is
+buried in remote antiquity; but his town has prospered, while of San
+Romolo nothing remains but a ruined hill-convent among pine-trees. The
+old convent is worth visiting. Its road carries you into the heart of
+the sierra which surrounds San Remo, a hill-country something like
+the Jura, undulating and green to the very top with maritime pines and
+pinasters. Riding up, you hear all manner of Alpine sounds; brawling
+streams, tinkling cowbells, and herdsmen calling to each other on the
+slopes. Beneath you lies San Remo, scarcely visible; and over it the
+great sea rises ever so far into the sky, until the white sails hang
+in air, and cloud and sea-line melt into each other indistinguishably.
+Spanish chestnuts surround the monastery with bright blue gentians,
+hepaticas, forget-me-nots, and primroses about their roots. The house
+itself is perched on a knoll with ample prospect to the sea and to
+the mountains, very near to heaven, within a theatre of noble
+contemplations and soul-stirring thoughts. If Mentone spoke to me of
+the poetry of Greek pastoral life, this convent speaks of mediaeval
+monasticism--of solitude with God, above, beneath, and all around, of
+silence and repose from agitating cares, of continuity in prayer, and
+changelessness of daily life. Some precepts of the _Imitatio_
+came into my mind: 'Be never wholly idle; read or write, pray or
+meditate, or work with diligence for the common needs.' 'Praiseworthy
+is it for the religious man to go abroad but seldom, and to seem to
+shun, and keep his eyes from men.' 'Sweet is the cell when it is often
+sought, but if we gad about, it wearies us by its seclusion.' Then I
+thought of the monks so living in this solitude; their cell windows
+looking across the valley to the sea, through summer and winter, under
+sun and stars. Then would they read or write, what long melodious
+hours! or would they pray, what stations on the pine-clad hills! or
+would they toil, what terraces to build and plant with corn, what
+flowers to tend, what cows to milk and pasture, what wood to cut,
+what fir-cones to gather for the winter fire! or should they yearn for
+silence, silence from their comrades of the solitude, what whispering
+galleries of God, where never human voice breaks loudly, but winds
+and streams and lonely birds disturb the awful stillness! In such a
+hermitage as this, only more wild, lived S. Francis of Assisi, among
+the Apennines.[7] It was there that he learned the tongues of beasts
+and birds, and preached them sermons. Stretched for hours motionless
+on the bare rocks, coloured like them and rough like them in his brown
+peasant's serge, he prayed and meditated, saw the vision of Christ
+crucified, and planned his order to regenerate a vicious age. So still
+he lay, so long, so like a stone, so gentle were his eyes, so kind
+and low his voice, that the mice nibbled breadcrumbs from his wallet,
+lizards ran over him, and larks sang to him in the air. There, too, in
+those long, solitary vigils, the Spirit of God came upon him, and the
+spirit of Nature was even as God's Spirit, and he sang: 'Laudato sia
+Dio mio Signore, con tutte le creature, specialmente messer lo frate
+sole; per suor luna, e per le stelle; per frate vento e per l'aire, e
+nuvolo, e sereno e ogni tempo.' Half the value of this hymn would
+be lost were we to forget how it was written, in what solitudes and
+mountains far from men, or to ticket it with some abstract word
+like Pantheism. Pantheism it is not; but an acknowledgment of that
+brotherhood, beneath the love of God, by which the sun and moon and
+stars, and wind and air and cloud, and clearness and all weather, and
+all creatures, are bound together with the soul of man.
+
+Few, of course, were like S. Francis. Probably no monk of San Romolo
+was inspired with his enthusiasm for humanity, or had his revelation
+of the Divine Spirit inherent in the world. Still fewer can have felt
+the aesthetic charm of Nature but most vaguely. It was as much as they
+could boast, if they kept steadily to the rule of their order, and
+attended to the concerns each of his own soul. A terrible selfishness,
+if rightly considered; but one which accorded with the delusion that
+this world is a cave of care, the other world a place of torture or
+undying bliss, death the prime object of our meditation, and lifelong
+abandonment of our fellow-men the highest mode of existence. Why,
+then, should monks, so persuaded of the riddle of the earth, have
+placed themselves in scenes so beautiful? Why rose the Camaldolis and
+Chartreuses over Europe? white convents on the brows of lofty hills,
+among the rustling boughs of Vallombrosas, in the grassy meadows of
+Engelbergs,--always the eyries of Nature's lovers, men smitten with
+the loveliness of earth? There is surely some meaning in these poetic
+stations.
+
+Here is a sentence of the _Imitatio_ which throws some light upon
+the hymn of S. Francis and the sites of Benedictine monasteries, by
+explaining the value of natural beauty for monks who spent their life
+in studying death: 'If thy heart were right, then would every creature
+be to thee a mirror of life, and a book of holy doctrine. There is no
+creature so small and vile that does not show forth the goodness
+of God.' With this sentence bound about their foreheads, walked Fra
+Angelico and S. Francis. To men like them the mountain valleys and the
+skies, and all that they contained, were full of deep significance.
+Though they reasoned '_de conditione humanae miseriae_,' and '_de
+contemptu mundi_,' yet the whole world was a pageant of God's
+glory, a testimony to His goodness. Their chastened senses, pure
+hearts, and simple wills were as wings by which they soared above the
+things of earth, and sent the music of their souls aloft with every
+other creature in the symphony of praise. To them, as to Blake, the
+sun was no mere blazing disc or ball, but 'an innumerable company
+of the heavenly host singing, "Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God
+Almighty."' To them the winds were brothers, and the streams were
+sisters--brethren in common dependence upon God their Father, brethren
+in common consecration to His service, brethren by blood, brethren by
+vows of holiness. Unquestioning faith rendered this world no puzzle;
+they overlooked the things of sense because the spiritual things
+were ever present, and as clear as day. Yet did they not forget
+that spiritual things are symbolised by things of sense; and so the
+smallest herb of grass was vital to their tranquil contemplations.
+We who have lost sight of the invisible world, who set our affections
+more on things of earth, fancy that because these monks despised the
+world, and did not write about its landscapes, therefore they were
+dead to its beauty. This is mere vanity: the mountains, stars, seas,
+fields, and living things were only swallowed up in the one thought of
+God, and made subordinate to the awfulness of human destinies. We
+to whom hills are hills, and seas are seas, and stars are ponderable
+quantities, speak, write, and reason of them as of objects interesting
+in themselves. The monks were less ostensibly concerned about such
+things, because they only found in them the vestibules and symbols of
+a hidden mystery.
+
+The contrast between the Greek and mediaeval modes of regarding
+Nature is not a little remarkable. Both Greeks and monks, judged by
+nineteenth-century standards, were unobservant of natural beauties.
+They make but brief and general remarks upon landscapes and the like.
+The [Greek: pontion te kumaton anerithmon gelasma] is very
+rare. But the Greeks stopped at the threshold of Nature; the forces
+they found there, the gods, were inherent in Nature, and distinct.
+They did not, like the monks, place one spiritual power, omnipotent
+and omnipresent, above all, and see in Nature lessons of Divine
+government. We ourselves having somewhat overstrained the latter point
+of view, are now apt to return vaguely to Greek fancies. Perhaps, too,
+we talk so much about scenery because it is scenery to us, and the
+life has gone out of it.
+
+I cannot leave the Cornice without one word about a place which lies
+between Mentone and San Remo. Bordighera has a beauty which is quite
+distinct from both. Palms are its chief characteristics. They lean
+against the garden walls, and feather the wells outside the town,
+where women come with brazen pitchers to draw water. In some of the
+marshy tangles of the plain, they spring from a thick undergrowth of
+spiky leaves, and rear their tall aerial arms against the deep blue
+background of the sea or darker purple of the distant hills. White
+pigeons fly about among their branches, and the air is loud with
+cooings and with rustlings, and the hoarser croaking of innumerable
+frogs. Then, in the olive-groves that stretch along the level shore,
+are labyrinths of rare and curious plants, painted tulips and white
+periwinkles, flinging their light of blossoms and dark glossy leaves
+down the swift channels of the brawling streams. On each side of the
+rivulets they grow, like sister cataracts of flowers instead of spray.
+At night fresh stars come out along the coast, beneath the stars
+of heaven; for you can see the lamps of Ventimiglia and Mentone
+and Monaco, and, far away, the lighthouses upon the promontories of
+Antibes and the Estrelles. At dawn, a vision of Corsica grows from
+the sea. The island lies eighty miles away, but one can trace the
+dark strip of irregular peaks glowing amid the gold and purple of the
+rising sun. If the air is clear and bright, the snows and overvaulting
+clouds which crown its mountains shine all day, and glitter like an
+apparition in the bright blue sky. 'Phantom fair,' half raised above
+the sea, it stands, as unreal and transparent as the moon when seen in
+April sunlight, yet not to be confounded with the shape of any cloud.
+If Mentone speaks of Greek legends, and San Romolo restores the
+monastic past, we feel ourselves at Bordighera transported to the
+East; and lying under its tall palms can fancy ourselves at Tyre or
+Daphne, or in the gardens of a Moslem prince.
+
+ Note.--Dec. 1873. My old impressions are renewed and confirmed
+ by a third visit, after seven years, to this coast. For purely
+ idyllic loveliness, the Cornice is surpassed by nothing in
+ the South. A very few spots in Sicily, the road between
+ Castellammare and Amalfi, and the island of Corfu, are its
+ only rivals in this style of scenery. From Cannes to Sestri is
+ one continuous line of exquisitely modulated landscape beauty,
+ which can only be fully appreciated by travellers in carriage
+ or on foot.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_AJACCIO_
+
+
+It generally happens that visitors to Ajaccio pass over from the
+Cornice coast, leaving Nice at night, and waking about sunrise to find
+themselves beneath the frowning mountains of Corsica. The difference
+between the scenery of the island and the shores which they have
+left is very striking. Instead of the rocky mountains of the Cornice,
+intolerably dry and barren at their summits, but covered at their base
+with villages and ancient towns and olive-fields, Corsica presents a
+scene of solitary and peculiar grandeur. The highest mountain-tops are
+covered with snow, and beneath the snow-level to the sea they are
+as green as Irish or as English hills, but nearly uninhabited and
+uncultivated. Valleys of almost Alpine verdure are succeeded by
+tracts of chestnut wood and scattered pines, or deep and flowery
+brushwood--the 'maquis' of Corsica, which yields shelter to its
+traditional outlaws and bandits. Yet upon these hillsides there
+are hardly any signs of life; the whole country seems abandoned to
+primeval wildness and the majesty of desolation. Nothing can possibly
+be more unlike the smiling Riviera, every square mile of which is
+cultivated like a garden, and every valley and bay dotted over with
+white villages. After steaming for a few hours along this savage
+coast, the rocks which guard the entrance to the bay of Ajaccio,
+murderous-looking teeth and needles ominously christened Sanguinari,
+are passed, and we enter the splendid land-locked harbour, on the
+northern shore of which Ajaccio is built. About three centuries ago
+the town, which used to occupy the extreme or eastern end of the bay,
+was removed to a more healthy point upon the northern coast, so that
+Ajaccio is quite a modern city. Visitors who expect to find in it
+the picturesqueness of Genoa or San Remo, or even of Mentone, will
+be sadly disappointed. It is simply a healthy, well-appointed town of
+recent date, the chief merits of which are, that it has wide streets,
+and is free, externally at least, from the filth and rubbish of most
+southern seaports.
+
+But if Ajaccio itself is not picturesque, the scenery which
+it commands, and in the heart of which it lies, is of the most
+magnificent. The bay of Ajaccio resembles a vast Italian lake--a Lago
+Maggiore, with greater space between the mountains and the shore.
+From the snow-peaks of the interior, huge granite crystals clothed in
+white, to the southern extremity of the bay, peak succeeds peak and
+ridge rises behind ridge in a line of wonderful variety and beauty.
+The atmospheric changes of light and shadow, cloud and colour, on this
+upland country, are as subtle and as various as those which lend their
+beauty to the scenery of the lakes, while the sea below is blue and
+rarely troubled. One could never get tired with looking at this view.
+Morning and evening add new charms to its sublimity and beauty. In the
+early morning Monte d'Oro sparkles like a Monte Rosa with its fresh
+snow, and the whole inferior range puts on the crystal blueness of
+dawn among the Alps. In the evening, violet and purple tints and
+the golden glow of Italian sunset lend a different lustre to the
+fairyland. In fact, the beauties of Switzerland and Italy are
+curiously blended in this landscape.
+
+In soil and vegetation the country round Ajaccio differs much from the
+Cornice. There are very few olive-trees, nor is the cultivated ground
+backed up so immediately by stony mountains; but between the seashore
+and the hills there is plenty of space for pasture-land, and orchards
+of apricot and peach-trees, and orange gardens. This undulating
+champaign, green with meadows and watered with clear streams, is very
+refreshing to the eyes of Northern people, who may have wearied of the
+bareness and greyness of Nice or Mentone. It is traversed by excellent
+roads, recently constructed on a plan of the French Government, which
+intersect the country in all directions, and offer an infinite variety
+of rides or drives to visitors. The broken granite of which these
+roads are made is very pleasant for riding over. Most of the hills
+through which they strike, after starting from Ajaccio, are
+clothed with a thick brushwood of box, ilex, lentisk, arbutus,
+and laurustinus, which stretches down irregularly into vineyards,
+olive-gardens, and meadows. It is, indeed, the native growth of the
+island; for wherever a piece of ground is left untilled, the macchi
+grow up, and the scent of their multitudinous aromatic blossoms is so
+strong that it may be smelt miles out at sea. Napoleon, at S. Helena,
+referred to this fragrance when he said that he should know Corsica
+blindfold by the smell of its soil. Occasional woods of holm oak make
+darker patches on the landscape, and a few pines fringe the side of
+enclosure walls or towers. The prickly pear runs riot in and out
+among the hedges and upon the walls, diversifying the colours of the
+landscape with its strange grey-green masses and unwieldy fans. In
+spring, when peach and almond trees are in blossom, and when the
+roadside is starred with asphodels, this country is most beautiful in
+its gladness. The macchi blaze with cistus flowers of red and silver.
+Golden broom mixes with the dark purple of the great French lavender,
+and over the whole mass of blossom wave plumes of Mediterranean heath
+and sweet-scented yellow coronilla. Under the stems of the ilex peep
+cyclamens, pink and sweet; the hedgerows are a tangle of vetches,
+convolvuluses, lupines, orchises, and alliums, with here and there a
+purple iris. It would be difficult to describe all the rare and lovely
+plants which are found here in a profusion that surpasses even the
+flower-gardens of the Cornice, and reminds one of the most favoured
+Alpine valleys in their early spring.
+
+Since the French occupied Corsica they have done much for the island
+by improving its harbours and making good roads, and endeavouring
+to mitigate the ferocity of the people. But they have many things to
+contend against, and Corsica is still behind the other provinces of
+France. The people are idle, haughty, umbrageous, fiery, quarrelsome,
+fond of gipsy life, and retentive through generations of old feuds and
+prejudices to an almost inconceivable extent. Then the nature of the
+country itself offers serious obstacles to its proper colonisation
+and cultivation. The savage state of the island and its internal feuds
+have disposed the Corsicans to quit the seaboard for their mountain
+villages and fortresses, so that the great plains at the foot of the
+hills are unwholesome for want of tillage and drainage. Again,
+the mountains themselves have in many parts been stripped of their
+forests, and converted into mere wildernesses of macchi stretching
+up and down their slopes for miles and miles of useless desolation.
+Another impediment to proper cultivation is found in the old habit of
+what is called free pasturage. The highland shepherds are allowed
+by the national custom to drive down their flocks and herds to the
+lowlands during the winter, so that fences are broken, young crops
+are browsed over and trampled down, and agriculture becomes a mere
+impossibility. The last and chief difficulty against which the French
+have had to contend, and up to this time with apparent success, is
+brigandage. The Corsican system of brigandage is so very different
+from that of the Italians, Sicilians, and Greeks, that a word may be
+said about its peculiar character. In the first place, it has nothing
+at all to do with robbery and thieving. The Corsican bandit took to a
+free life among the macchi, not for the sake of supporting himself by
+lawless depredation, but because he had put himself under a legal and
+social ban by murdering some one in obedience to the strict code of
+honour of his country. His victim may have been the hereditary foe of
+his house for generations, or else the newly made enemy of yesterday.
+But in either case, if he had killed him fairly, after a due
+notification of his intention to do so, he was held to have fulfilled
+a duty rather than to have committed a crime. He then betook himself
+to the dense tangles of evergreens which I have described, where he
+lived upon the charity of countryfolk and shepherds. In the eyes of
+those simple people it was a sacred duty to relieve the necessities of
+the outlaws, and to guard them from the bloodhounds of justice. There
+was scarcely a respectable family in Corsica who had not one or more
+of its members thus _alla campagna_, as it was euphemistically
+styled. The Corsicans themselves have attributed this miserable state
+of things to two principal causes. The first of these was the ancient
+bad government of the island: under its Genoese rulers no justice was
+administered, and private vengeance for homicide or insult became a
+necessary consequence among the haughty and warlike families of
+the mountain villages. Secondly, the Corsicans have been from time
+immemorial accustomed to wear arms in everyday life. They used to sit
+at their house doors and pace the streets with musket, pistol, dagger,
+and cartouch-box on their persons; and on the most trivial occasion
+of merriment or enthusiasm they would discharge their firearms. This
+habit gave a bloody termination to many quarrels, which might have
+ended more peaceably had the parties been unarmed; and so the seeds
+of _vendetta_ were constantly being sown. Statistics published
+by the French Government present a hideous picture of the state of
+bloodshed in Corsica even during this century. In one period of thirty
+years (between 1821 and 1850) there were 4319 murders in the island.
+Almost every man was watching for his neighbour's life, or seeking how
+to save his own; and agriculture and commerce were neglected for this
+grisly game of hide-and-seek. In 1853 the French began to take strong
+measures, and, under the Prefect Thuillier, they hunted the bandits
+from the macchi, killing between 200 and 300 of them. At the same time
+an edict was promulgated against bearing arms. It is forbidden to sell
+the old Corsican stiletto in the shops, and no one may carry a gun,
+even for sporting purposes, unless he obtains a special licence. These
+licences, moreover, are only granted for short and precisely measured
+periods.
+
+In order to appreciate the stern and gloomy character of the
+Corsicans, it is necessary to leave the smiling gardens of Ajaccio,
+and to visit some of the more distant mountain villages--Vico, Cavro,
+Bastelica, or Bocognano, any of which may easily be reached from the
+capital. Immediately after quitting the seaboard, we enter a country
+austere in its simplicity, solemn without relief, yet dignified by its
+majesty and by the sense of freedom it inspires. As we approach the
+mountains, the macchi become taller, feathering man-high above the
+road, and stretching far away upon the hills. Gigantic masses of
+granite, shaped like buttresses and bastions, seem to guard the
+approaches to these hills; while, looking backward over the green
+plain, the sea lies smiling in a haze of blue among the rocky horns
+and misty headlands of the coast. There is a stateliness about the
+abrupt inclination of these granite slopes, rising from their frowning
+portals by sharp _aretes_ to the snows piled on their summits,
+which contrasts in a strange way with the softness and beauty of
+the mingling sea and plain beneath. In no landscape are more various
+qualities combined; in none are they so harmonised as to produce so
+strong a sense of majestic freedom and severe power. Suppose that we
+are on the road to Corte, and have now reached Bocognano, the first
+considerable village since we left Ajaccio. Bocognano might be chosen
+as typical of Corsican hill-villages, with its narrow street, and
+tall tower-like houses of five or six stories high, faced with
+rough granite, and pierced with the smallest windows and very narrow
+doorways. These buildings have a mournful and desolate appearance.
+There is none of the grandeur of antiquity about them; no sculptured
+arms or castellated turrets, or balconies or spacious staircases,
+such as are common in the poorest towns of Italy. The signs of warlike
+occupation which they offer, and their sinister aspect of vigilance,
+are thoroughly prosaic. They seem to suggest a state of society in
+which feud and violence were systematised into routine. There is no
+relief to the savage austerity of their forbidding aspect; no signs
+of wealth or household comfort; no trace of art, no liveliness and
+gracefulness of architecture. Perched upon their coigns of vantage,
+these villages seem always menacing, as if Saracen pirates, or Genoese
+marauders, or bandits bent on vengeance, were still for ever on the
+watch. Forests of immensely old chestnut-trees surround Bocognano on
+every side, so that you step from the village streets into the shade
+of woods that seem to have remained untouched for centuries. The
+country-people support themselves almost entirely upon the fruit of
+these chestnuts; and there is a large department of Corsica called
+Castagniccia, from the prevalence of these trees and the sustenance
+which the inhabitants derive from them. Close by the village brawls
+a torrent, such as one may see in the Monte Rosa valleys or the
+Apennines, but very rarely in Switzerland. It is of a pure green
+colour, absolutely like Indian jade, foaming round the granite
+boulders, and gliding over smooth slabs of polished stone, and eddying
+into still, deep pools fringed with fern. Monte d'Oro, one of the
+largest mountains of Corsica, soars above, and from his snows the
+purest water, undefiled by glacier mud or the _debris_ of
+avalanches, melts away. Following the stream, we rise through the
+macchi and the chestnut woods, which grow more sparely by degrees,
+until we reach the zone of beeches. Here the scene seems suddenly
+transferred to the Pyrenees; for the road is carried along abrupt
+slopes, thickly set with gigantic beech-trees, overgrown with pink and
+silver lichens. In the early spring their last year's leaves are still
+crisp with hoar-frost; one morning's journey has brought us from the
+summer of Ajaccio to winter on these heights, where no flowers are
+visible but the pale hellebore and tiny lilac crocuses. Snow-drifts
+stretch by the roadside, and one by one the pioneers of the vast
+pine-woods of the interior appear. A great portion of the pine-forest
+(_Pinus larix_, or Corsican pine, not larch) between Bocognano
+and Corte had recently been burned by accident when we passed by.
+Nothing could be more forlorn than the black leafless stems and
+branches emerging from the snow. Some of these trees were mast-high,
+and some mere saplings. Corte itself is built among the mountain
+fastnesses of the interior. The snows and granite cliffs of Monte
+Rotondo overhang it to the north-west, while two fair valleys lead
+downward from its eyrie to the eastern coast. The rock on which it
+stands rises to a sharp point, sloping southward, and commanding the
+valleys of the Golo and the Tavignano. Remembering that Corte was the
+old capital of Corsica, and the centre of General Paoli's government,
+we are led to compare the town with Innsprueck, Meran, or Grenoble.
+In point of scenery and situation it is hardly second to any of these
+mountain-girdled cities; but its poverty and bareness are scarcely
+less striking than those of Bocognano.
+
+The whole Corsican character, with its stern love of justice, its
+furious revengefulness and wild passion for freedom, seems to be
+illustrated by the peculiar elements of grandeur and desolation in
+this landscape. When we traverse the forest of Vico or the rocky
+pasture-lands of Niolo, the history of the Corsican national heroes,
+Giudice della Rocca and Sampiero, becomes intelligible, nor do we fail
+to understand some of the mysterious attraction which led the more
+daring spirits of the island to prefer a free life among the macchi
+and pine-woods to placid lawful occupations in farms and villages.
+The lives of the two men whom I have mentioned are so prominent in
+Corsican history, and are so often still upon the lips of the common
+people, that it may be well to sketch their outlines in the foreground
+of the Salvator Rosa landscape just described. Giudice was the
+governor of Corsica, as lieutenant for the Pisans, at the end of the
+thirteenth century. At that time the island belonged to the republic
+of Pisa, but the Genoese were encroaching on them by land and sea,
+and the whole life of their brave champion was spent in a desperate
+struggle with the invaders, until at last he died, old, blind, and in
+prison, at the command of his savage foes. Giudice was the title which
+the Pisans usually conferred upon their governor, and Della Rocca
+deserved it by right of his own inexorable love of justice. Indeed,
+justice seems to have been with him a passion, swallowing up all other
+feelings of his nature. All the stories which are told of him turn
+upon this point in his character; and though they may not be strictly
+true, they illustrate the stern virtues for which he was celebrated
+among the Corsicans, and show what kind of men this harsh and gloomy
+nation loved to celebrate as heroes. This is not the place either to
+criticise these legends or to recount them at full length. The most
+famous and the most characteristic may, however, be briefly told. On
+one occasion, after a victory over the Genoese, he sent a message
+that the captives in his hands should be released if their wives and
+sisters came to sue for them. The Genoese ladies embarked, and
+arrived in Corsica, and to Giudice's nephew was intrusted the duty
+of fulfilling his uncle's promise. In the course of executing his
+commission, the youth was so smitten with the beauty of one of the
+women that he dishonoured her. Thereupon Giudice had him at once put
+to death. Another story shows the Spartan justice of this hero in
+a less savage light. He was passing by a cowherd's cottage, when he
+heard some young calves bleating. On inquiring what distressed them,
+he was told that the calves had not enough milk to drink after the
+farm people had been served. Then Giudice made it a law that the
+calves throughout the land should take their fill before the cows were
+milked.
+
+Sampiero belongs to a later period of Corsican history. After a long
+course of misgovernment the Genoese rule had become unbearable. There
+was no pretence of administering justice, and private vengeance had
+full sway in the island. The sufferings of the nation were so great
+that the time had come for a new judge or saviour to rise among them.
+Sampiero was the son of obscure parents who lived at Bastelica. But
+his abilities very soon declared themselves, and made a way for him in
+the world. He spent his youth in the armies of the Medici and of the
+French Francis, gaining great renown as a brave soldier. Bayard became
+his friend, and Francis made him captain of his Corsican bands. But
+Sampiero did not forget the wrongs of his native land while thus on
+foreign service. He resolved, if possible, to undermine the power
+of Genoa, and spent the whole of his manhood and old age in one
+long struggle with their great captain, Stephen Doria. Of his stern
+patriotism and Roman severity of virtue the following story is a
+terrible illustration. Sampiero, though a man of mean birth, had
+married an heiress of the noble Corsican house of the Ornani. His
+wife, Vannina, was a woman of timid and flexible nature, who, though
+devoted to her husband, fell into the snares of his enemies. During
+his absence on an embassy to Algiers the Genoese induced her to leave
+her home at Marseilles and to seek refuge in their city, persuading
+her that this step would secure the safety of her child. She was
+starting on her journey when a friend of Sampiero arrested her, and
+brought her back to Aix, in Provence. Sampiero, when he heard of these
+events, hurried to France, and was received by a relative of his,
+who hinted that he had known of Vannina's projected flight. 'E tu hai
+taciuto?' was Sampiero's only answer, accompanied by a stroke of his
+poignard that killed the lukewarm cousin. Sampiero now brought his
+wife from Aix to Marseilles, preserving the most absolute silence on
+the way, and there, on entering his house, he killed her with his own
+hand. It is said that he loved Vannina passionately; and when she was
+dead, he caused her to be buried with magnificence in the church of S.
+Francis. Like Giudice, Sampiero fell at last a prey to treachery. The
+murder of Vannina had made the Ornani his deadly foes. In order to
+avenge her blood, they played into the hands of the Genoese, and laid
+a plot by which the noblest of the Corsicans was brought to death.
+First, they gained over to their scheme a monk of Bastelica, called
+Ambrogio, and Sampiero's own squire and shield-bearer, Vittolo. By
+means of these men, in whom he trusted, he was drawn defenceless and
+unattended into a deeply wooded ravine near Cavro, not very far from
+his birthplace, where the Ornani and their Genoese troops surrounded
+him. Sampiero fired his pistols in vain, for Vittolo had loaded them
+with the shot downwards. Then he drew his sword, and began to lay
+about him, when the same Vittolo, the Judas, stabbed him from
+behind, and the old lion fell dead by his friend's hand. Sampiero was
+sixty-nine when he died, in the year 1567. It is satisfactory to know
+that the Corsicans have called traitors and foes to their country
+Vittoli for ever. These two examples of Corsican patriots are enough;
+we need not add to theirs the history of Paoli--a milder and more
+humane, but scarcely less heroic leader. Paoli, however, in the
+hour of Corsica's extremest peril, retired to England, and died in
+philosophic exile. Neither Giudice nor Sampiero would have acted thus.
+The more forlorn the hope, the more they struggled.
+
+Among the old Corsican customs which are fast dying out, but
+which still linger in the remote valleys of Niolo and Vico, is the
+_vocero_, or funeral chant, improvised by women at funerals over
+the bodies of the dead. Nothing illustrates the ferocious temper and
+savage passions of the race better than these _voceri_, many of
+which have been written down and preserved. Most of them are songs
+of vengeance and imprecation, mingled with hyperbolical laments and
+utterances of extravagant grief, poured forth by wives and sisters at
+the side of murdered husbands and brothers. The women who sing them
+seem to have lost all milk of human kindness, and to have exchanged
+the virtues of their sex for Spartan fortitude and the rage of furies.
+While we read their turbid lines we are carried in imagination to one
+of the cheerless houses of Bastelica or Bocognano, overshadowed by its
+mournful chestnut-tree, on which the blood of the murdered man is yet
+red. The _gridata_, or wake, is assembled in a dark room. On the
+wooden board, called _tola_, the corpse lies stretched; and round
+it are women, veiled in the blue-black mantle of Corsican costume,
+moaning and rocking themselves upon their chairs. The _pasto_ or
+_conforto_, food supplied for mourners, stands upon a side table,
+and round the room are men with savage eyes and bristling beards,
+armed to the teeth, keen for vengeance. The dead man's musket and
+pocket-pistol lie beside him, and his bloody shirt is hung up at his
+head. Suddenly, the silence, hitherto only disturbed by suppressed
+groans and muttered curses, is broken by a sharp cry. A woman rises:
+it is the sister of the dead man; she seizes his shirt, and holding
+it aloft with Maenad gestures and frantic screams, gives rhythmic
+utterance to her grief and rage. 'I was spinning, when I heard a great
+noise: it was a gunshot, which went into my heart, and seemed a voice
+that cried, "Run, thy brother is dying." I ran into the room above;
+I took the blow into my breast; I said, "Now he is dead, there is
+nothing to give me comfort. Who will undertake thy vengeance? When I
+show thy shirt, who will vow to let his beard grow till the murderer
+is slain? Who is there left to do it? A mother near her death? A
+sister? Of all our race there is only left a woman, without kin, poor,
+orphan, and a girl. Yet, O my brother! never fear. For thy vengeance
+thy sister is enough!
+
+ '"Ma per fa la to bindetta,
+ Sta siguru, basta anch ella!
+
+Give me the pistol; I will shoulder the gun; I will away to the
+hills. My brother, heart of thy sister, thou shalt be avenged!"' A
+_vocero_ declaimed upon the bier of Giammatteo and Pasquale,
+two cousins, by the sister of the former, is still fiercer and more
+energetic in its malediction. This Erinnys of revenge prays Christ and
+all the saints to extirpate the murderer's whole race, to shrivel it
+up till it passes from the earth. Then, with a sudden and vehement
+transition to the pathos of her own sorrow, she exclaims:--
+
+ 'Halla mai bista nissunu
+ Tumba l'omi pe li canti?'
+
+It appears from these words that Giammatteo's enemies had killed him
+because they were jealous of his skill in singing. Shortly after,
+she curses the curate of the village, a kinsman of the murderer, for
+refusing to toll the funeral bells; and at last, all other threads of
+rage and sorrow being twined and knotted into one, she gives loose
+to her raging thirst for blood: 'If only I had a son, to train like
+a sleuth-hound, that he might track the murderer! Oh, if I had a son!
+Oh, if I had a lad!' Her words seem to choke her, and she swoons, and
+remains for a short time insensible. When the Bacchante of revenge
+awakes, it is with milder feelings in her heart: 'O brother mine,
+Matteo! art thou sleeping? Here I will rest with thee and weep till
+daybreak.' It is rare to find in literature so crude and intense
+an expression of fiery hatred as these untranslatable _voceri_
+present. The emotion is so simple and so strong that it becomes
+sublime by mere force, and affects us with a strange pathos when
+contrasted with the tender affection conveyed in such terms of
+endearment as 'my dove,' 'my flower,' 'my pheasant,' 'my bright
+painted orange,' addressed to the dead. In the _voceri_ it often
+happens that there are several interlocutors: one friend questions and
+another answers; or a kinswoman of the murderer attempts to justify
+the deed, and is overwhelmed with deadly imprecations. Passionate
+appeals are made to the corpse: 'Arise! Do you not hear the women cry?
+Stand up. Show your wounds, and let the fountains of your blood flow!
+Alas! he is dead; he sleeps; he cannot hear!' Then they turn again to
+tears and curses, feeling that no help or comfort can come from the
+clay-cold form. The intensity of grief finds strange language for its
+utterance. A girl, mourning over her father, cries:--
+
+ 'Mi l'hannu crucifissatu
+ Cume Ghiesu Cristu in croce.'
+
+Once only, in Viale's collection, does any friend of the dead remember
+mercy. It is an old woman, who points to the crucifix above the bier.
+
+But all the _voceri_ are not so murderous. Several are composed
+for girls who died unwedded and before their time, by their mothers
+or companions. The language of these laments is far more tender and
+ornate. They praise the gentle virtues and beauty of the girl, her
+piety and helpful household ways. The most affecting of these dirges
+is that which celebrates the death of Romana, daughter of Dariola
+Danesi. Here is a pretty picture of the girl: 'Among the best and
+fairest maidens you were like a rose among flowers, like the moon
+among stars; so far more lovely were you than the loveliest. The
+youths in your presence were like lighted torches, but full of
+reverence; you were courteous to all, but with none familiar. In
+church they gazed at you, but you looked at none of them; and after
+mass you said, "Mother, let us go." Oh! who will console me for your
+loss? Why did the Lord so much desire you? But now you rest in heaven,
+all joy and smiles; for the world was not worthy of so fair a face.
+Oh, how far more beautiful will Paradise be now!' Then follows a
+piteous picture of the old bereaved mother, to whom a year will seem
+a thousand years, who will wander among relatives without affection,
+neighbours without love; and who, when sickness comes, will have no
+one to give her a drop of water, or to wipe the sweat from her brow,
+or to hold her hand in death. Yet all that is left for her is to wait
+and pray for the end, that she may join again her darling.
+
+But it is time to return to Ajaccio itself. At present the attractions
+and ornaments of the town consist of a good public library, Cardinal
+Fesch's large but indifferent collection of pictures, two monuments
+erected to Napoleon, and Napoleon's house. It will always be the chief
+pride of Ajaccio that she gave birth to the great emperor. Close to
+the harbour, in a public square by the sea-beach, stands an equestrian
+statue of the conqueror, surrounded by his four brothers on foot. They
+are all attired in Roman fashion, and are turned seaward, to the west,
+as if to symbolise the emigration of this family to subdue Europe.
+There is something ludicrous and forlorn in the stiffness of the
+group--something even pathetic, when we think how Napoleon gazed
+seaward from another island, no longer on horseback, no longer
+laurel-crowned, an unthroned, unseated conqueror, on S. Helena. His
+father's house stands close by. An old Italian waiting-woman, who had
+been long in the service of the Murats, keeps it and shows it. She
+has the manners of a lady, and can tell many stories of the various
+members of the Buonaparte family. Those who fancy that Napoleon was
+born in a mean dwelling of poor parents will be surprised to find so
+much space and elegance in these apartments. Of course his family was
+not rich by comparison with the riches of French or English nobles.
+But for Corsicans they were well-to-do, and their house has an air of
+antique dignity. The chairs of the entrance-saloon have been literally
+stripped of their coverings by enthusiastic visitors; the horse-hair
+stuffing underneath protrudes itself with a sort of comic pride, as
+if protesting that it came to be so tattered in an honourable service.
+Some of the furniture seems new; but many old presses, inlaid with
+marbles, agates, and lapis-lazuli, such as Italian families preserve
+for generations, have an air of respectable antiquity about them. Nor
+is there any doubt that the young Napoleon led his minuets beneath
+the stiff girandoles of the formal dancing-room. There, too, in a
+dark back chamber, is the bed in which he was born. At its foot is a
+photograph of the Prince Imperial sent by the Empress Eugenie, who,
+when she visited the room, wept much _pianse molto_ (to use the
+old lady's phrase)--at seeing the place where such lofty destinies
+began. On the wall of the same room is a portrait of Napoleon himself
+as the young general of the republic--with the citizen's unkempt
+hair, the fierce fire of the Revolution in his eyes, a frown upon his
+forehead, lips compressed, and quivering nostrils; also one of his
+mother, the pastille of a handsome woman, with Napoleonic eyes
+and brows and nose, but with a vacant simpering mouth. Perhaps
+the provincial artist knew not how to seize the expression of this
+feature, the most difficult to draw. For we cannot fancy that Letizia
+had lips without the firmness or the fulness of a majestic nature.
+
+The whole first story of this house belonged to the Buonaparte family.
+The windows look out partly on a little court and partly on narrow
+streets. It was, no doubt, the memory of this home that made Napoleon,
+when emperor, design schemes for the good of Corsica--schemes that
+might have brought him more honour than many conquests, but which
+he had no time or leisure to carry out. On S. Helena his mind often
+reverted to them, and he would speak of the gummy odours of the macchi
+wafted from the hillsides to the seashore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_MONTE GENEROSO_
+
+The long hot days of Italian summer were settling down on plain and
+country when, in the last week of May, we travelled northward from
+Florence and Bologna seeking coolness. That was very hard to find in
+Lombardy. The days were long and sultry, the nights short, without a
+respite from the heat. Milan seemed a furnace, though in the Duomo and
+the narrow shady streets there was a twilight darkness which at least
+looked cool. Long may it be before the northern spirit of improvement
+has taught the Italians to despise the wisdom of their forefathers,
+who built those sombre streets of palaces with overhanging eaves,
+that, almost meeting, form a shelter from the fiercest sun. The lake
+country was even worse than the towns; the sunlight lay all day asleep
+upon the shining waters, and no breeze came to stir their surface or
+to lift the tepid veil of haze, through which the stony mountains,
+with their yet unmelted patches of winter snow, glared as if in
+mockery of coolness.
+
+Then we heard of a new inn, which had just been built by an
+enterprising Italian doctor below the very top of Monte Generoso.
+There was a picture of it in the hotel at Cadenabbia, but this gave
+but little idea of any particular beauty. A big square house,
+with many windows, and the usual ladies on mules, and guides with
+alpenstocks, advancing towards it, and some round bushes growing near,
+was all it showed. Yet there hung the real Monte Generoso above our
+heads, and we thought it must be cooler on its height than by the
+lake-shore. To find coolness was the great point with us just then.
+Moreover, some one talked of the wonderful plants that grew among its
+rocks, and of its grassy slopes enamelled with such flowers as make
+our cottage gardens at home gay in summer, not to speak of others
+rarer and peculiar to the region of the Southern Alps. Indeed, the
+Generoso has a name for flowers, and it deserves it, as we presently
+found.
+
+This mountain is fitted by its position for commanding one of the
+finest views in the whole range of the Lombard Alps. A glance at the
+map shows that. Standing out pre-eminent among the chain of lower
+hills to which it belongs, the lakes of Lugano and Como with their
+long arms enclose it on three sides, while on the fourth the plain of
+Lombardy with its many cities, its rich pasture-lands and cornfields
+intersected by winding river-courses and straight interminable
+roads, advances to its very foot. No place could be better chosen for
+surveying that contrasted scene of plain and mountain, which forms
+the great attraction of the outlying buttresses of the central Alpine
+mass. The superiority of the Monte Generoso to any of the similar
+eminences on the northern outskirts of Switzerland is great. In
+richness of colour, in picturesqueness of suggestion, in sublimity and
+breadth of prospect, its advantages are incontestable. The reasons for
+this superiority are obvious. On the Italian side the transition from
+mountain to plain is far more abrupt; the atmosphere being clearer,
+a larger sweep of distance is within our vision; again, the sunlight
+blazes all day long upon the very front and forehead of the distant
+Alpine chain, instead of merely slanting along it, as it does upon the
+northern side.
+
+From Mendrisio, the village at the foot of the mountain, an easy
+mule-path leads to the hotel, winding first through English-looking
+hollow lanes with real hedges, which are rare in this country,
+and English primroses beneath them. Then comes a forest region of
+luxuriant chestnut-trees, giants with pink boles just bursting into
+late leafage, yellow and tender, but too thin as yet for shade.
+A little higher up, the chestnuts are displaced by wild laburnums
+bending under their weight of flowers. The graceful branches meet
+above our heads, sweeping their long tassels against our faces as we
+ride beneath them, while the air for a good mile is full of fragrance.
+It is strange to be reminded in this blooming labyrinth of the dusty
+suburb roads and villa gardens of London. The laburnum is pleasant
+enough in S. John's Wood or the Regent's Park in May--a tame
+domesticated thing of brightness amid smoke and dust. But it is
+another joy to see it flourishing in its own home, clothing acres of
+the mountain-side in a very splendour of spring-colour, mingling its
+paler blossoms with the golden broom of our own hills, and with
+the silver of the hawthorn and wild cherry. Deep beds of
+lilies-of-the-valley grow everywhere beneath the trees; and in the
+meadows purple columbines, white asphodels, the Alpine spiraea, tall,
+with feathery leaves, blue scabious, golden hawkweeds, turkscap
+lilies, and, better than all, the exquisite narcissus poeticus, with
+its crimson-tipped cup, and the pure pale lilies of San Bruno, are
+crowded in a maze of dazzling brightness. Higher up the laburnums
+disappear, and flaunting crimson peonies gleam here and there upon
+the rocks, until at length the gentians and white ranunculuses of the
+higher Alps displace the less hardy flowers of Italy.
+
+About an hour below the summit of the mountain we came upon the inn,
+a large clean building, with scanty furniture and snowy wooden floors,
+guiltless of carpets. It is big enough to hold about a hundred guests;
+and Doctor Pasta, who built it, a native of Mendrisio, was gifted
+either with much faith or with a real prophetic instinct.[8] Anyhow he
+deserves commendation for his spirit of enterprise. As yet the house
+is little known to English travellers: it is mostly frequented by
+Italians from Milan, Novara, and other cities of the plain, who call
+it the Italian Righi, and come to it, as cockneys go to Richmond,
+for noisy picnic excursions, or at most for a few weeks'
+_villeggiatura_ in the summer heats. When we were there in May
+the season had scarcely begun, and the only inmates besides ourselves
+were a large party from Milan, ladies and gentlemen in holiday guise,
+who came, stayed one night, climbed the peak at sunrise, and departed
+amid jokes and shouting and half-childish play, very unlike the doings
+of a similar party in sober England. After that the stillness of
+nature descended on the mountain, and the sun shone day after day upon
+that great view which seemed created only for ourselves. And what
+a view it was! The plain stretching up to the high horizon, where a
+misty range of pink cirrus-clouds alone marked the line where earth
+ended and the sky began, was islanded with cities and villages
+innumerable, basking in the hazy shimmering heat. Milan, seen through
+the doctor's telescope, displayed its Duomo perfect as a microscopic
+shell, with all its exquisite fretwork, and Napoleon's arch of triumph
+surmounted by the four tiny horses, as in a fairy's dream. Far off,
+long silver lines marked the lazy course of Po and Ticino, while
+little lakes like Varese and the lower end of Maggiore spread
+themselves out, connecting the mountains with the plain. Five minutes'
+walk from the hotel brought us to a ridge where the precipice fell
+suddenly and almost sheer over one arm of Lugano Lake. Sullenly
+outstretched asleep it lay beneath us, coloured with the tints of
+fluor-spar, or with the changeful green and azure of a peacock's
+breast. The depth appeared immeasurable. San Salvadore had receded
+into insignificance: the houses and churches and villas of Lugano
+bordered the lake-shore with an uneven line of whiteness. And over all
+there rested a blue mist of twilight and of haze, contrasting with the
+clearness of the peaks above. It was sunset when we first came here;
+and, wave beyond wave, the purple Italian hills tossed their crested
+summits to the foot of a range of stormy clouds that shrouded the high
+Alps. Behind the clouds was sunset, clear and golden; but the
+mountains had put on their mantle for the night, and the hem of their
+garment was all we were to see. And yet--over the edge of the topmost
+ridge of cloud, what was that long hard line of black, too solid and
+immovable for cloud, rising into four sharp needles clear and well
+defined? Surely it must be the familiar outline of Monte Rosa itself,
+the form which every one who loves the Alps knows well by heart, which
+picture-lovers know from Ruskin's woodcut in the 'Modern Painters.'
+For a moment only the vision stayed: then clouds swept over it again,
+and from the place where the empress of the Alps had been, a pillar of
+mist shaped like an angel's wing, purple and tipped with gold, shot up
+against the pale green sky. That cloud-world was a pageant in itself,
+as grand and more gorgeous perhaps than the mountains would have been.
+Deep down through the hollows of the Simplon a thunderstorm was
+driving; and we saw forked flashes once and again, as in a distant
+world, lighting up the valleys for a moment, and leaving the darkness
+blacker behind them as the storm blurred out the landscape forty miles
+away. Darkness was coming to us too, though our sky was clear and the
+stars were shining brightly. At our feet the earth was folding itself
+to sleep; the plain was wholly lost; little islands of white mist had
+formed themselves, and settled down upon the lakes and on their marshy
+estuaries; the birds were hushed; the gentian-cups were filling to the
+brim with dew. Night had descended on the mountain and the plain; the
+show was over.
+
+The dawn was whitening in the east next morning, when we again
+scrambled through the dwarf beechwood to the precipice above the lake.
+Like an ink-blot it lay, unruffled, slumbering sadly. Broad sheets of
+vapour brooded on the plain, telling of miasma and fever, of which we
+on the mountain, in the pure cool air, knew nothing. The Alps were
+all there now--cold, unreal, stretching like a phantom line of snowy
+peaks, from the sharp pyramids of Monte Viso and the Grivola in the
+west to the distant Bernina and the Ortler in the east. Supreme among
+them towered Monte Rosa--queenly, triumphant, gazing down in proud
+pre-eminence, as she does when seen from any point of the Italian
+plain. There is no mountain like her. Mont Blanc himself is scarcely
+so regal; and she seems to know it, for even the clouds sweep humbled
+round her base, girdling her at most, but leaving her crown clear and
+free. Now, however, there were no clouds to be seen in all the sky.
+The mountains had a strange unshriven look, as if waiting to be
+blessed. Above them, in the cold grey air, hung a low black arch
+of shadow, the shadow of the bulk of the huge earth, which still
+concealed the sun. Slowly, slowly this dark line sank lower, till,
+one by one, at last, the peaks caught first a pale pink flush; then
+a sudden golden glory flashed from one to the other, as they leapt
+joyfully into life. It is a supreme moment this first burst of life
+and light over the sleeping world, as one can only see it on rare days
+and in rare places like the Monte Generoso. The earth--enough of it at
+least for us to picture to ourselves the whole--lies at our feet; and
+we feel as the Saviour might have felt, when from the top of that
+high mountain He beheld the kingdoms of the world and all the glory of
+them. Strangely and solemnly may we image to our fancy the lives that
+are being lived down in those cities of the plain: how many are waking
+at this very moment to toil and a painful weariness, to sorrow, or to
+'that unrest which men miscall delight;' while we upon our mountain
+buttress, suspended in mid-heaven and for a while removed from daily
+cares, are drinking in the beauty of the world that God has made so
+fair and wonderful. From this same eyrie, only a few years ago, the
+hostile armies of France, Italy, and Austria might have been watched
+moving in dim masses across the plains, for the possession of which
+they were to clash in mortal fight at Solferino and Magenta. All is
+peaceful now. It is hard to picture the waving cornfields trodden
+down, the burning villages and ransacked vineyards, all the horrors of
+real war to which that fertile plain has been so often the prey. But
+now these memories of
+
+ Old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ And battles long ago,
+
+do but add a calm and beauty to the radiant scene that lies before us.
+And the thoughts which it suggests, the images with which it stores
+our mind, are not without their noblest uses. The glory of the world
+sinks deeper into our shallow souls than we well know; and the spirit
+of its splendour is always ready to revisit us on dark and dreary days
+at home with an unspeakable refreshment. Even as I write, I seem to
+see the golden glow sweeping in broad waves over the purple hills
+nearer and nearer, till the lake brightens at our feet, and the
+windows of Lugano flash with sunlight, and little boats creep forth
+across the water like spiders on a pond, leaving an arrowy track of
+light upon the green behind them, while Monte Salvadore with its tiny
+chapel and a patch of the further landscape are still kept in darkness
+by the shadow of the Generoso itself. The birds wake into song as the
+sun's light comes; cuckoo answers cuckoo from ridge to ridge; dogs
+bark; and even the sounds of human life rise up to us: children's
+voices and the murmurs of the market-place ascending faintly from the
+many villages hidden among the chestnut-trees beneath our feet; while
+the creaking of a cart we can but just see slowly crawling along the
+straight road by the lake, is heard at intervals.
+
+The full beauty of the sunrise is but brief. Already the low lakelike
+mists we saw last night have risen and spread, and shaken themselves
+out into masses of summer clouds, which, floating upward, threaten to
+envelop us upon our vantage-ground. Meanwhile they form a changeful
+sea below, blotting out the plain, surging up into the valleys with
+the movement of a billowy tide, attacking the lower heights like the
+advance-guard of a besieging army, but daring not as yet to invade the
+cold and solemn solitudes of the snowy Alps. These, too, in time, when
+the sun's heat has grown strongest, will be folded in their midday
+pall of sheltering vapour.
+
+The very summit of Monte Generoso must not be left without a word of
+notice. The path to it is as easy as the sheep-walks on an English
+down, though cut along grass-slopes descending at a perilously sharp
+angle. At the top the view is much the same, as far as the grand
+features go, as that which is commanded from the cliff by the hotel.
+But the rocks here are crowded with rare Alpine flowers--delicate
+golden auriculas with powdery leaves and stems, pale yellow cowslips,
+imperial purple saxifrages, soldanellas at the edge of lingering
+patches of the winter snow, blue gentians, crocuses, and the frail,
+rosy-tipped ranunculus, called glacialis. Their blooming time is
+brief. When summer comes the mountain will be bare and burned, like
+all Italian hills. The Generoso is a very dry mountain, silent and
+solemn from its want of streams. There is no sound of falling waters
+on its crags; no musical rivulets flow down its sides, led carefully
+along the slopes, as in Switzerland, by the peasants, to keep their
+hay-crops green and gladden the thirsty turf throughout the heat
+and drought of summer. The soil is a Jurassic limestone: the rain
+penetrates the porous rock, and sinks through cracks and fissures, to
+reappear above the base of the mountain in a full-grown stream. This
+is a defect in the Generoso, as much to be regretted as the want of
+shade upon its higher pastures. Here, as elsewhere in Piedmont, the
+forests are cut for charcoal; the beech-scrub, which covers large
+tracts of the hills, never having the chance of growing into trees
+much higher than a man. It is this which makes an Italian mountain
+at a distance look woolly, like a sheep's back. Among the brushwood,
+however, lilies-of-the-valley and Solomon's seals delight to grow;
+and the league-long beds of wild strawberries prove that when the
+laburnums have faded, the mountain will become a garden of feasting.
+
+It was on the crest of Monte Generoso, late one afternoon in May, that
+we saw a sight of great beauty. The sun had yet about an hour before
+it sank behind the peaks of Monte Rosa, and the sky was clear, except
+for a few white clouds that floated across the plain of Lombardy. Then
+as we sat upon the crags, tufted with soldanellas and auriculas,
+we could see a fleecy vapour gliding upward from the hollows of the
+mountain, very thin and pale, yet dense enough to blot the landscape
+to the south and east from sight. It rose with an imperceptible
+motion, as the Oceanides might have soared from the sea to comfort
+Prometheus in the tragedy of AEschylus. Already the sun had touched its
+upper edge with gold, and we were expecting to be enveloped in a mist;
+when suddenly upon the outspread sheet before us there appeared two
+forms, larger than life, yet not gigantic, surrounded with haloes of
+such tempered iridescence as the moon half hidden by a summer cloud is
+wont to make. They were the glorified figures of ourselves; and what
+we did, the phantoms mocked, rising or bowing, or spreading wide their
+arms. Some scarce-felt breeze prevented the vapour from passing across
+the ridge to westward, though it still rose from beneath, and kept
+fading away into thin air above our heads. Therefore the vision lasted
+as long as the sun stayed yet above the Alps; and the images with
+their aureoles shrank and dilated with the undulations of the mist.
+I could not but think of that old formula for an anthropomorphic
+Deity--'the Brocken-spectre of the human spirit projected on the mists
+of the Non-ego.' Even like those cloud-phantoms are the gods made in
+the image of man, who have been worshipped through successive ages of
+the world, gods dowered with like passions to those of the races
+who have crouched before them, gods cruel and malignant and lustful,
+jealous and noble and just, radiant or gloomy, the counterparts of men
+upon a vast and shadowy scale. But here another question rose. If
+the gods that men have made and ignorantly worshipped be really
+but glorified copies of their own souls, where is the sun in this
+parallel? Without the sun's rays the mists of Monte Generoso could
+have shown, no shadowy forms. Without some other power than the mind
+of man, could men have fashioned for themselves those ideals that they
+named their gods? Unseen by Greek, or Norseman, or Hindoo, the potent
+force by which alone they could externalise their image, existed
+outside them, independent of their thought. Nor does the trite epigram
+touch the surface of the real mystery. The sun, the human beings on
+the mountain, and the mists are all parts of one material universe:
+the transient phenomenon we witnessed was but the effect of a chance
+combination. Is, then, the anthropomorphic God as momentary and as
+accidental in the system of the world as that vapoury spectre? The
+God in whom we live and move and have our being must be far more
+all-pervasive, more incognisable by the souls of men, who doubt not
+for one moment of His presence and His power. Except for purposes of
+rhetoric the metaphor that seemed so clever fails. Nor, when once such
+thoughts have been stirred in us by such a sight, can we do better
+than repeat Goethe's sublime profession of a philosophic mysticism.
+This translation I made one morning on the Pasterze Gletscher beneath
+the spires of the Gross Glockner:--
+
+ To Him who from eternity, self-stirred,
+ Himself hath made by His creative word!
+ To Him, supreme, who causeth Faith to be,
+ Trust, Hope, Love, Power, and endless Energy!
+ To Him, who, seek to name Him as we will,
+ Unknown within Himself abideth still!
+
+ Strain ear and eye, till sight and sense be dim;
+ Thou'lt find but faint similitudes of Him:
+ Yea, and thy spirit in her flight of flame
+ Still strives to gauge the symbol and the name:
+ Charmed and compelled thou climb'st from height to height,
+ And round thy path the world shines wondrous bright;
+ Time, Space, and Size, and Distance cease to be,
+ And every step is fresh infinity.
+ What were the God who sat outside to scan
+ The spheres that 'neath His finger circling ran?
+ God dwells within, and moves the world and moulds,
+ Himself and Nature in one form enfolds:
+ Thus all that lives in Him and breathes and is,
+ Shall ne'er His puissance, ne'er His spirit miss.
+
+ The soul of man, too, is an universe:
+ Whence follows it that race with race concurs
+ In naming all it knows of good and true
+ God,--yea, its own God; and with homage due
+ Surrenders to His sway both earth and heaven;
+ Fears Him, and loves, where place for love is given.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_LOMBARD VIGNETTES_
+
+
+ON THE SUPERGA
+
+This is the chord of Lombard colouring in May. Lowest in the scale:
+bright green of varied tints, the meadow-grasses mingling with willows
+and acacias, harmonised by air and distance. Next, opaque blue--the
+blue of something between amethyst and lapis-lazuli--that belongs
+alone to the basements of Italian mountains. Higher, the roseate
+whiteness of ridged snow on Alps or Apennines. Highest, the blue of
+the sky, ascending from pale turquoise to transparent sapphire filled
+with light. A mediaeval mystic might have likened this chord to the
+spiritual world. For the lowest region is that of natural life, of
+plant and bird and beast, and unregenerate man; it is the place of
+faun and nymph and satyr, the plain where wars are fought and cities
+built, and work is done. Thence we climb to purified humanity, the
+mountains of purgation, the solitude and simplicity of contemplative
+life not yet made perfect by freedom from the flesh. Higher comes that
+thin white belt, where are the resting places of angelic feet, the
+points whence purged souls take their flight toward infinity. Above
+all is heaven, the hierarchies ascending row on row to reach the light
+of God.
+
+This fancy occurred to me as I climbed the slope of the Superga,
+gazing over acacia hedges and poplars to the mountains bare in morning
+light. The occasional occurrence of bars across this chord--poplars
+shivering in sun and breeze, stationary cypresses as black as night,
+and tall campanili with the hot red shafts of glowing brick--adds just
+enough of composition to the landscape. Without too much straining of
+the allegory, the mystic might have recognised in these aspiring bars
+the upward effort of souls rooted in the common life of earth.
+
+The panorama, unrolling as we ascend, is enough to overpower a lover
+of beauty. There is nothing equal to it for space and breadth and
+majesty. Monte Rosa, the masses of Mont Blanc blent with the Grand
+Paradis, the airy pyramid of Monte Viso, these are the battlements of
+that vast Alpine rampart, in which the vale of Susa opens like a gate.
+To west and south sweep the Maritime Alps and the Apennines. Beneath,
+glides the infant Po; and where he leads our eyes, the plain is only
+limited by pearly mist.
+
+A BRONZE BUST OF CALIGULA AT TURIN
+
+The Albertina bronze is one of the most precious portraits of
+antiquity, not merely because it confirms the testimony of the green
+basalt bust in the Capitol, but also because it supplies an even more
+emphatic and impressive illustration to the narrative of Suetonius.
+
+Caligula is here represented as young and singularly beautiful. It is
+indeed an ideal Roman head, with the powerful square modelling, the
+crisp short hair, low forehead and regular firm features, proper to
+the noblest Roman type. The head is thrown backward from the throat;
+and there is a something of menace or defiance or suffering in the
+suggestion of brusque movement given to the sinews of the neck. This
+attitude, together with the tension of the forehead, and the fixed
+expression of pain and strain communicated by the lines of the
+mouth--strong muscles of the upper lip and abruptly chiselled under
+lip--in relation to the small eyes, deep set beneath their cavernous
+and level brows, renders the whole face a monument of spiritual
+anguish. I remember that the green basalt bust of the Capitol has the
+same anxious forehead, the same troubled and overburdened eyes; but
+the agony of this fretful mouth, comparable to nothing but the mouth
+of Pandolfo Sigismondo Malatesta, and, like that, on the verge
+of breaking into the spasms of delirium, is quite peculiar to the
+Albertina bronze. It is just this which the portrait of the Capitol
+lacks for the completion of Caligula. The man who could be so
+represented in art had nothing wholly vulgar in him. The brutality
+of Caracalla, the overblown sensuality of Nero, the effeminacy of
+Commodus or Heliogabalus, are all absent here. This face idealises
+the torture of a morbid soul. It is withal so truly beautiful that it
+might easily be made the poem of high suffering or noble passion.
+If the bronze were plastic, I see how a great sculptor, by but few
+strokes, could convert it into an agonising Stephen or Sebastian. As
+it is, the unimaginable touch of disease, the unrest of madness, made
+Caligula the genius of insatiable appetite; and his martyrdom was the
+torment of lust and ennui and everlasting agitation. The accident of
+empire tantalised him with vain hopes of satisfying the Charybdis
+of his soul's sick cravings. From point to point he passed of empty
+pleasure and unsatisfying cruelty, for ever hungry; until the malady
+of his spirit, unrestrained by any limitations, and with the right
+medium for its development, became unique--the tragic type of
+pathological desire. What more than all things must have plagued a man
+with that face was probably the unavoidable meanness of his career.
+When we study the chapters of Suetonius, we are forced to feel that,
+though the situation and the madness of Caligula were dramatically
+impressive, his crimes were trivial and, small. In spite of the vast
+scale on which he worked his devilish will, his life presents a total
+picture of sordid vice, differing only from pot-house dissipation and
+schoolboy cruelty in point of size. And this of a truth is the Nemesis
+of evil. After a time, mere tyrannous caprice must become commonplace
+and cloying, tedious to the tyrant, and uninteresting to the student
+of humanity: nor can I believe that Caligula failed to perceive this
+to his own infinite disgust.
+
+Suetonius asserts that he was hideously ugly. How are we to square
+this testimony with the witness of the bronze before us? What changed
+the face, so beautiful and terrible in youth, to ugliness that shrank
+from sight in manhood? Did the murderers find it blurred in its fine
+lineaments, furrowed with lines of care, hollowed with the soul's
+hunger? Unless a life of vice and madness had succeeded in making
+Caligula's face what the faces of some maniacs are--the bloated ruin
+of what was once a living witness to the soul within--I could fancy
+that death may have sanctified it with even more beauty than this
+bust of the self-tormented young man shows. Have we not all seen the
+anguish of thought-fretted faces smoothed out by the hands of the
+Deliverer?
+
+FERRARI AT VERCELLI
+
+It is possible that many visitors to the Cathedral of Como have
+carried away the memory of stately women with abundant yellow hair and
+draperies of green and crimson, in a picture they connect thereafter
+with Gaudenzio Ferrari. And when they come to Milan, they are probably
+both impressed and disappointed by a Martyrdom of S. Catherine in the
+Brera, bearing the same artist's name. If they wish to understand this
+painter, they must seek him at Varallo, at Saronno, and at Vercelli.
+In the Church of S. Cristoforo in Vercelli, Gaudenzio Ferrari at the
+full height of his powers showed what he could do to justify Lomazzo's
+title chosen for him of the Eagle. He has indeed the strong wing and
+the swiftness of the king of birds. And yet the works of few really
+great painters--and among the really great we place Ferrari--leave
+upon the mind a more distressing sense of imperfection. Extraordinary
+fertility of fancy, vehement dramatic passion, sincere study of
+nature, and great command of technical resources are here (as
+elsewhere in Ferrari's frescoes) neutralised by an incurable defect of
+the combining and harmonising faculty, so essential to a masterpiece.
+There is stuff enough of thought and vigour and imagination to make
+a dozen artists. And yet we turn away disappointed from the crowded,
+dazzling, stupefying wilderness of forms and faces on these mighty
+walls.
+
+All that Ferrari derived from actual life--the heads of single
+figures, the powerful movement of men and women in excited action, the
+monumental pose of two praying nuns--is admirably rendered. His angels
+too, in S. Cristoforo as elsewhere, are quite original; not only in
+their type of beauty, which is terrestrial and peculiar to Ferrari,
+without a touch of Correggio's sensuality; but also in the intensity
+of their emotion, the realisation of their vitality. Those which hover
+round the Cross in the fresco of the 'Crucifixion' are as passionate
+as any angels of the Giottesque masters in Assisi. Those again which
+crowd the Stable of Bethlehem in the 'Nativity' yield no point of
+idyllic charm to Gozzoli's in the Riccardi Chapel.
+
+The 'Crucifixion' and the 'Assumption of Madonna' are very tall
+and narrow compositions, audacious in their attempt to fill almost
+unmanageable space with a connected action. Of the two frescoes the
+'Crucifixion,' which has points of strong similarity to the same
+subject at Varallo, is by far the best. Ferrari never painted anything
+at once truer to life and nobler in tragic style than the fainting
+Virgin. Her face expresses the very acme of martyrdom--not exaggerated
+nor spasmodic, but real and sublime--in the suffering of a stately
+matron. In points like this Ferrari cannot be surpassed. Raphael could
+scarcely have done better; besides, there is an air of sincerity, a
+stamp of popular truth, in this episode, which lies beyond Raphael's
+sphere. It reminds us rather of Tintoretto.
+
+After the 'Crucifixion,' I place the 'Adoration of the Magi,' full
+of fine mundane motives and gorgeous costumes; then the 'Sposalizio'
+(whose marriage, I am not certain), the only grandly composed picture
+of the series, and marked by noble heads; then the 'Adoration of
+the Shepherds,' with two lovely angels holding the bambino. The
+'Assumption of the Magdalen'--for which fresco there is a valuable
+cartoon in the Albertina Collection at Turin--must have been a fine
+picture; but it is ruined now. An oil altar-piece in the choir of the
+same church struck me less than the frescoes. It represents Madonna
+and a crowd of saints under an orchard of apple-trees, with cherubs
+curiously flung about almost at random in the air. The motive of the
+orchard is prettily conceived and carried out with spirit.
+
+What Ferrari possessed was rapidity of movement, fulness and richness
+of reality, exuberance of invention, excellent portraiture, dramatic
+vehemence, and an almost unrivalled sympathy with the swift and
+passionate world of angels. What he lacked was power of composition,
+simplicity of total effect, harmony in colouring, control over his
+own luxuriance, the sense of tranquillity. He seems to have sought
+grandeur in size and multitude, richness, eclat, contrast. Being the
+disciple of Lionardo and Raphael, his defects are truly singular. As
+a composer, the old leaven of Giovenone remained in him; but he felt
+the dramatic tendencies of a later age, and in occasional episodes he
+realised them with a force and _furia_ granted to very few of the
+Italian painters.
+
+LANINI AT VERCELLI
+
+The Casa Mariano is a palace which belonged to a family of that name.
+Like many houses of the sort in Italy, it fell to vile uses; and
+its hall of audience was turned into a lumber-room. The Operai of
+Vercelli, I was told, bought the palace a few years ago, restored the
+noble hall, and devoted a smaller room to a collection of pictures
+valuable for students of the early Vercellese style of painting. Of
+these there is no need to speak. The great hall is the gem of the Casa
+Mariano. It has a coved roof, with a large flat oblong space in
+the centre of the ceiling. The whole of this vault and the lunettes
+beneath were painted by Lanini; so runs the tradition of the
+fresco-painter's name; and though much injured by centuries of
+outrage, and somewhat marred by recent restoration, these frescoes
+form a precious monument of Lombard art. The object of the painter's
+design seems to have been the glorification of Music. In the central
+compartment of the roof is an assembly of the gods, obviously borrowed
+from Raphael's 'Marriage of Cupid and Psyche' in the Farnesina
+at Rome. The fusion of Roman composition with Lombard execution
+constitutes the chief charm of this singular work, and makes it, so
+far as I am aware, unique. Single figures of the goddesses, and the
+whole movement of the scene upon Olympus, are transcribed without
+attempt at concealment. And yet the fresco is not a barefaced copy.
+The manner of feeling and of execution is quite different from that of
+Raphael's school. The poetry and sentiment are genuinely Lombard. None
+of Raphael's pupils could have carried out his design with a delicacy
+of emotion and a technical skill in colouring so consummate. What,
+we think, as we gaze upward, would the Master have given for such a
+craftsman? The hardness, coarseness, and animal crudity of the Roman
+School are absent: so also is their vigour. But where the grace of
+form and colour is so soft and sweet, where the high-bred calm of
+good company is so sympathetically rendered, where the atmosphere of
+amorous languor and of melody is so artistically diffused, we cannot
+miss the powerful modelling and rather vulgar _tours de force_ of
+Giulio Romano. The scale of tone is silvery golden. There are no hard
+blues, no coarse red flesh-tints, no black shadows. Mellow lights,
+the morning hues of primrose, or of palest amber, pervade the whole
+society. It is a court of gentle and harmonious souls; and though
+this style of beauty might cloy, at first sight there is something
+ravishing in those yellow-haired white-limbed, blooming deities. No
+movement of lascivious grace as in Correggio, no perturbation of
+the senses as in some of the Venetians, disturbs the rhythm of their
+music; nor is the pleasure of the flesh, though felt by the painter
+and communicated to the spectator, an interruption to their divine
+calm. The white, saffron-haired goddesses are grouped together
+like stars seen in the topaz light of evening, like daffodils half
+smothered in snowdrops, and among them, Diana, with the crescent
+on her forehead, is the fairest. Her dream-like beauty need fear
+no comparison with the Diana of the Camera di S. Paolo. Apollo and
+Bacchus are scarcely less lovely in their bloom of earliest manhood;
+honey-pale, as Greeks would say; like statues of living electron;
+realising Simaetha's picture of her lover and his friend:
+
+[Greek:
+
+ tois d' en xanthotera men elichrysoio geneias,
+ stethea de stilbonta poly pleon e tu Selana.[9]]
+
+It was thus that the almost childlike spirit of the Milanese painters
+felt the antique: how differently from their Roman brethren! It was
+thus that they interpreted the lines of their own poets:--
+
+ E i tuoi capei piu volte ho somigliati
+ Di Cerere a le paglie secche o bionde
+ Dintorno crespi al tuo capo legati.[10]
+
+Yet the painter of this hall--whether we are to call him Lanini or
+another--was not a composer. Where he has not robbed the motives and
+the distribution of the figures from Raphael, he has nothing left but
+grace of detail. The intellectual feebleness of his style may be seen
+in many figures of women playing upon instruments of music, ranged
+around the walls. One girl at the organ is graceful; another with a
+tambourine has a sort of Bassarid beauty. But the group of Apollo,
+Pegasus, and a Muse upon Parnassus, is a failure in its meaningless
+frigidity, while few of these subordinate compositions show power of
+conception or vigour of design.
+
+Lanini, like Sodoma, was a native of Vercelli; and though he was
+Ferrari's pupil, there is more in him of Luini or of Sodoma than of
+his master. He does not rise at any point to the height of these
+three great masters, but he shares some of Luini's and Sodoma's fine
+qualities, without having any of Ferrari's force. A visit to the
+mangled remnants of his frescoes in S. Caterina will repay the student
+of art. This was once, apparently, a double church, or a church with
+the hall and chapel of a _confraternita_ appended to it. One portion
+of the building was painted with the history of the Saint; and very
+lovely must this work have been, to judge by the fragments which have
+recently been rescued from whitewash, damp, and ruthless mutilation.
+What wonderful Lombard faces, half obliterated on the broken wall and
+mouldering plaster, smile upon us like drowned memories swimming up
+from the depths of oblivion! Wherever three or four are grouped
+together, we find an exquisite little picture--an old woman and two
+young women in a doorway, for example, telling no story, but touching
+us with simple harmony of form. Nothing further is needed to render
+their grace intelligible. Indeed, knowing the faults of the school, we
+may seek some consolation by telling ourselves that these incomplete
+fragments yield Lanini's best. In the coved compartments of the roof,
+above the windows, ran a row of dancing boys; and these are still most
+beautifully modelled, though the pallor of recent whitewash is upon
+them. All the boys have blonde hair. They are naked, with scrolls or
+ribbons wreathed around them, adding to the airiness of their
+continual dance. Some of the loveliest are in a room used to stow away
+the lumber of the church--old boards and curtains, broken lanterns,
+candle-ends in tin sconces, the musty apparatus of festival
+adornments, and in the midst of all a battered, weather-beaten bier.
+
+THE PIAZZA OF PIACENZA
+
+The great feature of Piacenza is its famous piazza--romantically,
+picturesquely perfect square, surpassing the most daring attempts
+of the scene-painter, and realising a poet's dreams. The space is
+considerable, and many streets converge upon it at irregular angles.
+Its finest architectural feature is the antique Palace of the Commune:
+Gothic arcades of stone below, surmounted by a brick building with
+wonderfully delicate and varied terra-cotta work in the round-arched
+windows. Before this facade, on the marble pavement, prance the bronze
+equestrian statues of two Farnesi--insignificant men, exaggerated
+horses, flying drapery--as _barocco_ as it is possible to be
+in style, but so splendidly toned with verdigris, so superb in their
+_bravura_ attitude, and so happily placed in the line of two
+streets lending far vistas from the square into the town beyond, that
+it is difficult to criticise them seriously. They form, indeed, an
+important element in the pictorial effect, and enhance the terra-cotta
+work of the facade by the contrast of their colour.
+
+The time to see this square is in evening twilight--that wonderful
+hour after sunset--when the people are strolling on the pavement,
+polished to a mirror by the pacing of successive centuries, and
+when the cavalry soldiers group themselves at the angles under the
+lamp-posts or beneath the dimly lighted Gothic arches of the Palace.
+This is the magical mellow hour to be sought by lovers of the
+picturesque in all the towns of Italy, the hour which, by its tender
+blendings of sallow western lights with glimmering lamps, casts the
+veil of half shadow over any crudeness and restores the injuries
+of Time; the hour when all the tints of these old buildings are
+intensified, etherealised, and harmonised by one pervasive glow. When
+I last saw Piacenza, it had been raining all day; and ere sundown a
+clearing had come from the Alps, followed by fresh threatenings of
+thunderstorms. The air was very liquid. There was a tract of yellow
+sunset sky to westward, a faint new moon half swathed in mist above,
+and over all the north a huge towered thundercloud kept flashing
+distant lightnings. The pallid primrose of the West, forced down and
+reflected back from that vast bank of tempest, gave unearthly beauty
+to the hues of church and palace--tender half-tones of violet and
+russet paling into greys and yellows on what in daylight seemed but
+dull red brick. Even the uncompromising facade of S. Francesco helped;
+and the Dukes were like statues of the 'Gran Commendatore,' waiting
+for Don Giovanni's invitation.
+
+MASOLINO AT CASTIGLIONE D'OLONA
+
+Through the loveliest Arcadian scenery of woods and fields and
+rushing waters the road leads downward from Varese to Castiglione.
+The Collegiate Church stands on a leafy hill above the town, with fair
+prospect over groves and waterfalls and distant mountains. Here in the
+choir is a series of frescoes by Masolino da Panicale, the master
+of Masaccio, who painted them about the year 1428. 'Masolinus de
+Florentia pinxit' decides their authorship. The histories of the
+Virgin, S. Stephen and S. Lawrence, are represented: but the injuries
+of time and neglect have been so great that it is difficult to judge
+them fairly. All we feel for certain is that Masolino had not yet
+escaped from the traditional Giottesque mannerism. Only a group of
+Jews stoning Stephen, and Lawrence before the tribunal, remind us by
+dramatic energy of the Brancacci Chapel.
+
+The Baptistery frescoes, dealing with the legend of S. John, show a
+remarkable advance; and they are luckily in better preservation. A
+soldier lifting his two-handed sword to strike off the Baptist's head
+is a vigorous figure, full of Florentine realism. Also in the Baptism
+in Jordan we are reminded of Masaccio by an excellent group of
+bathers--one man taking off his hose, another putting them on again,
+a third standing naked with his back turned, and a fourth shivering
+half-dressed with a look of curious sadness on his face. The nude has
+been carefully studied and well realised. The finest composition of
+this series is a large panel representing a double action--Salome at
+Herod's table begging for the Baptist's head, and then presenting
+it to her mother Herodias. The costumes are quattrocento Florentine,
+exactly rendered. Salome is a graceful slender creature; the two women
+who regard her offering to Herodias with mingled curiosity and horror,
+are well conceived. The background consists of a mountain landscape
+in Masaccio's simple manner, a rich Renaissance villa, and an open
+loggia. The architecture perspective is scientifically accurate, and
+a frieze of boys with garlands on the villa is in the best manner of
+Florentine sculpture. On the mountain side, diminished in scale, is
+a group of elders, burying the body of S. John. These are massed
+together and robed in the style of Masaccio, and have his virile
+dignity of form and action. Indeed this interesting wall-painting
+furnishes an epitome of Florentine art, in its intentions and
+achievements, during the first half of the fifteenth century. The
+colour is strong and brilliant, and the execution solid.
+
+The margin of the Salome panel has been used for scratching the
+Chronicle of Castiglione. I read one date, 1568, several of the
+next century, the record of a duel between two gentlemen, and many
+inscriptions to this effect, 'Erodiana Regina,' 'Omnia praetereunt,'
+&c. A dirty one-eyed fellow keeps the place. In my presence he swept
+the frescoes over with a scratchy broom, flaying their upper surface
+in profound unconsciousness of mischief. The armour of the executioner
+has had its steel colours almost rubbed off by this infernal process.
+Damp and cobwebs are far kinder.
+
+THE CERTOSA
+
+The Certosa of Pavia leaves upon the mind an impression of bewildering
+sumptuousness: nowhere else are costly materials so combined with a
+lavish expenditure of the rarest art. Those who have only once been
+driven round together with the crew of sightseers, can carry little
+away but the memory of lapis-lazuli and bronze-work, inlaid agates and
+labyrinthine sculpture, cloisters tenantless in silence, fair painted
+faces smiling from dark corners on the senseless crowd, trim gardens
+with rows of pink primroses in spring, and of begonia in autumn,
+blooming beneath colonnades of glowing terra-cotta. The striking
+contrast between the Gothic of the interior and the Renaissance
+facade, each in its own kind perfect, will also be remembered; and
+thoughts of the two great houses, Visconti and Sforza, to whose pride
+of power it is a monument, may be blended with the recollection of
+art-treasures alien to their spirit.
+
+Two great artists, Ambrogio Borgognone and Antonio Amadeo, are the
+presiding genii of the Certosa. To minute criticism, based upon the
+accurate investigation of records and the comparison of styles,
+must be left the task of separating their work from that of numerous
+collaborators. But it is none the less certain that the keynote of
+the whole music is struck by them, Amadeo, the master of the Colleoni
+chapel at Bergamo, was both sculptor and architect. If the facade
+of the Certosa be not absolutely his creation, he had a hand in the
+distribution of its masses and the detail of its ornaments. The only
+fault in this otherwise faultless product of the purest quattrocento
+inspiration, is that the facade is a frontispiece, with hardly any
+structural relation to the church it masks: and this, though serious
+from the point of view of architecture, is no abatement of its
+sculpturesque and picturesque refinement. At first sight it seems
+a wilderness of loveliest reliefs and statues--of angel faces,
+fluttering raiment, flowing hair, love-laden youths, and stationary
+figures of grave saints, mid wayward tangles of acanthus and wild vine
+and cupid-laden foliage; but the subordination of these decorative
+details to the main design, clear, rhythmical, and lucid, like a
+chaunt of Pergolese or Stradella, will enrapture one who has the
+sense for unity evoked from divers elements, for thought subduing all
+caprices to the harmony of beauty. It is not possible elsewhere in
+Italy to find the instinct of the earlier Renaissance, so amorous in
+its expenditure of rare material, so lavish in its bestowal of the
+costliest workmanship on ornamental episodes, brought into truer
+keeping with a pure and simple structural effect.
+
+All the great sculptor-architects of Lombardy worked in succession
+on this miracle of beauty; and this may account for the sustained
+perfection of style, which nowhere suffers from the languor of
+exhaustion in the artist or from repetition of motives. It remains the
+triumph of North Italian genius, exhibiting qualities of tenderness
+and self-abandonment to inspiration, which we lack in the severer
+masterpieces of the Tuscan school.
+
+To Borgognone is assigned the painting of the roof in nave and
+choir--exceeding rich, varied, and withal in sympathy with stately
+Gothic style. Borgognone again is said to have designed the saints and
+martyrs worked in _tarsia_ for the choir-stalls. His frescoes are
+in some parts well preserved, as in the lovely little Madonna at the
+end of the south chapel, while the great fresco above the window in
+the south transept has an historical value that renders it interesting
+in spite of partial decay. Borgognone's oil pictures throughout
+the church prove, if such proof were needed after inspection of the
+altar-piece in our National Gallery, that he was one of the most
+powerful and original painters of Italy, blending the repose of the
+earlier masters and their consummate workmanship with a profound
+sensibility to the finest shades of feeling and the rarest forms of
+natural beauty. He selected an exquisite type of face for his young
+men and women; on his old men he bestowed singular gravity and
+dignity. His saints are a society of strong, pure, restful, earnest
+souls, in whom the passion of deepest emotion is transfigured by
+habitual calm. The brown and golden harmonies he loved, are gained
+without sacrifice of lustre: there is a self-restraint in his
+colouring which corresponds to the reserve of his emotion; and though
+a regret sometimes rises in our mind that he should have modelled the
+light and shade upon his faces with a brusque, unpleasing hardness,
+their pallor dwells within our memory as something delicately sought
+if not consummately attained. In a word, Borgognone was a true Lombard
+of the best time. The very imperfection of his flesh-painting repeats
+in colour what the greatest Lombard sculptors sought in stone--a
+sharpness of relief that passes over into angularity. This brusqueness
+was the counterpoise to tenderness of feeling and intensity of fancy
+in these northern artists. Of all Borgognone's pictures in the Certosa
+I should select the altar-piece of S. Siro with S. Lawrence and S.
+Stephen and two Fathers of the Church, for its fusion of this master's
+qualities.
+
+The Certosa is a wilderness of lovely workmanship. From Borgognone's
+majesty we pass into the quiet region of Luini's Christian grace, or
+mark the influence of Lionardo on that rare Assumption of Madonna by
+his pupil, Andrea Solari. Like everything touched by the Lionardesque
+spirit, this great picture was left unfinished: yet Northern Italy
+has nothing finer to show than the landscape, outspread in its
+immeasurable purity of calm, behind the grouped Apostles and the
+ascendant Mother of Heaven. The feeling of that happy region between
+the Alps and Lombardy, where there are many waters--_et tacitos sine
+labe laous sine murmure rivos_--and where the last spurs of the
+mountains sink in undulations to the plain, has passed into this azure
+vista, just as all Umbria is suggested in a twilight background of
+young Raphael or Perugino.
+
+The portraits of the Dukes of Milan and their families carry us into
+a very different realm of feeling. Medallions above the doors of
+sacristy and chancel, stately figures reared aloft beneath gigantic
+canopies, men and women slumbering with folded hands upon their marble
+biers--we read in all those sculptured forms a strange record of human
+restlessness, resolved into the quiet of the tomb. The iniquities of
+Gian Galeazzo Visconti, _il gran Biscione_, the blood-thirst
+of Gian Maria, the dark designs of Filippo and his secret vices,
+Francesco Sforza's treason, Galeazzo Maria's vanities and lusts;
+their tyrants' dread of thunder and the knife; their awful deaths by
+pestilence and the assassin's poignard; their selfishness, oppression,
+cruelty and fraud; the murders of their kinsmen; their labyrinthine
+plots and acts of broken faith;--all is tranquil now, and we can
+say to each what Bosola found for the Duchess of Malfi ere her
+execution:--
+
+ Much you had of land and rent;
+ Your length in clay's now competent:
+ A long war disturbed your mind;
+ Here your perfect peace is signed!
+
+Some of these faces are commonplace, with _bourgeois_ cunning
+written on the heavy features; one is bluff, another stolid, a third
+bloated, a fourth stately. The sculptors have dealt fairly with
+all, and not one has the lineaments of utter baseness. To Cristoforo
+Solari's statues of Lodovico Sforza and his wife, Beatrice d'Este, the
+palm of excellence in art and of historical interest must be awarded.
+Sculpture has rarely been more dignified and true to life than here.
+The woman with her short clustering curls, the man with his strong
+face, are resting after that long fever which brought woe to Italy, to
+Europe a new age, and to the boasted minion of Fortune a slow death
+in the prison palace of Loches. Attired in ducal robes, they lie in
+state; and the sculptor has carved the lashes on their eyelids, heavy
+with death's marmoreal sleep. He at least has passed no judgment
+on their crimes. Let us too bow and leave their memories to the
+historian's pen, their spirits to God's mercy.
+
+After all wanderings in this Temple of Art, we return to Antonio
+Amadeo, to his long-haired seraphs playing on the lutes of Paradise,
+to his angels of the Passion with their fluttering robes and arms
+outspread in agony, to his saints and satyrs mingled on pilasters of
+the marble doorways, his delicate _Lavabo_ decorations, and his
+hymns of piety expressed in noble forms of weeping women and dead
+Christs. Wherever we may pass, this master-spirit of the Lombard style
+enthralls attention. His curious treatment of drapery as though it
+|were made of crumpled paper, and his trick of enhancing relief by
+sharp angles and attenuated limbs, do not detract from his peculiar
+charm. That is his way, very different from Donatello's, of attaining
+to the maximum of life and lightness in the stubborn vehicle of
+stone. Nor do all the riches of the choir--those multitudes of singing
+angels, those Ascensions and Assumptions, and innumerable
+basreliefs of gleaming marble moulded into softest wax by mastery of
+art--distract our eyes from the single round medallion, not larger
+than a common plate, inscribed by him upon the front of the high
+altar. Perhaps, if one who loved Amadeo were bidden to point out
+his masterpiece, he would lead the way at once to this. The space is
+small: yet it includes the whole tragedy of the Passion. Christ is
+lying dead among the women on his mother's lap, and there are pitying
+angels in the air above. One woman lifts his arm, another makes her
+breast a pillow for his head. Their agony is hushed, but felt in
+every limb and feature; and the extremity of suffering is seen in each
+articulation of the worn and wounded form just taken from the cross.
+It would be too painful, were not the harmony of art so rare, the
+interlacing of those many figures in a simple round so exquisite. The
+noblest tranquillity and the most passionate emotion are here fused in
+a manner of adorable naturalness.
+
+From the church it is delightful to escape into the cloisters, flooded
+with sunlight, where the swallows skim, and the brown hawks circle,
+and the mason bees are at work upon their cells among the carvings.
+The arcades of the two cloisters are the final triumph of Lombard
+terra-cotta. The memory fails before such infinite invention, such
+facility and felicity of execution. Wreaths of cupids gliding round
+the arches among grape-bunches and bird-haunted foliage of vine; rows
+of angels, like rising and setting planets, some smiling and
+some grave, ascending and descending by the Gothic curves; saints
+stationary on their pedestals, and faces leaning from the rounds
+above; crowds of cherubs, and courses of stars, and acanthus leaves in
+woven lines, and ribands incessantly inscribed with Ave Maria! Then,
+over all, the rich red light and purple shadows of the brick, than
+which no substance sympathises more completely with the sky of solid
+blue above, the broad plain space of waving summer grass beneath our
+feet.
+
+It is now late afternoon, and when evening comes, the train will take
+us back to Milan. There is yet a little while to rest tired eyes and
+strained spirits among the willows and the poplars by the monastery
+wall. Through that grey-green leafage, young with early spring,
+the pinnacles of the Certosa leap like flames into the sky. The
+rice-fields are under water, far and wide, shining like burnished
+gold beneath the level light now near to sun-down. Frogs are croaking;
+those persistent frogs, whom the Muses have ordained to sing for aye,
+in spite of Bion and all tuneful poets dead. We sit and watch the
+water-snakes, the busy rats, the hundred creatures swarming in the fat
+well-watered soil. Nightingales here and there, new-comers, tune their
+timid April song: but, strangest of all sounds in such a place, my
+comrade from the Grisons jodels forth an Alpine cowherd's melody.
+_Auf den Alpen droben ist ein herrliches Leben!_
+
+Did the echoes of Gian Galeazzo's convent ever wake to such a tune as
+this before?
+
+SAN MAURIZIO
+
+The student of art in Italy, after mastering the characters of
+different styles and epochs, finds a final satisfaction in the
+contemplation of buildings designed and decorated by one master, or
+by groups of artists interpreting the spirit of a single period. Such
+supreme monuments of the national genius are not very common, and they
+are therefore the more precious. Giotto's Chapel at Padua; the Villa
+Farnesina at Rome, built by Peruzzi and painted in fresco by Raphael
+and Sodoma; the Palazzo del Te at Mantua, Giulio Romano's masterpiece;
+the Scuola di San Rocco, illustrating the Venetian Renaissance at its
+climax, might be cited among the most splendid of these achievements.
+In the church of the Monastero Maggiore at Milan, dedicated to S.
+Maurizio, Lombard architecture and fresco-painting may be studied
+in this rare combination. The monastery itself, one of the oldest in
+Milan, formed a retreat for cloistered virgins following the rule of
+S. Benedict. It may have been founded as early as the tenth century;
+but its church was rebuilt in the first two decades of the sixteenth,
+between 1503 and 1519, and was immediately afterwards decorated with
+frescoes by Luini and his pupils. Gian Giacomo Dolcebono, architect
+and sculptor, called by his fellow-craftsmen _magistro di taliare
+pietre_, gave the design, at once simple and harmonious, which was
+carried out with hardly any deviation from his plan. The church is a
+long parallelogram, divided into two unequal portions, the first and
+smaller for the public, the second for the nuns. The walls are pierced
+with rounded and pilastered windows, ten on each side, four of which
+belong to the outer and six to the inner section. The dividing wall or
+septum rises to the point from which the groinings of the roof spring;
+and round three sides of the whole building, north, east, and south,
+runs a gallery for the use of the convent. The altars of the inner and
+outer church are placed against the septum, back to back, with certain
+differences of structure that need not be described. Simple and
+severe, S. Maurizio owes its architectural beauty wholly and entirely
+to purity of line and perfection of proportion. There is a prevailing
+spirit of repose, a sense of space, fair, lightsome, and adapted
+to serene moods of the meditative fancy in this building, which is
+singularly at variance with the religious mysticism and imaginative
+grandeur of a Gothic edifice. The principal beauty of the church,
+however, is its tone of colour. Every square inch is covered with
+fresco or rich woodwork, mellowed by time into that harmony of tints
+which blends the work of greater and lesser artists in one golden
+hue of brown. Round the arcades of the convent-loggia run delicate
+arabesques with faces of fair female saints--Catherine, Agnes, Lucy,
+Agatha,--gem-like or star-like, gazing from their gallery upon the
+church below. The Luinesque smile is on their lips and in their eyes,
+quiet, refined, as though the emblems of their martyrdom brought back
+no thought of pain to break the Paradise of rest in which they dwell.
+There are twenty-six in all, a sisterhood of stainless souls, the
+lilies of Love's garden planted round Christ's throne. Soldier saints
+are mingled with them in still smaller rounds above the windows,
+chosen to illustrate the virtues of an order which renounced the
+world. To decide whose hand produced these masterpieces of Lombard
+suavity and grace, or whether more than one, would not be easy. Near
+the altar we can perhaps trace the style of Bartolommeo Suardi in an
+Annunciation painted on the spandrils--that heroic style, large and
+noble, known to us by the chivalrous S. Martin and the glorified
+Madonna of the Brera frescoes. It is not impossible that the male
+saints of the loggia may be also his, though a tenderer touch, a
+something more nearly Lionardesque in its quietude, must be discerned
+in Lucy and her sisters. The whole of the altar in this inner church
+belongs to Luini. Were it not for darkness and decay, we should
+pronounce this series of the Passion in nine great compositions, with
+saints and martyrs and torch-bearing genii, to be one of his most
+ambitious and successful efforts. As it is, we can but judge in part;
+the adolescent beauty of Sebastian, the grave compassion of S.
+Rocco, the classical perfection of the cupid with lighted tapers, the
+gracious majesty of women smiling on us sideways from their Lombard
+eyelids--these remain to haunt our memory, emerging from the shadows
+of the vault above.
+
+The inner church, as is fitting, excludes all worldly elements. We
+are in the presence of Christ's agony, relieved and tempered by the
+sunlight of those beauteous female faces. All is solemn here, still as
+the convent, pure as the meditations of a novice. We pass the septum,
+and find ourselves in the outer church appropriated to the laity.
+Above the high altar the whole wall is covered with Luini's loveliest
+work, in excellent light and far from ill preserved. The space divides
+into eight compartments. A Pieta, an Assumption, Saints and Founders
+of the church, group themselves under the influence of Luini's
+harmonising colour into one symphonious whole. But the places of
+distinction are reserved for two great benefactors of the convent,
+Alessandro de' Bentivogli and his wife, Ippolita Sforza. When the
+Bentivogli were expelled from Bologna by the Papal forces, Alessandro
+settled at Milan, where he dwelt, honoured by the Sforzas and allied
+to them by marriage, till his death in 1532. He was buried in the
+monastery by the side of his sister Alessandra, a nun of the order.
+Luini has painted the illustrious exile in his habit as he lived. He
+is kneeling, as though in ever-during adoration of the altar mystery,
+attired in a long black senatorial robe trimmed with furs. In his left
+hand he holds a book; and above his pale, serenely noble face is a
+little black berretta. Saints attend him, as though attesting to his
+act of faith. Opposite kneels Ippolita, his wife, the brilliant queen
+of fashion, the witty leader of society, to whom Bandello dedicated
+his Novelle, and whom he praised as both incomparably beautiful and
+singularly learned. Her queenly form is clothed from head to foot in
+white brocade, slashed and trimmed with gold lace, and on her forehead
+is a golden circlet. She has the proud port of a princess, the beauty
+of a woman past her prime but stately, the indescribable dignity of
+attitude which no one but Luini could have rendered so majestically
+sweet. In her hand is a book; and she, like Alessandro, has her
+saintly sponsors, Agnes and Catherine and S. Scolastica.
+
+Few pictures bring the splendid Milanese Court so vividly before us as
+these portraits of the Bentivogli: they are, moreover, very precious
+for the light they throw on what Luini could achieve in the secular
+style so rarely touched by him. Great, however, as are these frescoes,
+they are far surpassed both in value and interest by his paintings in
+the side chapel of S. Catherine. Here more than anywhere else, more
+even than at Saronno or Lugano, do we feel the true distinction
+of Luini--his unrivalled excellence as a colourist, his power over
+pathos, the refinement of his feeling, and the peculiar beauty of his
+favourite types. The chapel was decorated at the expense of a Milanese
+advocate, Francesco Besozzi, who died in 1529. It is he who is
+kneeling, grey-haired and bareheaded, under the protection of S.
+Catherine of Alexandria, intently gazing at Christ unbound from the
+scourging pillar. On the other side stand S. Lawrence and S. Stephen,
+pointing to the Christ and looking at us, as though their lips were
+framed to say: 'Behold and see if there be any sorrow like unto
+his sorrow.' Even the soldiers who have done their cruel work, seem
+softened. They untie the cords tenderly, and support the fainting
+form, too weak to stand alone. What sadness in the lovely faces of S.
+Catherine and Lawrence! What divine anguish in the loosened limbs
+and bending body of Christ; what piety in the adoring old man! All the
+moods proper to this supreme tragedy of the faith are touched as in
+some tenor song with low accompaniment of viols; for it was Luini's
+special province to feel profoundly and to express musically. The very
+depth of the Passion is there; and yet there is no discord.
+
+Just in proportion to this unique faculty for yielding a melodious
+representation of the most intense moments of stationary emotion, was
+his inability to deal with a dramatic subject. The first episode of S.
+Catherine's execution, when the wheel was broken and the executioners
+struck by lightning, is painted in this chapel without energy and with
+a lack of composition that betrays the master's indifference to his
+subject. Far different is the second episode when Catherine is about
+to be beheaded. The executioner has raised his sword to strike. She,
+robed in brocade of black and gold, so cut as to display the curve of
+neck and back, while the bosom is covered, leans her head above
+her praying hands, and waits the blow in sweetest resignation. Two
+soldiers stand at some distance in a landscape of hill and meadow; and
+far up are seen the angels carrying her body to its tomb upon Mount
+Sinai. I cannot find words or summon courage to describe the beauty
+of this picture; its atmosphere of holy peace, the dignity of its
+composition, the golden richness of its colouring. The most tragic
+situation has here again been alchemised by Luini's magic into a
+pure idyll, without the loss of power, without the sacrifice of
+edification.
+
+S. Catherine in this incomparable fresco is a portrait, the history of
+which so strikingly illustrates the relation of the arts to religion
+on the one hand, and to life on the other, in the age of the
+Renaissance, that it cannot be omitted. At the end of his fourth
+Novella, having related the life of the Contessa di Cellant, Bandello
+says: 'And so the poor woman was beheaded; such was the end of her
+unbridled desires; and he who would fain see her painted to the life,
+let him go to the Church of the Monistero Maggiore, and there will he
+behold her portrait.' The Contessa di Cellant was the only child of a
+rich usurer who lived at Casal Monferrato. Her mother was a Greek;
+and she was a girl of such exquisite beauty, that, in spite of her
+low origin, she became the wife of the noble Ermes Visconti in her
+sixteenth year. He took her to live with him at Milan, where she
+frequented the house of the Bentivogli, but none other. Her husband
+told Bandello that he knew her temper better than to let her visit
+with the freedom of the Milanese ladies. Upon his death, while she
+was little more than twenty, she retired to Casale and led a gay
+life among many lovers. One of these, the Count of Cellant in the Val
+d'Aosta, became her second husband, conquered by her extraordinary
+loveliness. They could not, however, agree together. She left him, and
+established herself at Pavia. Rich with her father's wealth and still
+of most seductive beauty, she now abandoned herself to a life of
+profligacy. Three among her lovers must be named: Ardizzino Valperga,
+Count of Masino; Roberto Sanseverino, of the princely Naples family;
+and Don Pietro di Cardona, a Sicilian. With each of the two first she
+quarrelled, and separately besought each to murder the other. They
+were friends and frustrated her plans by communicating them to one
+another. The third loved her with the insane passion of a very young
+man. What she desired, he promised to do blindly; and she bade him
+murder his two predecessors in her favour. At this time she was living
+at Milan, where the Duke of Bourbon was acting as viceroy for the
+Emperor. Don Pietro took twenty-five armed men of his household, and
+waylaid the Count of Masino, as he was returning with his brother and
+eight or nine servants, late one night from supper. Both the brothers
+and the greater part of their suite were killed: but Don Pietro was
+caught. He revealed the atrocity of his mistress; and she was sent
+to prison. Incapable of proving her innocence, and prevented from
+escaping, in spite of 15,000 golden crowns with which she hoped to
+bribe her jailors, she was finally beheaded. Thus did a vulgar and
+infamous Messalina, distinguished only by rare beauty, furnish Luini
+with a S. Catherine for this masterpiece of pious art! The thing seems
+scarcely credible. Yet Bandello lived in Milan while the Church of
+S. Maurizio was being painted; nor does he show the slightest sign of
+disgust at the discord between the Contessa's life and her artistic
+presentation in the person of a royal martyr.
+
+A HUMANIST'S MONUMENT
+
+In the Sculpture Gallery of the Brera is preserved a fair white marble
+tomb, carved by that excellent Lombard sculptor, Agostino Busti. The
+epitaph runs as follows:--
+
+ En Virtutem Mortis nesciam.
+ Vivet Lancinus Curtius
+ Saecula per omnia
+ Quascunque lustrans oras,
+ Tantum possunt Camoenae.
+
+'Look here on Virtue that knows nought of Death! Lancinus Curtius
+shall live through all the centuries, and visit every shore of earth.
+Such power have the Muses.' The timeworn poet reclines, as though
+sleeping or resting, ready to be waked; his head is covered with
+flowing hair, and crowned with laurel; it leans upon his left hand. On
+either side of his couch stand cupids or genii with torches turned to
+earth. Above is a group of the three Graces, flanked by winged Pegasi.
+Higher up are throned two Victories with palms, and at the top a naked
+Fame. We need not ask who was Lancinus Curtius. He is forgotten, and
+his virtue has not saved him from oblivion; though he strove in his
+lifetime, _pro virili parte_, for the palm that Busti carved upon
+his grave. Yet his monument teaches in short compass a deep lesson;
+and his epitaph sums up the dream which lured the men of Italy in the
+Renaissance to their doom. We see before us sculptured in this marble
+the ideal of the humanistic poet-scholar's life: Love, Grace, the
+Muse, and Nakedness, and Glory. There is not a single intrusive
+thought derived from Christianity. The end for which the man lived
+was Pagan. His hope was earthly fame. Yet his name survives, if this
+indeed be a survival, not in those winged verses which were to carry
+him abroad across the earth, but in the marble of a cunning craftsman,
+scanned now and then by a wandering scholar's eye in the half-darkness
+of a vault.
+
+THE MONUMENT OF GASTON DE FOIX IN THE BRERA
+
+The hero of Ravenna lies stretched upon his back in the hollow of
+a bier covered with laced drapery; and his head rests on richly
+ornamented cushions. These decorative accessories, together with the
+minute work of his scabbard, wrought in the fanciful mannerism of the
+_cinquecento_, serve to enhance the statuesque simplicity of the
+young soldier's effigy. The contrast between so much of richness in
+the merely subordinate details, and this sublime severity of treatment
+in the person of the hero, is truly and touchingly dramatic. There is
+a smile as of content in death, upon his face; and the features are
+exceedingly beautiful--with the beauty of a boy, almost of a woman.
+The heavy hair is cut straight above the forehead and straight over
+the shoulders, falling in massive clusters. A delicately sculptured
+laurel branch is woven into a victor's crown, and laid lightly on the
+tresses it scarcely seems to clasp. So fragile is this wreath that
+it does not break the pure outline of the boy-conqueror's head. The
+armour is quite plain. So is the surcoat. Upon the swelling bust,
+that seems fit harbour for a hero's heart, there lies the collar of an
+order composed of cockle-shells; and this is all the ornament given
+to the figure. The hands are clasped across a sword laid flat upon the
+breast, and placed between the legs. Upon the chin is a little tuft of
+hair, parted, and curling either way; for the victor of Ravenna, like
+the Hermes of Homer, was [Greek: proton hypenetes], 'a youth of
+princely blood, whose beard hath just begun to grow, for whom the
+season of bloom is in its prime of grace.' The whole statue is the
+idealisation of _virtu_--that quality so highly prized by the
+Italians and the ancients, so well fitted for commemoration in the
+arts. It is the apotheosis of human life resolved into undying memory
+because of one great deed. It is the supreme portrait in modern times
+of a young hero, chiselled by artists belonging to a race no longer
+heroic, but capable of comprehending and expressing the aesthetic charm
+of heroism. Standing before it, we may say of Gaston what Arrian wrote
+to Hadrian of Achilles:--'That he was a hero, if hero ever lived,
+I cannot doubt; for his birth and blood were noble, and he was
+beautiful, and his spirit was mighty, and he passed in youth's
+prime away from men.' Italian sculpture, under the condition of the
+_cinquecento_, had indeed no more congenial theme than this
+of bravery and beauty, youth and fame, immortal honour and untimely
+death; nor could any sculptor of death have poetised the theme more
+thoroughly than Agostino Busti, whose simple instinct, unlike that of
+Michelangelo, led him to subordinate his own imagination to the pathos
+of reality.
+
+SARONNO
+
+The church of Saronno is a pretty building with a Bramantesque cupola,
+standing among meadows at some distance from the little town. It
+is the object of a special cult, which draws pilgrims from the
+neighbouring country-side; but the concourse is not large enough to
+load the sanctuary with unnecessary wealth. Everything is very quiet
+in the holy place, and the offerings of the pious seem to have been
+only just enough to keep the building and its treasures of art in
+repair. The church consists of a nave, a central cupola, a vestibule
+leading to the choir, the choir itself, and a small tribune behind the
+choir. No other single building in North Italy can boast so much that
+is first-rate of the work of Luini and Gandenzio Ferrari.
+
+The cupola is raised on a sort of drum composed of twelve pieces,
+perforated with round windows and supported on four massive piers. On
+the level of the eye are frescoes by Luini of S. Rocco, S. Sebastian,
+S. Christopher, and S. Antony--by no means in his best style, and
+inferior to all his other paintings in this church. The Sebastian,
+for example, shows an effort to vary the traditional treatment of this
+saint. He is tied in a sprawling attitude to a tree; and little of
+Luini's special pathos or sense of beauty--the melody of idyllic grace
+made spiritual--appears in him. These four saints are on the piers.
+Above are frescoes from the early Bible history by Lanini, painted in
+continuation of Ferrari's medallions from the story of Adam expelled
+from Paradise, which fill the space beneath the cupola, leading the
+eye upward to Ferrari's masterpiece.
+
+The dome itself is crowded with a host of angels singing and playing
+upon instruments of music. At each of the twelve angles of the drum
+stands a coryphaeus of this celestial choir, full length, with waving
+drapery. Higher up, the golden-haired, broad-winged, divine creatures
+are massed together, filling every square inch of the vault with
+colour. Yet there is no confusion. The simplicity of the selected
+motive and the necessities of the place acted like a check on
+Ferrari, who, in spite of his dramatic impulse, could not tell a story
+coherently or fill a canvas with harmonised variety. There is no trace
+of his violence here. Though the motion of music runs through the
+whole multitude like a breeze, though the joy expressed is a real
+_tripudio celeste_, not one of all these angels flings his arms
+abroad or makes a movement that disturbs the rhythm. We feel that they
+are keeping time and resting quietly, each in his appointed seat, as
+though the sphere was circling with them round the throne of God, who
+is their centre and their source of gladness. Unlike Correggio and his
+imitators, Ferrari has introduced no clouds, and has in no case made
+the legs of his angels prominent. It is a mass of noble faces and
+voluminously robed figures, emerging each above the other like flowers
+in a vase. Bach too has specific character, while all are robust and
+full of life, intent upon the service set them. Their instruments
+of music are all the lutes and viols, flutes, cymbals, drums, fifes,
+citherns, organs, and harps that Ferrari's day could show. The scale
+of colour, as usual with Ferrari, is a little heavy; nor are the tints
+satisfactorily harmonised. But the vigour and invention of the whole
+work would atone for minor defects of far greater consequence.
+
+It is natural, beneath this dome, to turn aside and think one
+moment of Correggio at Parma. Before the _macchinisti_ of the
+seventeenth century had vulgarised the motive, Correggio's bold
+attempt to paint heaven in flight from earth--earth left behind in the
+persons of the Apostles standing round the empty tomb, heaven soaring
+upward with a spiral vortex into the abyss of light above--had an
+originality which set at nought all criticism. There is such ecstasy
+of jubilation, such rapturous rapidity of flight, that we who strain
+our eyes from below, feel we are in the darkness of the grave which
+Mary left. A kind of controlling rhythm for the composition is gained
+by placing Gabriel, Madonna, and Christ at three points in the swirl
+of angels. Nevertheless, composition--the presiding all-controlling
+intellect--is just what makes itself felt by absence; and Correggio's
+special qualities of light and colour have now so far vanished
+from the cupola of the Duomo that the, constructive poverty is
+not disguised. Here if anywhere in painting, we may apply Goethe's
+words--_Gefuehl ist Alles._
+
+If then we return to Ferrari's angels at Saronno, we find that the
+painter of Varallo chose a safer though a far more modest theme. Nor
+did he expose himself to that most cruel of all degradations which the
+ethereal genius of Correggio has suffered from incompetent imitators.
+To daub a tawdry and superficial reproduction of those Parmese
+frescoes, to fill the cupolas of Italy with veritable _guazzetti
+di rane_, was comparatively easy; and between our intelligence
+and what remains of that stupendous masterpiece of boldness, crowd a
+thousand memories of such ineptitude. On the other hand, nothing but
+solid work and conscientious inspiration could enable any workman,
+however able, to follow Ferrari in the path struck out by him at
+Saronno. His cupola has had no imitator; and its only rival is the
+noble pendant painted at Varallo by his own hand, of angels in adoring
+anguish round the Cross.
+
+In the ante-choir of the sanctuary are Luini's priceless frescoes of
+the 'Marriage of the Virgin,' and the 'Dispute with the Doctors.'[11]
+Their execution is flawless, and they are perfectly preserved. If
+criticism before such admirable examples of so excellent a master
+be permissible, it may be questioned whether the figures are not too
+crowded, whether the groups are sufficiently varied and connected by
+rhythmic lines. Yet the concords of yellow and orange with blue in
+the 'Sposalizio,' and the blendings of dull violet and red in the
+'Disputa,' make up for much of stiffness. Here, as in the Chapel of
+S. Catherine at Milan, we feel that Luini was the greatest colourist
+among _frescanti._ In the 'Sposalizio' the female heads are singularly
+noble and idyllically graceful. Some of the young men too have Luini's
+special grace and abundance of golden hair. In the 'Disputa' the
+gravity and dignity of old men are above all things striking.
+
+Passing into the choir, we find on either hand the 'Adoration
+of the Magi' and the 'Purification of the Virgin,' two of Luini's
+divinest frescoes. Above them in lunettes are four Evangelists and
+four Latin Fathers, with four Sibyls. Time and neglect have done no
+damage here: and here, again, perforce we notice perfect mastery of
+colour in fresco. The blues detach themselves too much, perhaps, from
+the rest of the colouring; and that is all a devil's advocate could
+say. It is possible that the absence of blue makes the S. Catherine
+frescoes in the Monastero Maggiore at Milan surpass all other works of
+Luini. But nowhere else has he shown more beauty and variety in detail
+than here. The group of women led by Joseph, the shepherd carrying
+the lamb upon his shoulder, the girl with a basket of white doves,
+the child with an apple on the altar-steps, the lovely youth in the
+foreground heedless of the scene; all these are idyllic incidents
+treated with the purest, the serenest, the most spontaneous, the
+truest, most instinctive sense of beauty. The landscape includes a
+view of Saronno, and an episodical picture of the 'Flight into Egypt'
+where a white-robed angel leads the way. All these lovely things
+are in the 'Purification,' which is dated _Bernardinus Lovinus
+pinxit_, MDXXV.
+
+The fresco of the 'Magi' is less notable in detail, and in general
+effect is more spoiled by obtrusive blues. There is, however, one
+young man of wholly Lionardesque loveliness, whose divine innocence
+of adolescence, unalloyed by serious thought, unstirred by passions,
+almost forces a comparison with Sodoma. The only painter who
+approaches Luini in what may be called the Lombard, to distinguish it
+from the Venetian idyll, is Sodoma; and the work of his which comes
+nearest to Luini's masterpieces is the legend of S. Benedict, at
+Monte Oliveto, near Siena. Yet Sodoma had not all Luini's innocence or
+_naivete._ If he added something slightly humorous which has an
+indefinite charm, he lacked that freshness as of 'cool, meek-blooded
+flowers' and boyish voices, which fascinates us in Luini. Sodoma
+was closer to the earth, and feared not to impregnate what he saw
+of beauty with the fiercer passions of his nature. If Luini had felt
+passion, who shall say? It appears nowhere in his work, where life is
+toned to a religious joyousness. When Shelley compared the poetry of
+the Theocritean amourists to the perfume of the tuberose, and that of
+the earlier Greek poets to 'a meadow-gale of June, which mingles
+the fragrance of all the flowers of the field,' he supplied us
+with critical images which may not unfairly be used to point the
+distinction between Sodoma at Monte Oliveto and Luini at Saronno.
+
+THE CASTELLO OF FERRARA
+
+Is it possible that the patron saints of cities should mould the
+temper of the people to their own likeness? S. George, the chivalrous,
+is champion of Ferrara. His is the marble group above the Cathedral
+porch, so feudal in its medieval pomp. He and S. Michael are painted
+in fresco over the south portcullis of the Castle. His lustrous armour
+gleams with Giorgionesque brilliancy from Dossi's masterpiece in
+the Pinacoteca. That Ferrara, the only place in Italy where chivalry
+struck any root, should have had S. George for patron, is at any rate
+significant.
+
+The best preserved relic of princely feudal life in Italy is
+this Castello of the Este family, with its sombre moat, chained
+drawbridges, doleful dungeons, and unnumbered tragedies, each one of
+which may be compared with Parisina's history. I do not want to dwell
+on these things now. It is enough to remember the Castello, built of
+ruddiest brick, time-mellowed with how many centuries of sun and soft
+sea-air, as it appeared upon the close of one tempestuous day. Just
+before evening the rain-clouds parted and the sun flamed out across
+the misty Lombard plain. The Castello burned like a hero's funeral
+pyre, and round its high-built turrets swallows circled in the warm
+blue air. On the moat slept shadows, mixed with flowers of sunset,
+tossed from pinnacle and gable. Then the sky changed. A roof of
+thunder-cloud spread overhead with the rapidity of tempest. The dying
+sun gathered his last strength against it, fretting those steel-blue
+arches with crimson; and all the fierce light, thrown from vault to
+vault of cloud, was reflected back as from a shield, and cast in
+blots and patches on the buildings. The Castle towered up rosy-red
+and shadowy sombre, enshrined, embosomed in those purple clouds; and
+momently ran lightning forks like rapiers through the growing mass.
+Everything around, meanwhile, was quiet in the grass-grown streets.
+The only sound was a high, clear boy's voice chanting an opera tune.
+
+PETRARCH'S TOMB AT ARQUA
+
+The drive from Este along the skirts of the Euganean Hills to Arqua
+takes one through a country which is tenderly beautiful, because of
+its contrast between little peaked mountains and the plain. It is
+not a grand landscape. It lacks all that makes the skirts of Alps
+and Apennines sublime. Its charm is a certain mystery and
+repose--an undefined sense of the neighbouring Adriatic, a pervading
+consciousness of Venice unseen, but felt from far away. From the
+terraces of Arqua the eye ranges across olive-trees, laurels, and
+pomegranates on the southern slopes, to the misty level land that
+melts into the sea, with churches and tall campanili like gigantic
+galleys setting sail for fairyland over 'the foam of perilous seas
+forlorn.' Let a blue-black shadow from a thunder-cloud be cast
+upon this plain, and let one ray of sunlight strike a solitary
+bell-tower;--it burns with palest flame of rose against the steely
+dark, and in its slender shaft and shell-like tint of pink all Venice
+is foreseen.
+
+The village church of Arqua stands upon one of these terraces, with a
+full stream of clearest water flowing by. On the little square before
+the church-door, where the peasants congregate at mass-time--open to
+the skies with all their stars and storms, girdled by the hills,
+and within hearing of the vocal stream--is Petrarch's sepulchre. Fit
+resting-place for what remains to earth of such a poet's clay! It is
+as though archangels, flying, had carried the marble chest and set it
+down here on the hillside, to be a sign and sanctuary for after-men. A
+simple rectilinear coffin, of smooth Verona _mandorlato_, raised
+on four thick columns, and closed by a heavy cippus-cover. Without
+emblems, allegories, or lamenting genii, this tomb of the great poet,
+the great awakener of Europe from mental lethargy, encircled by the
+hills, beneath the canopy of heaven, is impressive beyond the power of
+words. Bending here, we feel that Petrarch's own winged thoughts
+and fancies, eternal and aerial, 'forms more real than living man,
+nurslings of immortality,' have congregated to be the ever-ministering
+and irremovable attendants on the shrine of one who, while he lived,
+was purest spirit in a veil of flesh.
+
+ON A MOUNTAIN
+
+Milan is shining in sunset on those purple fields; and a score of
+cities flash back the last red light, which shows each inequality
+and undulation of Lombardy outspread four thousand feet beneath. Both
+ranges, Alps and Apennines, are clear to view; and all the silvery
+lakes are over-canopied and brought into one picture by flame-litten
+mists. Monte Rosa lifts her crown of peaks above a belt of clouds into
+light of living fire. The Mischabelhoerner and the Dom rest stationary
+angel-wings upon the rampart, which at this moment is the wall of
+heaven. The pyramid of distant Monte Viso burns like solid amethyst
+far, far away. Mont Cervin beckons to his brother, the gigantic
+Finsteraarhorn, across tracts of liquid ether. Bells are rising from
+the villages, now wrapped in gloom, between me and the glimmering
+lake. A hush of evening silence falls upon the ridges, cliffs, and
+forests of this billowy hill, ascending into wave-like crests, and
+toppling with awful chasms over the dark waters of Lugano. It is good
+to be alone here at this hour. Yet I must rise and go--passing through
+meadows, where white lilies sleep in silvery drifts, and asphodel is
+pale with spires of faintest rose, and narcissus dreams of his own
+beauty, loading the air with fragrance sweet as some love-music of
+Mozart. These fields want only the white figure of Persephone to make
+them poems: and in this twilight one might fancy that the queen had
+left her throne by Pluto's side, to mourn for her dead youth among the
+flowers uplifted between earth and heaven. Nay, they are poems now,
+these fields; with that unchanging background of history, romance,
+and human life--the Lombard plain, against whose violet breadth the
+blossoms bend their faint heads to the evening air. Downward we
+hurry, on pathways where the beeches meet, by silent farms, by meadows
+honey-scented, deep in dew. The columbine stands tall and still on
+those green slopes of shadowy grass. The nightingale sings now, and
+now is hushed again. Streams murmur through the darkness, where the
+growth of trees, heavy with honeysuckle and wild rose, is thickest.
+Fireflies begin to flit above the growing corn. At last the plain is
+reached, and all the skies are tremulous with starlight. Alas, that
+we should vibrate so obscurely to these harmonies of earth and
+heaven! The inner finer sense of them seems somehow unattainable--that
+spiritual touch of soul evoking soul from nature, which should
+transfigure our dull mood of self into impersonal delight. Man needs
+to be a mytho-poet at some moments, or, better still, to be a mystic
+steeped through half-unconsciousness in the vast wonder of the world.
+Gold and untouched to poetry or piety by scenes that ought to blend
+the spirit in ourselves with spirit in the world without, we can but
+wonder how this phantom show of mystery and beauty will pass away from
+us--how soon--and we be where, see what, use all our sensibilities on
+aught or nought?
+
+SIC GENIUS
+
+In the picture-gallery at Modena there is a masterpiece of Dosso
+Dossi. The frame is old and richly carved; and the painting, bordered
+by its beautiful dull gold, shines with the lustre of an emerald. In
+his happy moods Dosso set colour upon canvas, as no other painter out
+of Venice ever did; and here he is at his happiest. The picture is the
+portrait of a jester, dressed in courtly clothes and with a feathered
+cap upon his head. He holds a lamb in his arms, and carries the
+legend, _Sic Genius_. Behind him is a landscape of exquisite
+brilliancy and depth. His face is young and handsome. Dosso has made
+it one most wonderful laugh. Even so perhaps laughed Yorick. Nowhere
+else have I seen a laugh thus painted: not violent, not loud, although
+the lips are opened to show teeth of dazzling whiteness;--but fine and
+delicate, playing over the whole face like a ripple sent up from the
+depths of the soul within. Who was he? What does the lamb mean? How
+should the legend be interpreted? We cannot answer these questions. He
+may have been the court-fool of Ferrara; and his genius, the spiritual
+essence of the man, may have inclined him to laugh at all things.
+That at least is the value he now has for us. He is the portrait of
+perpetual irony, the spirit of the golden Sixteenth Century which
+delicately laughed at the whole world of thoughts and things, the
+quintessence of the poetry of Ariosto, the wit of Berni, all condensed
+into one incarnation and immortalised by truthfullest art. With the
+Gaul, the Spaniard, and the German at her gates, and in her cities,
+and encamped upon her fields, Italy still laughed; and when the voice
+of conscience sounding through Savonarola asked her why, she only
+smiled--_Sic Genius_.
+
+One evening in May we rowed from Venice to Torcello, and at sunset
+broke bread and drank wine together among the rank grasses just
+outside that ancient church. It was pleasant to sit in the so-called
+chair of Attila and feel the placid stillness of the place. Then there
+came lounging by a sturdy young fellow in brown country clothes, with
+a marvellous old wide-awake upon his head, and across his shoulders a
+bunch of massive church-keys. In strange contrast to his uncouth garb
+he flirted a pink Japanese fan, gracefully disposing it to cool his
+sunburned olive cheeks. This made us look at him. He was not ugly.
+Nay, there was something of attractive in his face--the smooth-curved
+chin, the shrewd yet sleepy eyes, and finely cut thin lips--a curious
+mixture of audacity and meekness blent upon his features. Yet this
+impression was but the prelude to his smile. When that first dawned,
+some breath of humour seeming to stir in him unbidden, the true
+meaning was given to his face. Each feature helped to make a smile
+that was the very soul's life of the man expressed. I broadened,
+showing brilliant teeth, and grew into a noiseless laugh; and then I
+saw before me Dosso's jester, the type of Shakspere's fools, the life
+of that wild irony, now rude, now fine, which once delighted Courts.
+The laughter of the whole world and of all the centuries was silent in
+his face. What he said need not be repeated. The charm was less in his
+words than in his personality; for Momus-philosophy lay deep in every
+look and gesture of the man. The place lent itself to irony: parties
+of Americans and English parsons, the former agape for any
+rubbishy old things, the latter learned in the lore of obsolete
+Church-furniture, had thronged Torcello; and now they were all gone,
+and the sun had set behind the Alps, while an irreverent stranger
+drank his wine in Attila's chair, and nature's jester smiled--_Sic
+Genius_.
+
+When I slept that night I dreamed of an altar-piece in the Temple of
+Folly. The goddess sat enthroned beneath a canopy hung with bells
+and corals. On her lap was a beautiful winged smiling genius, who
+flourished two bright torches. On her left hand stood the man of
+Modena with his white lamb, a new S. John. On her right stood the man
+of Torcello with his keys, a new S. Peter. Both were laughing after
+their all-absorbent, divine, noiseless fashion; and under both was
+written, _Sic Genius_. Are not all things, even profanity,
+permissible in dreams?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+COMO AND IL MEDEGHINO
+
+To which of the Italian lakes should the palm of beauty be accorded?
+This question may not unfrequently have moved the idle minds of
+travellers, wandering through that loveliest region from Orta to
+Garda--from little Orta, with her gemlike island, rosy granite crags,
+and chestnut-covered swards above the Colma; to Garda, bluest of all
+waters, surveyed in majestic length from Desenzano or poetic Sirmione,
+a silvery sleeping haze of hill and cloud and heaven and clear waves
+bathed in modulated azure. And between these extreme points what
+varied lovelinesses lie in broad Maggiore, winding Como, Varese with
+the laughing face upturned to heaven, Lugano overshadowed by the
+crested crags of Monte Generoso, and Iseo far withdrawn among the
+rocky Alps! He who loves immense space, cloud shadows slowly sailing
+over purple slopes, island gardens, distant glimpses of snow-capped
+mountains, breadth, air, immensity, and flooding sunlight, will choose
+Maggiore. But scarcely has he cast his vote for this, the Juno of the
+divine rivals, when he remembers the triple lovelinesses of the
+Larian Aphrodite, disclosed in all their placid grace from Villa
+Serbelloni;--the green blue of the waters, clear as glass, opaque
+through depth; the _millefleurs_ roses clambering into cypresses
+by Cadenabbia; the laburnums hanging their yellow clusters from the
+clefts of Sasso Eancio; the oleander arcades of Varenna; the wild
+white limestone crags of San Martiuo, which he has climbed to feast
+his eyes with the perspective, magical, serene, Lionardesquely
+perfect, of the distant gates of Adda. Then while this modern Paris
+is yet doubting, perhaps a thought may cross his mind of sterner,
+solitary Lake Iseo--the Pallas of the three. She offers her own
+attractions. The sublimity of Monte Adamello, dominating Lovere and
+all the lowland like Hesiod's hill of Virtue reared aloft above the
+plain of common life, has charms to tempt heroic lovers. Nor can
+Varese be neglected. In some picturesque respects, Varese is the most
+perfect of the lakes. Those long lines of swelling hills that lead
+into the level, yield an infinite series of placid foregrounds,
+pleasant to the eye by contrast with the dominant snow-summits, from
+Monte Viso to Monte Leone: the sky is limitless to southward; the low
+horizons are broken by bell-towers and farmhouses; while armaments of
+clouds are ever rolling in the interval of Alps and plain.
+
+Of a truth, to decide which is the queen of the Italian lakes, is but
+an _infinita quaestio_; and the mere raising of it is folly. Still
+each lover of the beautiful may give his vote; and mine, like that of
+shepherd Paris, is already given to the Larian goddess. Words fail
+in attempting to set forth charms which have to be enjoyed, or can at
+best but lightly be touched with most consummate tact, even as great
+poets have already touched on Como Lake--from Virgil with his 'Lari
+maxume,' to Tennyson and the Italian Manzoni. The threshold of the
+shrine is, however, less consecrated ground; and the Cathedral of Como
+may form a vestibule to the temple where silence is more golden than
+the speech of a describer.
+
+The Cathedral of Como is perhaps the most perfect building in Italy
+for illustrating the fusion of Gothic and Renaissance styles, both of
+a good type and exquisite in their sobriety. The Gothic ends with the
+nave. The noble transepts and the choir, each terminating in a rounded
+tribune of the same dimensions, are carried out in a simple and
+decorous Bramantesque manner. The transition from the one style to the
+other is managed so felicitously, and the sympathies between them are
+so well developed, that there is no discord. What we here call
+Gothic, is conceived in a truly southern spirit, without fantastic
+efflorescence or imaginative complexity of multiplied parts; while
+the Renaissance manner, as applied by Tommaso Rodari, has not yet
+stiffened into the lifeless neo-Latinism of the later _cinquecento_:
+it is still distinguished by delicate inventiveness, and beautiful
+subordination of decorative detail to architectural effect. Under
+these happy conditions we feel that the Gothic of the nave, with its
+superior severity and sombreness, dilates into the lucid harmonies of
+choir and transepts like a flower unfolding. In the one the mind is
+tuned to inner meditation and religious awe; in the other the
+worshipper passes into a temple of the clear explicit faith--as an
+initiated neophyte might be received into the meaning of the
+mysteries.
+
+After the collapse of the Roman Empire the district of Como seems
+to have maintained more vividly than the rest of Northern Italy some
+memory of classic art. _Magistri Comacini_ is a title frequently
+inscribed upon deeds and charters of the earlier middle ages, as
+synonymous with sculptors and architects. This fact may help to
+account for the purity and beauty of the Duomo. It is the work of a
+race in which the tradition of delicate artistic invention had
+never been wholly interrupted. To Tommaso Rodari and his brothers,
+Bernardino and Jacopo, the world owes this sympathetic fusion of the
+Gothic and the Bramantesque styles; and theirs too is the sculpture
+with which the Duomo is so richly decorated. They were natives of
+Maroggia, a village near Mendrisio, beneath the crests of Monte
+Generoso, close to Campione, which sent so many able craftsmen out
+into the world between the years 1300 and 1500. Indeed the name of
+Campionesi would probably have been given to the Rodari, had they left
+their native province for service in Eastern Lombardy. The body of the
+Duomo had been finished when Tommaso Rodari was appointed master of
+the fabric in 1487. To complete the work by the addition of a tribune
+was his duty. He prepared a wooden model and exposed it, after the
+fashion of those times, for criticism in his _bottega_; and
+the usual difference of opinion arose among the citizens of Como
+concerning its merits. Cristoforo Solaro, surnamed Il Gobbo, was
+called in to advise. It may be remembered that when Michelangelo first
+placed his Pieta in S. Peter's, rumour gave it to this celebrated
+Lombard sculptor, and the Florentine was constrained to set his own
+signature upon the marble. The same Solaro carved the monument of
+Beatrice Sforza in the Certosa of Pavia. He was indeed in all
+points competent to criticise or to confirm the design of his
+fellow-craftsman. Il Gobbo disapproved of the proportions chosen by
+Rodari, and ordered a new model to be made; but after much discussion,
+and some concessions on the part of Rodari, who is said to have
+increased the number of the windows and lightened the orders of his
+model, the work was finally entrusted to the master of Maroggia.
+
+Not less creditable than the general design of the tribune is
+the sculpture executed by the brothers. The north side door is a
+master-work of early Renaissance chiselling, combining mixed Christian
+and classical motives with a wealth of floral ornament. Inside, over
+the same door, is a procession of children seeming to represent the
+Triumph of Bacchus, with perhaps some Christian symbolism. Opposite,
+above the south door, is a frieze of fighting Tritons--horsed sea
+deities pounding one another with bunches of fish and splashing the
+water, in Mantegna's spirit. The doorways of the facade are decorated
+with the same rare workmanship; and the canopies, supported by naked
+fauns and slender twisted figures, under which the two Plinies are
+seated, may be reckoned among the supreme achievements of delicate
+Renaissance sculpture. The Plinies are not like the work of the same
+master. They are older, stiffer, and more Gothic. The chief interest
+attaching to them is that they are habited and seated after the
+fashion of Humanists. This consecration of the two Pagan saints beside
+the portals of the Christian temple is truly characteristic of
+the fifteenth century in Italy. Beneath, are little basreliefs
+representing scenes from their respective lives, in the style of
+carved predellas on the altars of saints.
+
+The whole church is peopled with detached statues, among which a
+Sebastian in the Chapel of the Madonna must be mentioned as singularly
+beautiful. It is a finely modelled figure, with the full life and
+exuberant adolescence of Venetian inspiration. A peculiar feature of
+the external architecture is the series of Atlantes, bearing on their
+shoulders urns, heads of lions, and other devices, and standing on
+brackets round the upper cornice just below the roof. They are of all
+sorts; young and old, male and female; classically nude, and boldly
+outlined. These water-conduits, the work of Bernardo Bianco and
+Francesco Rusca, illustrate the departure of the earlier Renaissance
+from the Gothic style. They are gargoyles; but they have lost the
+grotesque element. At the same time the sculptor, while discarding
+Gothic tradition, has not betaken himself yet to a servile imitation
+of the antique. He has used invention, and substituted for grinning
+dragons' heads something wild and bizarre of his own in harmony with
+classic taste.
+
+The pictures in the chapels, chiefly by Luini and Ferrari--an idyllic
+Nativity, with faun-like shepherds and choirs of angels--a sumptuous
+adoration of the Magi--a jewelled Sposalizio with abundance of golden
+hair flowing over draperies of green and crimson--will interest
+those who are as yet unfamiliar with Lombard painting. Yet their
+architectural setting, perhaps, is superior to their intrinsic merit
+as works of art; and their chief value consists in adding rare dim
+flakes of colour to the cool light of the lovely church. More curious,
+because less easily matched, is the gilded woodwork above the altar of
+S. Abondio, attributed to a German carver, but executed for the
+most part in the purest Luinesque manner. The pose of the enthroned
+Madonna, the type and gesture of S. Catherine, and the treatment of
+the Pieta above, are thoroughly Lombard, showing how Luini's ideal of
+beauty could be expressed in carving. Some of the choicest figures in
+the Monastero Maggiore at Milan seem to have descended from the walls
+and stepped into their tabernacles on this altar. Yet the style is not
+maintained consistently. In the reliefs illustrating the life of S.
+Abondio we miss Luini's childlike grace, and find instead a something
+that reminds us of Donatello--a seeking after the classical in dress,
+carriage, and grouping of accessory figures. It may have been that the
+carver, recognising Luini's defective composition, and finding nothing
+in that master's manner adapted to the spirit of relief, had the good
+taste to render what was Luinesquely lovely in his female figures, and
+to fall back on a severer model for his basreliefs.
+
+The building-fund for the Duomo was raised in Como and its districts.
+Boxes were placed in all the churches to receive the alms of those who
+wished to aid the work. The clergy begged in Lent, and preached the
+duty of contributing on special days. Presents of lime and bricks
+and other materials were thankfully received. Bishops, canons, and
+municipal magistrates were expected to make costly gifts on taking
+office. Notaries, under penalty of paying 100 soldi if they neglected
+their engagement, were obliged to persuade testators, _cum bonis
+modis dulciter_, to inscribe the Duomo on their wills. Fines for
+various offences were voted to the building by the city. Each new
+burgher paid a certain sum; while guilds and farmers of the taxes
+bought monopolies and privileges at the price of yearly subsidies.
+A lottery was finally established for the benefit of the fabric.
+Of course each payment to the good work carried with it spiritual
+privileges; and so willingly did the people respond to the call of the
+Church, that during the sixteenth century the sums subscribed amounted
+to 200,000 golden crowns. Among the most munificent donators are
+mentioned the Marchese Giacomo Gallio, who bequeathed 290,000 lire,
+and a Benzi, who gave 10,000 ducats.
+
+While the people of Como were thus straining every nerve to complete
+a pious work, which at the same time is one of the most perfect
+masterpieces of Italian art, their lovely lake was turned into a
+pirate's stronghold, and its green waves stained with slaughter of
+conflicting navies. So curious is this episode in the history of the
+Larian lake that it is worth while to treat of it at some length.
+Moreover, the lives of few captains of adventure offer matter more
+rich in picturesque details and more illustrative of their times than
+that of Gian Giacomo de' Medici, the Larian corsair, long known and
+still remembered as Il Medeghino. He was born in Milan in 1498, at
+the beginning of that darkest and most disastrous period of Italian
+history, when the old fabric of social and political existence went to
+ruin under the impact of conflicting foreign armies. He lived on until
+the year 1555, witnessing and taking part in the dismemberment of the
+Milanese Duchy, playing a game of hazard at high stakes for his own
+profit with the two last Sforzas, the Empire, the French, and the
+Swiss. At the beginning of the century, while he was still a youth,
+the rich valley of the Valtelline, with Bormio and Chiavenna, had
+been assigned to the Grisons. The Swiss Cantons at the same time had
+possessed themselves of Lugano and Bellinzona. By these two acts of
+robbery the mountaineers tore a portion of its fairest territory from
+the Duchy; and whoever ruled in Milan, whether a Sforza, or a Spanish
+viceroy, or a French general, was impatient to recover the lost jewel
+of the ducal crown. So much has to be premised, because the scene of
+our hero's romantic adventures was laid upon the borderland between
+the Duchy and the Cantons. Intriguing at one time with the Duke of
+Milan, at another with his foes the French or Spaniards, Il Medeghino
+found free scope for his peculiar genius in a guerilla warfare,
+carried on with the avowed purpose of restoring the Valtelline to
+Milan. To steer a plain course through that chaos of politics, in
+which the modern student, aided by the calm clear lights of history
+and meditation, cannot find a clue, was of course impossible for an
+adventurer whose one aim was to gratify his passions and exalt himself
+at the expense of others. It is therefore of little use to seek
+motives of statecraft or of patriotism in the conduct of Il Medeghino.
+He was a man shaped according to Machiavelli's standard of political
+morality--self-reliant, using craft and force with cold indifference
+to moral ends, bent only upon wringing for himself the largest share
+of this world's power for men who, like himself, identified virtue
+with unflinching and immitigable egotism.
+
+Il Medeghino's father was Bernardo de' Medici, a Lombard, who neither
+claimed nor could have proved cousinship with the great Medicean
+family of Florence. His mother was Cecilia Serbelloni. The boy was
+educated in the fashionable humanistic studies, nourishing his young
+imagination with the tales of Roman heroes. The first exploit by which
+he proved his _virtu_, was the murder of a man he hated, at the
+age of sixteen. This 'virile act of vengeance,' as it was called,
+brought him into trouble, and forced him to choose the congenial
+profession of arms. At a time when violence and vigour passed for
+manliness, a spirited assassination formed the best of introductions
+to the captains of mixed mercenary troops. Il Medeghino rose in
+favour with his generals, helped to reinstate Francesco Sforza in his
+capital, and, returning himself to Milan, inflicted severe vengeance
+on the enemies who had driven him to exile. It was his ambition, at
+this early period of his life, to be made governor of the Castle of
+Musso, on the Lake of Como. While fighting in the neighbourhood, he
+had observed the unrivalled capacities for defence presented by its
+site; and some pre-vision of his future destinies now urged him to
+acquire it, as the basis for the free marauding life he planned. The
+headland of Musso lies about halfway between Gravedona and Menaggio,
+on the right shore of the Lake of Como. Planted on a pedestal of
+rock, and surmounted by a sheer cliff, there then stood a very ancient
+tower, commanding this promontory on the side of the land. Between it
+and the water the Visconti, in more recent days, had built a square
+fort; and the headland had been further strengthened by the addition
+of connecting walls and bastions pierced for cannon. Combining
+precipitous cliffs, strong towers, and easy access from the lake
+below, this fortress of Musso was exactly the fit station for a
+pirate. So long as he kept the command of the lake, he had little
+to fear from land attacks, and had a splendid basis for aggressive
+operations. Il Medeghino made his request to the Duke of Milan; but
+the foxlike Sforza would not grant him a plain answer. At length he
+hinted that if his suitor chose to rid him of a troublesome subject,
+the noble and popular Astore Visconti, he should receive Musso
+for payment. Crimes of bloodshed and treason sat lightly on the
+adventurer's conscience. In a short time he compassed the young
+Visconti's death, and claimed his reward. The Duke despatched him
+thereupon to Musso, with open letters to the governor, commanding him
+to yield the castle to the bearer. Private advice, also entrusted to
+Il Medeghino, bade the governor, on the contrary, cut the bearer's
+throat. The young man, who had the sense to read the Duke's letter,
+destroyed the secret document, and presented the other, or, as one
+version of the story goes, forged a ducal order in his own favour.[12]
+At any rate, the castle was placed in his hands; and affecting to know
+nothing of the Duke's intended treachery, Il Medeghino took possession
+of it as a trusted servant of the ducal crown.
+
+As soon as he was settled in his castle, the freebooter devoted all
+his energies to rendering it still more impregnable by strengthening
+the walls and breaking the cliffs into more horrid precipices. In this
+work he was assisted by his numerous friends and followers; for Musso
+rapidly became, like ancient Rome, an asylum for the ruffians and
+outlaws of neighbouring provinces. It is even said that his sisters,
+Clarina and Margherita, rendered efficient aid with manual labour. The
+mention of Clarina's name justifies a parenthetical side-glance at Il
+Medeghino's pedigree, which will serve to illustrate the exceptional
+conditions of Italian society during this age. She was married to
+the Count Giberto Borromeo, and became the mother of the pious Carlo
+Borromeo, whose shrine is still adored at Milan in the Duomo. Il
+Medeghino's brother, Giovan Angelo, rose to the Papacy, assuming the
+title of Pius IV. Thus this murderous marauder was the brother of a
+Pope and the uncle of a Saint; and these three persons of one family
+embraced the various degrees and typified the several characters which
+flourished with peculiar lustre in Renaissance Italy--the captain of
+adventure soaked in blood, the churchman unrivalled for intrigue, and
+the saint aflame with holiest enthusiasm. Il Medeghino was short of
+stature, but well made and powerful; broad-chested; with a penetrating
+voice and winning countenance. He dressed simply, like one of his own
+soldiers; slept but little; was insensible to carnal pleasure; and
+though he knew how to win the affection of his men by jovial speech,
+he maintained strict discipline in his little army. In all points he
+was an ideal bandit chief, never happy unless fighting or planning
+campaigns, inflexible of purpose, bold and cunning in the execution of
+his schemes, cruel to his enemies, generous to his followers,
+sacrificing all considerations, human and divine, to the one aim of
+his life, self-aggrandisement by force and intrigue. He knew well how
+to make himself both feared and respected. One instance of his dealing
+will suffice. A gentleman of Bellano, Polidoro Boldoni, in return to
+his advances, coldly replied that he cared for neither amity nor
+relationship with thieves and robbers; whereupon Il Medeghino
+extirpated his family, almost to a man.
+
+Soon after his settlement in Musso, Il Medeghino, wishing to secure
+the gratitude of the Duke, his master, began war with the Grisons.
+From Coire, from the Engadine, and from Davos, the Alpine pikemen were
+now pouring down to swell the troops of Francis I.; and their road lay
+through the Lake of Como. Il Medeghino burned all the boats upon the
+lake, except those which he took into his own service, and thus made
+himself master of the water passage. He then swept the 'length of
+lordly Lario' from Colico to Lecco, harrying the villages upon
+the shore, and cutting off the bands of journeying Switzers at his
+pleasure. Not content with this guerilla, he made a descent upon
+the territory of the Trepievi, and pushed far up towards Chiavenna,
+forcing the Grisons to recall their troops from the Milanese. These
+acts of prowess convinced the Duke that he had found a strong ally
+in the pirate chief. When Francis I. continued his attacks upon the
+Duchy, and the Grisons still adhered to their French paymaster, the
+Sforza formally invested Gian Giacomo de' Medici with the perpetual
+governorship of Musso, the Lake of Como, and as much as he could wrest
+from the Grisons above the lake. Furnished now with a just title for
+his depredations, Il Medeghino undertook the siege of Chiavenna. That
+town is the key to the valleys of the Spluegen and Bregaglia. Strongly
+fortified and well situated for defence, the burghers of the Grisons
+well knew that upon its possession depended their power in the Italian
+valleys. To take it by assault was impossible, Il Medeghino used
+craft, entered the castle, and soon had the city at his disposition.
+Nor did he lose time in sweeping Val Bregaglia. The news of this
+conquest recalled the Switzers from the Duchy; and as they hurried
+homeward just before the battle of Pavia, it may be affirmed that Gian
+Giacomo de' Medici was instrumental in the defeat and capture of the
+French King. The mountaineers had no great difficulty in dislodging
+their pirate enemy from Chiavenna, the Valtelline, and Val Bregaglia.
+But he retained his hold on the Trepievi, occupied the Valsassina,
+took Porlezza, and established himself still more strongly in Musso as
+the corsair monarch of the lake.
+
+The tyranny of the Sforzas in Milan was fast going to pieces between
+France and Spain; and in 1526 the Marquis of Pescara occupied the
+capital in the name of Charles V. The Duke, meanwhile, remained a
+prisoner in his Castello. Il Medeghino was now without a master; for
+he refused to acknowledge the Spaniards, preferring to watch events
+and build his own power on the ruins of the dukedom. At the head of
+4,000 men, recruited from the lakes and neighbouring valleys, he
+swept the country far and wide, and occupied the rich champaign of the
+Brianza. He was now lord of the lakes of Como and Lugano, and absolute
+in Lecco and the adjoining valleys. The town of Como itself alone
+belonged to the Spaniards; and even Como was blockaded by the navy of
+the corsair. Il Medeghino had a force of seven big ships, with three
+sails and forty-eight oars, bristling with guns and carrying marines.
+His flagship was a large brigantine, manned by picked rowers, from
+the mast of which floated the red banner with the golden palle of the
+Medicean arms. Besides these larger vessels, he commanded a flotilla
+of countless small boats. It is clear that to reckon with him was a
+necessity. If he could not be put down with force, he might be bought
+over by concessions. The Spaniards adopted the second course, and Il
+Medeghino, judging that the cause of the Sforza family was desperate,
+determined in 1528 to attach himself to the Empire. Charles V.
+invested him with the Castle of Musso and the larger part of Como
+Lake, including the town of Lecco. He now assumed the titles of
+Marquis of Musso and Count of Lecco: and in order to prove his
+sovereignty before the world, he coined money with his own name and
+devices.
+
+It will be observed that Gian Giacomo de' Medici had hitherto acted
+with a single-hearted view to his own interests. At the age of thirty
+he had raised himself from nothing to a principality, which, though
+petty, might compare with many of some name in Italy--with Carpi, for
+example, or Mirandola, or Camerino. Nor did he mean to remain quiet
+in the prime of life. He regarded Como Lake as the mere basis for more
+arduous undertakings. Therefore, when the whirligig of events restored
+Francesco Sforza to his duchy in 1529, Il Medeghino refused to obey
+his old lord. Pretending to move under the Duke's orders, but really
+acting for himself alone, he proceeded to attack his ancient
+enemies, the Grisons. By fraud and force he worked his way into
+their territory, seized Morbegno, and overran the Valtelline. He
+was destined, however, to receive a serious check. Twelve thousand
+Switzers rose against him on the one hand, on the other the Duke of
+Milan sent a force by land and water to subdue his rebel subject,
+while Alessandro Gonzaga marched upon his castles in the Brianza. He
+was thus assailed by formidable forces from three quarters, converging
+upon the Lake of Como, and driving him to his chosen element, the
+water. Hastily quitting the Valtelline, he fell back to the Castle of
+Mandello on the lake, collected his navy, and engaged the ducal ships
+in a battle off Menaggio. In this battle he was worsted. But he did
+not lose his courage. From Bellagio, from Varenna, from Bellano he
+drove forth his enemies, rolled the cannon of the Switzers into the
+lake, regained Lecco, defeated the troops of Alessandro Gonzaga, and
+took the Duke of Mantua prisoner. Had he but held Como, it is probable
+that he might have obtained such terms at this time as would have
+consolidated his tyranny. The town of Como, however, now belonged
+to the Duke of Milan, and formed an excellent basis for operations
+against the pirate. Overmatched, with an exhausted treasury and broken
+forces, Il Medeghino was at last compelled to give in. Yet he retired
+with all the honours of war. In exchange for Musso and the lake, the
+Duke agreed to give him 35,000 golden crowns, together with the feud
+and marquisate of Marignano. A free pardon was promised not only
+to himself and his brothers, but to all his followers; and the Duke
+further undertook to transport his artillery and munitions of war at
+his own expense to Marignano. Having concluded this treaty under the
+auspices of Charles V. and his lieutenant, Il Medeghino, in March
+1532, set sail from Musso, and turned his back upon the lake for
+ever. The Switzers immediately destroyed the towers, forts, walls, and
+bastions of the Musso promontory, leaving in the midst of their ruins
+the little chapel of S. Eufemia.
+
+Gian Giacomo de' Medici, henceforth known to Europe as the Marquis
+of Marignano, now took service under Spain; and through the favour
+of Anton de Leyva, Viceroy for the Duchy, rose to the rank of
+Field Marshal. When the Marquis del Vasto succeeded to the Spanish
+governorship of Milan in 1536, he determined to gratify an old grudge
+against the ex-pirate, and, having invited him to a banquet, made him
+prisoner. II Medeghino was not, however, destined to languish in a
+dungeon. Princes and kings interested themselves in his fate. He
+was released, and journeyed to the court of Charles V. in Spain.
+The Emperor received him kindly, and employed him first in the Low
+Countries, where he helped to repress the burghers of Ghent, and at
+the siege of Landrecy commanded the Spanish artillery against other
+Italian captains of adventure: for, Italy being now dismembered and
+enslaved, her sons sought foreign service where they found best pay
+and widest scope for martial science. Afterwards the Medici ruled
+Bohemia as Spanish Viceroy; and then, as general of the league formed
+by the Duke of Florence, the Emperor, and the Pope to repress the
+liberties of Tuscany, distinguished himself in that cruel war of
+extermination, which turned the fair Contado of Siena into a poisonous
+Maremma. To the last Il Medeghino preserved the instincts and the
+passions of a brigand chief. It was at this time that, acting for the
+Grand Duke of Tuscany, he first claimed open kinship with the Medici
+of Florence. Heralds and genealogists produced a pedigree, which
+seemed to authorise this pretension; he was recognised, together with
+his brother, Pius IV., as an offshoot of the great house which had
+already given Dukes to Florence, Kings to France, and two Popes to
+the Christian world. In the midst of all this foreign service he never
+forgot his old dream of conquering the Valtelline; and in 1547 he
+made proposals to the Emperor for a new campaign against the Grisons.
+Charles V. did not choose to engage in a war, the profits of which
+would have been inconsiderable for the master of half the civilised
+world, and which might have proved troublesome by stirring up the
+tameless Switzers. Il Medeghino was obliged to abandon a project
+cherished from the earliest dawn of his adventurous manhood.
+
+When Gian Giacomo died in 1555, his brother Battista succeeded to his
+claims upon Lecco and the Trepievi. His monument, magnificent with
+five bronze figures, the masterpiece of Leone Lioni, from Menaggio,
+Michelangelesque in style, and of consummate workmanship, still adorns
+the Duomo of Milan. It stands close by the door that leads to the
+roof. This mausoleum, erected to the memory of Gian Giacomo and
+his brother Gabrio, is said to have cost 7800 golden crowns. On the
+occasion of the pirate's funeral the Senate of Milan put on mourning,
+and the whole city followed the great robber, the hero of Renaissance
+_virtu_, to the grave.
+
+Between the Cathedral of Como and the corsair Medeghino there is but
+a slight link. Yet so extraordinary were the social circumstances of
+Renaissance Italy, that almost at every turn, on her seaboard, in her
+cities, from her hill-tops, we are compelled to blend our admiration
+for the loveliest and purest works of art amid the choicest scenes
+of nature with memories of execrable crimes and lawless characters.
+Sometimes, as at Perugia, the _nexus_ is but local. At others,
+one single figure, like that of Cellini, unites both points of view in
+a romance of unparalleled dramatic vividness. Or, again, beneath
+the vaults of the Certosa, near Pavia, a masterpiece of the serenest
+beauty carries our thoughts perforce back to the hideous cruelties
+and snake-like frauds of its despotic founder. This is the excuse
+for combining two such diverse subjects in one study.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_BERGAMO AND BARTOLOMMEO COLLEONI_
+
+
+From the new town of commerce to the old town of history upon the
+hill, the road is carried along a rampart lined, with horse-chestnut
+trees--clumps of massy foliage, and snowy pyramids of bloom, expanded
+in the rapture of a southern spring. Each pair of trees between their
+stems and arch of intermingling leaves includes a space of plain,
+checkered with cloud-shadows, melting blue and green in amethystine
+haze. To right and left the last spurs of the Alps descend, jutting
+like promontories, heaving like islands from the misty breadth below:
+and here and there are towers, half-lost in airy azure; and cities
+dwarfed to blots; and silvery lines where rivers flow; and distant,
+vapour-drowned, dim crests of Apennines. The city walls above us wave
+with snapdragons and iris among fig-trees sprouting from the riven
+stones. There are terraces over-rioted with pergolas of vine, and
+houses shooting forward into balconies and balustrades, from which a
+Romeo might launch himself at daybreak, warned by the lark's song.
+A sudden angle in the road is turned, and we pass from airspace and
+freedom into the old town, beneath walls of dark brown masonry, where
+wild valerians light their torches of red bloom in immemorial shade.
+Squalor and splendour live here side by side. Grand Renaissance
+portals grinning with Satyr masks are flanked by tawdry frescoes
+shamming stonework, or by doorways where the withered bush hangs out
+a promise of bad wine. The Cappella Colleoni is our destination, that
+masterpiece of the sculptor-architect's craft, with its variegated
+marbles,--rosy and white and creamy yellow and jet-black,--in
+patterns, basreliefs, pilasters, statuettes, encrusted on the fanciful
+domed shrine. Upon the facade are mingled, in the true Renaissance
+spirit of genial acceptance, motives Christian and Pagan with supreme
+impartiality. Medallions of emperors and gods alternate with virtues,
+angels and cupids in a maze of loveliest arabesque; and round the
+base of the building are told two stories--the one of Adam from his
+creation to his fall, the other of Hercules and his labours. Italian
+craftsmen of the _quattrocento_ were not averse to setting
+thus together, in one framework, the myths of our first parents and
+Alemena's son: partly perhaps because both subjects gave scope to
+the free treatment of the nude; but partly also, we may venture to
+surmise, because the heroism of Hellas counterbalanced the sin of
+Eden. Here then we see how Adam and Eve were made and tempted and
+expelled from Paradise and set to labour, how Cain killed Abel, and
+Lamech slew a man to his hurt, and Isaac was offered on the mountain.
+The tale of human sin and the promise of redemption are epitomised
+in twelve of the sixteen basreliefs. The remaining four show Hercules
+wrestling with Antaeus, taming the Nemean lion, extirpating the Hydra,
+and bending to his will the bull of Crete. Labour, appointed for a
+punishment to Adam, becomes a title to immortality for the hero.
+The dignity of man is reconquered by prowess for the Greek, as it is
+repurchased for the Christian by vicarious suffering. Many may think
+this interpretation of Amadeo's basreliefs far-fetched; yet, such as
+it is, it agrees with the spirit of Humanism, bent ever on harmonising
+the two great traditions of the past. Of the workmanship little need
+be said, except that it is wholly Lombard, distinguished from the
+similar work of Della Quercia at Bologna and Siena by a more imperfect
+feeling for composition, and a lack of monumental gravity, yet
+graceful, rich in motives, and instinct with a certain wayward
+_improvvisatore_ charm.
+
+This Chapel was built by the great Condottiere Bartolommeo Colleoni,
+to be the monument of his puissance even in the grave. It had been
+the Sacristy of S. Maria Maggiore, which, when the Consiglio della
+Misericordia refused it to him for his half-proud, half-pious purpose,
+he took and held by force. The structure, of costliest materials,
+reared by Gian Antonio Amadeo, cost him 50,000 golden florins. An
+equestrian statue of gilt wood, voted to him by the town of Bergamo,
+surmounts his monument inside the Chapel. This was the work of two
+German masters, called 'Sisto figlio di Enrico Syri da Norimberga'
+and 'Leonardo Tedesco.' The tomb itself is of marble, executed for the
+most part in a Lombard style resembling Amadeo's, but scarcely
+worthy of his genius. The whole effect is disappointing. Five figures
+representing Mars, Hercules, and three sons-in-law of Colleoni, who
+surround the sarcophagus of the buried general, are indeed almost
+grotesque. The angularity and crumpled draperies of the Milanese
+manner, when so exaggerated, produce an impression of caricature. Yet
+many subordinate details--a row of _putti_ in a _cinquecento_ frieze,
+for instance--and much of the low relief work--especially the
+Crucifixion with its characteristic episodes of the fainting Maries
+and the soldiers casting dice--are lovely in their unaffected
+Lombardism.
+
+There is another portrait of Colleoni in a round above the great door,
+executed with spirit, though in a _bravura_ style that curiously
+anticipates the decline of Italian sculpture. Gaunt, hollow-eyed,
+with prominent cheek bones and strong jaws, this animated, half-length
+statue of the hero bears the stamp of a good likeness; but when or by
+whom it was made, I do not know.
+
+Far more noteworthy than Colleoni's own monument is that of his
+daughter Medea. She died young in 1470, and her father caused her
+tomb, carved of Carrara marble, to be placed in the Dominican Church
+of Basella, which he had previously founded. It was not until 1842
+that this most precious masterpiece of Antonio Amadeo's skill was
+transferred to Bergamo. _Hic jacet Medea virgo._ Her hands are
+clasped across her breast. A robe of rich brocade, gathered to the
+waist and girdled, lies in simple folds upon the bier. Her throat,
+exceedingly long and slender, is circled with a string of pearls.
+Her face is not beautiful, for the features, especially the nose,
+are large and prominent; but it is pure and expressive of vivid
+individuality. The hair curls in crisp short clusters, and the ear,
+fine and shaped almost like a Faun's, reveals the scrupulous fidelity
+of the sculptor. Italian art has, in truth, nothing more exquisite
+than this still sleeping figure of the girl, who, when she lived, must
+certainly have been so rare of type and lovable in personality. If
+Busti's Lancinus Curtius be the portrait of a humanist, careworn with
+study, burdened by the laurel leaves that were so dry and dusty--if
+Gaston de Foix in the Brera, smiling at death and beautiful in
+the cropped bloom of youth, idealise the hero of romance--if
+Michelangelo's Penseroso translate in marble the dark broodings of a
+despot's soul--if Della Porta's Julia Farnese be the Roman courtesan
+magnificently throned in nonchalance at a Pope's footstool--if
+Verocchio's Colleoni on his horse at Venice impersonate the pomp
+and circumstance of scientific war--surely this Medea exhales the
+flower-like graces, the sweet sanctities of human life, that even in
+that turbid age were found among high-bred Italian ladies. Such power
+have mighty sculptors, even in our modern world, to make the mute
+stone speak in poems and clasp the soul's life of a century in some
+five or six transcendent forms.
+
+The Colleoni, or Coglioni, family were of considerable antiquity and
+well-authenticated nobility in the town of Bergamo. Two lions' heads
+conjoined formed one of their canting ensigns; another was borrowed
+from the vulgar meaning of their name. Many members of the house held
+important office during the three centuries preceding the birth of the
+famous general, Bartolommeo. He was born in the year 1400 at Solza, in
+the Bergamasque Contado. His father Paolo, or Puho as he was commonly
+called, was poor and exiled from the city, together with the rest of
+the Guelf nobles, by the Visconti. Being a man of daring spirit, and
+little inclined to languish in a foreign state as the dependent on
+some patron, Puho formed the bold design of seizing the Castle of
+Trezzo. This he achieved in 1405 by fraud, and afterwards held it as
+his own by force. Partly with the view of establishing himself more
+firmly in his acquired lordship, and partly out of family affection,
+Puho associated four of his first-cousins in the government of Trezzo.
+They repaid his kindness with an act of treason and cruelty, only too
+characteristic of those times in Italy. One day while he was playing
+at draughts in a room of the Castle, they assaulted him and killed
+him, seized his wife and the boy Bartolommeo, and flung them into
+prison. The murdered Puho had another son, Antonio, who escaped and
+took refuge with Giorgio Benzone, the tyrant of Crema. After a short
+time the Colleoni brothers found means to assassinate him also;
+therefore Bartolommeo alone, a child of whom no heed was taken,
+remained to be his father's avenger. He and his mother lived together
+in great indigence at Solza, until the lad felt strong enough to enter
+the service of one of the numerous petty Lombard princes, and to
+make himself if possible a captain of adventure. His name alone was a
+sufficient introduction, and the Duchy of Milan, dismembered upon the
+death of Gian Maria Visconti, was in such a state that all the minor
+despots were increasing their forces and preparing to defend by arms
+the fragments they had seized from the Visconti heritage. Bartolommeo
+therefore had no difficulty in recommending himself to Filippo
+d'Arcello, sometime general in the pay of the Milanese, but now the
+new lord of Piacenza. With this master he remained as page for two or
+three years, learning the use of arms, riding, and training himself
+in the physical exercises which were indispensable to a young Italian
+soldier. Meanwhile Filippo Maria Visconti reacquired his hereditary
+dominions; and at the age of twenty, Bartolommeo found it prudent
+to seek a patron stronger than d'Arcello. The two great Condottieri,
+Sforza Attendolo and Braccio, divided the military glories of Italy at
+this period; and any youth who sought to rise in his profession,
+had to enrol himself under the banners of the one or the other.
+Bartolommeo chose Braccio for his master, and was enrolled among his
+men as a simple trooper, or _ragazzo_, with no better prospects
+than he could make for himself by the help of his talents and his
+borrowed horse and armour. Braccio at this time was in Apulia,
+prosecuting the war of the Neapolitan Succession disputed between
+Alfonso of Aragon and Louis of Anjou under the weak sovereignty of
+Queen Joan. On which side of a quarrel a Condottiere fought mattered
+but little: so great was the confusion of Italian politics, and so
+complete was the egotism of these fraudful, violent, and treacherous
+party leaders. Yet it may be mentioned that Braccio had espoused
+Alfonso's cause. Bartolommeo Colleoni early distinguished himself
+among the ranks of the Bracceschi. But he soon perceived that he
+could better his position by deserting to another camp. Accordingly
+he offered his services to Jacopo Caldora, one of Joan's generals, and
+received from him a commission of twenty men-at-arms. It may here
+be parenthetically said that the rank and pay of an Italian captain
+varied with the number of the men he brought into the field. His title
+'Condottiere' was derived from the circumstance that he was said to
+have received a _Condotta di venti cavalli_, and so forth.
+Each _cavallo_ was equal to one mounted man-at-arms and two
+attendants, who were also called _ragazzi_. It was his business
+to provide the stipulated number of men, to keep them in good
+discipline, and to satisfy their just demands. Therefore an Italian
+army at this epoch consisted of numerous small armies varying in
+size, each held together by personal engagements to a captain, and all
+dependent on the will of a general-in-chief, who had made a bargain
+with some prince or republic for supplying a fixed contingent of
+fighting-men. The _Condottiere_ was in other words a contractor
+or _impresario_, undertaking to do a certain piece of work for a
+certain price, and to furnish the requisite forces for the business
+in good working order. It will be readily seen upon this system how
+important were the personal qualities of the captain, and what great
+advantages those Condottieri had, who, like the petty princes
+of Romagna and the March, the Montefeltri, Ordelaffi, Malatesti,
+Manfredi, Orsini, and Vitelli, could rely upon a race of hardy vassals
+for their recruits.
+
+It is not necessary to follow Colleoni's fortunes in the Regno, at
+Aquila, Ancona, and Bologna. He continued in the service of Caldora,
+who was now General of the Church, and had his _Condotta_
+gradually increased. Meanwhile his cousins, the murderers of his
+father, began to dread his rising power, and determined, if possible,
+to ruin him. He was not a man to be easily assassinated; so they sent
+a hired ruffian to Caldora's camp to say that Bartolommeo had taken
+his name by fraud, and that he was himself the real son of Puho
+Colleoni. Bartolommeo defied the liar to a duel; and this would have
+taken place before the army, had not two witnesses appeared, who knew
+the fathers of both Colleoni and the _bravo_, and who gave such
+evidence that the captains of the army were enabled to ascertain the
+truth. The impostor was stripped and drummed out of the camp.
+
+At the conclusion of a peace between the Pope and the Bolognese,
+Bartolommeo found himself without occupation. He now offered himself
+to the Venetians, and began to fight again under the great Carmagnola
+against Filippo Visconti. His engagement allowed him forty men,
+which, after the judicial murder of Carmagnola at Venice in 1432, were
+increased to eighty. Erasmo da Narni, better known as Gattamelata, was
+now his general-in-chief--a man who had risen from the lowest fortunes
+to one of the most splendid military positions in Italy. Colleoni
+spent the next years of his life, until 1443, in Lombardy, manoeuvring
+against Il Piccinino, and gradually rising in the Venetian service,
+until his Condotta reached the number of 800 men. Upon Gattamelata's
+death at Padua in 1440, Colleoni became the most important of the
+generals who had fought with Caldora in the March. The lordships of
+Romano in the Bergamasque and of Covo and Antegnate in the Cremonese
+had been assigned to him; and he was in a position to make independent
+engagements with princes. What distinguished him as a general, was a
+combination of caution with audacity. He united the brilliant system
+of his master Braccio with the more prudent tactics of the Sforzeschi;
+and thus, though he often surprised his foes by daring stratagems
+and vigorous assaults, he rarely met with any serious check. He was a
+captain who could be relied upon for boldly seizing an advantage,
+no less than for using a success with discretion. Moreover he had
+acquired an almost unique reputation for honesty in dealing with his
+masters, and for justice combined with humane indulgence to his men.
+His company was popular, and he could always bring capital troops into
+the field.
+
+In the year 1443 Colleoni quitted the Venetian service on account of a
+quarrel with Gherardo Dandolo, the Provoditore of the Republic. He
+now took a commission from Filippo Maria Visconti, who received him at
+Milan with great honour, bestowed on him the Castello Adorno at Pavia,
+and sent him into the March of Ancona upon a military expedition. Of
+all Italian tyrants this Visconti was the most difficult to serve.
+Constitutionally timid, surrounded with a crowd of spies and base
+informers, shrinking from the sight of men in the recesses of his
+palace, and controlling the complicated affairs of his Duchy by means
+of correspondents and intelligencers, this last scion of the Milanese
+despots lived like a spider in an inscrutable network of suspicion
+and intrigue. His policy was one of endless plot and counterplot. He
+trusted no man; his servants were paid to act as spies on one another;
+his bodyguard consisted of mutually hostile mercenaries; his captains
+in the field were watched and thwarted by commissioners appointed to
+check them at the point of successful ambition or magnificent victory.
+The historian has a hard task when he tries to fathom the Visconti's
+schemes, or to understand his motives. Half the Duke's time seems to
+have been spent in unravelling the webs that he had woven, in undoing
+his own work, and weakening the hands of his chosen ministers.
+Conscious that his power was artificial, that the least breath might
+blow him back into the nothingness from which he had arisen on the
+wrecks of his father's tyranny, he dreaded the personal eminence of
+his generals above all things. His chief object was to establish a
+system of checks, by means of which no one whom he employed should
+at any moment be great enough to threaten him. The most formidable
+of these military adventurers, Francesco Sforza, had been secured by
+marriage with Bianca Maria Visconti, his master's only daughter, in
+1441; but the Duke did not even trust his son-in-law. The last six
+years of his life were spent in scheming to deprive Sforza of his
+lordships; and the war in the March, on which he employed Colleoni,
+had the object of ruining the principality acquired by this daring
+captain from Pope Eugenius IV. in 1443.
+
+Colleoni was by no means deficient in those foxlike qualities which
+were necessary to save the lion from the toils spread for him by
+Italian intriguers. He had already shown that he knew how to push his
+own interests, by changing sides and taking service with the highest
+bidder, as occasion prompted. Nor, though his character for probity
+and loyalty stood exceptionally high among the men of his profession,
+was he the slave to any questionable claims of honour or of duty. In
+that age of confused politics and extinguished patriotism, there
+was not indeed much scope for scrupulous honesty. But Filippo Maria
+Visconti proved more than a match for him in craft. While Colleoni
+was engaged in pacifying the revolted population of Bologna, the Duke
+yielded to the suggestion of his parasites at Milan, who whispered
+that the general was becoming dangerously powerful. He recalled him,
+and threw him without trial into the dungeons of the Forni at Monza.
+Here Colleoni remained a prisoner more than a year, until the
+Duke's death in 1447, when he made his escape, and profited by the
+disturbance of the Duchy to reacquire his lordships in the Bergamasque
+territory. The true motive for his imprisonment remains still buried
+in obscure conjecture. Probably it was not even known to the Visconti,
+who acted on this, as on so many other occasions, by a mere spasm of
+suspicious jealousy, for which he could have given no account.
+
+From the year 1447 to the year 1455, it is difficult to follow
+Colleoni's movements, or to trace his policy. First, we find
+him employed by the Milanese Republic, during its brief space of
+independence; then he is engaged by the Venetians, with a commission
+for 1500 horse; next, he is in the service of Francesco Sforza; once
+more in that of the Venetians, and yet again in that of the Duke of
+Milan. His biographer relates with pride that, during this period,
+he was three times successful against French troops in Piedmont and
+Lombardy. It appears that he made short engagements, and changed his
+paymasters according to convenience. But all this time he rose in
+personal importance, acquired fresh lordships in the Bergamasque, and
+accumulated wealth. He reached the highest point of his prosperity
+in 1455, when the Republic of S. Mark elected him General-in-Chief of
+their armies, with the fullest powers, and with a stipend of 100,000
+florins. For nearly twenty-one years, until the day of his death, in
+1475, Colleoni held this honourable and lucrative office. In his will
+he charged the Signory of Venice that they should never again commit
+into the hands of a single captain such unlimited control over their
+military resources. It was indeed no slight tribute to Colleoni's
+reputation for integrity, that the jealous Republic, which had
+signified its sense of Carmagnola's untrustworthiness by capital
+punishment, should have left him so long in the undisturbed disposal
+of their army. The Standard and the Baton of S. Mark were conveyed to
+Colleoni by two ambassadors, and presented to him at Brescia on June
+24, 1455. Three years later he made a triumphal entry into Venice, and
+received the same ensigns of military authority from the hands of the
+new Doge, Pasquale Malipiero. On this occasion his staff consisted of
+some two hundred officers, splendidly armed, and followed by a train
+of serving-men. Noblemen from Bergamo, Brescia, and other cities of
+the Venetian territory, swelled the cortege. When they embarked on the
+lagoons, they found the water covered with boats and gondolas, bearing
+the population of Venice in gala attire, to greet the illustrious
+guest with instruments of music. Three great galleys of the Republic,
+called Bucentaurs, issued from the crowd of smaller craft. On the
+first was the Doge in his state robes, attended by the government in
+office, or the Signoria of S. Mark. On the second were members of the
+Senate and minor magistrates. The third carried the ambassadors of
+foreign powers. Colleoni was received into the first state-galley,
+and placed by the side of the Doge. The oarsmen soon cleared the
+space between the land and Venice, passed the small canals, and
+swept majestically up the Canalozzo among the plaudits of the crowds
+assembled on both sides to cheer their General. Thus they reached the
+piazzetta, where Colleoni alighted between the two great pillars,
+and, conducted by the Doge in person, walked to the Church of S.
+Mark. Here, after Mass had been said, and a sermon had been preached,
+kneeling before the high altar he received the truncheon from the
+Doge's hands. The words of his commission ran as follows:--
+
+'By authority and decree of this most excellent City of Venice, of
+us the Prince, and of the Senate, you are to be Commander and Captain
+General of all our forces and armaments on terra firma. Take from
+our hands this truncheon, with good augury and fortune, as sign and
+warrant of your power. Be it your care and effort, with dignity and
+splendour to maintain and to defend the Majesty, the Loyalty, and the
+Principles of this Empire. Neither provoking, not yet provoked, unless
+at our command, shall you break into open warfare with our enemies.
+Free jurisdiction and lordship over each one of our soldiers, except
+in cases of treason, we hereby commit to you.'
+
+After the ceremony of his reception, Colleoni was conducted with
+no less pomp to his lodgings, and the next ten days were spent in
+festivities of all sorts.
+
+The commandership-in-chief of the Venetian forces was perhaps the
+highest military post in Italy. It placed Colleoni on the pinnacle
+of his profession, and made his camp the favourite school of young
+soldiers. Among his pupils or lieutenants we read of Ercole d'Este,
+the future Duke of Ferrara; Alessandro Sforza, lord of Pesaro;
+Boniface, Marquis of Montferrat; Cicco and Pino Ordelaffi, princes
+of Forli; Astorre Manfredi, the lord of Faenza; three Counts of
+Mirandola; two princes of Carpi; Deifobo, the Count of Anguillara;
+Giovanni Antonio Caldora, lord of Jesi in the March; and many others
+of less name. Honours came thick upon him. When one of the many
+ineffectual leagues against the infidel was formed in 1468, during the
+pontificate of Paul II., he was named Captain-General for the Crusade.
+Pius II. designed him for the leader of the expedition he had planned
+against the impious and savage despot, Sigismondo Malatesta. King Rene
+of Anjou, by special patent, authorised him to bear his name and
+arms, and made him a member of his family. The Duke of Burgundy, by
+a similar heraldic fiction, conferred upon him his name and armorial
+bearings. This will explain why Colleoni is often styled 'di Andegavia
+e Borgogna.' In the case of Rene, the honour was but a barren show.
+But the patent of Charles the Bold had more significance. In 1473 he
+entertained the project of employing the great Italian General against
+his Swiss foes; nor does it seem reasonable to reject a statement made
+by Colleoni's biographer, to the effect that a secret compact had been
+drawn up between him and the Duke of Burgundy, for the conquest and
+partition of the Duchy of Milan. The Venetians, in whose service
+Colleoni still remained, when they became aware of this project, met
+it with peaceful but irresistible opposition.
+
+Colleoni had been engaged continually since his earliest boyhood in
+the trade of war. It was not therefore possible that he should have
+gained a great degree of literary culture. Yet the fashion of the
+times made it necessary that a man in his position should seek the
+society of scholars. Accordingly his court and camp were crowded with
+students, in whose wordy disputations he is said to have delighted. It
+will be remembered that his contemporaries, Alfonso the Magnanimous,
+Francesco Sforza, Federigo of Urbino, and Sigismondo Pandolfo
+Malatesta, piqued themselves at least as much upon their patronage of
+letters, as upon their prowess in the field.
+
+Colleoni's court, like that of Urbino, was a model of good manners. As
+became a soldier, he was temperate in food and moderate in slumber. It
+was recorded of him that he had never sat more than one hour at meat
+in his own house, and that he never overslept the sunrise. After
+dinner he would converse with his friends, using commonly his native
+dialect of Bergamo, and entertaining the company now with stories of
+adventure, and now with pithy sayings. In another essential point he
+resembled his illustrious contemporary, the Duke of Urbino; for he was
+sincerely pious in an age which, however it preserved the decencies
+of ceremonial religion, was profoundly corrupt at heart. His principal
+lordships in the Bergamasque territory owed to his munificence their
+fairest churches and charitable institutions. At Martinengo, for
+example, he rebuilt and re-endowed two monasteries, the one dedicated
+to S. Chiara, the other to S. Francis. In Bergamo itself he founded an
+establishment named' La Pieta,' for the good purpose of dowering and
+marrying poor girls. This house he endowed with a yearly income of
+3000 ducats. The Sulphur baths of Trescorio, at some distance from the
+city, were improved and opened to poor patients by a hospital which
+he provided. At Rumano he raised a church to S. Peter, and erected
+buildings of public utility, which on his death he bequeathed to
+the society of the Misericordia in that town. All the places of his
+jurisdiction owed to him such benefits as good water, new walls, and
+irrigation works. In addition to these munificent foundations must
+be mentioned the Basella, or Monastery of Dominican friars, which he
+established not far from Bergamo, upon the river Serio, in memory of
+his beloved daughter Medea. Last, not least, was the Chapel of S. John
+the Baptist, attached to the Church of S. Maria Maggiore, which he
+endowed with fitting maintenance for two priests and deacons.
+
+The one defect acknowledged by his biographer was his partiality
+for women. Early in life he married Tisbe, of the noble house of the
+Brescian Martinenghi, who bore him one daughter, Caterina, wedded to
+Gasparre Martinengo. Two illegitimate daughters, Ursina and Isotta,
+were recognised and treated by him as legitimate. The first he gave in
+marriage to Gherardo Martinengo, and the second to Jacopo of the
+same family. Two other natural children, Doratina and Ricardona, were
+mentioned in his will: he left them four thousand ducats a piece for
+dowry. Medea, the child of his old age (for she was born to him when
+he was sixty), died before her father, and was buried, as we have
+seen, in the Chapel of Basella.
+
+Throughout his life he was distinguished for great physical strength
+and agility. When he first joined the troop of Braccio, he could race,
+with his corselet on, against the swiftest runner of the army; and
+when he was stripped, few horses could beat him in speed. Far on into
+old age he was in the habit of taking long walks every morning for the
+sake of exercise, and delighted in feats of arms and jousting matches.
+'He was tall, straight, and full of flesh, well proportioned, and
+excellently made in all his limbs. His complexion inclined somewhat to
+brown, but was coloured with sanguine and lively carnation. His eyes
+were black; in look and sharpness of light, they were vivid, piercing,
+and terrible. The outlines of his nose and all his countenance
+expressed a certain manly nobleness, combined with goodness and
+prudence.' Such is the portrait drawn of Colleoni by his biographer;
+and it well accords with the famous bronze statue of the general at
+Venice.
+
+Colleoni lived with a magnificence that suited his rank. His favourite
+place of abode was Malpaga, a castle built by him at the distance of
+about an hour's drive from Bergamo. The place is worth a visit, though
+its courts and gates and galleries have now been turned into a monster
+farm, and the southern rooms, where Colleoni entertained his guests,
+are given over to the silkworms. Half a dozen families, employed upon
+a vast estate of the Martinengo family, occupy the still substantial
+house and stables. The moat is planted with mulberry-trees; the upper
+rooms are used as granaries for golden maize; cows, pigs, and horses
+litter in the spacious yard. Yet the walls of the inner court and of
+the ancient state rooms are brilliant with frescoes, executed by some
+good Venetian hand, which represent the chief events of Colleoni's
+life--his battles, his reception by the Signory of Venice,
+his tournaments and hawking parties, and the great series of
+entertainments with which he welcomed Christiern of Denmark. This king
+had made his pilgrimage to Rome and was returning westward, when the
+fame of Colleoni and his princely state at Malpaga induced him to turn
+aside and spend some days as the general's guest. In order to do
+him honour, Colleoni left his castle at the king's disposal and
+established himself with all his staff and servants in a camp at some
+distance from Malpaga. The camp was duly furnished with tents and
+trenches, stockades, artillery, and all the other furniture of war. On
+the king's approach, Colleoni issued with trumpets blowing and banners
+flying to greet his guest, gratifying him thus with a spectacle of the
+pomp and circumstance of war as carried on in Italy. The visit
+was further enlivened by sham fights, feats of arms, and trials of
+strength. When it ended, Colleoni presented the king with one of
+his own suits of armour, and gave to each of his servants a complete
+livery of red and white, his colours. Among the frescoes at Malpaga
+none are more interesting, and none, thanks to the silkworms rather
+than to any other cause, are fortunately in a better state of
+preservation, than those which represent this episode in the history
+of the Castle.
+
+Colleoni died in the year 1475, at the age of seventy-five. Since he
+left no male representative, he constituted the Republic of S. Mark
+his heir-in-chief, after properly providing for his daughters and his
+numerous foundations. The Venetians received under this testament a
+sum of 100,000 ducats, together with all arrears of pay due to him,
+and 10,000 ducats owed him by the Duke of Ferrara. It set forth the
+testator's intention that this money should be employed in defence of
+the Christian faith against the Turk. One condition was attached to
+the bequest. The legatees were to erect a statue to Colleoni on the
+Piazza of S. Mark. This, however, involved some difficulty; for the
+proud Republic had never accorded a similar honour, nor did they
+choose to encumber their splendid square with a monument. They evaded
+the condition by assigning the Campo in front of the Scuola di S.
+Marco, where also stands the Church of S. Zanipolo, to the purpose.
+Here accordingly the finest bronze equestrian statue in Italy, if we
+except the Marcus Aurelius of the Capitol, was reared upon its marble
+pedestal by Andrea Verocchio and Alessandro Leopardi.
+
+Colleoni's liberal expenditure of wealth found its reward in the
+immortality conferred by art. While the names of Braccio, his master
+in the art of war, and of Piccinino, his great adversary, are familiar
+to few but professed students, no one who has visited either Bergamo
+or Venice can fail to have learned something about the founder of the
+Chapel of S. John and the original of Leopardi's bronze. The annals
+of sculpture assign to Verocchio, of Florence, the principal share in
+this statue: but Verocchio died before it was cast; and even granting
+that he designed the model, its execution must be attributed to his
+collaborator, the Venetian Leopardi. For my own part, I am loth to
+admit that the chief credit of this masterpiece belongs to a man whose
+undisputed work at Florence shows but little of its living spirit and
+splendour of suggested motion. That the Tuscan science of Verocchio
+secured conscientious modelling for man and horse may be assumed; but
+I am fain to believe that the concentrated fire which animates them
+both is due in no small measure to the handling of his northern
+fellow-craftsman.
+
+While immersed in the dreary records of crimes, treasons, cruelties,
+and base ambitions, which constitute the bulk of fifteenth-century
+Italian history, it is refreshing to meet with a character so frank
+and manly, so simply pious and comparatively free from stain, as
+Colleoni. The only general of his day who can bear comparison with
+him for purity of public life and decency in conduct, was Federigo di
+Montefeltro. Even here, the comparison redounds to Colleoni's credit;
+for he, unlike the Duke of Urbino, rose to eminence by his own
+exertion in a profession fraught with peril to men of ambition and
+energy. Federigo started with a principality sufficient to satisfy
+his just desires for power. Nothing but his own sense of right and
+prudence restrained Colleoni upon the path which brought Francesco
+Sforza to a duchy by dishonourable dealings, and Carmagnola to the
+scaffold by questionable practice against his masters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_CREMA AND THE CRUCIFIX_
+
+
+Few people visit Crema. It is a little country town of Lombardy,
+between Cremona and Treviglio, with no historic memories but very
+misty ones belonging to the days of the Visconti dynasty. On every
+side around the city walls stretch smiling vineyards and rich meadows,
+where the elms are married to the mulberry-trees by long festoons of
+foliage hiding purple grapes, where the sunflowers droop their heavy
+golden heads among tall stems of millet and gigantic maize, and here
+and there a rice-crop ripens in the marshy loam. In vintage time
+the carts, drawn by their white oxen, come creaking townward in
+the evening, laden with blue bunches. Down the long straight roads,
+between rows of poplars, they creep on; and on the shafts beneath
+the pyramid of fruit lie contadini stained with lees of wine. Far off
+across that 'waveless sea' of Lombardy, which has been the battlefield
+of countless generations, rise the dim grey Alps, or else pearled
+domes of thunder-clouds in gleaming masses over some tall solitary
+tower. Such backgrounds, full of peace, suggestive of almost infinite
+distance, and dignified with colours of incomparable depth and
+breadth, the Venetian painters loved. No landscape in Europe is more
+wonderful than this--thrice wonderful in the vastness of its arching
+heavens, in the stillness of its level plain, and in the bulwark of
+huge crested mountains, reared afar like bastions against the northern
+sky. The little town is all alive in this September weather. At every
+corner of the street, under rustling abeles and thick-foliaged planes,
+at the doors of palaces and in the yards of inns, men, naked from the
+thighs downward, are treading the red must into vats and tuns; while
+their mild-eyed oxen lie beneath them in the road, peaceably chewing
+the cud between one journey to the vineyard and another. It must not
+be imagined that the scene of Alma Tadema's 'Roman Vintage,' or what
+we fondly picture to our fancy of the Athenian Lenaea, is repeated in
+the streets of Crema. This modern treading of the wine-press is a
+very prosaic affair. The town reeks with a sour smell of old casks and
+crushed grape-skins, and the men and women at work bear no resemblance
+whatever to Bacchus and his crew. Yet even as it is, the Lombard
+vintage, beneath floods of sunlight and a pure blue sky, is beautiful;
+and he who would fain make acquaintance with Crema, should time his
+entry into the old town, if possible, on some still golden afternoon
+of autumn. It is then, if ever, that he will learn to love the glowing
+brickwork of its churches and the quaint terra-cotta traceries that
+form its chief artistic charm.
+
+How the unique brick architecture of the Lombard cities took its
+origin--whether from the precepts of Byzantine aliens in the earliest
+middle ages, or from the native instincts of a mixed race composed of
+Gallic, Ligurian, Roman, and Teutonic elements, under the leadership
+of Longobardic rulers--is a question for antiquarians to decide.
+There can, however, be no doubt that the monuments of the Lombard
+style, as they now exist, are no less genuinely local, no less
+characteristic of the country they adorn, no less indigenous to the
+soil they sprang from, than the Attic colonnades of Mnesicles and
+Ictinus. What the marble quarries of Pentelicus were to the Athenian
+builders, the clay beneath their feet was to those Lombard craftsmen.
+From it they fashioned structures as enduring, towers as majestic, and
+cathedral aisles as solemn, as were ever wrought from chiselled stone.
+There is a true sympathy between those buildings and the Lombard
+landscape, which by itself might suffice to prove the originality
+of their almost unknown architects. The rich colour of the baked
+clay--finely modulated from a purplish red, through russet, crimson,
+pink, and orange, to pale yellow and dull grey--harmonises with the
+brilliant greenery of Lombard vegetation and with the deep azure
+of the distant Alpine range. Reared aloft above the flat expanse of
+plain, those square _torroni_, tapering into octagons and
+crowned with slender cones, break the long sweeping lines and
+infinite horizons with a contrast that affords relief, and yields a
+resting-place to tired eyes; while, far away, seen haply from some
+bridge above Ticino, or some high-built palace loggia, they gleam like
+columns of pale rosy fire against the front of mustering storm-clouds
+blue with rain. In that happy orchard of Italy, a pergola of vines
+in leaf, a clump of green acacias, and a campanile soaring above its
+church roof, brought into chance combination with the reaches of the
+plain and the dim mountain range, make up a picture eloquent in its
+suggestive beauty.
+
+Those ancient builders wrought cunningly with their material. The
+bricks are fashioned and fixed to last for all time. Exposed to the
+icy winds of a Lombard winter, to the fierce fire of a Lombard summer,
+and to the moist vapours of a Lombard autumn; neglected by unheeding
+generations; with flowers clustering in their crannies, and birds
+nesting in their eaves, and mason-bees filling the delicate network of
+their traceries--they still present angles as sharp as when they were
+but finished, and joints as nice as when the mortar dried in the first
+months of their building. This immunity from age and injury they owe
+partly to the imperishable nature of baked clay; partly to the care of
+the artists who selected and mingled the right sorts of earth, burned
+them with scrupulous attention, and fitted them together with a
+patience born of loving service. Each member of the edifice was
+designed with a view to its ultimate place. The proper curve was
+ascertained for cylindrical columns and for rounded arches. Larger
+bricks were moulded for the supporting walls, and lesser pieces were
+adapted to the airy vaults and lanterns. In the brickfield and the
+kiln the whole church was planned and wrought out in its details,
+before the hands that made a unity of all these scattered elements
+were set to the work of raising it in air. When they came to put the
+puzzle together, they laid each brick against its neighbour, filling
+up the almost imperceptible interstices with liquid cement composed
+of quicklime and fine sand in water. After five centuries the seams
+between the layers of bricks that make the bell-tower of S. Gottardo
+at Milan, yield no point of vantage to the penknife or the chisel.
+
+Nor was it in their welding of the bricks alone that these craftsmen
+showed their science. They were wont to enrich the surface with
+marble, sparingly but effectively employed--as in those slender
+detached columns, which add such beauty to the octagon of S. Gottardo,
+or in the string-courses of strange beasts and reptiles that adorn the
+church fronts of Pavia. They called to their aid the _mandorlato_
+of Verona, supporting their porch pillars on the backs of couchant
+lions, inserting polished slabs on their facades, and building huge
+sarcophagi into their cloister alleys. Between terra-cotta and this
+marble of Verona there exists a deep and delicate affinity. It took
+the name of _mandorlato_, I suppose, from a resemblance to almond
+blossoms. But it is far from having the simple beauty of a single hue.
+Like all noble veined stones, it passes by a series of modulations and
+gradations through a gamut of associated rather than contrasted tints.
+Not the pink of the almond blossom only, but the creamy whiteness of
+the almond kernel, and the dull yellow of the almond nut may be found
+in it; and yet these colours are so blent and blurred to all-pervading
+mellowness, that nowhere is there any shock of contrast or violence of
+a preponderating tone. The veins which run in labyrinths of crossing,
+curving, and contorted lines all over its smooth surface add, no
+doubt, to this effect of unity. The polish, lastly, which it takes,
+makes the _mandorlato_ shine like a smile upon the sober face
+of the brickwork: for, serviceable as terra-cotta is for nearly all
+artistic purposes, it cannot reflect light or gain the illumination
+which comes from surface brightness.
+
+What the clay can do almost better than any crystalline material, may
+be seen in the mouldings so characteristic of Lombard architecture.
+Geometrical patterns of the rarest and most fanciful device; scrolls
+of acanthus foliage, and traceries of tendrils; Cupids swinging in
+festoons of vines; angels joining hands in dance, with fluttering
+skirts and windy hair, and mouths that symbol singing; grave faces of
+old men and beautiful profiles of maidens leaning from medallions;
+wide-winged genii filling the spandrils of cloister arches, and
+cherubs clustered in the rondure of rose-windows--ornaments like
+these, wrought from the plastic clay, and adapted with true taste to
+the requirements of the architecture, are familiar to every one who
+has studied the church front of Crema, the cloisters of the Certosa,
+the courts of the Ospedale Maggiore at Milan, or the public palace of
+Cremona.
+
+If the _mandorlato_ gives a smile to those majestic Lombard
+buildings, the terra-cotta decorations add the element of life
+and movement. The thought of the artist in its first freshness
+and vivacity is felt in them. They have all the spontaneity of
+improvisation, the seductive melody of unpremeditated music.
+Moulding the supple earth with 'hand obedient to the brain,' the
+_plasticatore_ has impressed his most fugitive dreams of beauty
+on it without effort; and what it cost him but a few fatigueless
+hours to fashion, the steady heat of the furnace has gifted with
+imperishable life. Such work, no doubt, has the defects of its
+qualities. As there are few difficulties to overcome, it suffers
+from a fatal facility--_nec pluteum coedit nec demorsos sapit
+ungues_. It is therefore apt to be unequal, touching at times the
+highest point of inspiration, as in the angels of Guccio at Perugia,
+and sinking not unfrequently into the commonplace of easygoing
+triviality, as in the common floral traceries of Milanese windows.
+But it is never laboured, never pedantic, never dulled by the painful
+effort to subdue an obstinate material to the artist's will. If marble
+is required to develop the strength of the few supreme sculptors,
+terra-cotta saves intact the fancies of a crowd of lesser men.
+
+When we reflect that all the force, solemnity, and beauty of the
+Lombard buildings was evoked from clay, we learn from them this
+lesson: that the thought of man needs neither precious material nor
+yet stubborn substance for the production of enduring masterpieces.
+The red earth was enough for God when He made man in His own image;
+and mud dried in the sun suffices for the artist, who is next to God
+in his creative faculty--since _non merita nome di creatore se
+non Iddio ed il poeta_. After all, what is more everlasting than
+terra-cotta? The hobnails of the boys who ran across the brickfields
+in the Roman town of Silchester, may still be seen, mingled with
+the impress of the feet of dogs and hoofs of goats, in the tiles
+discovered there. Such traces might serve as a metaphor for the
+footfall of artistic genius, when the form-giver has stamped his
+thought upon the moist clay, and fire has made that imprint permanent.
+
+Of all these Lombard edifices, none is more beautiful than the
+Cathedral of Crema, with its delicately finished campanile, built
+of choicely tinted yellow bricks, and ending in a lantern of the
+gracefullest, most airily capricious fancy. This bell-tower does not
+display the gigantic force of Cremona's famous torrazzo, shooting
+396 feet into blue ether from the city square; nor can it rival the
+octagon of S. Gottardo for warmth of hue. Yet it has a character of
+elegance, combined with boldness of invention, that justifies the
+citizens of Crema in their pride. It is unique; and he who has not
+seen it does not know the whole resources of the Lombard style. The
+facade of the Cathedral displays that peculiar blending of Byzantine
+or Romanesque round arches with Gothic details in the windows,
+and with the acute angle of the central pitch, which forms the
+characteristic quality of the late _trecento_ Lombard manner. In
+its combination of purity and richness it corresponds to the best age
+of decorated work in English Gothic. What, however, strikes a Northern
+observer is the strange detachment of this elaborate facade from the
+main structure of the church. Like a frontispiece cut out of cardboard
+and pierced with ornamental openings, it shoots far above the low
+roof of the nave; so that at night the moon, rising above the southern
+aisle, shines through its topmost window, and casts the shadow of
+its tracery upon the pavement of the square. This is a constructive
+blemish to which the Italians in no part of the peninsula were
+sensitive. They seem to have regarded their church fronts as
+independent of the edifice, capable of separate treatment, and worthy
+in themselves of being made the subject of decorative skill.
+
+In the so-called Santuario of Crema--a circular church dedicated to
+S. Maria della Croce, outside the walls--the Lombard style has been
+adapted to the manner of the Mid-Renaissance. This church was raised
+in the last years of the fifteenth century by Gian Battista Battagli,
+an architect of Lodi, who followed the pure rules of taste, bequeathed
+to North Italian builders by Bramante. The beauty of the edifice
+is due entirely to its tranquil dignity and harmony of parts, the
+lightness of its circling loggia, and the just proportion maintained
+between the central structure and the four projecting porticoes. The
+sharp angles of these vestibules afford a contrast to the simplicity
+of the main building, while their clustered cupolas assist the general
+effect of roundness aimed at by the architect. Such a church as
+this proves how much may be achieved by the happy distribution of
+architectural masses. It was the triumph of the best Renaissance style
+to attain lucidity of treatment, and to produce beauty by geometrical
+proportion. When Leo Battista Alberti complained to his friend, Matteo
+di Bastia, that a slight alteration of the curves in his design for
+S. Francesco at Rimini would 'spoil his music,' _cio che tu muti
+discorda tutta quella musica_, this is what he meant. The melody
+of lines and the harmony of parts made a symphony to his eyes no less
+agreeable than a concert of tuned lutes and voices to his ears; and to
+this concord he was so sensitive that any deviation was a discord.
+
+After visiting the churches of Crema and sauntering about the streets
+awhile, there is nothing left to do but to take refuge in the old
+Albergo del Pozzo. This is one of those queer Italian inns, which
+carry you away at once into a scene of Goldoni. It is part of some
+palace, where nobles housed their _bravi_ in the sixteenth
+century, and which the lesser people of to-day have turned into a
+dozen habitations. Its great stone staircase leads to a saloon upon
+which the various bedchambers open; and round its courtyard runs an
+open balcony, and from the court grows up a fig-tree poking ripe fruit
+against a bedroom window. Oleanders in tubs and red salvias in pots,
+and kitchen herbs in boxes, flourish on the pavement, where the ostler
+comes to wash his carriages, and where the barber shaves the poodle of
+the house. Visitors to the Albergo del Pozzo are invariably asked if
+they have seen the Museo; and when they answer in the negative, they
+are conducted with some ceremony to a large room on the ground-floor
+of the inn, looking out upon the courtyard and the fig-tree. It was
+here that I gained the acquaintance of Signor Folcioni, and became
+possessor of an object that has made the memory of Crema doubly
+interesting to me ever since.
+
+When we entered the Museo, we found a little old man, gentle, grave,
+and unobtrusive, varnishing the ugly portrait of some Signor of the
+_cinquecento_. Round the walls hung pictures, of mediocre value,
+in dingy frames; but all of them bore sounding titles. Titians,
+Lionardos, Guido Renis, and Luinis, looked down and waited for a
+purchaser. In truth this museum was a _bric-a-brac_ shop of a
+sort that is common enough in Italy, where treasures of old lace,
+glass, armour, furniture, and tapestry, may still be met with. Signor
+Folcioni began by pointing out the merits of his pictures; and after
+making due allowance for his zeal as amateur and dealer, it was
+possible to join in some of his eulogiums. A would-be Titian, for
+instance, bought in Verona from a noble house in ruins, showed
+Venetian wealth of colour in its gemmy greens and lucid crimsons
+shining from a background deep and glowing. Then he led us to a
+walnut-wood bureau of late Renaissance work, profusely carved with
+nymphs and Cupids, and armed men, among festoons of fruits embossed
+in high relief. Deeply drilled worm-holes set a seal of antiquity upon
+the blooming faces and luxuriant garlandslike the touch of Time who
+'delves the parallels in beauty's brow.' On the shelves of an ebony
+cabinet close by he showed us a row of cups cut out of rock-crystal
+and mounted in gilt silver, with heaps of engraved gems, old
+snuff-boxes, coins, medals, sprays of coral, and all the indescribable
+lumber that one age flings aside as worthless for the next to pick
+up from the dust-heap and regard as precious. Surely the genius of
+culture in our century might be compared to a chiffonnier of Paris,
+who, when the night has fallen, goes into the streets, bag on back
+and lantern in hand, to rake up the waifs and strays a day of whirling
+life has left him.
+
+The next curiosity was an ivory carving of S. Anthony preaching to the
+fishes, so fine and small you held it on your palm, and used a lens
+to look at it. Yet there stood the Santo gesticulating, and there
+were the fishes in rows--the little fishes first, and then the
+middle-sized, and last of all the great big fishes almost out at sea,
+with their heads above the water and their mouths wide open, just as
+the _Fioretti di San Francesco_ describes them. After this
+came some original drawings of doubtful interest, and then a case of
+fifty-two _nielli_. These were of unquestionable value; for has
+not Cicognara engraved them on a page of his classic monograph?
+The thin silver plates, over which once passed the burin of Maso
+Finiguerra, cutting lines finer than hairs, and setting here a shadow
+in dull acid-eaten grey, and there a high light of exquisite polish,
+were far more delicate than any proofs impressed from them. These
+frail masterpieces of Florentine art--the first beginnings of line
+engraving--we held in our hands while Signor Folcioni read out
+Cicognara's commentary in a slow impressive voice, breaking off now
+and then to point at the originals before us.
+
+The sun had set, and the room was almost dark, when he laid his book
+down, and said: 'I have not much left to show--yet stay! Here are
+still some little things of interest.' He then opened the door
+into his bedroom, and took down from a nail above his bed a
+wooden Crucifix. Few things have fascinated me more than this
+Crucifix--produced without parade, half negligently, from the dregs of
+his collection by a dealer in old curiosities at Crema. The cross was,
+or is--for it is lying on the table now before me--twenty-one inches
+in length, made of strong wood, covered with coarse yellow parchment,
+and shod at the four ends with brass. The Christ is roughly hewn in
+reddish wood, coloured scarlet, where the blood streams from the five
+wounds. Over the head an oval medallion, nailed into the cross, serves
+as framework to a miniature of the Madonna, softly smiling with a
+Correggiesque simper. The whole Crucifix is not a work of art, but
+such as may be found in every convent. Its date cannot be earlier than
+the beginning of the eighteenth century. As I held it in my hand, I
+thought--perhaps this has been carried to the bedside of the sick
+and dying; preachers have brandished it from the pulpit over
+conscience-stricken congregations; monks have knelt before it on the
+brick floor of their cells, and novices have kissed it in the vain
+desire to drown their yearnings after the relinquished world; perhaps
+it has attended criminals to the scaffold, and heard the secrets
+of repentant murderers; but why should it be shown me as a thing of
+rarity? These thoughts passed through my mind, while Signor Folcioni
+quietly remarked: 'I bought this Cross from the Frati when their
+convent was dissolved in Crema.' Then he bade me turn it round, and
+showed a little steel knob fixed into the back between the arms. This
+was a spring. He pressed it, and the upper and lower parts of the
+cross came asunder; and holding the top like a handle, I drew out as
+from a scabbard a sharp steel blade, concealed in the thickness of the
+wood, behind the very body of the agonising Christ. What had been a
+crucifix became a deadly poniard in my grasp, and the rust upon it in
+the twilight looked like blood. 'I have often wondered,' said Signor
+Folcioni, 'that the Frati cared to sell me this.'
+
+There is no need to raise the question of the genuineness of this
+strange relic, though I confess to having had my doubts about it,
+or to wonder for what nefarious purposes the impious weapon was
+designed--whether the blade was inserted by some rascal monk who never
+told the tale, or whether it was used on secret service by the
+friars. On its surface the infernal engine carries a dark certainty of
+treason, sacrilege, and violence. Yet it would be wrong to incriminate
+the Order of S. Francis by any suspicion, and idle to seek the actual
+history of this mysterious weapon. A writer of fiction could indeed
+produce some dark tale in the style of De Stendhal's 'Nouvelles,' and
+christen it 'The Crucifix of Crema.' And how delighted would Webster
+have been if he had chanced to hear of such a sword-sheath! He might
+have placed it in the hands of Bosola for the keener torment of his
+Duchess. Flamineo might have used it; or the disguised friars, who
+made the deathbed of Bracciano hideous, might have plunged it in the
+Duke's heart after mocking his eyes with the figure of the suffering
+Christ. To imagine such an instrument of moral terror mingled with
+material violence, lay within the scope of Webster's sinister and
+powerful genius. But unless he had seen it with his eyes, what poet
+would have ventured to devise the thing and display it even in the
+dumb show of a tragedy? Fact is more wonderful than romance. No
+apocalypse of Antichrist matches what is told of Roderigo Borgia; and
+the crucifix of Crema exceeds the sombre fantasy of Webster.
+
+Whatever may be the truth about this cross, it has at any rate the
+value of a symbol or a metaphor. The idea which it materialises, the
+historical events of which it is a sign, may well arrest attention. A
+sword concealed in the crucifix--what emblem brings more forcibly
+to mind than this that two-edged glaive of persecution which Dominic
+unsheathed to mow down the populations of Provence and to make Spain
+destitute of men? Looking upon the crucifix of Crema, we may seem
+to see pestilence-stricken multitudes of Moors and Jews dying on the
+coasts of Africa and Italy. The Spaniards enter Mexico; and this is
+the cross they carry in their hands. They take possession of Peru; and
+while the gentle people of the Incas come to kiss the bleeding brows
+of Christ, they plunge this dagger in their sides. What, again, was
+the temporal power of the Papacy but a sword embedded in a cross?
+Each Papa Re, when he ascended the Holy Chair, was forced to take the
+crucifix of Crema and to bear it till his death. A long procession of
+war-loving Pontiffs, levying armies and paying captains with the pence
+of S. Peter, in order to keep by arms the lands they had acquired by
+fraud, defiles before our eyes. First goes the terrible Sixtus IV.,
+who died of grief when news was brought him that the Italian princes
+had made peace. He it was who sanctioned the conspiracy to murder
+the Medici in church, at the moment of the elevation of the Host.
+The brigands hired to do this work refused at the last moment. The
+sacrilege appalled them. 'Then,' says the chronicler, 'was found a
+priest, who, being used to churches, had no scruple.' The poignard
+this priest carried was this crucifix of Crema. After Sixtus came the
+blood-stained Borgia; and after him Julius II., whom the Romans
+in triumphal songs proclaimed a second Mars, and who turned, as
+Michelangelo expressed it, the chalices of Rome into swords and helms.
+Leo X., who dismembered Italy for his brother and nephew; and Clement
+VII., who broke the neck of Florence and delivered the Eternal City to
+the spoiler, follow. Of the antinomy between the Vicariate of Christ
+and an earthly kingdom, incarnated by these and other Holy Fathers,
+what symbol could be found more fitting than a dagger with a crucifix
+for case and covering?
+
+It is not easy to think or write of these matters without rhetoric.
+When I laid my head upon my pillow that night in the Albergo del Pozzo
+at Crema, it was full of such thoughts; and when at last sleep came,
+it brought with it a dream begotten doubtless by the perturbation of
+my fancy. For I thought that a brown Franciscan, with hollow cheeks,
+and eyes aflame beneath his heavy cowl, sat by my bedside, and, as he
+raised the crucifix in his lean quivering hands, whispered a tale of
+deadly passion and of dastardly revenge. His confession carried me
+away to a convent garden of Palermo; and there was love in the story,
+and hate that is stronger than love, and, for the ending of the whole
+matter, remorse which dies not even in the grave. Each new possessor
+of the crucifix of Crema, he told me, was forced to hear from him in
+dreams his dreadful history. But, since it was a dream and nothing
+more, why should I repeat it? I have wandered far enough already
+from the vintage and the sunny churches of the little Lombard town.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_CHERUBINO AT THE SCALA THEATRE_
+
+
+I
+
+It was a gala night. The opera-house of Milan was one blaze of light
+and colour. Royalty in field-marshal's uniform and diamonds, attended
+by decorated generals and radiant ladies of the court, occupied the
+great box opposite the stage. The tiers from pit to gallery were
+filled with brilliantly dressed women. From the third row, where we
+were fortunately placed, the curves of that most beautiful of theatres
+presented to my gaze a series of retreating and approaching lines,
+composed of noble faces, waving feathers, sparkling jewels, sculptured
+shoulders, uniforms, robes of costly stuffs and every conceivable
+bright colour. Light poured from the huge lustre in the centre of the
+roof, ran along the crimson velvet cushions of the boxes, and flashed
+upon the gilded frame of the proscenium--satyrs and acanthus scrolls
+carved in the manner of a century ago. Pit and orchestra scarcely
+contained the crowd of men who stood in lively conversation, their
+backs turned to the stage, their lorgnettes raised from time to time
+to sweep the boxes. This surging sea of faces and sober costumes
+enhanced by contrast the glitter, variety, and luminous tranquillity
+of the theatre above it.
+
+No one took much thought of the coming spectacle, till the conductor's
+rap was heard upon his desk, and the orchestra broke into the overture
+to Mozart's _Nozze_. Before they were half through, it was clear
+that we should not enjoy that evening the delight of perfect music
+added to the enchantment of so brilliant a scene. The execution of the
+overture was not exactly bad. But it lacked absolute precision, the
+complete subordination of all details to the whole. In rendering
+German music Italians often fail through want of discipline, or
+through imperfect sympathy with a style they will not take the pains
+to master. Nor, when the curtain lifted and the play began, was the
+vocalisation found in all parts satisfactory. The Contessa had a
+meagre _mezza voce_. Susanna, though she did not sing false,
+hovered on the verge of discords, owing to the weakness of an organ
+which had to be strained in order to make any effect on that enormous
+stage. On the other hand, the part of Almaviva was played with
+dramatic fire, and Figaro showed a truly Southern sense of comic
+fun. The scenes were splendidly mounted, and something of a princely
+grandeur--the largeness of a noble train of life--was added to the
+drama by the vast proportions of the theatre. It was a performance
+which, in spite of drawbacks, yielded pleasure.
+
+And yet it might have left me frigid but for the artist who played
+Cherubino. This was no other than Pauline Lucca, in the prime of youth
+and petulance. From her first appearance to the last note she sang,
+she occupied the stage. The opera seemed to have been written for her.
+The mediocrity of the troupe threw her commanding merits--the richness
+of her voice, the purity of her intonation, her vivid conception of
+character, her indescribable brusquerie of movement and emotion--into
+that relief which a sapphire gains from a setting of pearls. I can see
+her now, after the lapse of nearly twenty years, as she stood there
+singing in blue doublet and white mantle, with the slouched Spanish
+hat and plume of ostrich feathers, a tiny rapier at her side, and blue
+rosettes upon her white silk shoes! The _Nozze di Figaro_ was
+followed by a Ballo. This had for its theme the favourite legend of
+a female devil sent from the infernal regions to ruin a young man.
+Instead of performing the part assigned her, Satanella falls in love
+with the hero, sacrifices herself, and is claimed at last by the
+powers of goodness. _Quia multum amavit_, her lost soul is saved.
+If the opera left much to be desired, the Ballo was perfection. That
+vast stage of the Scala Theatre had almost overwhelmed the actors
+of the play. Now, thrown open to its inmost depths, crowded with
+glittering moving figures, it became a fairyland of fantastic
+loveliness. Italians possess the art of interpreting a serious
+dramatic action by pantomime. A Ballo with them is no mere affair of
+dancing--fine dresses, evolutions performed by brigades of pink-legged
+women with a fixed smile on their faces. It takes the rank of high
+expressive art. And the motive of this Ballo was consistently worked
+out in an intelligible sequence of well-ordered scenes. To moralise
+upon its meaning would be out of place. It had a conflict of passions,
+a rhythmical progression of emotions, a tragic climax in the triumph
+of good over evil.
+
+II
+
+At the end of the performance there were five persons in our box--the
+beautiful Miranda, and her husband, a celebrated English man of
+letters; a German professor of biology; a young Milanese gentleman,
+whom we called Edoardo; and myself. Edoardo and the professor had
+joined us just before the ballet. I had occupied a seat behind Miranda
+and my friend the critic from the commencement. We had indeed dined
+together first at their hotel, the Rebecchino; and they now proposed
+that we should all adjourn together there on foot for supper. From the
+Scala Theatre to the Rebecchino is a walk of some three minutes.
+
+When we were seated at the supper-table and had talked some while upon
+indifferent topics, the enthusiasm roused in me by Pauline Lucca burst
+out. I broke a moment's silence by exclaiming, 'What a wonder-world
+music creates! I have lived this evening in a sphere of intellectual
+enjoyment raised to rapture. I never lived so fast before!' 'Do
+you really think so?' said Miranda. She had just finished a
+_beccafico_, and seemed disposed for conversation. 'Do you really
+think so? For my part, music is in a wholly different region from
+experience, thought, or feeling. What does it communicate to you?' And
+she hummed to herself the _motif_ of Cherubino's 'Non so piu
+cosa son cosa faccio.'--'What does it teach me?' I broke in upon the
+melody. 'Why, to-night, when I heard the music, and saw her there, and
+felt the movement of the play, it seemed to me that a new existence
+was revealed. For the first time I understood what love might be in
+one most richly gifted for emotion.' Miranda bent her eyes on the
+table-cloth and played with her wineglass. 'I don't follow you at all.
+I enjoyed myself to-night. The opera, indeed, might have been better
+rendered. The ballet, I admit, was splendid. But when I remember the
+music--even the best of it--even Pauline Lucca's part'--here she
+looked up, and shot me a quick glance across the table--'I have mere
+music in my ears. Nothing more. Mere music!' The professor of
+biology, who was gifted with, a sense of music and had studied it
+scientifically, had now crunched his last leaf of salad. Wiping his
+lips with his napkin, he joined our _tete-a-tete_. 'Gracious
+madam, I agree with you. He who seeks from music more than music
+gives, is on the quest--how shall I put it?--of the Holy Grail.' 'And
+what,' I struck in, 'is this minimum or maximum that music gives?'
+'Dear young friend,' replied the professor, 'music gives melodies,
+harmonies, the many beautiful forms to which sound shall be fashioned.
+Just as in the case of shells and fossils, lovely in themselves,
+interesting for their history and classification, so is it with
+music. You must not seek an intellectual meaning. No; there is no
+_Inhalt_ in music' And he hummed contentedly the air of 'Voi
+che sapete.' While he was humming, Miranda whispered to me across the
+table, 'Separate the Lucca from the music.' 'But,' I answered rather
+hotly, for I was nettled by Miranda's argument _ad hominem_, 'But
+it is not possible in an opera to divide the music from the words, the
+scenery, the play, the actor. Mozart, when he wrote the score to Da
+Ponte's libretto, was excited to production by the situations. He did
+not conceive his melodies out of connection with a certain cast of
+characters, a given ethical environment.' 'I do not know, my dear
+young friend,' responded the professor, 'whether you have read
+Mozart's Life and letters. It is clearly shown in them how he composed
+airs at times and seasons when he had no words to deal with. These he
+afterwards used as occasion served. Whence I conclude that music was
+for him a free and lovely play of tone. The words of our excellent
+Da Ponte were a scaffolding to introduce his musical creations to the
+public. But without that carpenter's work, the melodies of Cherubino
+are _Selbst-staendig_, sufficient in themselves to vindicate their
+place in art. Do I interpret your meaning, gracious lady?' This he
+said bending to Miranda. 'Yes,' she replied. But she still played with
+her wineglass, and did not look as though she were quite satisfied.
+I meanwhile continued: 'Of course I have read Mozart's Life, and know
+how he went to work. But Mozart was a man of feeling, of experience,
+of ardent passions. How can you prove to me that the melodies he gave
+to Cherubino had not been evolved from situations similar to those
+in which Cherubino finds himself? How can you prove he did not feel
+a natural appropriateness in the _motifs_ he selected from his
+memory for Cherubino? How can you be certain that the part itself did
+not stimulate his musical faculty to fresh and still more appropriate
+creativeness? And if we must fall back on documents, do you remember
+what he said himself about the love-music in _Die Entfuehrung?_ I
+think he tells us that he meant it to express his own feeling for the
+woman who had just become his wife.' Miranda looked up as though she
+were almost half-persuaded. Yet she hummed again 'Non so piu,' then
+said to herself, 'Yes, it is wiser to believe with the professor that
+these are sequences of sounds, and nothing more.' Then she sighed. In
+the pause which followed, her husband, the famous critic, filled his
+glass, stretched his legs out, and began: 'You have embarked, I see,
+upon the ocean of aesthetics. For my part, to-night I was thinking
+how much better fitted for the stage Beaumarchais' play was than this
+musical mongrel--this operatic adaptation. The wit, observe, is lost.
+And Cherubino--that sparkling little _enfant terrible_--becomes a
+sentimental fellow--a something I don't know what--between a girl and
+a boy--a medley of romance and impudence--anyhow a being quite unlike
+the sharply outlined playwright's page. I confess I am not a musician;
+the drama is my business, and I judge things by their fitness for
+the stage. My wife agrees with me to differ. She likes music, I like
+plays. To-night she was better pleased than I was; for she got good
+music tolerably well rendered, while I got nothing but a mangled
+comedy.'
+
+We bore the critic's monologue with patience. But once again the
+spirit, seeking after something which neither Miranda, nor her
+husband, nor the professor could be got to recognise, moved within me.
+I cried out at a venture, 'People who go to an opera must forget
+music pure and simple, must forget the drama pure and simple. You
+must welcome a third species of art, in which the play, the music, the
+singers with their voices, the orchestra with its instruments--Pauline
+Lucca, if you like, with her fascination' (and here I shot a
+side-glance at Miranda), 'are so blent as to create a world beyond the
+scope of poetry or music or acting taken by themselves. I give Mozart
+credit for having had insight into this new world, for having brought
+it near to us. And I hold that every fresh representation of his work
+is a fresh revelation of its possibilities.'
+
+To this the critic answered, 'You now seem to me to be confounding the
+limits of the several arts.' 'What!' I continued, 'is the drama but
+emotion presented in its most external forms as action? And what is
+music but emotion, in its most genuine essence, expressed by sound?
+Where then can a more complete artistic harmony be found than in the
+opera?'
+
+'The opera,' replied our host, 'is a hybrid. You will probably learn
+to dislike artistic hybrids, if you have the taste and sense I give
+you credit for. My own opinion has been already expressed. In the
+_Nozze_, Beaumarchais' _Mariage de Figaro_ is simply spoiled. My
+friend the professor declares Mozart's music to be sufficient by
+itself, and the libretto to be a sort of machinery for its display.
+Miranda, I think, agrees with him. You plead eloquently for the
+hybrid. You have a right to your own view. These things are matters,
+in the final resort, of individual taste rather than of demonstrable
+principles. But I repeat that you are very young.' The critic drained
+his Lambrusco, and smiled at me.
+
+'Yes, he is young,' added Miranda. 'He must learn to distinguish
+between music, his own imagination, and a pretty woman. At present he
+mixes them all up together. It is a sort of transcendental omelette.
+But I think the pretty woman has more to do with it than metaphysics!'
+
+All this while Edoardo had bestowed devout attention on his supper.
+But it appeared that the drift of our discourse had not been lost by
+him. 'Well,' he said, 'you finely fibred people dissect and analyse.
+I am content with the _spettacolo_. That pleases. What does a man
+want more? The _Nozze_ is a comedy of life and manners. The music
+is adorable. To-night the women were not bad to look at--the Lucca
+was divine; the scenes--ingenious. I thought but little. I came away
+delighted. You could have a better play, Caro Signore!' (with a bow
+to our host). 'That is granted. You might have better music, Cara
+Signora!' (with a bow to Miranda). 'That too is granted. But when the
+play and the music come together--how shall I say?--the music helps
+the play, and the play helps the music; and we--well we, I suppose,
+must help both!'
+
+Edoardo's little speech was so ingenuous, and, what is more, so true
+to his Italian temperament, that it made us all laugh and leave the
+argument just where we found it. The bottles of Lambrusco supplied us
+each with one more glass; and while we were drinking them, Miranda,
+woman-like, taking the last word, but contradicting herself, softly
+hummed 'Non so piu cosa son,' and 'Ah!' she said, 'I shall dream of
+love to-night!'
+
+We rose and said good-night. But when I had reached my bedroom in the
+Hotel de la Ville, I sat down, obstinate and unconvinced, and penned
+this rhapsody, which I have lately found among papers of nearly twenty
+years ago. I give it as it stands.
+
+III
+
+Mozart has written the two melodramas of love--the one a melo-tragedy,
+the other a melo-comedy. But in really noble art, Comedy and Tragedy
+have faces of equal serenity and beauty. In the Vatican there
+are marble busts of the two Muses, differing chiefly in their
+head-dresses: that of Tragedy is an elaborately built-up structure of
+fillets and flowing hair, piled high above the forehead and descending
+in long curls upon the shoulders; while Comedy wears a similar
+adornment, with the addition of a wreath of vine-leaves and
+grape-bunches. The expression of the sister goddesses is no less
+finely discriminated. Over the mouth of Comedy plays a subtle smile,
+and her eyes are relaxed in a half-merriment. A shadow rests upon
+the slightly heavier brows of Tragedy, and her lips, though not
+compressed, are graver. So delicately did the Greek artist indicate
+the division between two branches of one dramatic art. And since all
+great art is classical, Mozart's two melodramas, _Don Giovanni_
+and the _Nozze di Figaro_, though the one is tragic and the other
+comic, are twin-sisters, similar in form and feature.
+
+The central figure of the melo-tragedy is Don Juan, the hero
+of unlimited desire, pursuing the unattainable through tortuous
+interminable labyrinths, eager in appetite yet never satisfied, 'for
+ever following and for ever foiled.' He is the incarnation of lust
+that has become a habit of the soul--rebellious, licentious, selfish,
+even cruel. His nature, originally noble and brave, has assumed the
+qualities peculiar to lust--rebellion, license, cruelty, defiant
+egotism. Yet, such as he is, doomed to punishment and execration,
+Don Juan remains a fit subject for poetry and music, because he is
+complete, because he is impelled by some demonic influence, spurred on
+by yearnings after an unsearchable delight. In his death, the spirit
+of chivalry survives, metamorphosed, it is true, into the spirit of
+revolt, yet still tragic, such as might animate the desperate sinner
+of a haughty breed.
+
+The central figure of the melo-comedy is Cherubino, the genius of
+love, no less insatiable, but undetermined to virtue or to vice. This
+is the point of Cherubino, that the ethical capacities in him are
+still potential. His passion still hovers on the borderland of good
+and bad. And this undetermined passion is beautiful because of extreme
+freshness; of infinite, immeasurable expansibility. Cherubino is the
+epitome of all that belongs to the amorous temperament in a state of
+still ascendant adolescence. He is about sixteen years of age--a boy
+yesterday, a man to-morrow--to-day both and neither--something
+beyond boyhood, but not yet limited by man's responsibility and man's
+absorbing passions. He partakes of both ages in the primal awakening
+to self-consciousness. Desire, which in Don Juan has become a fiend,
+hovers before him like a fairy. His are the sixteen years, not of a
+Northern climate, but of Spain or Italy, where manhood appears in a
+flash, and overtakes the child with sudden sunrise of new faculties.
+_Nondum amabam, sed amare amabam, quaerebam quod amarem, amans
+amare_--'I loved not yet, but was in love with loving; I sought
+what I should love, being in love with loving.' That sentence, penned
+by S. Augustine and consecrated by Shelley, describes the mood of
+Cherubino. He loves at every moment of his life, with every pulse of
+his being. His object is not a beloved being, but love itself--the
+satisfaction of an irresistible desire, the paradise of bliss which
+merely loving has become for him. What love means he hardly knows. He
+only knows that he must love. And women love him--half as a plaything
+to be trifled with, half as a young god to be wounded by. This rising
+of the star of love as it ascends into the heaven of youthful fancy,
+is revealed in the melodies Mozart has written for him. How shall we
+describe their potency? Who shall translate those curiously perfect
+words to which tone and rhythm have been indissolubly wedded? _E
+pur mi piace languir cosi.... E se non ho chi m' oda, parlo d'amor con
+me._
+
+But if this be so, it may be asked, Who shall be found worthy to act
+Cherubino on the stage? You cannot have seen and heard Pauline Lucca,
+or you would not ask this question.
+
+Cherubino is by no means the most important person in the plot of the
+_Nozze_. But he strikes the keynote of the opera. His love is the
+standard by which we measure the sad, retrospective, stately love of
+the Countess, who tries to win back an alienated husband. By Cherubino
+we measure the libertine love of the Count, who is a kind of Don Juan
+without cruelty, and the humorous love of Figaro and his sprightly
+bride Susanna. Each of these characters typifies one of the many
+species of love. But Cherubino anticipates and harmonises all. They
+are conscious, experienced, world-worn, disillusioned, trivial. He is
+all love, foreseen, foreshadowed in a dream of life to be; all love,
+diffused through brain and heart and nerves like electricity; all
+love, merging the moods of ecstasy, melancholy, triumph, regret,
+jealousy, joy, expectation, in a hazy sheen, as of some Venetian
+sunrise. What will Cherubino be after three years? A Romeo, a
+Lovelace, a Lothario, a Juan? a disillusioned rake, a sentimentalist,
+an effete fop, a romantic lover? He may become any one of these, for
+he contains the possibilities of all. As yet, he is the dear glad
+angel of the May of love, the nightingale of orient emotion.
+This moment in the unfolding of character Mozart has arrested and
+eternalised for us in Cherubino's melodies; for it is the privilege of
+art to render things most fugitive and evanescent fixed imperishably
+in immortal form.
+
+IV
+
+This is indeed a rhapsodical production. Miranda was probably right.
+Had it not been for Pauline Lucca, I might not have philosophised the
+_Nozze_ thus. Yet, in the main, I believe that my instinct was
+well grounded. Music, especially when wedded to words, more especially
+when those words are dramatic, cannot separate itself from emotion. It
+will not do to tell us that a melody is a certain sequence of sounds;
+that the composer chose it for its beauty of rhythm, form, and tune,
+and only used the words to get it vocalised. We are forced to go
+farther back, and ask ourselves, What suggested it in the first place
+to the composer? why did he use it precisely in connection with
+this dramatic situation? How can we answer these questions except by
+supposing that music was for him the utterance through art of some
+emotion? The final fact of human nature is emotion, crystallising
+itself in thought and language, externalising itself in action and
+art. 'What,' said Novalis, 'are thoughts but pale dead feelings?'
+Admitting this even in part, we cannot deny to music an emotional
+content of some kind. I would go farther, and assert that, while a
+merely mechanical musician may set inappropriate melodies to words,
+and render music inexpressive of character, what constitutes a musical
+dramatist is the conscious intention of fitting to the words of his
+libretto such melody as shall interpret character, and the power to do
+this with effect.
+
+That the Cherubino of Mozart's _Nozze_ is quite different from
+Beaumarchais' Cherubin does not affect this question. He is a new
+creation, just because Mozart could not, or would not, conceive the
+character of the page in Beaumarchais' sprightly superficial spirit.
+He used the part to utter something unutterable except by music about
+the soul of the still adolescent lover. The libretto-part and the
+melodies, taken together, constitute a new romantic ideal, consistent
+with experience, but realised with the intensity and universality
+whereby art is distinguished from life. Don Juan was a myth before
+Mozart touched him with the magic wand of music. Cherubino became
+a myth by the same Prospero's spell. Both characters have the
+universality, the symbolic potency, which belongs to legendary beings.
+That there remains a discrepancy between the boy-page and the music
+made for him, can be conceded without danger to my theory; for
+the music made for Cherubino is meant to interpret his psychical
+condition, and is independent of his boyishness of conduct.
+
+This further explains why there may be so many renderings of
+Cherubino's melodies. Mozart idealised an infinite emotion. The
+singer is forced to define; the actor also is forced to define. Each
+introduces his own limit on the feeling. When the actor and the singer
+meet together in one personality, this definition of emotion becomes
+of necessity doubly specific. The condition of all music is that it
+depends in a great measure on the temperament of the interpreter for
+its momentary shade of expression, and this dependence is of course
+exaggerated when the music is dramatic. Furthermore, the subjectivity
+of the audience enters into the problem as still another element of
+definition. It may therefore be fairly said that, in estimating any
+impression produced by Cherubino's music, the original character of
+the page, transplanted from French comedy to Italian opera, Mozart's
+conception of that character, Mozart's specific quality of emotion
+and specific style of musical utterance, together with the contralto's
+interpretation of the character and rendering of the music, according
+to her intellectual capacity, artistic skill, and timbre of voice,
+have collaborated with the individuality of the hearer. Some of the
+constituents of the ever-varying product--a product which is new each
+time the part is played--are fixed. Da Ponte's Cherubino and Mozart's
+melodies remain unalterable. All the rest is undecided; the singer and
+the listener change on each occasion.
+
+To assert that the musician Mozart meant nothing by his music, to
+assert that he only cared about it _qua_ music, is the same as
+to say that the painter Tintoretto, when he put the Crucifixion upon
+canvas, the sculptor Michelangelo, when he carved Christ upon the lap
+of Mary, meant nothing, and only cared about the beauty of their
+forms and colours. Those who take up this position prove, not that the
+artist has no meaning to convey, but that for them the artist's nature
+is unintelligible, and his meaning is conveyed in an unknown tongue.
+It seems superfluous to guard against misinterpretation by saying that
+to expect clear definition from music--the definition which belongs
+to poetry--would be absurd. The sphere of music is in sensuous
+perception; the sphere of poetry is in intelligence. Music, dealing
+with pure sound, must always be vaguer in significance than poetry,
+dealing with words. Nevertheless, its effect upon the sentient subject
+may be more intense and penetrating for this very reason. We cannot
+fail to understand what words are intended to convey; we may very
+easily interpret in a hundred different ways the message of sound.
+But this is not because words are wider in their reach and more alive;
+rather because they are more limited, more stereotyped, more dead.
+They symbolise something precise and unmistakable; but this precision
+is itself attenuation of the something symbolised. The exact value of
+the counter is better understood when it is a word than when it is a
+chord, because all that a word conveys has already become a thought,
+while all that musical sounds convey remains within the region of
+emotion which has not been intellectualised. Poetry touches emotion
+through the thinking faculty. If music reaches the thinking faculty at
+all, it is through fibres of emotion. But emotion, when it has become
+thought, has already lost a portion of its force, and has taken to
+itself a something alien to its nature. Therefore the message of music
+can never rightly be translated into words. It is the very largeness
+and vividness of the sphere of simple feeling which makes its
+symbolical counterpart in sound so seeming vague. But in spite of this
+incontestable defect of seeming vagueness, emotion expressed by music
+is nearer to our sentient self, if we have ears to take it in, than
+the same emotion limited by language. It is intenser, it is more
+immediate, as compensation for being less intelligible, less
+unmistakable in meaning. It is an infinite, an indistinct, where each
+consciousness defines and sets a limitary form.
+
+V
+
+A train of thought which begins with the concrete not unfrequently
+finds itself finishing, almost against its will, in abstractions. This
+is the point to which the performance of Cherubino's part by Pauline
+Lucca at the Scala twenty years ago has led me--that I have to settle
+with myself what I mean by art in general, and what I take to be the
+proper function of music as one of the fine arts.
+
+'Art,' said Goethe, 'is but form-giving.' We might vary this
+definition, and say, 'Art is a method of expression or presentation.'
+Then comes the question: If art gives form, if it is a method of
+expression or presentation, to what does it give form, what does it
+express or present? The answer certainly must be: Art gives form to
+human consciousness; expresses or presents the feeling or the thought
+of man. Whatever else art may do by the way, in the communication
+of innocent pleasures, in the adornment of life and the softening of
+manners, in the creation of beautiful shapes and sounds, this, at all
+events, is its prime function.
+
+While investing thought, the spiritual subject-matter of all art, with
+form, or finding for it proper modes of presentation, each of the arts
+employs a special medium, obeying the laws of beauty proper to that
+medium. The vehicles of the arts, roughly speaking, are material
+substances (like stone, wood, metal), pigments, sounds, and words.
+The masterly handling of these vehicles and the realisation of
+their characteristic types of beauty have come to be regarded as the
+craftsman's paramount concern. And in a certain sense this is a right
+conclusion; for dexterity in the manipulation of the chosen vehicle
+and power to create a beautiful object, distinguish the successful
+artist from the man who may have had like thoughts and feelings. This
+dexterity, this power, are the properties of the artist _qua_
+artist. Yet we must not forget that the form created by the artist
+for the expression of a thought or feeling is not the final end of art
+itself. That form, after all, is but the mode of presentation through
+which the spiritual content manifests itself. Beauty, in like manner,
+is not the final end of art, but is the indispensable condition under
+which the artistic manifestation of the spiritual content must he
+made. It is the business of art to create an ideal world, in which
+perception, emotion, understanding, action, all elements of human life
+sublimed by thought, shall reappear in concrete forms as beauty. This
+being so, the logical criticism of art demands that we should not
+only estimate the technical skill of artists and their faculty for
+presenting beauty to the aesthetic sense, but that we should also ask
+ourselves what portion of the human spirit he has chosen to invest
+with form, and how he has conceived his subject. It is not necessary
+that the ideas embodied in a work of art should be the artist's
+own. They may be common to the race and age: as, for instance, the
+conception of sovereign deity expressed in the Olympian Zeus of
+Pheidias, or the conception of divine maternity expressed in Raphael's
+'Madonna di San Sisto.' Still the personality of the artist, his
+own intellectual and moral nature, his peculiar way of thinking and
+feeling, his individual attitude towards the material given to him in
+ideas of human consciousness, will modify his choice of subject and
+of form, and will determine his specific type of beauty. To take an
+example: supposing that an idea, common to his race and age, is given
+to the artist for treatment; this will be the final end of the work
+of art which he produces. But his personal qualities and technical
+performance determine the degree of success or failure to which he
+attains in presenting that idea and in expressing it with beauty.
+Signorelli fails where Perugino excels, in giving adequate and lovely
+form to the religious sentiment. Michelangelo is sure of the sublime,
+and Raphael of the beautiful.
+
+Art is thus the presentation of the human spirit by the artist to his
+fellow-men. The subject-matter of the arts is commensurate with what
+man thinks and feels and does. It is as deep as religion, as wide as
+life. But what distinguishes art from religion or from life is, that
+this subject-matter must assume beautiful form, and must be presented
+directly or indirectly to the senses. Art is not the school or the
+cathedral, but the playground, the paradise of humanity. It does not
+teach, it does not preach. Nothing abstract enters into art's domain.
+Truth and goodness are transmuted into beauty there, just as in
+science beauty and goodness assume the shape of truth, and in
+religion truth and beauty become goodness. The rigid definitions, the
+unmistakable laws of science, are not to be found in art. Whatever art
+has touched acquires a concrete sensuous embodiment, and thus ideas
+presented to the mind in art have lost a portion of their pure
+thought-essence. It is on this account that the religious conceptions
+of the Greeks were so admirably fitted for the art of sculpture, and
+certain portions of the mediaeval Christian mythology lent themselves
+so well to painting. For the same reason the metaphysics of
+ecclesiastical dogma defy the artist's plastic faculty. Art, in a
+word, is a middle term between reason and the senses. Its secondary
+aim, after the prime end of presenting the human spirit in beautiful
+form has been accomplished, is to give tranquil and innocent
+enjoyment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From what has gone before it will be seen that no human being can
+make or mould a beautiful form without incorporating in that form some
+portion of the human mind, however crude, however elementary. In other
+words, there is no work of art without a theme, without a motive,
+without a subject. The presentation of that theme, that motive, that
+subject, is the final end of art. The art is good or bad according as
+the subject has been well or ill presented, consistently with the laws
+of beauty special to the art itself. Thus we obtain two standards
+for aesthetic criticism. We judge a statue, for example, both by
+the sculptor's intellectual grasp upon his subject, and also by his
+technical skill and sense of beauty. In a picture of the Last Judgment
+by Fra Angelico we say that the bliss of the righteous has been more
+successfully treated than the torments of the wicked, because the
+former has been better understood, although the painter's skill in
+each is equal. In the Perseus of Cellini we admire the sculptor's
+spirit, finish of execution, and originality of design, while we
+deplore that want of sympathy with the heroic character which makes
+his type of physical beauty slightly vulgar and his facial expression
+vacuous. If the phrase 'Art for art's sake' has any meaning, this
+meaning is simply that the artist, having chosen a theme, thinks
+exclusively in working at it of technical dexterity or the quality of
+beauty. There are many inducements for the artist thus to narrow his
+function, and for the critic to assist him by applying the canons of
+a soulless connoisseurship to his work; for the conception of the
+subject is but the starting-point in art-production, and the artist's
+difficulties and triumphs as a craftsman lie in the region of
+technicalities. He knows, moreover, that, however deep or noble his
+idea may be, his work of art will be worthless if it fail in skill
+or be devoid of beauty. What converts a thought into a statue or
+a picture, is the form found for it; and so the form itself seems
+all-important. The artist, therefore, too easily imagines that he may
+neglect his theme; that a fine piece of colouring, a well-balanced
+composition, or, as Cellini put it, 'un bel corpo ignudo,' is enough.
+And this is especially easy in an age which reflects much upon the
+arts, and pursues them with enthusiasm, while its deeper thoughts and
+feelings are not of the kind which translate themselves readily
+into artistic form. But, after all, a fine piece of colouring, a
+well-balanced composition, a sonorous stanza, a learned essay in
+counterpoint, are not enough. They are all excellent good things,
+yielding delight to the artistic sense and instruction to the student.
+Yet when we think of the really great statues, pictures, poems, music
+of the world, we find that these are really great because of something
+more--and that more is their theme, their presentation of a noble
+portion of the human soul. Artists and art-students may be satisfied
+with perfect specimens of a craftsman's skill, independent of his
+theme; but the mass of men will not be satisfied; and it is as wrong
+to suppose that art exists for artists and art-students, as to talk
+of art for art's sake. Art exists for humanity. Art transmutes thought
+and feeling into terms of beautiful form. Art is great and lasting
+in proportion as it appeals to the human consciousness at large,
+presenting to it portions of itself in adequate and lovely form.
+
+VI
+
+It was necessary in the first place firmly to apprehend the truth that
+the final end of all art is the presentation of a spiritual content;
+it is necessary in the next place to remove confusions by considering
+the special circumstances of the several arts.
+
+Each art has its own vehicle of presentation. What it can present and
+how it must present it, depends upon the nature of this vehicle. Thus,
+though architecture, sculpture, painting, music, poetry, meet upon
+the common ground of spiritualised experience--though the works of art
+produced by the architect, sculptor, painter, musician, poet, emanate
+from the spiritual nature of the race, are coloured by the spiritual
+nature of the men who make them, and express what is spiritual in
+humanity under concrete forms invented for them by the artist--yet it
+is certain that all of these arts do not deal exactly with the same
+portions of this common material in the same way or with the same
+results. Each has its own department. Each exhibits qualities of
+strength and weakness special to itself. To define these several
+departments, to explain the relation of these several vehicles
+of presentation to the common subject-matter, is the next step in
+criticism.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of the fine arts, architecture alone subserves utility. We build for
+use. But the geometrical proportions which the architect observes,
+contain the element of beauty and powerfully influence the soul. Into
+the language of arch and aisle and colonnade, of cupola and facade and
+pediment, of spire and vault, the architect translates emotion, vague
+perhaps but deep, mute but unmistakable. When we say that a building
+is sublime or graceful, frivolous or stern, we mean that sublimity
+or grace, frivolity or sternness, is inherent in it. The emotions
+connected with these qualities are inspired in us when we contemplate
+it, and are presented to us by its form. Whether the architect
+deliberately aimed at the sublime or graceful--whether the dignified
+serenity of the Athenian genius sought to express itself in the
+Parthenon, and the mysticism of mediaeval Christianity in the gloom of
+Chartres Cathedral--whether it was Renaissance paganism which gave its
+mundane pomp and glory to S. Peter's, and the refined selfishness of
+royalty its specious splendour to the palace of Versailles--need not
+be curiously questioned. The fact that we are impelled to raise these
+points, that architecture more almost than any art connects itself
+indissolubly with the life, the character, the moral being of a nation
+and an epoch, proves that we are justified in bringing it beneath
+our general definition of the arts. In a great measure because it
+subserves utility, and is therefore dependent upon the necessities of
+life, does architecture present to us through form the human spirit.
+Comparing the palace built by Giulio Romano for the Dukes of Mantua
+with the contemporary castle of a German prince, we cannot fail at
+once to comprehend the difference of spiritual conditions, as these
+displayed themselves in daily life, which then separated Italy from
+the Teutonic nations. But this is not all. Spiritual quality in
+the architect himself finds clear expression in his work. Coldness
+combined with violence marks Brunelleschi's churches; a certain
+suavity and well-bred taste the work of Bramante; while Michelangelo
+exhibits wayward energy in his Library of S. Lorenzo, and Amadeo
+self-abandonment to fancy in his Lombard chapels. I have chosen
+examples from one nation and one epoch in order that the point I seek
+to make, the demonstration of a spiritual quality in buildings, may be
+fairly stated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sculpture and painting distinguish themselves from the other fine
+arts by the imitation of concrete existences in nature. They copy the
+bodies of men and animals, the aspects of the world around us, and the
+handiwork of men. Yet, in so far as they are rightly arts, they do
+not make imitation an object in itself. The grapes of Zeuxis at which
+birds pecked, the painted dog at which a cat's hair bristles--if such
+grapes or such a dog were ever put on canvas--are but evidences of the
+artist's skill, not of his faculty as artist. These two plastic, or,
+as I prefer to call them, figurative arts, use their imitation of
+the external world for the expression, the presentation of internal,
+spiritual things. The human form is for them the outward symbol of the
+inner human spirit, and their power of presenting spirit is limited by
+the means at their disposal.
+
+Sculpture employs stone, wood, clay, the precious metals, to model
+forms, detached and independent, or raised upon a flat surface
+in relief. Its domain is the whole range of human character and
+consciousness, in so far as these can be indicated by fixed facial
+expression, by physical type, and by attitude. If we dwell for an
+instant on the greatest historical epoch of sculpture, we shall
+understand the domain of this art in its range and limitation. At a
+certain point of Greek development the Hellenic Pantheon began to be
+translated by the sculptors into statues; and when the genius of the
+Greeks expired in Rome, the cycle of their psychological conceptions
+had been exhaustively presented through this medium. During that long
+period of time, the most delicate gradations of human personality,
+divinised, idealised, were presented to the contemplation of the
+consciousness which gave them being, in appropriate types. Strength
+and swiftness, massive force and airy lightness, contemplative repose
+and active energy, voluptuous softness and refined grace, intellectual
+sublimity and lascivious seductiveness--the whole rhythm of qualities
+which can be typified by bodily form--were analysed, selected,
+combined in various degrees, to incarnate the religious conceptions of
+Zeus, Aphrodite, Herakles, Dionysus, Pallas, Fauns and Satyrs, Nymphs
+of woods and waves, Tritons, the genius of Death, heroes and hunters,
+lawgivers and poets, presiding deities of minor functions, man's
+lustful appetites and sensual needs. All that men think, or do, or
+are, or wish for, or imagine in this world, had found exact corporeal
+equivalents. Not physiognomy alone, but all the portions of the body
+upon which the habits of the animating soul are wont to stamp
+themselves, were studied and employed as symbolism. Uranian Aphrodite
+was distinguished from her Pandemic sister by chastened lust-repelling
+loveliness. The muscles of Herakles were more ponderous than the tense
+sinews of Achilles. The Hermes of the palaestra bore a torso of
+majestic depth; the Hermes, who carried messages from heaven, had
+limbs alert for movement. The brows of Zeus inspired awe; the breasts
+of Dionysus breathed delight.
+
+A race accustomed, as the Greeks were, to read this symbolism,
+accustomed, as the Greeks were, to note the individuality of naked
+form, had no difficulty in interpreting the language of sculpture.
+Nor is there now much difficulty in the task. Our surest guide to
+the subject of a basrelief or statue is study of the physical type
+considered as symbolical of spiritual quality. From the fragment of
+a torso the true critic can say whether it belongs to the athletic or
+the erotic species. A limb of Bacchus differs from a limb of Poseidon.
+The whole psychological conception of Aphrodite Pandemos enters into
+every muscle, every joint, no less than into her physiognomy, her
+hair, her attitude.
+
+There is, however, a limit to the domain of sculpture. This art deals
+most successfully with personified generalities. It is also strong in
+the presentation of incarnate character. But when it attempts to tell
+a story, we often seek in vain its meaning. Battles of Amazons or
+Centaurs upon basreliefs, indeed, are unmistakable. The subject is
+indicated here by some external sign. The group of Laocoon appeals
+at once to a reader of Virgil, and the divine vengeance of Leto's
+children upon Niobe is manifest in the Uffizzi marbles. But who are
+the several heroes of the AEginetan pediment, and what was the subject
+of the Pheidian statues on the Parthenon? Do the three graceful
+figures of a basrelief which exists at Naples and in the Villa Albani,
+represent Orpheus, Hermes, and Eurydice, or Antiope and her two sons?
+Was the winged and sworded genius upon the Ephesus column meant for a
+genius of Death or a genius of Love?
+
+This dimness of significance indicates the limitation of sculpture,
+and inclines some of those who feel its charm to assert that the
+sculptor seeks to convey no intellectual meaning, that he is satisfied
+with the creation of beautiful form. There is sense in this revolt
+against the faith which holds that art is nothing but a mode of
+spiritual presentation. Truly the artist aims at producing beauty, is
+satisfied if he conveys delight. But it is impossible to escape from
+the certainty that, while he is creating forms of beauty, he means
+something; and that something, that theme for which he finds the form,
+is part of the world's spiritual heritage. Only the crudest works of
+plastic art, capricci and arabesques, have no intellectual content;
+and even these are good in so far as they convey the playfulness of
+fancy.
+
+Painting employs colours upon surfaces--walls, panels, canvas. What
+has been said about sculpture will apply in a great measure to this
+art. The human form, the world around us, the works of man's hands,
+are represented in painting, not for their own sake merely, but with
+a view to bringing thought, feeling, action, home to the consciousness
+of the spectator from the artist's consciousness on which they have
+been impressed. Painting can tell a story better than sculpture, can
+represent more complicated feelings, can suggest thoughts of a subtler
+intricacy. Through colour, it can play, like music, directly on
+powerful but vague emotion. It is deficient in fulness and roundness
+of concrete reality. A statue stands before us, the soul incarnate in
+ideal form, fixed and frozen for eternity. The picture is a reflection
+cast upon a magic glass; not less permanent, but reduced to a shadow
+of reality. To follow these distinctions farther would be alien from
+the present purpose. It is enough to repeat that, within their several
+spheres, according to their several strengths and weaknesses, both
+sculpture and painting present the spirit to us only as the spirit
+shows itself immersed in things of sense. The light of a lamp enclosed
+within an alabaster vase is still lamplight, though shorn of lustre
+and toned to coloured softness. Even thus the spirit, immersed in
+things of sense presented to us by the figurative arts, is still
+spirit, though diminished in its intellectual clearness and invested
+with hues not its own. To fashion that alabaster form of art with
+utmost skill, to make it beautiful, to render it transparent, is the
+artist's function. But he will have failed of the highest if the
+light within burns dim, or if he gives the world a lamp in which no
+spiritual flame is lighted.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Music transports us to a different region. It imitates nothing. It
+uses pure sound, and sound of the most wholly artificial kind--so
+artificial that the musical sounds of one race are unmusical, and
+therefore unintelligible, to another. Like architecture, music relies
+upon mathematical proportions. Unlike architecture, music serves no
+utility. It is the purest art of pleasure--the truest paradise and
+playground of the spirit. It has less power than painting, even less
+power than sculpture, to tell a story or to communicate an idea. For
+we must remember that when music is married to words, the words, and
+not the music, reach our thinking faculty. And yet, in spite of all,
+music presents man's spirit to itself through form. The domain of the
+spirit over which music reigns, is emotion--not defined emotion, not
+feeling even so defined as jealousy or anger--but those broad bases of
+man's being out of which emotions spring, defining themselves through
+action into this or that set type of feeling. Architecture, we have
+noticed, is so connected with specific modes of human existence, that
+from its main examples we can reconstruct the life of men who used
+it. Sculpture and painting, by limiting their presentation to the
+imitation of external things, have all the help which experience
+and, association render. The mere artificiality of music's vehicle
+separates it from life and makes its message untranslatable. Yet, as I
+have already pointed out, this very disability under which it labours
+is the secret of its extraordinary potency. Nothing intervenes between
+the musical work of art and the fibres of the sentient being it
+immediately thrills. We do not seek to say what music means. We feel
+the music. And if a man should pretend that the music has not passed
+beyond his ears, has communicated nothing but a musical delight, he
+simply tells us that he has not felt music. The ancients on this point
+were wiser than some moderns when, without pretending to assign an
+intellectual significance to music, they held it for an axiom that
+one type of music bred one type of character, another type another.
+A change in the music of a state, wrote Plato, will be followed by
+changes in its constitution. It is of the utmost importance, said
+Aristotle, to provide in education for the use of the ennobling and
+the fortifying moods. These philosophers knew that music creates a
+spiritual world, in which the spirit cannot live and move without
+contracting habits of emotion. In this vagueness of significance but
+intensity of feeling lies the magic of music. A melody occurs to the
+composer, which he certainly connects with no act of the reason, which
+he is probably unconscious of connecting with any movement of his
+feeling, but which nevertheless is the form in sound of an emotional
+mood. When he reflects upon the melody secreted thus impromptu, he
+is aware, as we learn from his own lips, that this work has
+correspondence with emotion. Beethoven calls one symphony Heroic,
+another Pastoral; of the opening of another he says, 'Fate knocks at
+the door.' Mozart sets comic words to the mass-music of a friend, in
+order to mark his sense of its inaptitude for religious sentiment. All
+composers use phrases like Maestoso, Pomposo, Allegro, Lagrimoso, Con
+Fuoco, to express the general complexion of the mood their music ought
+to represent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Before passing to poetry, it may be well to turn aside and consider
+two subordinate arts, which deserve a place in any system of
+aesthetics. These are dancing and acting. Dancing uses the living human
+form, and presents feeling or action, the passions and the deeds of
+men, in artificially educated movements of the body. The element of
+beauty it possesses, independently of the beauty of the dancer, is
+rhythm. Acting or the art of mimicry presents the same subject-matter,
+no longer under the conditions of fixed rhythm but as an ideal
+reproduction of reality. The actor is what he represents, and the
+element of beauty in his art is perfection of realisation. It is his
+duty as an artist to show us Orestes or Othello, not perhaps exactly
+as Othello and Orestes were, but as the essence of their tragedies,
+ideally incorporate in action, ought to be. The actor can do this
+in dumb show. Some of the greatest actors of the ancient world were
+mimes. But he usually interprets a poet's thought, and attempts to
+present an artistic conception in a secondary form of art, which has
+for its advantage his own personality in play.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The last of the fine arts is literature; or, in the narrower sphere
+of which it will be well to speak here only, is poetry. Poetry employs
+words in fixed rhythms, which we call metres. Only a small portion of
+its effect is derived from the beauty of its sound. It appeals to the
+sense of hearing far less immediately than music does. It makes no
+appeal to the eyesight, and takes no help from the beauty of colour.
+It produces no tangible object. But language being the storehouse
+of all human experience, language being the medium whereby spirit
+communicates with spirit in affairs of life, the vehicle which
+transmits to us the thoughts and feelings of the past, and on which we
+rely for continuing our present to the future, it follows that, of all
+the arts, poetry soars highest, flies widest, and is most at home in
+the region of the spirit. What poetry lacks of sensuous fulness, it
+more than balances by intellectual intensity. Its significance is
+unmistakable, because it employs the very material men use in their
+exchange of thoughts and correspondence of emotions. To the bounds of
+its empire there is no end. It embraces in its own more abstract
+being all the arts. By words it does the work in turn of architecture,
+sculpture, painting, music. It is the metaphysic of the fine arts.
+Philosophy finds place in poetry; and life itself, refined to its last
+utterance, hangs trembling on this thread which joins our earth
+to heaven, this bridge between experience and the realms where
+unattainable and imperceptible will have no meaning.
+
+If we are right in defining art as the manifestation of the human
+spirit to man by man in beautiful form, poetry, more incontestably
+than any other art, fulfils this definition and enables us to gauge
+its accuracy. For words are the spirit, manifested to itself in
+symbols with no sensual alloy. Poetry is therefore the presentation,
+through words, of life and all that life implies. Perception, emotion,
+thought, action, find in descriptive, lyrical, reflective, dramatic,
+and epical poetry their immediate apocalypse. In poetry we are no
+longer puzzled with problems as to whether art has or has not of
+necessity a spiritual content. There cannot be any poetry whatsoever
+without a spiritual meaning of some sort: good or bad, moral,
+immoral, or non-moral, obscure or lucid, noble or ignoble, slight or
+weighty--such distinctions do not signify. In poetry we are not met by
+questions whether the poet intended to convey a meaning when he made
+it. Quite meaningless poetry (as some critics would fain find melody
+quite meaningless, or a statue meaningless, or a Venetian picture
+meaningless) is a contradiction in terms. In poetry, life, or a
+portion of life, lives again, resuscitated and presented to our mental
+faculty through art. The best poetry is that which reproduces the most
+of life, or its intensest moments. Therefore the extensive species of
+the drama and the epic, the intensive species of the lyric, have been
+ever held in highest esteem. Only a half-crazy critic flaunts the
+paradox that poetry is excellent in so far as it assimilates the
+vagueness of music, or estimates a poet by his power of translating
+sense upon the borderland of nonsense into melodious words. Where
+poetry falls short in the comparison with other arts, is in the
+quality of form-giving, in the quality of sensuous concreteness.
+Poetry can only present forms to the mental eye and to the
+intellectual sense, stimulate the physical senses by indirect
+suggestion. Therefore dramatic poetry, the most complicated kind of
+poetry, relies upon the actor; and lyrical poetry, the intensest kind
+of poetry, seeks the aid of music. But these comparative deficiencies
+are overbalanced, for all the highest purposes of art, by the
+width and depth, the intelligibility and power, the flexibility and
+multitudinous associations, of language. The other arts are limited in
+what they utter. There is nothing which has entered into the life of
+man which poetry cannot express. Poetry says everything in man's own
+language to the mind. The other arts appeal imperatively, each in its
+own region, to man's senses; and the mind receives art's message
+by the help of symbols from the world of sense. Poetry lacks this
+immediate appeal to sense. But the elixir which it offers to the mind,
+its quintessence extracted from all things of sense, reacts through
+intellectual perception upon all the faculties that make men what they
+are.
+
+VII
+
+I used a metaphor in one of the foregoing paragraphs to indicate the
+presence of the vital spirit, the essential element of thought or
+feeling, in the work of art. I said it radiated through the form, as
+lamplight through an alabaster vase. Now the skill of the artist is
+displayed in modelling that vase, in giving it shape, rich and rare,
+and fashioning its curves with subtlest workmanship. In so far as he
+is a craftsman, the artist's pains must be bestowed upon this precious
+vessel of the animating theme. In so far as he has power over beauty,
+he must exert it in this plastic act. It is here that he displays
+dexterity; here that he creates; here that he separates himself from
+other men who think and feel. The poet, more perhaps than any other
+artist, needs to keep this steadily in view; for words being our daily
+vehicle of utterance, it may well chance that the alabaster vase of
+language should be hastily or trivially modelled. This is the true
+reason why 'neither gods nor men nor the columns either suffer
+mediocrity in singers.' Upon the poet it is specially incumbent to see
+that he has something rare to say and some rich mode of saying it. The
+figurative arts need hardly be so cautioned. They run their risk in
+quite a different direction. For sculptor and for painter, the danger
+is lest he should think that alabaster vase his final task. He may too
+easily be satisfied with moulding a beautiful but empty form.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The last word on the topic of the arts is given in one sentence. Let
+us remember that every work of art enshrines a spiritual subject, and
+that the artist's power is shown in finding for that subject a form of
+ideal loveliness. Many kindred points remain to be discussed; as what
+we mean by beauty, which is a condition indispensable to noble art;
+and what are the relations of the arts to ethics. These questions
+cannot now be raised. It is enough in one essay to have tried to
+vindicate the spirituality of art in general.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_A VENETIAN MEDLEY_
+
+
+I.--FIRST IMPRESSIONS AND FAMILIARITY
+
+It is easy to feel and to say something obvious about Venice. The
+influence of this sea-city is unique, immediate, and unmistakable. But
+to express the sober truth of those impressions which remain when the
+first astonishment of the Venetian revelation has subsided, when the
+spirit of the place has been harmonised through familiarity with our
+habitual mood, is difficult.
+
+Venice inspires at first an almost Corybantic rapture. From our
+earliest visits, if these have been measured by days rather than
+weeks, we carry away with us the memory of sunsets emblazoned in gold
+and crimson upon cloud and water; of violet domes and bell-towers
+etched against the orange of a western sky; of moonlight silvering
+breeze-rippled breadths of liquid blue; of distant islands shimmering
+in sun-litten haze; of music and black gliding boats; of labyrinthine
+darkness made for mysteries of love and crime; of statue-fretted
+palace fronts; of brazen clangour and a moving crowd; of pictures by
+earth's proudest painters, cased in gold on walls of council chambers
+where Venice sat enthroned a queen, where nobles swept the floors with
+robes of Tyrian brocade. These reminiscences will be attended by an
+ever-present sense of loneliness and silence in the world around; the
+sadness of a limitless horizon, the solemnity of an unbroken arch of
+heaven, the calm and greyness of evening on the lagoons, the pathos of
+a marble city crumbling to its grave in mud and brine.
+
+These first impressions of Venice are true. Indeed they are
+inevitable. They abide, and form a glowing background for all
+subsequent pictures, toned more austerely, and painted in more lasting
+hues of truth upon the brain. Those have never felt Venice at all who
+have not known this primal rapture, or who perhaps expected more of
+colour, more of melodrama, from a scene which nature and the art of
+man have made the richest in these qualities. Yet the mood engendered
+by this first experience is not destined to be permanent. It contains
+an element of unrest and unreality which vanishes upon familiarity.
+From the blare of that triumphal bourdon of brass instruments emerge
+the delicate voices of violin and clarinette. To the contrasted
+passions of our earliest love succeed a multitude of sweet and
+fanciful emotions. It is my present purpose to recapture some of the
+impressions made by Venice in more tranquil moods. Memory might
+be compared to a kaleidoscope. Far away from Venice I raise the
+wonder-working tube, allow the glittering fragments to settle as they
+please, and with words attempt to render something of the patterns I
+behold.
+
+II.--A LODGING IN SAN VIO
+
+I have escaped from the hotels with their bustle of tourists and
+crowded _tables-d'hote_. My garden stretches down to the Grand
+Canal, closed at the end with a pavilion, where I lounge and smoke and
+watch the cornice of the Prefettura fretted with gold in sunset light.
+My sitting-room and bed-room face the southern sun. There is a canal
+below, crowded with gondolas, and across its bridge the good folk
+of San Vio come and go the whole day long--men in blue shirts with
+enormous hats, and jackets slung on their left shoulder; women in
+kerchiefs of orange and crimson. Barelegged boys sit upon the parapet,
+dangling their feet above the rising tide. A hawker passes, balancing
+a basket full of live and crawling crabs. Barges filled with Brenta
+water or Mirano wine take up their station at the neighbouring steps,
+and then ensues a mighty splashing and hurrying to and fro of men with
+tubs upon their heads. The brawny fellows in the wine-barge are red
+from brows to breast with drippings of the vat. And now there is a
+bustle in the quarter. A _barca_ has arrived from S. Erasmo, the
+island of the market-gardens. It is piled with gourds and pumpkins,
+cabbages and tomatoes, pomegranates and pears--a pyramid of gold and
+green and scarlet. Brown men lift the fruit aloft, and women bending
+from the pathway bargain for it. A clatter of chaffering tongues, a
+ring of coppers, a Babel of hoarse sea-voices, proclaim the sharpness
+of the struggle. When the quarter has been served, the boat sheers
+off diminished in its burden. Boys and girls are left seasoning their
+polenta with a slice of _zucca_, while the mothers of a score of
+families go pattering up yonder courtyard with the material for their
+husbands' supper in their handkerchiefs. Across the canal, or more
+correctly the _Rio_, opens a wide grass-grown court. It is
+lined on the right hand by a row of poor dwellings, swarming with
+gondoliers' children. A garden wall runs along the other side, over
+which I can see pomegranate-trees in fruit and pergolas of vines. Far
+beyond are more low houses, and then the sky, swept with sea-breezes,
+and the masts of an ocean-going ship against the dome and turrets of
+Palladio's Redentore.
+
+This is my home. By day it is as lively as a scene in
+_Masaniello_. By night, after nine o'clock, the whole stir of the
+quarter has subsided. Far away I hear the bell of some church tell
+the hours. But no noise disturbs my rest, unless perhaps a belated
+gondolier moors his boat beneath the window. My one maid, Catina,
+sings at her work the whole day through. My gondolier, Francesco,
+acts as valet. He wakes me in the morning, opens the shutters, brings
+sea-water for my bath, and takes his orders for the day. 'Will it do
+for Chioggia, Francesco?' 'Sissignore! The Signorino has set off in
+his _sandolo_ already with Antonio. The Signora is to go with us
+in the gondola.' 'Then get three more men, Francesco, and see that all
+of them can sing.'
+
+III.--TO CHIOGGIA WITH OAR AND SAIL
+
+The _sandolo_ is a boat shaped like the gondola, but smaller
+and lighter, without benches, and without the high steel prow or
+_ferro_ which distinguishes the gondola. The gunwale is only just
+raised above the water, over which the little craft skims with a rapid
+bounding motion, affording an agreeable variation from the stately
+swanlike movement of the gondola. In one of these boats--called by
+him the _Fisolo_ or Seamew--my friend Eustace had started with
+Antonio, intending to row the whole way to Chioggia, or, if the breeze
+favoured, to hoist a sail and help himself along. After breakfast,
+when the crew for my gondola had been assembled, Francesco and I
+followed with the Signora. It was one of those perfect mornings which
+occur as a respite from broken weather, when the air is windless and
+the light falls soft through haze on the horizon. As we broke into the
+lagoon behind the Redentore, the islands in front of us, S. Spirito,
+Poveglia, Malamocco, seemed as though they were just lifted from the
+sea-line. The Euganeans, far away to westward, were bathed in mist,
+and almost blent with the blue sky. Our four rowers put their backs
+into their work; and soon we reached the port of Malamocco, where a
+breeze from the Adriatic caught us sideways for a while. This is
+the largest of the breaches in the Lidi, or raised sand-reefs, which
+protect Venice from the sea: it affords an entrance to vessels of
+draught like the steamers of the Peninsular and Oriental Company. We
+crossed the dancing wavelets of the port; but when we passed under the
+lee of Pelestrina, the breeze failed, and the lagoon was once again a
+sheet of undulating glass. At S. Pietro on this island a halt was made
+to give the oarsmen wine, and here we saw the women at their cottage
+doorways making lace. The old lace industry of Venice has recently
+been revived. From Burano and Pelestrina cargoes of hand-made
+imitations of the ancient fabrics are sent at intervals to Jesurun's
+magazine at S. Marco. He is the chief _impresario_ of the trade,
+employing hundreds of hands, and speculating for a handsome profit in
+the foreign market on the price he gives his workwomen.
+
+Now we are well lost in the lagoons--Venice no longer visible behind;
+the Alps and Euganeans shrouded in a noonday haze; the lowlands at the
+mouth of Brenta marked by clumps of trees ephemerally faint in silver
+silhouette against the filmy, shimmering horizon. Form and colour
+have disappeared in light-irradiated vapour of an opal hue. And yet
+instinctively we know that we are not at sea; the different quality
+of the water, the piles emerging here and there above the surface, the
+suggestion of coast-lines scarcely felt in this infinity of lustre,
+all remind us that our voyage is confined to the charmed limits of an
+inland lake. At length the jutting headland of Pelestrina was reached.
+We broke across the Porto di Chioggia, and saw Chioggia itself
+ahead--a huddled mass of houses low upon the water. One by one, as
+we rowed steadily, the fishing-boats passed by, emerging from their
+harbour for a twelve hours' cruise upon the open sea. In a long
+line they came, with variegated sails of orange, red, and saffron,
+curiously chequered at the corners, and cantled with devices in
+contrasted tints. A little land-breeze carried them forward. The
+lagoon reflected their deep colours till they reached the port. Then,
+slightly swerving eastward on their course, but still in single file,
+they took the sea and scattered, like beautiful bright-plumaged birds,
+who from a streamlet float into a lake, and find their way at large
+according as each wills.
+
+The Signorino and Antonio, though want of wind obliged them to row the
+whole way from Venice, had reached Chioggia an hour before, and stood
+waiting to receive us on the quay. It is a quaint town this Chioggia,
+which has always lived a separate life from that of Venice. Language
+and race and customs have held the two populations apart from those
+distant years when Genoa and the Republic of S. Mark fought their duel
+to the death out in the Chioggian harbours, down to these days, when
+your Venetian gondolier will tell you that the Chioggoto loves his
+pipe more than his _donna_ or his wife. The main canal is lined
+with substantial palaces, attesting to old wealth and comfort. But
+from Chioggia, even more than from Venice, the tide of modern luxury
+and traffic has retreated. The place is left to fishing folk and
+builders of the fishing craft, whose wharves still form the liveliest
+quarter. Wandering about its wide deserted courts and _calli_,
+we feel the spirit of the decadent Venetian nobility. Passages from
+Goldoni's and Casanova's Memoirs occur to our memory. It seems easy to
+realise what they wrote about the dishevelled gaiety and lawless
+license of Chioggia in the days of powder, sword-knot, and _soprani_.
+Baffo walks beside us in hypocritical composure of bag-wig and
+senatorial dignity, whispering unmentionable sonnets in his dialect of
+_Xe_ and _Ga_. Somehow or another that last dotage of S. Mark's
+decrepitude is more recoverable by our fancy than the heroism of
+Pisani in the fourteenth century. From his prison in blockaded Venice
+the great admiral was sent forth on a forlorn hope, and blocked
+victorious Doria here with boats on which the nobles of the Golden
+Book had spent their fortunes. Pietro Doria boasted that with his own
+hands he would bridle the bronze horses of S. Mark. But now he found
+himself between the navy of Carlo Zeno in the Adriatic and the
+flotilla led by Vittore Pisani across the lagoon. It was in vain that
+the Republic of S. George strained every nerve to send him succour
+from the Ligurian sea; in vain that the lords of Padua kept opening
+communications with him from the mainland. From the 1st of January
+1380 till the 21st of June the Venetians pressed the blockade ever
+closer, grappling their foemen in a grip that if relaxed one moment
+would have hurled him at their throats. The long and breathless
+struggle ended in the capitulation at Chioggia of what remained of
+Doria's forty-eight galleys and fourteen thousand men.
+
+These great deeds are far away and hazy. The brief sentences of
+mediaeval annalists bring them less near to us than the _chroniques
+scandaleuses_ of good-for-nothing scoundrels, whose vulgar adventures
+might be revived at the present hour with scarce a change of setting.
+Such is the force of _intimite_ in literature. And yet Baffo and
+Casanova are as much of the past as Doria and Pisani. It is only
+perhaps that the survival of decadence in all we see around us, forms
+a fitting framework for our recollections of their vividly described
+corruption.
+
+Not far from the landing-place a balustraded bridge of ample breadth
+and large bravura manner spans the main canal. Like everything at
+Chioggia, it is dirty and has fallen from its first estate. Yet
+neither time nor injury can obliterate style or wholly degrade marble.
+Hard by the bridge there are two rival inns. At one of these we
+ordered a seadinner--crabs, cuttlefishes, soles, and turbots--which
+we ate at a table in the open air. Nothing divided us from the street
+except a row of Japanese privet-bushes in hooped tubs. Our banquet
+soon assumed a somewhat unpleasant similitude to that of Dives; for
+the Chioggoti, in all stages of decrepitude and squalor, crowded round
+to beg for scraps--indescribable old women, enveloped in their own
+petticoats thrown over their heads; girls hooded with sombre black
+mantles; old men wrinkled beyond recognition by their nearest
+relatives; jabbering, half-naked boys; slow, slouching fishermen with
+clay pipes in their mouths and philosophical acceptance on their sober
+foreheads.
+
+That afternoon the gondola and sandolo were lashed together side
+by side. Two sails were raised, and in this lazy fashion we stole
+homewards, faster or slower according as the breeze freshened or
+slackened, landing now and then on islands, sauntering along the
+sea-walls which bulwark Venice from the Adriatic, and singing--those
+at least of us who had the power to sing. Four of our Venetians had
+trained voices and memories of inexhaustible music. Over the level
+water, with the ripple plashing at our keel, their songs went abroad,
+and mingled with the failing day. The barcaroles and serenades
+peculiar to Venice were, of course, in harmony with the occasion.
+But some transcripts from classical operas were even more attractive,
+through the dignity with which these men invested them. By the
+peculiarity of their treatment the _recitativo_ of the stage
+assumed a solemn movement, marked in rhythm, which removed it from
+the commonplace into antiquity, and made me understand how cultivated
+music may pass back by natural, unconscious transition into the realm
+of popular melody.
+
+The sun sank, not splendidly, but quietly in banks of clouds above
+the Alps. Stars came out, uncertainly at first, and then in strength,
+reflected on the sea. The men of the Dogana watch-boat challenged us
+and let us pass. Madonna's lamp was twinkling from her shrine upon the
+harbour-pile. The city grew before us. Stealing into Venice in that
+calm--stealing silently and shadowlike, with scarce a ruffle of the
+water, the masses of the town emerging out of darkness into twilight,
+till San Giorgio's gun boomed with a flash athwart our stern, and the
+gas-lamps of the Piazzetta swam into sight; all this was like a long
+enchanted chapter of romance. And now the music of our men had sunk to
+one faint whistling from Eustace of tunes in harmony with whispers at
+the prow.
+
+Then came the steps of the Palazzo Venier and the deep-scented
+darkness of the garden. As we passed through to supper, I plucked a
+spray of yellow Banksia rose, and put it in my buttonhole. The dew was
+on its burnished leaves, and evening had drawn forth its perfume.
+
+IV.--MORNING RAMBLES
+
+A story is told of Poussin, the French painter, that when he was asked
+why he would not stay in Venice, he replied, 'If I stay here, I
+shall become a colourist!' A somewhat similar tale is reported of a
+fashionable English decorator. While on a visit to friends in Venice,
+he avoided every building which contains a Tintoretto, averring that
+the sight of Tintoretto's pictures would injure his carefully trained
+taste. It is probable that neither anecdote is strictly true. Yet
+there is a certain epigrammatic point in both; and I have often
+speculated whether even Venice could have so warped the genius of
+Poussin as to shed one ray of splendour on his canvases, or whether
+even Tintoretto could have so sublimed the prophet of Queen Anne as to
+make him add dramatic passion to a London drawing-room. Anyhow, it is
+exceedingly difficult to escape from colour in the air of Venice, or
+from Tintoretto in her buildings. Long, delightful mornings may be
+spent in the enjoyment of the one and the pursuit of the other by folk
+who have no classical or pseudo-mediaeval theories to oppress them.
+
+Tintoretto's house, though changed, can still be visited. It formed
+part of the Fondamenta dei Mori, so called from having been the
+quarter assigned to Moorish traders in Venice. A spirited carving of a
+turbaned Moor leading a camel charged with merchandise, remains above
+the waterline of a neighbouring building; and all about the crumbling
+walls sprout flowering weeds--samphire and snapdragon and the spiked
+campanula, which shoots a spire of sea-blue stars from chinks of
+Istrian stone.
+
+The house stands opposite the Church of Santa Maria dell' Orto, where
+Tintoretto was buried, and where four of his chief masterpieces are
+to be seen. This church, swept and garnished, is a triumph of modern
+Italian restoration. They have contrived to make it as commonplace as
+human ingenuity could manage. Yet no malice of ignorant industry can
+obscure the treasures it contains--the pictures of Cima, Gian Bellini,
+Palma, and the four Tintorettos, which form its crowning glory. Here
+the master may be studied in four of his chief moods: as the painter
+of tragic passion and movement, in the huge 'Last Judgment;' as the
+painter of impossibilities, in the 'Vision of Moses upon Sinai;'
+as the painter of purity and tranquil pathos, in the 'Miracle of S.
+Agnes;' as the painter of Biblical history brought home to daily life,
+in the 'Presentation of the Virgin.' Without leaving the Madonna dell'
+Orto, a student can explore his genius in all its depth and breadth;
+comprehend the enthusiasm he excites in those who seek, as the
+essentials of art, imaginative boldness and sincerity; understand what
+is meant by adversaries who maintain that, after all, Tintoretto was
+but an inspired Gustave Dore. Between that quiet canvas of the
+'Presentation,' so modest in its cool greys and subdued gold, and the
+tumult of flying, running? doesn't make much sense, but can't figure
+out a plausible alternative, ascending figures in the 'Judgment,' what
+an interval there is! How strangely the white lamb-like maiden,
+kneeling beside her lamb in the picture of S. Agnes, contrasts with
+the dusky gorgeousness of the Hebrew women despoiling themselves of
+jewels for the golden calf! Comparing these several manifestations of
+creative power, we feel ourselves in the grasp of a painter who was
+essentially a poet, one for whom his art was the medium for expressing
+before all things thought and passion. Each picture is executed in the
+manner suited to its tone of feeling, the key of its conception.
+
+Elsewhere than in the Madonna dell' Orto there are more distinguished
+single examples of Tintoretto's realising faculty. The 'Last Supper'
+in San Giorgio, for instance, and the 'Adoration of the Shepherds'
+in the Scuola di San Rocco illustrate his unique power of presenting
+sacred history in a novel, romantic framework of familiar things.
+The commonplace circumstances of ordinary life have been employed to
+portray in the one case a lyric of mysterious splendour; in the other,
+an idyll of infinite sweetness. Divinity shines through the rafters
+of that upper chamber, where round a low large table the Apostles
+are assembled in a group translated from the social customs of the
+painter's days. Divinity is shed upon the straw-spread manger, where
+Christ lies sleeping in the loft, with shepherds crowding through the
+room beneath.
+
+A studied contrast between the simplicity and repose of the central
+figure and the tumult of passions in the multitude around, may be
+observed in the 'Miracle of S. Agnes.' It is this which gives dramatic
+vigour to the composition. But the same effect is carried to its
+highest fulfilment, with even a loftier beauty, in the episode of
+Christ before the judgment-seat of Pilate, at San Rocco. Of all
+Tintoretto's religious pictures, that is the most profoundly felt, the
+most majestic. No other artist succeeded as he has here succeeded in
+presenting to us God incarnate. For this Christ is not merely the
+just man, innocent, silent before his accusers. The stationary,
+white-draped figure, raised high above the agitated crowd, with
+tranquil forehead slightly bent, facing his perplexed and fussy judge,
+is more than man. We cannot say perhaps precisely why he is divine.
+But Tintoretto has made us feel that he is. In other words, his
+treatment of the high theme chosen by him has been adequate.
+
+We must seek the Scuola di San Rocco for examples of Tintoretto's
+liveliest imagination. Without ceasing to be Italian in his attention
+to harmony and grace, he far exceeded the masters of his nation in the
+power of suggesting what is weird, mysterious, upon the borderland
+of the grotesque. And of this quality there are three remarkable
+instances in the Scuola. No one but Tintoretto could have evoked
+the fiend in his 'Temptation of Christ.' It is an indescribable
+hermaphroditic genius, the genius of carnal fascination, with
+outspread downy rose-plumed wings, and flaming bracelets on the full
+but sinewy arms, who kneels and lifts aloft great stones, smiling
+entreatingly to the sad, grey Christ seated beneath a rugged
+pent-house of the desert. No one again but Tintoretto could have
+dashed the hot lights of that fiery sunset in such quivering flakes
+upon the golden flesh of Eve, half hidden among laurels, as she
+stretches forth the fruit of the Fall to shrinking Adam. No one but
+Tintoretto, till we come to Blake, could have imagined yonder Jonah,
+summoned by the beck of God from the whale's belly. The monstrous
+fish rolls over in the ocean, blowing portentous vapour from his
+trump-shaped nostril. The prophet's beard descends upon his naked
+breast in hoary ringlets to the girdle. He has forgotten the past
+peril of the deep, although the whale's jaws yawn around him. Between
+him and the outstretched finger of Jehovah calling him again to life,
+there runs a spark of unseen spiritual electricity.
+
+To comprehend Tintoretto's touch upon the pastoral idyll we must turn
+our steps to San Giorgio again, and pace those meadows by the
+running river in company with his Manna-Gatherers. Or we may seek the
+Accademia, and notice how he here has varied the 'Temptation of Adam
+by Eve,' choosing a less tragic motive of seduction than the one so
+powerfully rendered at San Rocco. Or in the Ducal Palace we may
+take our station, hour by hour, before the 'Marriage of Bacchus and
+Ariadne.' It is well to leave the very highest achievements of art
+untouched by criticism, undescribed. And in this picture we have the
+most perfect of all modern attempts to realise an antique myth--more
+perfect than Raphael's 'Galatea,' or Titian's 'Meeting of Bacchus
+with Ariadne,' or Botticelli's 'Birth of Venus from the Sea.' It may
+suffice to marvel at the slight effect which melodies so powerful and
+so direct as these produce upon the ordinary public. Sitting, as is my
+wont, one Sunday morning, opposite the 'Bacchus,' four Germans with a
+cicerone sauntered by. The subject was explained to them. They waited
+an appreciable space of time. Then the youngest opened his lips and
+spake: 'Bacchus war der Wein-Gott.' And they all moved heavily away.
+_Bos locutus est_. 'Bacchus was the wine-god!' This, apparently,
+is what a picture tells to one man. To another it presents divine
+harmonies, perceptible indeed in nature, but here by the painter-poet
+for the first time brought together and cadenced in a work of art. For
+another it is perhaps the hieroglyph of pent-up passions and desired
+impossibilities. For yet another it may only mean the unapproachable
+inimitable triumph of consummate craft.
+
+Tintoretto, to be rightly understood, must be sought all over
+Venice--in the church as well as the Scuola di San Rocco; in
+the 'Temptation of S. Anthony' at S. Trovaso no less than in the
+Temptations of Eve and Christ; in the decorative pomp of the Sala del
+Senato, and in the Paradisal vision of the Sala del Gran Consiglio.
+Yet, after all, there is one of his most characteristic moods, to
+appreciate which fully we return to the Madonna dell' Orto. I have
+called him 'the painter of impossibilities.' At rare moments he
+rendered them possible by sheer imaginative force. If we wish to
+realise this phase of his creative power, and to measure our own
+subordination to his genius in its most hazardous enterprise, we
+must spend much time in the choir of this church. Lovers of art who
+mistrust this play of the audacious fancy--aiming at sublimity in
+supersensual regions, sometimes attaining to it by stupendous effort
+or authentic revelation, not seldom sinking to the verge of bathos,
+and demanding the assistance of interpretative sympathy in the
+spectator--such men will not take the point of view required of them
+by Tintoretto in his boldest flights, in the 'Worship of the Golden
+Calf' and in the 'Destruction of the World by Water.' It is for them
+to ponder well the flying archangel with the scales of judgment in his
+hand, and the seraph-charioted Jehovah enveloping Moses upon Sinai in
+lightnings.
+
+The gondola has had a long rest. Were Francesco but a little more
+impatient, he might be wondering what had become of the padrone. I bid
+him turn, and we are soon gliding into the Sacca della Misericordia.
+This is a protected float, where the wood which comes from Cadore
+and the hills of the Ampezzo is stored in spring. Yonder square white
+house, standing out to sea, fronting Murano and the Alps, they call
+the Oasa degli Spiriti. No one cares to inhabit it; for here, in old
+days, it was the wont of the Venetians to lay their dead for a night's
+rest before their final journey to the graveyard of S. Michele. So
+many generations of dead folk had made that house their inn, that it
+is now no fitting home for living men. San Michele is the island close
+before Murano, where the Lombardi built one of their most romantically
+graceful churches of pale Istrian stone, and where the Campo Santo has
+for centuries received the dead into its oozy clay. The cemetery is at
+present undergoing restoration. Its state of squalor and abandonment
+to cynical disorder makes one feel how fitting for Italians would be
+the custom of cremation. An island in the lagoons devoted to funeral
+pyres is a solemn and ennobling conception. This graveyard, with
+its ruinous walls, its mangy riot of unwholesome weeds, its corpses
+festering in slime beneath neglected slabs in hollow chambers, and the
+mephitic wash of poisoned waters that surround it, inspires the horror
+of disgust.
+
+The morning has not lost its freshness. Antelao and Tofana, guarding
+the vale above Cortina, show faint streaks of snow upon their
+amethyst. Little clouds hang in the still autumn sky. There are men
+dredging for shrimps and crabs through shoals uncovered by the ebb.
+Nothing can be lovelier, more resting to eyes tired with pictures than
+this tranquil, sunny expanse of the lagoon. As we round the point of
+the Bersaglio, new landscapes of island and Alp and low-lying mainland
+move into sight at every slow stroke of the oar. A luggage-train
+comes lumbering along the railway bridge, puffing white smoke into
+the placid blue. Then we strike down Cannaregio, and I muse upon
+processions of kings and generals and noble strangers, entering Venice
+by this water-path from Mestre, before the Austrians built their
+causeway for the trains. Some of the rare scraps of fresco upon house
+fronts, still to be seen in Venice, are left in Cannaregio. They
+are chiaroscuro allegories in a bold bravura manner of the sixteenth
+century. From these and from a few rosy fragments on the Fondaco
+dei Tedeschi, the Fabbriche Nuove, and precious fading figures in a
+certain courtyard near San Stefano, we form some notion how Venice
+looked when all her palaces were painted. Pictures by Gentile Bellini,
+Mansueti, and Carpaccio help the fancy in this work of restoration.
+And here and there, in back canals, we come across coloured sections
+of old buildings, capped by true Venetian chimneys, which for a moment
+seem to realise our dream.
+
+A morning with Tintoretto might well be followed by a morning with
+Carpaccio or Bellini. But space is wanting in these pages. Nor would
+it suit the manner of this medley to hunt the Lombardi through palaces
+and churches, pointing out their singularities of violet and yellow
+panellings in marble, the dignity of their wide-opened arches, or the
+delicacy of their shallow chiselled traceries in cream-white
+Istrian stone. It is enough to indicate the goal of many a pleasant
+pilgrimage: warrior angels of Vivarini and Basaiti hidden in a dark
+chapel of the Frari; Fra Francesco's fantastic orchard of fruits and
+flowers in distant S. Francesco della Vigna; the golden Gian Bellini
+in S. Zaccaria; Palma's majestic S. Barbara in S. Maria Formosa; San
+Giobbe's wealth of sculptured frieze and floral scroll; the Ponte
+di Paradiso, with its Gothic arch; the painted plates in the Museo
+Civico; and palace after palace, loved for some quaint piece of
+tracery, some moulding full of mediaeval symbolism, some fierce
+impossible Renaissance freak of fancy.
+
+Bather than prolong this list, I will tell a story which drew me one
+day past the Public Gardens to the metropolitan Church of Venice, San
+Pietro di Castello. The novella is related by Bandello. It has, as
+will be noticed, points of similarity to that of 'Romeo and Juliet.'
+
+V.--A VENETIAN NOVELLA
+
+At the time when Carpaccio and Gentile Bellini were painting those
+handsome youths in tight jackets, parti-coloured hose, and little
+round caps placed awry upon their shocks of well-combed hair, there
+lived in Venice two noblemen, Messer Pietro and Messer Paolo, whose
+palaces fronted each other on the Grand Canal. Messer Paolo was a
+widower, with one married daughter, and an only son of twenty years or
+thereabouts, named Gerardo. Messer Pietro's wife was still living; and
+this couple had but one child, a daughter, called Elena, of exceeding
+beauty, aged fourteen. Gerardo, as is the wont of gallants, was paying
+his addresses to a certain lady; and nearly every day he had to cross
+the Grand Canal in his gondola, and to pass beneath the house of Elena
+on his way to visit his Dulcinea; for this lady lived some distance
+up a little canal on which the western side of Messer Pietro's palace
+looked.
+
+Now it so happened that at the very time when the story opens, Messer
+Pietro's wife fell ill and died, and Elena was left alone at home with
+her father and her old nurse. Across the little canal of which I spoke
+there dwelt another nobleman, with four daughters, between the years
+of seventeen and twenty-one. Messer Pietro, desiring to provide
+amusement for poor little Elena, besought this gentleman that his
+daughters might come on feast-days to play with her. For you must know
+that, except on festivals of the Church, the custom of Venice required
+that gentlewomen should remain closely shut within the private
+apartments of their dwellings. His request was readily granted; and on
+the next feast-day the five girls began to play at ball together for
+forfeits in the great saloon, which opened with its row of Gothic
+arches and balustraded balcony upon the Grand Canal. The four sisters,
+meanwhile, had other thoughts than for the game. One or other of them,
+and sometimes three together, would let the ball drop, and run to the
+balcony to gaze upon their gallants, passing up and down in gondolas
+below; and then they would drop flowers or ribands for tokens. Which
+negligence of theirs annoyed Elena much; for she thought only of the
+game. Wherefore she scolded them in childish wise, and one of them
+made answer, 'Elena, if you only knew how pleasant it is to play as we
+are playing on this balcony, you would not care so much for ball and
+forfeits!'
+
+On one of those feast-days the four sisters were prevented from
+keeping their little friend company. Elena, with nothing to do, and
+feeling melancholy, leaned upon the window-sill which overlooked the
+narrow canal. And it chanced that just then Gerardo, on his way to
+Dulcinea, went by; and Elena looked down at him, as she had seen those
+sisters look at passers-by. Gerardo caught her eye, and glances passed
+between them, and Gerardo's gondolier, bending from the poop, said
+to his master, 'O master! methinks that gentle maiden is better worth
+your wooing than Dulcinea.' Gerardo pretended to pay no heed to these
+words; but after rowing a little way, he bade the man turn, and they
+went slowly back beneath the window. This time Elena, thinking to play
+the game which her four friends had played, took from her hair a clove
+carnation and let it fall close to Gerardo on the cushion of the
+gondola. He raised the flower and put it to his lips, acknowledging
+the courtesy with a grave bow. But the perfume of the clove and the
+beauty of Elena in that moment took possession of his heart together,
+and straightway he forgot Dulcinea.
+
+As yet he knew not who Elena was. Nor is this wonderful; for the
+daughters of Venetian nobles were but rarely seen or spoken of.
+But the thought of her haunted him awake and sleeping; and every
+feast-day, when there was the chance of seeing her, he rowed his
+gondola beneath her windows. And there she appeared to him in company
+with her four friends; the five girls clustering together like sister
+roses beneath the pointed windows of the Gothic balcony. Elena, on her
+side, had no thought of love; for of love she had heard no one speak.
+But she took pleasure in the game those friends had taught her, of
+leaning from the balcony to watch Gerardo. He meanwhile grew love-sick
+and impatient, wondering how he might declare his passion. Until one
+day it happened that, talking through a lane or _calle_ which
+skirted Messer Pietro'a palace, he caught sight of Elena's nurse, who
+was knocking at the door, returning from some shopping she had
+made. This nurse had been his own nurse in childhood; therefore he
+remembered her, and cried aloud, 'Nurse, Nurse!' But the old woman did
+not hear him, and passed into the house and shut the door behind her.
+Whereupon Gerardo, greatly moved, still called to her, and when he
+reached the door, began to knock upon it violently. And whether it
+was the agitation of finding himself at last so near the wish of his
+heart, or whether the pains of waiting for his love had weakened him,
+I know not; but, while he knocked, his senses left him, and he fell
+fainting in the doorway. Then the nurse recognised the youth to whom
+she had given suck, and brought him into the courtyard by the help of
+handmaidens, and Elena came down and gazed upon him. The house was now
+full of bustle, and Messer Pietro heard the noise, and seeing the son
+of his neighbour in so piteous a plight, he caused Gerardo to be laid
+upon a bed. But for all they could do with him, he recovered not from
+his swoon. And after a while force was that they should place him in
+a gondola and ferry him across to his father's house. The nurse went
+with him, and informed Messer Paolo of what had happened. Doctors were
+sent for, and the whole family gathered round Gerardo's bed. After
+a while he revived a little; and thinking himself still upon the
+doorstep of Pietro's palace, called again, 'Nurse, Nurse!' She was
+near at hand, and would have spoken to him. But while he summoned his
+senses to his aid, he became gradually aware of his own kinsfolk
+and dissembled the secret of his grief. They beholding him in better
+cheer, departed on their several ways, and the nurse still sat alone
+beside him. Then he explained to her what he had at heart, and how he
+was in love with a maiden whom he had seen on feast-days in the
+house of Messer Pietro. But still he knew not Elena's name; and she,
+thinking it impossible that such a child had inspired this passion,
+began to marvel which of the four sisters it was Gerardo loved. Then
+they appointed the next Sunday, when all the five girls should be
+together, for Gerardo by some sign, as he passed beneath the window,
+to make known to the old nurse his lady.
+
+Elena, meanwhile, who had watched Gerardo lying still and pale in
+swoon beneath her on the pavement of the palace, felt the stirring
+of a new unknown emotion in her soul. When Sunday came, she devised
+excuses for keeping her four friends away, bethinking her that she
+might see him once again alone, and not betray the agitation which she
+dreaded. This ill suited the schemes of the nurse, who nevertheless
+was forced to be content. But after dinner, seeing how restless was
+the girl, and how she came and went, and ran a thousand times to the
+balcony, the nurse began to wonder whether Elena herself were not in
+love with some one. So she feigned to sleep, but placed herself within
+sight of the window. And soon Gerardo came by in his gondola; and
+Elena, who was prepared, threw to him her nosegay. The watchful nurse
+had risen, and peeping behind the girl's shoulder, saw at a glance how
+matters stood. Thereupon she began to scold her charge, and say, 'Is
+this a fair and comely thing, to stand all day at balconies and throw
+flowers at passers-by? Woe to you if your father should come to know
+of this! He would make you wish yourself among the dead!' Elena, sore
+troubled at her nurse's rebuke, turned and threw her arms about her
+neck, and called her 'Nanna!' as the wont is of Venetian children.
+Then she told the old woman how she had learned that game from the
+four sisters, and how she thought it was not different, but far
+more pleasant, than the game of forfeits; whereupon her nurse spoke
+gravely, explaining what love is, and how that love should lead to
+marriage, and bidding her search her own heart if haply she could
+choose Gerardo for her husband. There was no reason, as she knew, why
+Messer Paolo's son should not mate with Messer Pietro's daughter. But
+being a romantic creature, as many women are, she resolved to bring
+the match about in secret.
+
+Elena took little time to reflect, but told her nurse that she was
+willing, if Gerardo willed it too, to have him for her husband. Then
+went the nurse and made the young man know how matters stood, and
+arranged with him a day, when Messer Pietro should be in the Council
+of the Pregadi, and the servants of the palace otherwise employed,
+for him to come and meet his Elena. A glad man was Gerardo, nor did
+he wait to think how better it would be to ask the hand of Elena in
+marriage from her father. But when the day arrived, he sought the
+nurse, and she took him to a chamber in the palace, where there stood
+an image of the Blessed Virgin. Elena was there, pale and timid; and
+when the lovers clasped hands, neither found many words to say. But
+the nurse bade them take heart, and leading them before Our Lady,
+joined their hands, and made Gerardo place his ring on his bride's
+finger. After this fashion were Gerardo and Elena wedded. And for some
+while, by the assistance of the nurse, they dwelt together in much
+love and solace, meeting often as occasion offered.
+
+Messer Paolo, who knew nothing of these things, took thought meanwhile
+for his son's career. It was the season when the Signiory of Venice
+sends a fleet of galleys to Beirut with merchandise; and the noblemen
+may bid for the hiring of a ship, and charge it with wares, and
+send whomsoever they list as factor in their interest. One of these
+galleys, then, Messer Paolo engaged, and told his son that he had
+appointed him to journey with it and increase their wealth. 'On thy
+return, my son,' he said, 'we will bethink us of a wife for thee.'
+Gerardo, when he heard these words, was sore troubled, and first he
+told his father roundly that he would not go, and flew off in the
+twilight to pour out his perplexities to Elena. But she, who was
+prudent and of gentle soul, besought him to obey his father in this
+thing, to the end, moreover, that, having done his will and increased
+his wealth, he might afterwards unfold the story of their secret
+marriage. To these good counsels, though loth, Gerardo consented.
+His father was overjoyed at his son's repentance. The galley was
+straightway laden with merchandise, and Gerardo set forth on his
+voyage.
+
+The trip to Beirut and back lasted usually six months or at the most
+seven. Now when Gerardo had been some six months away, Messer Pietro,
+noticing how fair his daughter was, and how she had grown into
+womanhood, looked about him for a husband for her. When he had found a
+youth suitable in birth and wealth and years, he called for Elena, and
+told her that the day had been appointed for her marriage. She, alas!
+knew not what to answer. She feared to tell her father that she was
+already married, for she knew not whether this would please Gerardo.
+For the same reason she dreaded to throw herself upon the kindness of
+Messer Paolo. Nor was her nurse of any help in counsel; for the old
+woman repented her of what she had done, and had good cause to believe
+that, even if the marriage with Gerardo were accepted by the two
+fathers, they would punish her for her own part in the affair.
+Therefore she bade Elena wait on fortune, and hinted to her that, if
+the worst came to the worst, no one need know she had been wedded with
+the ring to Gerardo. Such weddings, you must know, were binding; but
+till they had been blessed by the Church, they had not taken the force
+of a religious sacrament. And this is still the case in Italy among
+the common folk, who will say of a man, 'Si, e ammogliato; ma il
+matrimonio non e stato benedetto.' 'Yes, he has taken a wife, but the
+marriage has not yet been blessed.'
+
+So the days flew by in doubt and sore distress for Elena. Then on the
+night before her wedding, she felt that she could bear this life no
+longer. But having no poison, and being afraid to pierce her bosom
+with a knife, she lay down on her bed alone, and tried to die by
+holding in her breath. A mortal swoon came over her; her senses fled;
+the life in her remained suspended. And when her nurse came next
+morning to call her, she found poor Elena cold as a corpse. Messer
+Pietro and all the household rushed, at the nurse's cries, into the
+room, and they all saw Elena stretched dead upon her bed undressed.
+Physicians were called, who made theories to explain the cause of
+death. But all believed that she was really dead, beyond all help
+of art or medicine. Nothing remained but to carry her to church for
+burial instead of marriage. Therefore, that very evening, a funeral
+procession was formed, which moved by torchlight up the Grand Canal,
+along the Riva, past the blank walls of the Arsenal, to the Campo
+before San Pietro in Castello. Elena lay beneath the black felze
+in one gondola, with a priest beside her praying, and other boats
+followed bearing mourners. Then they laid her in a marble chest
+outside the church, and all departed, still with torches burning, to
+their homes.
+
+Now it so fell out that upon that very evening Gerardo's galley had
+returned from Syria, and was anchoring within the port of Lido, which
+looks across to the island of Castello. It was the gentle custom of
+Venice at that time that, when a ship arrived from sea, the friends of
+those on board at once came out to welcome them, and take and give the
+news. Therefore many noble youths and other citizens were on the deck
+of Gerardo's galley, making merry with him over the safe conduct
+of his voyage. Of one of these he asked, 'Whose is yonder funeral
+procession returning from San Pietro?' The young man made answer,
+'Alas, for poor Elena, Messer Pietro's daughter! She should have been
+married this day. But death took her, and to-night they buried her
+in the marble monument outside the church.' A woeful man was Gerardo,
+hearing suddenly this news, and knowing what his dear wife must
+have suffered ere she died. Yet he restrained himself, daring not to
+disclose his anguish, and waited till his friends had left the galley.
+Then he called to him the captain of the oarsmen, who was his friend,
+and unfolded to him all the story of his love and sorrow, and said
+that he must go that night and see his wife once more, if even he
+should have to break her tomb. The captain tried to dissuade him, but
+in vain. Seeing him so obstinate, he resolved not to desert Gerardo.
+The two men took one of the galley's boats, and rowed together toward
+San Pietro. It was past midnight when they reached the Campo and broke
+the marble sepulchre asunder. Pushing back its lid, Gerardo descended
+into the grave and abandoned himself upon the body of his Elena. One
+who had seen them at that moment could not well have said which of the
+two was dead and which was living--Elena or her husband. Meantime the
+captain of the oarsmen, fearing lest the watch (set by the Masters of
+the Night to keep the peace of Venice) might arrive, was calling on
+Gerardo to come back. Gerardo heeded him no whit. But at the last,
+compelled by his entreaties, and as it were astonied, he arose,
+bearing his wife's corpse in his arms, and carried her clasped against
+his bosom to the boat, and laid her therein, and sat down by her
+side and kissed her frequently, and suffered not his friend's
+remonstrances. Force was for the captain, having brought himself into
+this scrape, that he should now seek refuge by the nearest way from
+justice. Therefore he hoved gently from the bank, and plied his oar,
+and brought the gondola apace into the open waters. Gerardo still
+clasped Elena, dying husband by dead wife. But the sea-breeze
+freshened towards daybreak; and the captain, looking down upon that
+pair, and bringing to their faces the light of his boat's lantern,
+judged their case not desperate at all. On Elena's cheek there was a
+flush of life less deadly even than the pallor of Gerardo's forehead.
+Thereupon the good man called aloud, and Gerardo started from his
+grief; and both together they chafed the hands and feet of Elena; and,
+the sea-breeze aiding with its saltness, they awoke in her the spark
+of life.
+
+Dimly burned the spark. But Gerardo, being aware of it, became a man
+again. Then, having taken counsel with the captain, both resolved
+to bear her to that brave man's mother's house. A bed was soon made
+ready, and food was brought; and after due time, she lifted up her
+face and knew Gerardo. The peril of the grave was past, but thought
+had now to be taken for the future. Therefore Gerardo, leaving his
+wife to the captain's mother, rowed back to the galley and prepared to
+meet his father. With good store of merchandise and with great gains
+from his traffic, he arrived in that old palace on the Grand Canal.
+Then having opened to Messer Paolo the matters of his journey, and
+shown him how he had fared, and set before him tables of disbursements
+and receipts, he seized the moment of his father's gladness. 'Father,'
+he said, and as he spoke he knelt upon his knees, 'Father, I bring you
+not good store of merchandise and bags of gold alone; I bring you also
+a wedded wife, whom I have saved this night from death.' And when
+the old man's surprise was quieted, he told him the whole story. Now
+Messer Paolo, desiring no better than that his son should wed the
+heiress of his neighbour, and knowing well that Messer Pietro would
+make great joy receiving back his daughter from the grave, bade
+Gerardo in haste take rich apparel and clothe Elena therewith, and
+fetch her home. These things were swiftly done; and after evenfall
+Messer Pietro was bidden to grave business in his neighbour's palace.
+With heavy heart he came, from a house of mourning to a house of
+gladness. But there, at the banquet-table's head he saw his dead child
+Elena alive, and at her side a husband. And when the whole truth had
+been declared, he not only kissed and embraced the pair who knelt
+before him, but of his goodness forgave the nurse, who in her
+turn came trembling to his feet. Then fell there joy and bliss in
+overmeasure that night upon both palaces of the Canal Grande. And with
+the morrow the Church blessed the spousals which long since had been
+on both sides vowed and consummated.
+
+VI.--ON THE LAGOONS
+
+The mornings are spent in study, sometimes among pictures, sometimes
+in the Marcian Library, or again in those vast convent chambers of
+the Frari, where the archives of Venice load innumerable shelves. The
+afternoons invite us to a further flight upon the water. Both sandolo
+and gondola await our choice, and we may sail or row, according as the
+wind and inclination tempt us.
+
+Yonder lies San Lazzaro, with the neat red buildings of the Armenian
+convent. The last oleander blossoms shine rosy pink above its walls
+against the pure blue sky as we glide into the little harbour. Boats
+piled with coal-black grapes block the landing-place, for the Padri
+are gathering their vintage from the Lido, and their presses run
+with new wine. Eustace and I have not come to revive memories of
+Byron--that curious patron saint of the Armenian colony--or to
+inspect the printing-press, which issues books of little value for
+our studies. It is enough to pace the terrace, and linger half an
+hour beneath the low broad arches of the alleys pleached with vines,
+through which the domes and towers of Venice rise more beautiful by
+distance.
+
+Malamocco lies considerably farther, and needs a full hour of stout
+rowing to reach it. Alighting there, we cross the narrow strip of
+land, and find ourselves upon the huge sea-wall--block piled
+on block--of Istrian stone in tiers and ranks, with cunning
+breathing-places for the waves to wreak their fury on and foam their
+force away in fretful waste. The very existence of Venice may be said
+to depend sometimes on these _murazzi_, which were finished at
+an immense cost by the Republic in the days of its decadence. The
+enormous monoliths which compose them had to be brought across the
+Adriatic in sailing vessels. Of all the Lidi, that of Malamocco is the
+weakest; and here, if anywhere, the sea might effect an entrance into
+the lagoon. Our gondoliers told us of some places where the _murazzi_
+were broken in a gale, or _sciroccale_, not very long ago. Lying awake
+in Venice, when the wind blows hard, one hears the sea thundering upon
+its sandy barrier, and blesses God for the _murazzi_. On such a night
+it happened once to me to dream a dream of Venice overwhelmed by
+water. I saw the billows roll across the smooth lagoon like a gigantic
+Eager. The Ducal Palace crumbled, and San Marco's domes went down. The
+Campanile rocked and shivered like a reed. And all along the Grand
+Canal the palaces swayed helpless, tottering to their fall, while
+boats piled high with men and women strove to stem the tide, and save
+themselves from those impending ruins. It was a mad dream, born of the
+sea's roar and Tintoretto's painting. But this afternoon no such
+visions are suggested. The sea sleeps, and in the moist autumn air we
+break tall branches of the seeded yellowing samphire from hollows of
+the rocks, and bear them homeward in a wayward bouquet mixed with cobs
+of Indian-corn.
+
+Fusina is another point for these excursions. It lies at the mouth
+of the Canal di Brenta, where the mainland ends in marsh and
+meadows, intersected by broad renes. In spring the ditches bloom with
+fleurs-de-lys; in autumn they take sober colouring from lilac daisies
+and the delicate sea-lavender. Scores of tiny plants are turning
+scarlet on the brown moist earth; and when the sun goes down behind
+the Euganean hills, his crimson canopy of cloud, reflected on these
+shallows, muddy shoals, and wilderness of matted weeds, converts the
+common earth into a fairyland of fabulous dyes. Purple, violet, and
+rose are spread around us. In front stretches the lagoon, tinted
+with a pale light from the east, and beyond this pallid mirror shines
+Venice--a long low broken line, touched with the softest roseate
+flush. Ere we reach the Giudecca on our homeward way, sunset has
+faded. The western skies have clad themselves in green, barred with
+dark fire-rimmed clouds. The Euganean hills stand like stupendous
+pyramids, Egyptian, solemn, against a lemon space on the horizon. The
+far reaches of the lagoons, the Alps, and islands assume those tones
+of glowing lilac which are the supreme beauty of Venetian evening.
+Then, at last, we see the first lamps glitter on the Zattere. The
+quiet of the night has come.
+
+Words cannot be formed to express the endless varieties of Venetian
+sunset. The most magnificent follow after wet stormy days, when the
+west breaks suddenly into a labyrinth of fire, when chasms of clear
+turquoise heavens emerge, and horns of flame are flashed to the
+zenith, and unexpected splendours scale the fretted clouds, step over
+step, stealing along the purple caverns till the whole dome throbs.
+Or, again, after a fair day, a change of weather approaches, and
+high, infinitely high, the skies are woven over with a web of
+half-transparent cirrus-clouds. These in the afterglow blush crimson,
+and through their rifts the depth of heaven is of a hard and gemlike
+blue, and all the water turns to rose beneath them. I remember one
+such evening on the way back from Torcello. We were well out at sea
+between Mazzorbo and Murano. The ruddy arches overhead were reflected
+without interruption in the waveless ruddy lake below. Our black boat
+was the only dark spot in this sphere of splendour. We seemed to hang
+suspended; and such as this, I fancied, must be the feeling of an
+insect caught in the heart of a fiery-petalled rose. Yet not these
+melodramatic sunsets alone are beautiful. Even more exquisite,
+perhaps, are the lagoons, painted in monochrome of greys, with just
+one touch of pink upon a western cloud, scattered in ripples here and
+there on the waves below, reminding us that day has passed and evening
+come. And beautiful again are the calm settings of fair weather, when
+sea and sky alike are cheerful, and the topmost blades of the lagoon
+grass, peeping from the shallows, glance like emeralds upon the
+surface. There is no deep stirring of the spirit in a symphony of
+light and colour; but purity, peace, and freshness make their way into
+our hearts.
+
+VII.--AT THE LIDO
+
+Of all these afternoon excursions, that to the Lido is most frequent.
+It has two points for approach. The more distant is the little station
+of San Nicoletto, at the mouth of the Porto. With an ebb-tide, the
+water of the lagoon runs past the mulberry gardens of this hamlet like
+a river. There is here a grove of acacia-trees, shadowy and dreamy,
+above deep grass, which even an Italian summer does not wither. The
+Riva is fairly broad, forming a promenade, where one may conjure
+up the personages of a century ago. For San Nicoletto used to be a
+fashionable resort before the other points of Lido had been occupied
+by pleasure-seekers. An artist even now will select its old-world
+quiet, leafy shade, and prospect through the islands of Vignole and
+Sant' Erasmo to snow-touched peaks of Antelao and Tofana, rather than
+the glare and bustle and extended view of Venice which its rival Sant'
+Elisabetta offers.
+
+But when we want a plunge into the Adriatic, or a stroll along smooth
+sands, or a breath of genuine sea-breeze, or a handful of horned
+poppies from the dunes, or a lazy half-hour's contemplation of a
+limitless horizon flecked with russet sails, then we seek Sant'
+Elisabetta. Our boat is left at the landing-place. We saunter across
+the island and back again. Antonio and Francesco wait and order wine,
+which we drink with them in the shade of the little _osteria's_
+wall.
+
+A certain afternoon in May I well remember, for this visit to the Lido
+was marked by one of those apparitions which are as rare as they are
+welcome to the artist's soul. I have always held that in our modern
+life the only real equivalent for the antique mythopoeic sense--that
+sense which enabled the Hellenic race to figure for themselves the
+powers of earth and air, streams and forests, and the presiding genii
+of places, under the forms of living human beings, is supplied by
+the appearance at some felicitous moment of a man or woman who
+impersonates for our imagination the essence of the beauty that
+environs us. It seems, at such a fortunate moment, as though we had
+been waiting for this revelation, although perchance the want of it
+had not been previously felt. Our sensations and perceptions test
+themselves at the touchstone of this living individuality. The keynote
+of the whole music dimly sounding in our ears is struck. A melody
+emerges, clear in form and excellent in rhythm. The landscapes we have
+painted on our brain, no longer lack their central figure. The life
+proper to the complex conditions we have studied is discovered, and
+every detail, judged by this standard of vitality, falls into its
+right relations.
+
+I had been musing long that day and earnestly upon the mystery of the
+lagoons, their opaline transparencies of air and water, their fretful
+risings and sudden subsidence into calm, the treacherousness of their
+shoals, the sparkle and the splendour of their sunlight. I had asked
+myself how would a Greek sculptor have personified the elemental deity
+of these salt-water lakes, so different in quality from the AEgean
+or Ionian sea? What would he find distinctive of their spirit? The
+Tritons of these shallows must be of other form and lineage than the
+fierce-eyed youth who blows his conch upon the curled crest of a wave,
+crying aloud to his comrades, as he bears the nymph away to caverns
+where the billows plunge in tideless instability.
+
+We had picked up shells and looked for sea-horses on the Adriatic
+shore. Then we returned to give our boatmen wine beneath the vine-clad
+_pergola_. Four other men were there, drinking, and eating from a
+dish of fried fish set upon the coarse white linen cloth. Two of
+them soon rose and went away. Of the two who stayed, one was a large,
+middle-aged man; the other was still young. He was tall and sinewy,
+but slender, for these Venetians are rarely massive in their strength.
+Each limb is equally developed by the exercise of rowing upright,
+bending all the muscles to their stroke. Their bodies are elastically
+supple, with free sway from the hips and a mercurial poise upon the
+ankle. Stefano showed these qualities almost in exaggeration. The type
+in him was refined to its artistic perfection. Moreover, he was
+rarely in repose, but moved with a singular brusque grace. A black
+broad-brimmed hat was thrown back upon his matted _zazzera_ of
+dark hair tipped with dusky brown. This shock of hair, cut in flakes,
+and falling wilfully, reminded me of the lagoon grass when it darkens
+in autumn upon uncovered shoals, and sunset gilds its sombre edges.
+Fiery grey eyes beneath it gazed intensely, with compulsive effluence
+of electricity. It was the wild glance of a Triton. Short blonde
+moustache, dazzling teeth, skin bronzed, but showing white and
+healthful through open front and sleeves of lilac shirt. The dashing
+sparkle of this animate splendour, who looked to me as though the
+sea-waves and the sun had made him in some hour of secret and unquiet
+rapture, was somehow emphasised by a curious dint dividing his square
+chin--a cleft that harmonised with smile on lip and steady flame in
+eyes. I hardly know what effect it would have upon a reader to compare
+eyes to opals. Yet Stefano's eyes, as they met mine, had the vitreous
+intensity of opals, as though the colour of Venetian waters were
+vitalised in them. This noticeable being had a rough, hoarse voice,
+which, to develop the parallel with a sea-god, might have screamed in
+storm or whispered raucous messages from crests of tossing billows.
+
+I felt, as I looked, that here, for me at least, the mythopoem of the
+lagoons was humanised; the spirit of the saltwater lakes had appeared
+to me; the final touch of life emergent from nature had been given. I
+was satisfied; for I had seen a poem.
+
+Then we rose, and wandered through the Jews' cemetery. It is a quiet
+place, where the flat grave-stones, inscribed in Hebrew and Italian,
+lie deep in Lido sand, waved over with wild grass and poppies. I would
+fain believe that no neglect, but rather the fashion of this folk, had
+left the monuments of generations to be thus resumed by nature. Yet,
+knowing nothing of the history of this burial-ground, I dare not
+affirm so much. There is one outlying piece of the cemetery which
+seems to contradict my charitable interpretation. It is not far from
+San Nicoletto. No enclosure marks it from the unconsecrated dunes.
+Acacia-trees sprout amid the monuments, and break the tablets with
+their thorny shoots upthrusting from the soil. Where patriarchs and
+rabbis sleep for centuries, the fishers of the sea now wander, and
+defile these habitations of the dead:
+
+ Corruption most abhorred
+ Mingling itself with their renowned ashes.
+
+Some of the grave-stones have been used to fence the towing-path; and
+one I saw, well carved with letters legible of Hebrew on fair Istrian
+marble, which roofed an open drain leading from the stable of a
+Christian dog.
+
+VIII.--A VENETIAN RESTAURANT
+
+At the end of a long glorious day, unhappy is that mortal whom the
+Hermes of a cosmopolitan hotel, white-chokered and white-waistcoated,
+marshals to the Hades of the _table-d'hote_. The world has often
+been compared to an inn; but on my way down to this common meal I
+have, not unfrequently, felt fain to reverse the simile. From their
+separate stations, at the appointed hour, the guests like ghosts flit
+to a gloomy gas-lit chamber. They are of various speech and race,
+preoccupied with divers interests and cares. Necessity and the
+waiter drive them all to a sepulchral syssition, whereof the cook too
+frequently deserves that old Greek comic epithet--[Greek: hadou
+mageiros]--cook of the Inferno. And just as we are told that in
+Charon's boat we shall not be allowed to pick our society, so here
+we must accept what fellowship the fates provide. An English spinster
+retailing paradoxes culled to-day from Ruskin's handbooks; an American
+citizen describing his jaunt in a gondola from the railway station;
+a German shopkeeper descanting in one breath on Baur's Bock and the
+beauties of the Marcusplatz; an intelligent aesthete bent on working
+into clearness his own views of Carpaccio's genius: all these in turn,
+or all together, must be suffered gladly through well-nigh two long
+hours. Uncomforted in soul we rise from the expensive banquet; and how
+often rise from it unfed!
+
+Far other be the doom of my own friends--of pious bards and genial
+companions, lovers of natural and lovely things! Nor for these do
+I desire a seat at Florian's marble tables, or a perch in Quadri's
+window, though the former supply dainty food, and the latter command
+a bird's-eye view of the Piazza. Rather would I lead them to a certain
+humble tavern on the Zattere. It is a quaint, low-built, unpretending
+little place, near a bridge, with a garden hard by which sends a
+cataract of honeysuckles sunward over a too-jealous wall. In front
+lies a Mediterranean steamer, which all day long has been discharging
+cargo. Gazing westward up Giudecca, masts and funnels bar the
+sunset and the Paduan hills; and from a little front room of the
+_trattoria_ the view is so marine that one keeps fancying oneself
+in some ship's cabin. Sea-captains sit and smoke beside their glass
+of grog in the pavilion and the _caffe_. But we do not seek their
+company at dinner-time. Our way lies under yonder arch, and up the
+narrow alley into a paved court. Here are oleanders in pots, and
+plants of Japanese spindle-wood in tubs; and from the walls beneath
+the window hang cages of all sorts of birds--a talking parrot, a
+whistling blackbird, goldfinches, canaries, linnets. Athos, the fat
+dog, who goes to market daily in a _barchetta_ with his master,
+snuffs around. 'Where are Porthos and Aramis, my friend?' Athos does
+not take the joke; he only wags his stump of tail and pokes his nose
+into my hand. What a Tartufe's nose it is! Its bridge displays the
+full parade of leather-bound brass-nailed muzzle. But beneath, this
+muzzle is a patent sham. The frame does not even pretend to close
+on Athos' jaw, and the wise dog wears it like a decoration. A little
+farther we meet that ancient grey cat, who has no discoverable name,
+but is famous for the sprightliness and grace with which she bears her
+eighteen years. Not far from the cat one is sure to find Carlo--the
+bird-like, bright-faced, close-cropped Venetian urchin, whose duty
+it is to trot backwards and forwards between the cellar and the
+dining-tables. At the end of the court we walk into the kitchen, where
+the black-capped little _padrone_ and the gigantic white-capped
+chef are in close consultation. Here we have the privilege of
+inspecting the larder--fish of various sorts, meat, vegetables,
+several kinds of birds, pigeons, tordi, beccafichi, geese, wild
+ducks, chickens, woodcock, &c., according to the season. We select
+our dinner, and retire to eat it either in the court among the birds
+beneath the vines, or in the low dark room which occupies one side of
+it. Artists of many nationalities and divers ages frequent this house;
+and the talk arising from the several little tables, turns upon points
+of interest and beauty in the life and landscape of Venice. There
+can be no difference of opinion about the excellence of
+the _cuisine_, or about the reasonable charges of this
+_trattoria_. A soup of lentils, followed by boiled turbot or
+fried soles, beefsteak or mutton cutlets, tordi or beccafichi, with
+a salad, the whole enlivened with good red wine or Florio's Sicilian
+Marsala from the cask, costs about four francs. Gas is unknown in the
+establishment. There is no noise, no bustle, no brutality of waiters,
+no _ahurissement_ of tourists. And when dinner is done, we can
+sit awhile over our cigarette and coffee, talking until the night
+invites us to a stroll along the Zattere or a _giro_ in the
+gondola.
+
+IX.--NIGHT IN VENICE
+
+Night in Venice! Night is nowhere else so wonderful, unless it be in
+winter among the high Alps. But the nights of Venice and the nights of
+the mountains are too different in kind to be compared.
+
+There is the ever-recurring miracle of the full moon rising, before
+day is dead, behind San Giorgio, spreading a path of gold on the
+lagoon which black boats traverse with the glow-worm lamp upon their
+prow; ascending the cloudless sky and silvering the domes of the
+Salute; pouring vitreous sheen upon the red lights of the Piazzetta;
+flooding the Grand Canal, and lifting the Rialto higher in ethereal
+whiteness; piercing but penetrating not the murky labyrinth of
+_rio_ linked with _rio_, through which we wind in light and
+shadow, to reach once more the level glories and the luminous expanse
+of heaven beyond the Misericordia.
+
+This is the melodrama of Venetian moonlight; and if a single
+impression of the night has to be retained from one visit to Venice,
+those are fortunate who chance upon a full moon of fair weather. Yet
+I know not whether some quieter and soberer effects are not more
+thrilling. To-night, for example, the waning moon will rise late
+through veils of _scirocco_. Over the bridges of San Cristoforo
+and San Gregorio, through the deserted Calle di Mezzo, my friend and
+I walk in darkness, pass the marble basements of the Salute, and push
+our way along its Riva to the point of the Dogana. We are out at sea
+alone, between the Canalozzo and the Giudecca. A moist wind ruffles
+the water and cools our forehead. It is so dark that we can only see
+San Giorgio by the light reflected on it from the Piazzetta. The same
+light climbs the Campanile of S. Mark, and shows the golden angel in
+a mystery of gloom. The only noise that reaches us is a confused hum
+from the Piazza. Sitting and musing there, the blackness of the water
+whispers in our ears a tale of death. And now we hear a plash of oars,
+and gliding through the darkness comes a single boat. One man leaps
+upon the landing-place without a word and disappears. There is another
+wrapped in a military cloak asleep. I see his face beneath me, pale
+and quiet. The _barcaruolo_ turns the point in silence. From the
+darkness they came; into the darkness they have gone. It is only an
+ordinary incident of coastguard service. But the spirit of the night
+has made a poem of it.
+
+Even tempestuous and rainy weather, though melancholy enough, is never
+sordid here. There is no noise from carriage traffic in Venice, and
+the sea-wind preserves the purity and transparency of the atmosphere.
+It had been raining all day, but at evening came a partial clearing.
+I went down to the Molo, where the large reach of the lagoon was all
+moon-silvered, and San Giorgio Maggiore dark against the bluish sky,
+and Santa Maria della Salute domed with moon-irradiated pearl, and the
+wet slabs of the Riva shimmering in moonlight, the whole misty sky,
+with its clouds and stellar spaces, drenched in moonlight, nothing but
+moonlight sensible except the tawny flare of gas-lamps and the orange
+lights of gondolas afloat upon the waters. On such a night the very
+spirit of Venice is abroad. We feel why she is called Bride of the
+Sea.
+
+Take yet another night. There had been a representation of Verdi's
+'Forza del Destino' at the Teatro Malibran. After midnight we walked
+homeward through the Merceria, crossed the Piazza, and dived into the
+narrow _calle_ which leads to the _traghetto_ of the Salute.
+It was a warm moist starless night, and there seemed no air to breathe
+in those narrow alleys. The gondolier was half asleep. Eustace called
+him as we jumped into his boat, and rang our _soldi_ on the
+gunwale. Then he arose and turned the _ferro_ round, and stood
+across towards the Salute. Silently, insensibly, from the oppression
+of confinement in the airless streets to the liberty and immensity
+of the water and the night we passed. It was but two minutes ere we
+touched the shore and said good-night, and went our way and left
+the ferryman. But in that brief passage he had opened our souls to
+everlasting things--the freshness, and the darkness, and the kindness
+of the brooding, all-enfolding night above the sea.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_THE GONDOLIER'S WEDDING_
+
+The night before the wedding we had a supper-party in my rooms. We
+were twelve in all. My friend Eustace brought his gondolier Antonio
+with fair-haired, dark-eyed wife, and little Attilio, their eldest
+child. My own gondolier, Francesco, came with his wife and two
+children. Then there was the handsome, languid Luigi, who, in his best
+clothes, or out of them, is fit for any drawing-room. Two gondoliers,
+in dark blue shirts, completed the list of guests, if we exclude the
+maid Catina, who came and went about the table, laughing and joining
+in the songs, and sitting down at intervals to take her share of wine.
+The big room looking across the garden to the Grand Canal had been
+prepared for supper; and the company were to be received in the
+smaller, which has a fine open space in front of it to southwards. But
+as the guests arrived, they seemed to find the kitchen and the cooking
+that was going on quite irresistible. Catina, it seems, had lost her
+head with so many cuttlefishes, _orai_, cakes, and fowls, and
+cutlets to reduce to order. There was, therefore, a great bustle below
+stairs; and I could hear plainly that all my guests were lending their
+making, or their marring, hands to the preparation of the supper. That
+the company should cook their own food on the way to the dining-room,
+seemed a quite novel arrangement, but one that promised well for their
+contentment with the banquet. Nobody could be dissatisfied with what
+was everybody's affair.
+
+When seven o'clock struck, Eustace and I, who had been entertaining
+the children in their mothers' absence, heard the sound of steps upon
+the stairs. The guests arrived, bringing their own _risotto_ with
+them. Welcome was short, if hearty. We sat down in carefully appointed
+order, and fell into such conversation as the quarter of San Vio and
+our several interests supplied. From time to time one of the matrons
+left the table and descended to the kitchen, when a finishing stroke
+was needed for roast pullet or stewed veal. The excuses they made
+their host for supposed failure in the dishes, lent a certain grace
+and comic charm to the commonplace of festivity. The entertainment
+was theirs as much as mine; and they all seemed to enjoy what took the
+form by degrees of curiously complicated hospitality. I do not think
+a well-ordered supper at any _trattoria_, such as at first
+suggested itself to my imagination, would have given any of us an
+equal pleasure or an equal sense of freedom. The three children had
+become the guests of the whole party. Little Attilio, propped upon an
+air-cushion, which puzzled him exceedingly, ate through his supper and
+drank his wine with solid satisfaction, opening the large brown eyes
+beneath those tufts of clustering fair hair which promise much beauty
+for him in his manhood. Francesco's boy, who is older and begins to
+know the world, sat with a semi-suppressed grin upon his face, as
+though the humour of the situation was not wholly hidden from him.
+Little Teresa, too, was happy, except when her mother, a severe
+Pomona, with enormous earrings and splendid _fazzoletto_ of
+crimson and orange dyes, pounced down upon her for some supposed
+infraction of good manners--_creanza_, as they vividly express it
+here. Only Luigi looked a trifle bored. But Luigi has been a soldier,
+and has now attained the supercilious superiority of young-manhood,
+which smokes its cigar of an evening in the piazza and knows the
+merits of the different cafes. The great business of the evening began
+when the eating was over, and the decanters filled with new wine of
+Mirano circulated freely. The four best singers of the party drew
+together; and the rest prepared themselves to make suggestions, hum
+tunes, and join with fitful effect in choruses. Antonio, who is a
+powerful young fellow, with bronzed cheeks and a perfect tempest of
+coal-black hair in flakes upon his forehead, has a most extraordinary
+soprano--sound as a bell, strong as a trumpet, well trained, and
+true to the least shade in intonation. Piero, whose rugged Neptunian
+features, sea-wrinkled, tell of a rough water-life, boasts a bass of
+resonant, almost pathetic quality. Francesco has a _mezzo voce_,
+which might, by a stretch of politeness, be called baritone. Piero's
+comrade, whose name concerns us not, has another of these nondescript
+voices. They sat together with their glasses and cigars before them,
+sketching part-songs in outline, striking the keynote--now higher and
+now lower--till they saw their subject well in view. Then they burst
+into full singing, Antonio leading with a metal note that thrilled
+one's ears, but still was musical. Complicated contrapuntal pieces,
+such as we should call madrigals, with ever-recurring refrains of
+'Venezia, gemma Triatica, sposa del mar,' descending probably from
+ancient days, followed each other in quick succession. Barcaroles,
+serenades, love-songs, and invitations to the water were interwoven
+for relief. One of these romantic pieces had a beautiful burden,
+'Dormi, o bella, o fingi di dormir,' of which the melody was fully
+worthy. But the most successful of all the tunes were two with a sad
+motive. The one repeated incessantly 'Ohime! mia madre mori;' the
+other was a girl's love lament: 'Perche tradirmi, perche lasciarmi!
+prima d'amarmi non eri cosi!' Even the children joined in these; and
+Catina, who took the solo part in the second, was inspired to a great
+dramatic effort. All these were purely popular songs. The people of
+Venice, however, are passionate for operas. Therefore we had duets
+and solos from 'Ernani,' the 'Ballo in Maschera,' and the 'Forza del
+Destino,' and one comic chorus from 'Boccaccio,' which seemed to make
+them wild with pleasure. To my mind, the best of these more formal
+pieces was a duet between Attila and Italia from some opera unknown to
+me, which Antonio and Piero performed with incomparable spirit. It
+was noticeable how, descending to the people, sung by them for love
+at sea, or on excursions to the villages round Mestre, these operatic
+reminiscences had lost something of their theatrical formality, and
+assumed instead the serious gravity, the quaint movement, and marked
+emphasis which belong to popular music in Northern and Central Italy.
+An antique character was communicated even to the recitative of Verdi
+by slight, almost indefinable, changes of rhythm and accent. There was
+no end to the singing. 'Siamo appassionati per il canto,' frequently
+repeated, was proved true by the profusion and variety of songs
+produced from inexhaustible memories, lightly tried over, brilliantly
+performed, rapidly succeeding each other. Nor were gestures
+wanting--lifted arms, hands stretched to hands, flashing eyes, hair
+tossed from the forehead--unconscious and appropriate action--which
+showed how the spirit of the music and words alike possessed the men.
+One by one the children fell asleep. Little Attilio and Teresa were
+tucked up beneath my Scotch shawl at two ends of a great sofa; and not
+even his father's clarion voice, in the character of Italia defying
+Attila to harm 'le mie superbe citta,' could wake the little boy up.
+The night wore on. It was past one. Eustace and I had promised to be
+in the church of the Gesuati at six next morning. We therefore gave
+the guests a gentle hint, which they as gently took. With exquisite,
+because perfectly unaffected, breeding they sank for a few moments
+into common conversation, then wrapped the children up, and took
+their leave. It was an uncomfortable, warm, wet night of sullen
+_scirocco_.
+
+The next day, which was Sunday, Francesco called me at five. There
+was no visible sunrise that cheerless damp October morning. Grey dawn
+stole somehow imperceptibly between the veil of clouds and leaden
+waters, as my friend and I, well sheltered by our _felze_, passed
+into the Giudecca, and took our station before the church of the
+Gesuati. A few women from the neighbouring streets and courts crossed
+the bridges in draggled petticoats on their way to first mass. A few
+men, shouldering their jackets, lounged along the Zattere, opened the
+great green doors, and entered. Then suddenly Antonio cried out that
+the bridal party was on its way, not as we had expected, in boats, but
+on foot. We left our gondola, and fell into the ranks, after shaking
+hands with Francesco, who is the elder brother of the bride. There was
+nothing very noticeable in her appearance, except her large dark eyes.
+Otherwise both face and figure were of a common type; and her bridal
+dress of sprigged grey silk, large veil and orange blossoms, reduced
+her to the level of a _bourgeoise_. It was much the same with
+the bridegroom. His features, indeed, proved him a true Venetian
+gondolier; for the skin was strained over the cheekbones, and the
+muscles of the throat beneath the jaws stood out like cords, and the
+bright blue eyes were deep-set beneath a spare brown forehead. But
+he had provided a complete suit of black for the occasion, and wore
+a shirt of worked cambric, which disguised what is really splendid in
+the physique of these oarsmen, at once slender and sinewy. Both bride
+and bridegroom looked uncomfortable in their clothes. The light that
+fell upon them in the church was dull and leaden. The ceremony, which
+was very hurriedly performed by an unctuous priest, did not appear to
+impress either of them. Nobody in the bridal party, crowding together
+on both sides of the altar, looked as though the service was of the
+slightest interest and moment. Indeed, this was hardly to be wondered
+at; for the priest, so far as I could understand his gabble, took
+the larger portion for read, after muttering the first words of the
+rubric. A little carven image of an acolyte--a weird boy who seemed to
+move by springs, whose hair had all the semblance of painted wood,
+and whose complexion was white and red like a clown's--did not make
+matters more intelligible by spasmodically clattering responses.
+
+After the ceremony we heard mass and contributed to three distinct
+offertories. Considering how much account even two _soldi_ are to
+these poor people, I was really angry when I heard the copper shower.
+Every member of the party had his or her pennies ready, and dropped
+them into the boxes. Whether it was the effect of the bad morning, or
+the ugliness of a very ill-designed _barocco_ building, or the
+fault of the fat oily priest, I know not. But the _sposalizio_
+struck me as tame and cheerless, the mass as irreverent and vulgarly
+conducted. At the same time there is something too impressive in
+the mass for any perfunctory performance to divest its symbolism of
+sublimity. A Protestant Communion Service lends itself more easily to
+degradation by unworthiness in the minister.
+
+We walked down the church in double file, led by the bride and
+bridegroom, who had knelt during the ceremony with the best
+man--_compare_, as he is called--at a narrow _prie-dieu_ before the
+altar. The _compare_ is a person of distinction at these weddings. He
+has to present the bride with a great pyramid of artificial flowers,
+which is placed before her at the marriage-feast, a packet of candles,
+and a box of bonbons. The comfits, when the box is opened, are found
+to include two magnificent sugar babies lying in their cradles. I was
+told that a _compare_, who does the thing handsomely, must be prepared
+to spend about a hundred francs upon these presents, in addition to
+the wine and cigars with which he treats his friends. On this occasion
+the women were agreed that he had done his duty well. He was a fat,
+wealthy little man, who lived by letting market-boats for hire on the
+Rialto.
+
+From the church to the bride's house was a walk of some three minutes.
+On the way we were introduced to the father of the bride--a very
+magnificent personage, with points of strong resemblance to Vittorio
+Emmanuele. He wore an enormous broad-brimmed hat and emerald-green
+earrings, and looked considerably younger than his eldest son,
+Francesco. Throughout the _nozze_ he took the lead in a grand
+imperious fashion of his own. Wherever he went, he seemed to fill the
+place, and was fully aware of his own importance. In Florence I think
+he would have got the nickname of _Tacchin_, or turkey-cock.
+Here at Venice the sons and daughters call their parent briefly
+_Vecchio_. I heard him so addressed with a certain amount of awe,
+expecting an explosion of bubbly-jock displeasure. But he took it, as
+though it was natural, without disturbance. The other _Vecchio_,
+father of the bridegroom, struck me as more sympathetic. He was a
+gentle old man, proud of his many prosperous, laborious sons.
+They, like the rest of the gentlemen, were gondoliers. Both the
+_Vecchi_, indeed, continue to ply their trade, day and night, at
+the _traghetto_.
+
+_Traghetti_ are stations for gondolas at different points of the
+canals. As their name implies, it is the first duty of the gondoliers
+upon them to ferry people across. This they do for the fixed fee of
+five centimes. The _traghetti_ are in fact Venetian cab-stands.
+And, of course, like London cabs, the gondolas may be taken off them
+for trips. The municipality, however, makes it a condition, under
+penalty of fine to the _traghetto_, that each station should
+always be provided with two boats for the service of the ferry. When
+vacancies occur on the _traghetti_, a gondolier who owns or hires
+a boat makes application to the municipality, receives a number, and
+is inscribed as plying at a certain station. He has now entered a sort
+of guild, which is presided over by a _Capo-traghetto_, elected
+by the rest for the protection of their interests, the settlement of
+disputes, and the management of their common funds. In the old acts
+of Venice this functionary is styled _Gastaldo di traghetto_. The
+members have to contribute something yearly to the guild. This payment
+varies upon different stations, according to the greater or less
+amount of the tax levied by the municipality on the _traghetto_.
+The highest subscription I have heard of is twenty-five francs; the
+lowest, seven. There is one _traghetto_, known by the name
+of Madonna del Giglio or Zobenigo, which possesses near its
+_pergola_ of vines a nice old brown Venetian picture. Some
+stranger offered a considerable sum for this. But the guild refused to
+part with it.
+
+As may be imagined, the _traghetti_ vary greatly in the amount
+and quality of their custom. By far the best are those in the
+neighbourhood of the hotels upon the Grand Canal. At any one of these
+a gondolier during the season is sure of picking up some foreigner or
+other who will pay him handsomely for comparatively light service.
+A _traghetto_ on the Giudecca, on the contrary, depends upon
+Venetian traffic. The work is more monotonous, and the pay is reduced
+to its tariffed minimum. So far as I can gather, an industrious
+gondolier, with a good boat, belonging to a good _traghetto_, may
+make as much as ten or fifteen francs in a single day. But this cannot
+be relied on. They therefore prefer a fixed appointment with a private
+family, for which they receive by tariff five francs a day, or by
+arrangement for long periods perhaps four francs a day, with certain
+perquisites and small advantages. It is great luck to get such an
+engagement for the winter. The heaviest anxieties which beset a
+gondolier are then disposed of. Having entered private service, they
+are not allowed to ply their trade on the _traghetto_, except
+by stipulation with their masters. Then they may take their place one
+night out of every six in the rank and file. The gondoliers have
+two proverbs, which show how desirable it is, while taking a fixed
+engagement, to keep their hold on the _traghetto_. One is to this
+effect: _il traghetto e un buon padrone_. The other satirises
+the meanness of the poverty-stricken Venetian nobility: _pompa di
+servitu, misera insegna_. When they combine the _traghetto_
+with private service, the municipality insists on their retaining
+the number painted on their gondola; and against this their employers
+frequently object. It is therefore a great point for a gondolier to
+make such an arrangement with his master as will leave him free to
+show his number. The reason for this regulation is obvious. Gondoliers
+are known more by their numbers and their _traghetti_ than
+their names. They tell me that though there are upwards of a
+thousand registered in Venice, each man of the trade knows the
+whole confraternity by face and number. Taking all things into
+consideration, I think four francs a day the whole year round are
+very good earnings for a gondolier. On this he will marry and rear a
+family, and put a little money by. A young unmarried man, working at
+two and a half or three francs a day, is proportionately well-to-do.
+If he is economical, he ought upon these wages to save enough in
+two or three years to buy himself a gondola. A boy from fifteen to
+nineteen is called a _mezz' uomo_, and gets about one franc a day. A
+new gondola with all its fittings is worth about a thousand francs. It
+does not last in good condition more than six or seven years. At the
+end of that time the hull will fetch eighty francs. A new hull can be
+had for three hundred francs. The old fittings--brass sea-horses or
+_cavalli_, steel prow or _ferro_, covered cabin or _felze_, cushions
+and leather-covered back-board or _stramazetto_, maybe transferred to
+it. When a man wants to start a gondola, he will begin by buying one
+already half past service--a _gondola da traghetto_ or _di mezza eta_.
+This should cost him something over two hundred francs. Little by
+little, he accumulates the needful fittings; and when his first
+purchase is worn out, he hopes to set up with a well-appointed
+equipage. He thus gradually works his way from the rough trade which
+involves hard work and poor earnings to that more profitable industry
+which cannot be carried on without a smart boat. The gondola is a
+source of continual expense for repairs. Its oars have to be replaced.
+It has to be washed with sponges, blacked, and varnished. Its bottom
+needs frequent cleaning. Weeds adhere to it in the warm brackish
+water, growing rapidly through the summer months, and demanding to be
+scrubbed off once in every four weeks. The gondolier has no place
+where he can do this for himself. He therefore takes his boat to a
+wharf, or _squero_, as the place is called. At these _squeri_ gondolas
+are built as well as cleaned. The fee for a thorough setting to rights
+of the boat is five francs. It must be done upon a fine day. Thus in
+addition to the cost, the owner loses a good day's work.
+
+These details will serve to give some notion of the sort of people
+with whom Eustace and I spent our day. The bride's house is in an
+excellent position on an open canal leading from the Canalozzo to the
+Giudecca. She had arrived before us, and received her friends in the
+middle of the room. Each of us in turn kissed her cheek and murmured
+our congratulations. We found the large living-room of the house
+arranged with chairs all round the walls, and the company were
+marshalled in some order of precedence, my friend and I taking place
+near the bride. On either hand airy bedrooms opened out, and two
+large doors, wide open, gave a view from where we sat of a good-sized
+kitchen. This arrangement of the house was not only comfortable, but
+pretty; for the bright copper pans and pipkins ranged on shelves
+along the kitchen walls had a very cheerful effect. The walls were
+whitewashed, but literally covered with all sorts of pictures. A great
+plaster cast from some antique, an Atys, Adonis, or Paris, looked down
+from a bracket placed between the windows. There was enough furniture,
+solid and well kept, in all the rooms. Among the pictures were
+full-length portraits in oils of two celebrated gondoliers--one in
+antique costume, the other painted a few years since. The original of
+the latter soon came and stood before it. He had won regatta prizes;
+and the flags of four discordant colours were painted round him by the
+artist, who had evidently cared more to commemorate the triumphs of
+his sitter and to strike a likeness than to secure the tone of his own
+picture. This champion turned out a fine fellow--Corradini--with one
+of the brightest little gondoliers of thirteen for his son.
+
+After the company were seated, lemonade and cakes were handed round
+amid a hubbub of chattering women. Then followed cups of black coffee
+and more cakes. Then a glass of Cyprus and more cakes. Then a glass
+of curacoa and more cakes. Finally, a glass of noyau and still more
+cakes. It was only a little after seven in the morning. Yet politeness
+compelled us to consume these delicacies. I tried to shirk my duty;
+but this discretion was taken by my hosts for well-bred modesty; and
+instead of being let off, I had the richest piece of pastry and the
+largest maccaroon available pressed so kindly on me, that, had they
+been poisoned, I would not have refused to eat them. The conversation
+grew more, and more animated, the women gathering together in their
+dresses of bright blue and scarlet, the men lighting cigars and
+puffing out a few quiet words. It struck me as a drawback that these
+picturesque people had put on Sunday-clothes to look as much like
+shopkeepers as possible. But they did not all of them succeed. Two
+handsome women, who handed the cups round--one a brunette, the other
+a blonde--wore skirts of brilliant blue, with a sort of white jacket,
+and white kerchief folded heavily about their shoulders. The brunette
+had a great string of coral, the blonde of amber, round her throat.
+Gold earrings and the long gold chains Venetian women wear, of all
+patterns and degrees of value, abounded. Nobody appeared without
+them; but I could not see any of an antique make. The men seemed to be
+contented with rings--huge, heavy rings of solid gold, worked with
+a rough flower pattern. One young fellow had three upon his fingers.
+This circumstance led me to speculate whether a certain portion at
+least of this display of jewellery around me had not been borrowed for
+the occasion.
+
+Eustace and I were treated quite like friends. They called us _I
+Signori_. But this was only, I think, because our English names
+are quite unmanageable. The women fluttered about us and kept
+asking whether we really liked it all? whether we should come to the
+_pranzo_? whether it was true we danced? It seemed to give them
+unaffected pleasure to be kind to us; and when we rose to go away, the
+whole company crowded round, shaking hands and saying: 'Si divertira
+bene stasera!' Nobody resented our presence; what was better, no one
+put himself out for us. 'Vogliono veder il nostro costume,' I heard
+one woman say.
+
+We got home soon after eight, and, as our ancestors would have said,
+settled our stomachs with a dish of tea. It makes me shudder now to
+think of the mixed liquids and miscellaneous cakes we had consumed at
+that unwonted hour.
+
+At half-past three, Eustace and I again prepared ourselves for action.
+His gondola was in attendance, covered with the _felze_, to take us to
+the house of the _sposa_. We found the canal crowded with poor people
+of the quarter--men, women, and children lining the walls along its
+side, and clustering like bees upon the bridges. The water itself was
+almost choked with gondolas. Evidently the folk of San Vio thought our
+wedding procession would be a most exciting pageant. We entered the
+house, and were again greeted by the bride and bridegroom, who
+consigned each of us to the control of a fair tyrant. This is the most
+fitting way of describing our introduction to our partners of the
+evening; for we were no sooner presented, than the ladies swooped upon
+us like their prey, placing their shawls upon our left arms, while
+they seized and clung to what was left available of us for locomotion.
+There was considerable giggling and tittering throughout the company
+when Signora Fenzo, the young and comely wife of a gondolier, thus
+took possession of Eustace, and Signora dell' Acqua, the widow of
+another gondolier, appropriated me. The affair had been arranged
+beforehand, and their friends had probably chaffed them with the
+difficulty of managing two mad Englishmen. However, they proved equal
+to the occasion, and the difficulties were entirely on our side.
+Signora Fenzo was a handsome brunette, quiet in her manners, who meant
+business. I envied Eustace his subjection to such a reasonable being.
+Signora dell' Acqua, though a widow, was by no means disconsolate; and
+I soon perceived that it would require all the address and diplomacy I
+possessed, to make anything out of her society. She laughed
+incessantly; darted in the most diverse directions, dragging me along
+with her; exhibited me in triumph to her cronies; made eyes at me over
+a fan, repeated my clumsiest remarks, as though they gave her
+indescribable amusement; and all the while jabbered Venetian at
+express rate, without the slightest regard for my incapacity to follow
+her vagaries. The _Vecchio_ marshalled us in order. First went the
+_sposa_ and _comare_ with the mothers of bride and bridegroom. Then
+followed the _sposo_ and the bridesmaid. After them I was made to lead
+my fair tormentor. As we descended the staircase there arose a hubbub
+of excitement from the crowd on the canals. The gondolas moved
+turbidly upon the face of the waters. The bridegroom kept muttering to
+himself, 'How we shall be criticised! They will tell each other who
+was decently dressed, and who stepped awkwardly into the boats, and
+what the price of my boots was!' Such exclamations, murmured at
+intervals, and followed by chest-drawn sighs, expressed a deep
+preoccupation. With regard to his boots, he need have had no anxiety.
+They were of the shiniest patent leather, much too tight, and without
+a speck of dust upon them. But his nervousness infected me with a
+cruel dread. All those eyes were going to watch how we comported
+ourselves in jumping from the landing-steps into the boat! If this
+operation, upon a ceremonious occasion, has terrors even for a
+gondolier, how formidable it ought to be to me! And here is the
+Signora dell' Acqua's white cachemire shawl dangling on one arm, and
+the Signora herself languishingly clinging to the other; and the
+gondolas are fretting in a fury of excitement, like corks, upon the
+churned green water! The moment was terrible. The _sposa_ and her
+three companions had been safely stowed away beneath their _felze_.
+The _sposo_ had successfully handed the bridesmaid into the second
+gondola. I had to perform the same office for my partner. Off she
+went, like a bird, from the bank. I seized a happy moment, followed,
+bowed, and found myself to my contentment gracefully ensconced in a
+corner opposite the widow. Seven more gondolas were packed. The
+procession moved. We glided down the little channel, broke away into
+the Grand Canal, crossed it, and dived into a labyrinth from which we
+finally emerged before our destination, the Trattoria di San Gallo.
+The perils of the landing were soon over; and, with the rest of the
+guests, my mercurial companion and I slowly ascended a long flight of
+stairs leading to a vast upper chamber. Here we were to dine.
+
+It had been the gallery of some palazzo in old days, was above one
+hundred feet in length, fairly broad, with a roof of wooden rafters
+and large windows opening on a courtyard garden. I could see the tops
+of three cypress-trees cutting the grey sky upon a level with us.
+A long table occupied the centre of this room. It had been laid for
+upwards of forty persons, and we filled it. There was plenty of
+light from great glass lustres blazing with gas. When the ladies had
+arranged their dresses, and the gentlemen had exchanged a few polite
+remarks, we all sat down to dinner--I next my inexorable widow,
+Eustace beside his calm and comely partner. The first impression
+was one of disappointment. It looked so like a public dinner of
+middle-class people. There was no local character in costume or
+customs. Men and women sat politely bored, expectant, trifling with
+their napkins, yawning, muttering nothings about the weather or their
+neighbours. The frozen commonplaceness of the scene was made for
+me still more oppressive by Signora dell' Acqua. She was evidently
+satirical, and could not be happy unless continually laughing at or
+with somebody. 'What a stick the woman will think me!' I kept saying
+to myself. 'How shall I ever invent jokes in this strange land? I
+cannot even flirt with her in Venetian! And here I have condemned
+myself--and her too, poor thing--to sit through at least three hours
+of mortal dulness!' Yet the widow was by no means unattractive.
+Dressed in black, she had contrived by an artful arrangement of lace
+and jewellery to give an air of lightness to her costume. She had
+a pretty little pale face, a _minois chiffonne_, with slightly
+turned-up nose, large laughing brown eyes, a dazzling set of teeth,
+and a tempestuously frizzled mop of powdered hair. When I managed to
+get a side-look at her quietly, without being giggled at or driven
+half mad by unintelligible incitements to a jocularity I could
+not feel, it struck me that, if we once found a common term of
+communication we should become good friends. But for the moment that
+_modus vivendi_ seemed unattainable. She had not recovered from
+the first excitement of her capture of me. She was still showing
+me off and trying to stir me up. The arrival of the soup gave me
+a momentary relief; and soon the serious business of the afternoon
+began. I may add that before dinner was over, the Signora dell' Acqua
+and I were fast friends. I had discovered the way of making jokes, and
+she had become intelligible. I found her a very nice, though flighty,
+little woman; and I believe she thought me gifted with the faculty of
+uttering eccentric epigrams in a grotesque tongue. Some of my remarks
+were flung about the table, and had the same success as uncouth
+Lombard carvings have with connoisseurs in _naivetes_ of art. By that
+time we had come to be _compare_ and _comare_ to each other--the
+sequel of some clumsy piece of jocularity.
+
+It was a heavy entertainment, copious in quantity, excellent in
+quality, plainly but well cooked. I remarked there was no fish. The
+widow replied that everybody present ate fish to satiety at home. They
+did not join a marriage feast at the San Gallo, and pay their nine
+francs, for that! It should be observed that each guest paid for his
+own entertainment. This appears to be the custom. Therefore attendance
+is complimentary, and the married couple are not at ruinous charges
+for the banquet. A curious feature in the whole proceeding had its
+origin in this custom. I noticed that before each cover lay an empty
+plate, and that my partner began with the first course to heap upon
+it what she had not eaten. She also took large helpings, and kept
+advising me to do the same. I said: 'No; I only take what I want to
+eat; if I fill that plate in front of me as you are doing, it will be
+great waste.' This remark elicited shrieks of laughter from all who
+heard it; and when the hubbub had subsided, I perceived an apparently
+official personage bearing down upon Eustace, who was in the same
+perplexity. It was then circumstantially explained to us that the
+empty plates were put there in order that we might lay aside what we
+could not conveniently eat, and take it home with us. At the end
+of the dinner the widow (whom I must now call my _comare_) had
+accumulated two whole chickens, half a turkey, and a large assortment
+of mixed eatables. I performed my duty and won her regard by placing
+delicacies at her disposition.
+
+Crudely stated, this proceeding moves disgust. But that is only
+because one has not thought the matter out. In the performance there
+was nothing coarse or nasty. These good folk had made a contract at
+so much a head--so many fowls, so many pounds of beef, &c, to be
+supplied; and what they had fairly bought, they clearly had a right
+to. No one, so far as I could notice, tried to take more than his
+proper share; except, indeed, Eustace and myself. In our first
+eagerness to conform to custom, we both overshot the mark, and grabbed
+at disproportionate helpings. The waiters politely observed that we
+were taking what was meant for two; and as the courses followed in
+interminable sequence, we soon acquired the tact of what was due to
+us.
+
+Meanwhile the room grew warm. The gentlemen threw off their coats--a
+pleasant liberty of which I availed myself, and was immediately more
+at ease. The ladies divested themselves of their shoes (strange
+to relate!) and sat in comfort with their stockinged feet upon the
+_scagliola_ pavement. I observed that some cavaliers by special
+permission were allowed to remove their partners' slippers. This was
+not my lucky fate. My _comare_ had not advanced to that point of
+intimacy. Healths began to be drunk. The conversation took a lively
+turn; and women went fluttering round the table, visiting their
+friends, to sip out of their glass, and ask each other how they
+were getting on. It was not long before the stiff veneer of
+_bourgeoisie_ which bored me had worn off. The people emerged in
+their true selves: natural, gentle, sparkling with enjoyment, playful.
+Playful is, I think, the best word to describe them. They played with
+infinite grace and innocence, like kittens, from the old men of sixty
+to the little boys of thirteen. Very little wine was drunk. Each guest
+had a litre placed before him. Many did not finish theirs; and for
+very few was it replenished. When at last the dessert arrived, and the
+bride's comfits had been handed round, they began to sing. It was very
+pretty to see a party of three or four friends gathering round some
+popular beauty, and paying her compliments in verse--they grouped
+behind her chair, she sitting back in it and laughing up to them,
+and joining in the chorus. The words, 'Brunetta mia simpatica, ti amo
+sempre piu,' sung after this fashion to Eustace's handsome partner,
+who puffed delicate whiffs from a Russian cigarette, and smiled her
+thanks, had a peculiar appropriateness. All the ladies, it may be
+observed in passing, had by this time lit their cigarettes. The men
+were smoking Toscani, Sellas, or Cavours, and the little boys were
+dancing round the table breathing smoke from their pert nostrils.
+
+The dinner, in fact, was over. Other relatives of the guests arrived,
+and then we saw how some of the reserved dishes were to be bestowed. A
+side-table was spread at the end of the gallery, and these late-comers
+were regaled with plenty by their friends. Meanwhile, the big table
+at which we had dined was taken to pieces and removed. The
+_scagliola_ floor was swept by the waiters. Musicians came
+streaming in and took their places. The ladies resumed their shoes.
+Every one prepared to dance.
+
+My friend and I were now at liberty to chat with the men. He knew
+some of them by sight, and claimed acquaintance with others. There
+was plenty of talk about different boats, gondolas, and sandolos and
+topos, remarks upon the past season, and inquiries as to chances of
+engagements in the future. One young fellow told us how he had been
+drawn for the army, and should be obliged to give up his trade just
+when he had begun to make it answer. He had got a new gondola, and
+this would have to be hung up during the years of his service. The
+warehousing of a boat in these circumstances costs nearly one hundred
+francs a year, which is a serious tax upon the pockets of a private in
+the line. Many questions were put in turn to us, but all of the same
+tenor. 'Had we really enjoyed the _pranzo_? Now, really, were we
+amusing ourselves? And did we think the custom of the wedding _un
+bel costume_?' We could give an unequivocally hearty response to
+all these interrogations. The men seemed pleased. Their interest in
+our enjoyment was unaffected. It is noticeable how often the word
+_divertimento_ is heard upon the lips of the Italians. They have
+a notion that it is the function in life of the _Signori_ to
+amuse themselves.
+
+The ball opened, and now we were much besought by the ladies. I had to
+deny myself with a whole series of comical excuses. Eustace performed
+his duty after a stiff English fashion--once with his pretty partner
+of the _pranzo_, and once again with a fat gondolier. The band
+played waltzes and polkas, chiefly upon patriotic airs--the Marcia
+Reale, Garibaldi's Hymn, &c. Men danced with men, women with women,
+little boys and girls together. The gallery whirled with a laughing
+crowd. There was plenty of excitement and enjoyment--not an unseemly
+or extravagant word or gesture. My _comare_ careered about with a
+light maenadic impetuosity, which made me regret my inability to accept
+her pressing invitations. She pursued me into every corner of the
+room, but when at last I dropped excuses and told her that my real
+reason for not dancing was that it would hurt my health, she waived
+her claims at once with an _Ah, poverino!_
+
+Some time after midnight we felt that we had had enough of
+_divertimento_. Francesco helped us to slip out unobserved. With
+many silent good wishes we left the innocent playful people who had
+been so kind to us. The stars were shining from a watery sky as we
+passed into the piazza beneath the Campanile and the pinnacles of
+S. Mark. The Riva was almost empty, and the little waves fretted the
+boats moored to the piazzetta, as a warm moist breeze went fluttering
+by. We smoked a last cigar, crossed our _traghetto_, and were
+soon sound asleep at the end of a long pleasant day. The ball, we
+heard next morning, finished about four.
+
+Since that evening I have had plenty of opportunities for seeing my
+friends the gondoliers, both in their own homes and in my apartment.
+Several have entertained me at their mid-day meal of fried fish
+and amber-coloured polenta. These repasts were always cooked with
+scrupulous cleanliness, and served upon a table covered with coarse
+linen. The polenta is turned out upon a wooden platter, and cut with
+a string called _lassa_. You take a large slice of it on the
+palm of the left hand, and break it with the fingers of the right.
+Wholesome red wine of the Paduan district and good white bread were
+never wanting. The rooms in which we met to eat looked out on narrow
+lanes or over pergolas of yellowing vines. Their whitewashed walls
+were hung with photographs of friends and foreigners, many of them
+souvenirs from English or American employers. The men, in broad
+black hats and lilac shirts, sat round the table, girt with the red
+waist-wrapper, or _fascia_, which marks the ancient faction of
+the Castellani. The other faction, called Nicolotti, are distinguished
+by a black _assisa_. The quarters of the town are divided
+unequally and irregularly into these two parties. What was once a
+formidable rivalry between two sections of the Venetian populace,
+still survives in challenges to trials of strength and skill upon the
+water. The women, in their many-coloured kerchiefs, stirred polenta at
+the smoke-blackened chimney, whose huge pent-house roof projects two
+feet or more across the hearth. When they had served the table they
+took their seat on low stools, knitted stockings, or drank out of
+glasses handed across the shoulder to them by their lords. Some of
+these women were clearly notable housewives, and I have no reason to
+suppose that they do not take their full share of the housework. Boys
+and girls came in and out, and got a portion of the dinner to consume
+where they thought best. Children went tottering about upon the
+red-brick floor, the playthings of those hulking fellows, who handled
+them very gently and spoke kindly in a sort of confidential whisper
+to their ears. These little ears were mostly pierced for earrings, and
+the light blue eyes of the urchins peeped maliciously beneath shocks
+of yellow hair. A dog was often of the party. He ate fish like his
+masters, and was made to beg for it by sitting up and rowing with
+his paws. _Voga, Azzo, voga!_ The Anzolo who talked thus to
+his little brown Spitz-dog has the hoarse voice of a Triton and the
+movement of an animated sea-wave. Azzo performed his trick, swallowed
+his fish-bones, and the fiery Anzolo looked round approvingly.
+
+On all these occasions I have found these gondoliers the same
+sympathetic, industrious, cheery affectionate folk. They live in many
+respects a hard and precarious life. The winter in particular is a
+time of anxiety, and sometimes of privation, even to the well-to-do
+among them. Work then is scarce, and what there is, is rendered
+disagreeable to them by the cold. Yet they take their chance with
+facile temper, and are not soured by hardships. The amenities of the
+Venetian sea and air, the healthiness of the lagoons, the cheerful
+bustle of the poorer quarters, the brilliancy of this Southern
+sunlight, and the beauty which is everywhere apparent, must be
+reckoned as important factors in the formation of their character. And
+of that character, as I have said, the final note is playfulness.
+In spite of difficulties, their life has never been stern enough to
+sadden them. Bare necessities are marvellously cheap, and the pinch
+of real bad weather--such frost as locked the lagoons in ice two years
+ago, or such south-western gales as flooded the basement floors of
+all the houses on the Zattere--is rare and does not last long. On the
+other hand, their life has never been so lazy as to reduce them to
+the savagery of the traditional Neapolitan lazzaroni. They have had
+to work daily for small earnings, but under favourable conditions,
+and their labour has been lightened by much good-fellowship among
+themselves, by the amusements of their _feste_ and their singing
+clubs.
+
+Of course it is not easy for a stranger in a very different social
+position to feel that he has been admitted to their confidence.
+Italians have an ineradicable habit of making themselves externally
+agreeable, of bending in all indifferent matters to the whims and
+wishes of superiors, and of saying what they think _Signori_
+like. This habit, while it smoothes the surface of existence, raises
+up a barrier of compliment and partial insincerity, against which the
+more downright natures of us Northern folk break in vain efforts. Our
+advances are met with an imperceptible but impermeable resistance by
+the very people who are bent on making the world pleasant to us. It
+is the very reverse of that dour opposition which a Lowland Scot or
+a North English peasant offers to familiarity; but it is hardly less
+insurmountable. The treatment, again, which Venetians of the lower
+class have received through centuries from their own nobility, makes
+attempts at fraternisation on the part of gentlemen unintelligible to
+them. The best way, here and elsewhere, of overcoming these obstacles
+is to have some bond of work or interest in common--of service on the
+one side rendered, and goodwill on the other honestly displayed. The
+men of whom I have been speaking will, I am convinced, not shirk their
+share of duty or make unreasonable claims upon the generosity of their
+employers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_A CINQUE CENTO BRUTUS_
+
+
+I.--THE SESTIERE DI SAN POLO
+
+There is a quarter of Venice not much visited by tourists, lying as
+it does outside their beat, away from the Rialto, at a considerable
+distance from the Frari and San Rocco, in what might almost pass for a
+city separated by a hundred miles from the Piazza. This is the quarter
+of San Polo, one corner of which, somewhere between the back of
+the Palazzo Foscari and the Campo di San Polo, was the scene of
+a memorable act of vengeance in the year 1546. Here Lorenzino de'
+Medici, the murderer of his cousin Alessandro, was at last tracked
+down and put to death by paid cut-throats. How they succeeded in their
+purpose, we know in every detail from the narrative dictated by the
+chief assassin. His story so curiously illustrates the conditions of
+life in Italy three centuries ago, that I have thought it worthy of
+abridgment. But, in order to make it intelligible, and to paint the
+manners of the times more fully, I must first relate the series of
+events which led to Lorenzino's murder of his cousin Alessandro, and
+from that to his own subsequent assassination. Lorenzino de' Medici,
+the Florentine Brutus of the sixteenth century, is the hero of the
+tragedy. Some of his relatives, however, must first appear upon the
+scene before he enters with a patriot's knife concealed beneath a
+court-fool's bauble.
+
+II.--THE MURDER OF IPPOLITO DE' MEDICI
+
+After the final extinction of the Florentine Republic, the hopes of
+the Medici, who now aspired to the dukedom of Tuscany, rested on three
+bastards--Alessandro, the reputed child of Lorenzo, Duke of Urbino;
+Ippolito, the natural son of Giuliano, Duke of Nemours; and Giulio,
+the offspring of an elder Giuliano, who was at this time Pope, with
+the title of Clement VII. Clement had seen Rome sacked in 1527 by a
+horde of freebooters fighting under the Imperial standard, and had
+used the remnant of these troops, commanded by the Prince of Orange,
+to crush his native city in the memorable siege of 1529-30. He now
+determined to rule Florence from the Papal chair by the help of the
+two bastard cousins I have named. Alessandro was created Duke of
+Civita di Penna, and sent to take the first place in the city.
+Ippolito was made a cardinal; since the Medici had learned that Rome
+was the real basis of their power, and it was undoubtedly in Clement's
+policy to advance this scion of his house to the Papacy. The sole
+surviving representative of the great Lorenzo de' Medici's legitimate
+blood was Catherine, daughter of the Duke of Urbino by Madeleine de la
+Tour d'Auvergne. She was pledged in marriage to the Duke of Orleans,
+who was afterwards Henry II. of France. A natural daughter of
+the Emperor Charles V. was provided for her putative half-brother
+Alessandro. By means of these alliances the succession of Ippolito
+to the Papal chair would have been secured, and the strength of the
+Medici would have been confirmed in Tuscany, but for the disasters
+which have now to be related.
+
+Between the cousins Alessandro and Ippolito there was no love lost. As
+boys, they had both played the part of princes in Florence under the
+guardianship of the Cardinal Passerini da Cortona. The higher rank
+had then been given to Ippolito, who bore the title of Magnifico, and
+seemed thus designated for the lordship of the city. Ippolito, though
+only half a Medici, was of more authentic lineage than Alessandro; for
+no proof positive could be adduced that the latter was even a spurious
+child of the Duke of Urbino. He bore obvious witness to his mother's
+blood upon his mulatto's face; but this mother was the wife of a
+groom, and it was certain that in the court of Urbino she had not been
+chary of her favours. The old magnificence of taste, the patronage
+of art and letters, and the preference for liberal studies which
+distinguished Casa Medici, survived in Ippolito; whereas Alessandro
+manifested only the brutal lusts of a debauched tyrant. It was
+therefore with great reluctance that, moved by reasons of state and
+domestic policy, Ippolito saw himself compelled to accept the scarlet
+hat. Alessandro having been recognised as a son of the Duke of Urbino,
+had become half-brother to the future Queen of France. To treat him as
+the head of the family was a necessity thrust, in the extremity of
+the Medicean fortunes, upon Clement. Ippolito, who more entirely
+represented the spirit of the house, was driven to assume the position
+of a cadet, with all the uncertainties of an ecclesiastical career.
+
+In these circumstances Ippolito had not strength of character to
+sacrifice himself for the consolidation of the Medicean power, which
+could only have been effected by maintaining a close bond of union
+between its members. The death of Clement in 1534 obscured his
+prospects in the Church. He was still too young to intrigue for the
+tiara. The new Pope, Alessandro Farnese, soon after his election,
+displayed a vigour which was unexpected from his age, together with
+a nepotism which his previous character had scarcely warranted. The
+Cardinal de' Medici felt himself excluded and oppressed. He joined the
+party of those numerous Florentine exiles, headed by Filippo Strozzi,
+and the Cardinals Salviati and Ridolfi, all of whom were connected
+by marriage with the legitimate Medici, and who unanimously hated and
+were jealous of the Duke of Civita di Penna. On the score of policy it
+is difficult to condemn this step. Alessandro's hold upon Florence was
+still precarious, nor had he yet married Margaret of Austria. Perhaps
+Ippolito was right in thinking he had less to gain from his cousin
+than from the anti-Medicean faction and the princes of the Church who
+favoured it. But he did not play his cards well. He quarrelled with
+the new Pope, Paul III., and by his vacillations led the Florentine
+exiles to suspect he might betray them.
+
+In the summer of 1535 Ippolito was at Itri, a little town not far
+from Gaeta and Terracina, within easy reach of Fondi, where dwelt the
+beautiful Giulia Gonzaga. To this lady the Cardinal paid assiduous
+court, passing his time with her in the romantic scenery of that
+world-famous Capuan coast. On the 5th of August his seneschal,
+Giovann' Andrea, of Borgo San Sepolcro, brought him a bowl of
+chicken-broth, after drinking which he exclaimed to one of his
+attendants, 'I have been poisoned, and the man who did it is Giovann'
+Andrea.' The seneschal was taken and tortured, and confessed that he
+had mixed a poison with the broth. Four days afterwards the Cardinal
+died, and a post-mortem examination showed that the omentum had been
+eaten by some corrosive substance. Giovann' Andrea was sent in chains
+to Rome; but in spite of his confession, more than once repeated, the
+court released him. He immediately took refuge with Alessandro de'
+Medici in Florence, whence he repaired to Borgo San Sepolcro, and
+was, at the close of a few months, there murdered by the people of the
+place. From these circumstances it was conjectured, not without good
+reason, that Alessandro had procured his cousin's death; and a certain
+Captain Pignatta, of low birth in Florence, a bravo and a coward,
+was believed to have brought the poison to Itri from the Duke. The
+Medicean courtiers at Florence did not disguise their satisfaction;
+and one of them exclaimed, with reference to the event, 'We know how
+to brush flies from our noses!'
+
+III.--THE MURDER OF ALESSANDRO DE' MEDICI
+
+Having removed his cousin and rival from the scene, Alessandro de'
+Medici plunged with even greater effrontery into the cruelties and
+debaucheries which made him odious in Florence. It seemed as though
+fortune meant to smile on him; for in this same year (1535) Charles
+V. decided at Naples in his favour against the Florentine exiles,
+who were pleading their own cause and that of the city injured by his
+tyrannies; and in February of the following year he married Margaret
+of Austria, the Emperor's natural daughter. Francesco Guicciardini,
+the first statesman and historian of his age, had undertaken his
+defence, and was ready to support him by advice and countenance in
+the conduct of his government. Within the lute of this prosperity,
+however, there was one little rift. For some months past he had
+closely attached to his person a certain kinsman, Lorenzo de' Medici,
+who was descended in the fourth generation from Lorenzo, the brother
+of Cosimo Pater Patriae. This Lorenzo, or Lorenzino, or Lorenzaccio,
+as his most intimate acquaintances called him, was destined to murder
+Alessandro; and it is worthy of notice that the Duke had received
+frequent warnings of his fate. A Perugian page, for instance, who
+suffered from some infirmity, saw in a dream that Lorenzino would kill
+his master. Astrologers predicted that the Duke must die by having his
+throat cut. One of them is said to have named Lorenzo de' Medici as
+the assassin; and another described him so accurately that there was
+no mistaking the man. Moreover, Madonna Lucrezia Salviati wrote to the
+Duke from Rome that he should beware of a certain person, indicating
+Lorenzino; and her daughter, Madonna Maria, told him to his face
+she hated the young man, 'because I know he means to murder you,
+and murder you he will.' Nor was this all. The Duke's favourite
+body-servants mistrusted Lorenzino. On one occasion, when Alessandro
+and Lorenzino, attended by a certain Giomo, were escalading a wall at
+night, as was their wont upon illicit love-adventures, Giomo whispered
+to his master: 'Ah, my lord, do let me cut the rope, and rid ourselves
+of him!' To which the Duke replied: 'No, I do not want this; but if he
+could, I know he'd twist it round my neck.'
+
+In spite, then, of these warnings and the want of confidence he felt,
+the Duke continually lived with Lorenzino, employing him as pander in
+his intrigues, and preferring his society to that of simpler men. When
+he rode abroad, he took this evil friend upon his crupper; although
+he knew for certain that Lorenzino had stolen a tight-fitting vest of
+mail he used to wear, and, while his arms were round his waist, was
+always meditating how to stick a poignard in his body. He trusted,
+so it seems, to his own great strength and to the other's physical
+weakness.
+
+At this point, since Lorenzino is the principal actor in the two-act
+drama which follows, it will be well to introduce him to the reader in
+the words of Varchi, who was personally acquainted with him. Born at
+Florence in 1514, he was left early by his father's death to the
+sole care of his mother, Maria Soderini, 'a lady of rare prudence
+and goodness, who attended with the utmost pains and diligence to his
+education. No sooner, however, had he acquired the rudiments of humane
+learning, which, being of very quick parts, he imbibed with incredible
+facility, than he began to display a restless mind, insatiable and
+appetitive of vice. Soon afterwards, under the rule and discipline of
+Filippo Strozzi, he made open sport of all things human and divine;
+and preferring the society of low persons, who not only flattered him
+but were congenial to his tastes, he gave free rein to his desires,
+especially in affairs of love, without regard for sex or age or
+quality, and in his secret soul, while he lavished feigned caresses
+upon every one he saw, felt no esteem for any living being. He
+thirsted strangely for glory, and omitted no point of deed or word
+that might, he thought, procure him the reputation of a man of spirit
+or of wit. He was lean of person, somewhat slightly built, and on
+this account people called him Lorenzino. He never laughed, but had a
+sneering smile; and although he was rather distinguished by grace than
+beauty, his countenance being dark and melancholy, still in the flower
+of his age he was beloved beyond all measure by Pope Clement; in spite
+of which he had it in his mind (according to what he said himself
+after killing the Duke Alessandro) to have murdered him. He brought
+Francesco di Raffaello de' Medici, the Pope's rival, who was a young
+man of excellent attainments and the highest hope, to such extremity
+that he lost his wits, and became the sport of the whole court at
+Rome, and was sent back, as a lesser evil, as a confirmed madman to
+Florence.' Varchi proceeds to relate how Lorenzino fell
+into disfavour with the Pope and the Romans by chopping the heads off
+statues from the arch of Constantine and other monuments; for which
+act of vandalism Molsa impeached him in the Roman Academy, and a price
+was set upon his head. Having returned to Florence, he proceeded
+to court Duke Alessandro, into whose confidence he wormed himself,
+pretending to play the spy upon the exiles, and affecting a personal
+timidity which put the Prince off his guard. Alessandro called him
+'the philosopher,' because he conversed in solitude with his own
+thoughts and seemed indifferent to wealth and office. But all this
+while Lorenzino was plotting how to murder him.
+
+Giovio's account of this strange intimacy may be added, since it
+completes the picture I have drawn from Varchi:--'Lorenzo made himself
+the accomplice and instrument of those amorous amusements for which
+the Duke had an insatiable appetite, with the object of deceiving him.
+He was singularly well furnished with all the scoundrelly arts and
+trained devices of the pander's trade; composed fine verses to incite
+to lust; wrote and represented comedies in Italian; and pretended
+to take pleasure only in such tricks and studies. Therefore he never
+carried arms like other courtiers, and feigned to be afraid of blood,
+a man who sought tranquillity at any price. Besides, he bore a pallid
+countenance and melancholy brow, walking alone, talking very little
+and with few persons. He haunted solitary places apart from the city,
+and showed such plain signs of hypochondria that some began covertly
+to pass jokes on him. Certain others, who were more acute, suspected
+that he was harbouring and devising in his mind some terrible
+enterprise.' The Prologue to Lorenzino's own comedy of 'Aridosiso'
+brings the sardonic, sneering, ironical man vividly before us.
+He calls himself 'un certo omiciatto, che non e nessun di voi che
+veggendolo non l'avesse a noia, pensando che egli abbia fatto una
+commedia;' and begs the audience to damn his play to save him the
+tedium of writing another. Criticised by the light of his subsequent
+actions, this prologue may even be understood to contain a covert
+promise of the murder he was meditating.
+
+'In this way,' writes Varchi, 'the Duke had taken such familiarity
+with Lorenzo, that, not content with making use of him as a ruffian
+in his dealings with women, whether religious or secular, maidens
+or wives or widows, noble or plebeian, young or elderly, as it might
+happen, he applied to him to procure for his pleasure a half-sister of
+Lorenzo's own mother, a young lady of marvellous beauty, but not less
+chaste than beautiful, who was the wife of Lionardo Ginori, and lived
+not far from the back entrance to the palace of the Medici.' Lorenzino
+undertook this odious commission, seeing an opportunity to work his
+designs against the Duke. But first he had to form an accomplice,
+since he could not hope to carry out the murder without help. A bravo,
+called Michele del Tavolaccino, but better known by the nickname of
+Scoronconcolo, struck him as a fitting instrument. He had procured
+this man's pardon for a homicide, and it appears that the fellow
+retained a certain sense of gratitude. Lorenzino began by telling the
+man there was a courtier who put insults upon him, and Scoronconcolo
+professed his readiness to kill the knave. 'Sia chi si voglia; io
+l'ammazzero, se fosse Cristo.' Up to the last minute the name of
+Alessandro was not mentioned. Having thus secured his assistant,
+Lorenzino chose a night when he knew that Alessandro Vitelli, captain
+of the Duke's guard, would be from home. Then, after supper, he
+whispered in Alessandro's ear that at last he had seduced his aunt
+with an offer of money, and that she would come to his, Lorenzo's
+chamber at the service of the Duke that night. Only the Duke must
+appear at the rendezvous alone, and when he had arrived, the lady
+should be fetched. 'Certain it is,' says Varchi, 'that the Duke,
+having donned a cloak of satin in the Neapolitan style, lined with
+sable, when he went to take his gloves, and there were some of mail
+and some of perfumed leather, hesitated awhile and said: "Which shall
+I choose, those of war, or those of love-making?"' He took the latter
+and went out with only four attendants, three of whom he dismissed
+upon the Piazza di San Marco, while one was stationed just opposite
+Lorenzo's house, with strict orders not to stir if he should see folk
+enter or issue thence. But this fellow, called the Hungarian, after
+waiting a great while, returned to the Duke's chamber, and there went
+to sleep.
+
+Meanwhile Lorenzino received Alessandro in his bedroom, where there
+was a good fire. The Duke unbuckled his sword, which Lorenzino took,
+and having entangled the belt with the hilt, so that it should not
+readily be drawn, laid it on the pillow. The Duke had flung himself
+already on the bed, and hid himself among the curtains--doing this, it
+is supposed, to save himself from the trouble of paying compliments to
+the lady when she should arrive. For Caterina Ginori had the fame of
+a fair speaker, and Alessandro was aware of his own incapacity to play
+the part of a respectful lover. Nothing could more strongly point the
+man's brutality than this act, which contributed in no small measure
+to his ruin.
+
+Lorenzino left the Duke upon the bed, and went at once for
+Scoronconcolo. He told him that the enemy was caught, and bade him
+only mind the work he had to do. 'That will I do,' the bravo answered,
+'even though it were the Duke himself.' 'You've hit the mark,' said
+Lorenzino with a face of joy; 'he cannot slip through our fingers.
+Come!' So they mounted to the bedroom, and Lorenzino, knowing where
+the Duke was laid, cried: 'Sir, are you asleep?' and therewith ran
+him through the back. Alessandro was sleeping, or pretending to
+sleep, face downwards, and the sword passed through his kidneys and
+diaphragm. But it did not kill him. He slipped from the bed, and
+seized a stool to parry the next blow. Scoronconcolo now stabbed him
+in the face, while Lorenzino forced him back upon the bed; and then
+began a hideous struggle. In order to prevent his cries, Lorenzino
+doubled his fist into the Duke's mouth. Alessandro seized the thumb
+between his teeth, and held it in a vice until he died. This disabled
+Lorenzino, who still lay upon his victim's body, and Scoronconcolo
+could not strike for fear of wounding his master. Between the writhing
+couple he made, however, several passes with his sword, which only
+pierced the mattress. Then he drew a knife and drove it into the
+Duke's throat, and bored about till he had severed veins and windpipe.
+
+
+IV.--THE FLIGHT OF LORENZINO DE' MEDICI
+
+Alessandro was dead. His body fell to earth. The two murderers,
+drenched with blood, lifted it up, and placed it on the bed, wrapped
+in the curtains, as they had found him first. Then Lorenzino went to
+the window, which looked out upon the Via Larga, and opened it to rest
+and breathe a little air. After this he called for Scoronconcolo's
+boy, Il Freccia, and bade him look upon the dead man. Il Freccia
+recognised the Duke. But why Lorenzino did this, no one knew. It
+seemed, as Varchi says, that, having planned the murder with great
+ability, and executed it with daring, his good sense and good luck
+forsook him. He made no use of the crime he had committed; and from
+that day forward till his own assassination, nothing prospered with
+him. Indeed, the murder of Alessandro appears to have been almost
+motiveless, considered from the point of view of practical politics.
+Varchi assumes that Lorenzino's burning desire of glory prompted the
+deed; and when he had acquired the notoriety he sought, there was an
+end to his ambition. This view is confirmed by the Apology he wrote
+and published for his act. It remains one of the most pregnant,
+bold, and brilliant pieces of writing which we possess in favour of
+tyrannicide from that epoch of insolent crime and audacious rhetoric.
+So energetic is the style, and so biting the invective of this
+masterpiece, in which the author stabs a second time his victim, that
+both Giordani and Leopardi affirmed it to be the only true monument of
+eloquence in the Italian language. If thirst for glory was Lorenzino's
+principal incentive, immediate glory was his guerdon. He escaped that
+same night with Scoronconcolo and Freccia to Bologna, where he stayed
+to dress his thumb, and then passed forward to Venice. Filippo Strozzi
+there welcomed him as the new Brutus, gave him money, and promised to
+marry his two sons to the two sisters of the tyrant-killer. Poems were
+written and published by the most famous men of letters, including
+Benedetto Varchi and Francesco Maria Molsa, in praise of the Tuscan
+Brutus, the liberator of his country from a tyrant. A bronze medal
+was struck bearing his name, with a profile copied from Michelangelo's
+bust of Brutus. On the obverse are two daggers and a cup, and the date
+viii. id. Jan.
+
+The immediate consequence of Alessandro's murder was the elevation
+of Cosimo, son of Giovanni delle Bande Nere, and second cousin of
+Lorenzino, to the duchy. At the ceremony of his investiture with
+the ducal honours, Cosimo solemnly undertook to revenge Alessandro's
+murder. In the following March he buried his predecessor with pomp
+in San Lorenzo. The body was placed beside the bones of the Duke of
+Urbino in the marble chest of Michelangelo, and here not many years
+ago it was discovered. Soon afterwards Lorenzino was declared a rebel.
+His portrait was painted according to old Tuscan precedent, head
+downwards, and suspended by one foot, upon the wall of the fort built
+by Alessandro. His house was cut in twain from roof to pavement, and
+a narrow lane was driven through it, which received the title of
+Traitor's Alley, _Chiasso del Traditore_. The price of four
+thousand golden florins was put upon his head, together with the
+further sum of one hundred florins per annum in perpetuity to be paid
+to the murderer and his direct heirs in succession, by the Otto di
+Balia. Moreover, the man who killed Lorenzino was to enjoy all civic
+privileges; exemption from all taxes, ordinary and extraordinary; the
+right of carrying arms, together with two attendants, in the city and
+the whole domain of Florence; and the further prerogative of restoring
+ten outlaws at his choice. If Lorenzino could be captured and brought
+alive to Florence, the whole of this reward would be doubled.
+
+This decree was promulgated in April 1537, and thenceforward Lorenzino
+de' Medici lived a doomed man. The assassin, who had been proclaimed a
+Brutus by Tuscan exiles and humanistic enthusiasts, was regarded as a
+Judas by the common people. Ballads were written on him with the title
+of the 'Piteous and sore lament made unto himself by Lorenzino de'
+Medici, who murdered the most illustrious Duke Alessandro.' He had
+become a wild beast, whom it was honourable to hunt down, a pest which
+it was righteous to extirpate. Yet fate delayed nine years to overtake
+him. What remains to be told about his story must be extracted
+from the narrative of the bravo who succeeded, with the aid of an
+accomplice, in despatching him at Venice.[13] So far as possible,
+I shall use the man's own words, translating them literally, and
+omitting only unimportant details. The narrative throws brilliant
+light upon the manners and movements of professional cut-throats at
+that period in Italy. It seems to have been taken down from the hero
+Francesco, or Cecco, Bibboni's lips; and there is no doubt that we
+possess in it a valuable historical document for the illustration of
+contemporary customs. It offers in all points a curious parallel
+to Cellini's account of his own homicides and hair-breadth escapes.
+Moreover, it is confirmed in its minutest circumstances by the records
+of the criminal courts of Venice in the sixteenth century. This I can
+attest from recent examination of MSS. relating to the _Signori
+di Notte_ and the _Esecutori contro la Bestemmia_, which are
+preserved among the Archives at the Frari.
+
+V.--THE MURDER OF LORENZINO DE' MEDICI
+
+'When I returned from Germany,' begins Bibboni, 'where I had been in
+the pay of the Emperor, I found at Vicenza Bebo da Volterra, who was
+staying in the house of M. Antonio da Roma, a nobleman of that city.
+This gentleman employed him because of a great feud he had; and he was
+mighty pleased, moreover, at my coming, and desired that I too should
+take up my quarters in his palace.'
+
+This paragraph strikes the keynote of the whole narrative, and
+introduces us to the company we are about to keep. The noblemen of
+that epoch, if they had private enemies, took into their service
+soldiers of adventure, partly to protect their persons, but also to
+make war, when occasion offered, on their foes. The _bravi_, as
+they were styled, had quarters assigned them in the basement of
+the palace, where they might be seen swaggering about the door or
+flaunting their gay clothes behind the massive iron bars of the
+windows which opened on the streets. When their master went abroad
+at night they followed him, and were always at hand to perform secret
+services in love affairs, assassination, and espial. For the rest,
+they haunted taverns, and kept up correspondence with prostitutes. An
+Italian city had a whole population of such fellows, the offscourings
+of armies, drawn from all nations, divided by their allegiance of the
+time being into hostile camps, but united by community of interest and
+occupation, and ready to combine against the upper class, upon whose
+vices, enmities, and cowardice they throve.
+
+Bibboni proceeds to say how another gentleman of Vicenza, M. Francesco
+Manente, had at this time a feud with certain of the Guazzi and the
+Laschi, which had lasted several years, and cost the lives of many
+members of both parties and their following. M. Francesco being a
+friend of M. Antonio, besought that gentleman to lend him Bibboni and
+Bebo for a season; and the two _bravi_ went together with their
+new master to Celsano, a village in the neighbourhood. 'There both
+parties had estates, and all of them kept armed men in their houses,
+so that not a day passed without feats of arms, and always there was
+some one killed or wounded. One day, soon afterwards, the leaders of
+our party resolved to attack the foe in their house, where we killed
+two, and the rest, numbering five men, entrenched themselves in
+a ground-floor apartment; whereupon we took possession of their
+harquebuses and other arms, which forced them to abandon the villa and
+retire to Vicenza; and within a short space of time this great feud
+was terminated by an ample peace.' After this Bebo took service with
+the Rector of the University in Padua, and was transferred by his new
+patron to Milan. Bibboni remained at Vicenza with M. Galeazzo della
+Seta, who stood in great fear of his life, notwithstanding the peace
+which had been concluded between the two factions. At the end of ten
+months he returned to M. Antonio da Roma and his six brothers, 'all of
+whom being very much attached to me, they proposed that I should
+live my life with them, for good or ill, and be treated as one of the
+family; upon the understanding that if war broke out and I wanted to
+take part in it, I should always have twenty-five crowns and arms and
+horse, with welcome home, so long as I lived; and in case I did not
+care to join the troops, the same provision for my maintenance.'
+
+From these details we comprehend the sort of calling which a bravo
+of Bibboni's species followed. Meanwhile Bebo was at Milan. 'There it
+happened that M. Francesco Vinta, of Volterra, was on embassy from
+the Duke of Florence. He saw Bebo, and asked him what he was doing in
+Milan, and Bebo answered that he was a knight errant.' This phrase,
+derived no doubt from the romantic epics then in vogue, was a pretty
+euphemism for a rogue of Bebo's quality. The ambassador now began
+cautiously to sound his man, who seems to have been outlawed from the
+Tuscan duchy, telling him he knew a way by which he might return with
+favour to his home, and at last disclosing the affair of Lorenzo. Bebo
+was puzzled at first, but when he understood the matter, he professed
+his willingness, took letters from the envoy to the Duke of Florence,
+and, in a private audience with Cosimo, informed him that he was ready
+to attempt Lorenzino's assassination. He added that 'he had a comrade
+fit for such a job, whose fellow for the business could not easily be
+found.'
+
+Bebo now travelled to Vicenza, and opened the whole matter to Bibboni,
+who weighed it well, and at last, being convinced that the Duke's
+commission to his comrade was _bona fide_, determined to take his
+share in the undertaking. The two agreed to have no accomplices.
+They went to Venice, and 'I,' says Bibboni, 'being most intimately
+acquainted with all that city, and provided there with many friends,
+soon quietly contrived to know where Lorenzino lodged, and took a room
+in the neighbourhood, and spent some days in seeing how we best might
+rule our conduct.' Bibboni soon discovered that Lorenzino never left
+his palace; and he therefore remained in much perplexity, until, by
+good luck, Ruberto Strozzi arrived from France in Venice, bringing in
+his train a Navarrese servant, who had the nickname of Spagnoletto.
+This fellow was a great friend of the bravo. They met, and Bibboni
+told him that he should like to go and kiss the hands of Messer
+Ruberto, whom he had known in Rome. Strozzi inhabited the same palace
+as Lorenzino. 'When we arrived there, both Messer Ruberto and Lorenzo
+were leaving the house, and there were around them so many gentlemen
+and other persons, that I could not present myself, and both
+straightway stepped into the gondola. Then I, not having seen Lorenzo
+for a long while past, and because he was very quietly attired, could
+not recognise the man exactly, but only as it were between certainty
+and doubt. Wherefore I said to Spagnoletto, "I think I know that
+gentleman, but don't remember where I saw him." And Messer Ruberto was
+giving him his right hand. Then Spagnoletto answered, "You know him
+well enough; he is Messer Lorenzo. But see you tell this to nobody. He
+goes by the name of Messer Dario, because he lives in great fear
+for his safety, and people don't know that he is now in Venice." I
+answered that I marvelled much, and if I could have helped him, would
+have done so willingly. Then I asked where they were going, and he
+said, to dine with Messer Giovanni della Casa, who was the Pope's
+Legate. I did not leave the man till I had drawn from him all I
+required.'
+
+Thus spoke the Italian Judas. The appearance of La Casa on the
+scene is interesting. He was the celebrated author of the scandalous
+'Capitolo del Forno,' the author of many sublime and melancholy
+sonnets, who was now at Venice, prosecuting a charge of heresy against
+Pier Paolo Vergerio, and paying his addresses to a noble lady of the
+Quirini family. It seems that on the territory of San Marco he made
+common cause with the exiles from Florence, for he was himself by
+birth a Florentine, and he had no objection to take Brutus-Lorenzino
+by the hand.
+
+After the noblemen had rowed off in their gondola to dine with the
+Legate, Bibboni and his friend entered their palace, where he found
+another old acquaintance, the house-steward, or _spenditore_ of
+Lorenzo. From him he gathered much useful information. Pietro Strozzi,
+it seems, had allowed the tyrannicide one thousand five hundred crowns
+a year, with the keep of three brave and daring companions (_tre
+compagni bravi e facinorosi_), and a palace worth fifty crowns on
+lease. But Lorenzo had just taken another on the Campo di San Polo at
+three hundred crowns a year, for which swagger (_altura_) Pietro
+Strozzi had struck a thousand crowns off his allowance. Bibboni also
+learned that he was keeping house with his uncle, Alessandro Soderini,
+another Florentine outlaw, and that he was ardently in love with a
+certain beautiful Barozza. This woman was apparently one of the grand
+courtesans of Venice. He further ascertained the date when he was
+going to move into the palace at San Polo, and, 'to put it briefly,
+knew everything he did, and, as it were, how many times a day he
+spit.' Such were the intelligences of the servants' hall, and of such
+value were they to men of Bibboni's calling.
+
+In the Carnival of 1546 Lorenzo meant to go masqued in the habit of
+a gipsy woman to the square of San Spirito, where there was to be a
+joust. Great crowds of people would assemble, and Bibboni hoped to
+do his business there. The assassination, however, failed on this
+occasion, and Lorenzo took up his abode in the palace he had hired
+upon the Campo di San Polo. This Campo is one of the largest open
+places in Venice, shaped irregularly, with a finely curving line upon
+the western side, where two of the noblest private houses in the city
+are still standing. Nearly opposite these, in the south-western angle,
+stands, detached, the little old church of San Polo. One of its side
+entrances opens upon the square; the other on a lane, which leads
+eventually to the Frari. There is nothing in Bibboni's narrative to
+make it clear where Lorenzo hired his dwelling. But it would seem
+from certain things which he says later on, that in order to enter the
+church his victim had to cross the square. Meanwhile Bibboni took the
+precaution of making friends with a shoemaker, whose shop commanded
+the whole Campo, including Lorenzo's palace. In this shop he began to
+spend much of his time; 'and oftentimes I feigned to be asleep;
+but God knows whether I was sleeping, for my mind, at any rate, was
+wide-awake.'
+
+A second convenient occasion for murdering Lorenzo soon seemed to
+offer. He was bidden to dine with Monsignor della Casa; and Bibboni,
+putting a bold face on, entered the Legate's palace, having left
+Bebo below in the loggia, fully resolved to do the business. 'But we
+found,' he says, 'that, they had gone to dine at Murano, so that we
+remained with our tabors in their bag.' The island of Murano at that
+period was a favourite resort of the Venetian nobles, especially of
+the more literary and artistic, who kept country-houses there, where
+they enjoyed the fresh air of the lagoons and the quiet of their
+gardens.
+
+The third occasion, after all these weeks of watching, brought success
+to Bibboni's schemes. He had observed how Lorenzo occasionally so far
+broke his rules of caution as to go on foot, past the church of San
+Polo, to visit the beautiful Barozza; and he resolved, if possible,
+to catch him on one of these journeys. 'It so chanced on the 28th of
+February, which was the second Sunday of Lent, that having gone, as
+was my wont, to pry out whether Lorenzo would give orders for going
+abroad that day, I entered the shoemaker's shop, and stayed awhile,
+until Lorenzo came to the window with a napkin round his neck for he
+was combing his hair--and at the same moment I saw a certain Giovan
+Battista Martelli, who kept his sword for the defence of Lorenzo's
+person, enter and come forth again. Concluding that they would
+probably go abroad, I went home to get ready and procure the necessary
+weapons, and there I found Bebo asleep in bed, and made him get up at
+once, and we came to our accustomed post of observation, by the church
+of San Polo, where our men would have to pass.' Bibboni now retired to
+his friend the shoemaker's, and Bebo took up his station at one of
+the side-doors of San Polo; 'and, as good luck would have it, Giovan
+Battista Martelli came forth, and walked a piece in front, and then
+Lorenzo came, and then Alessandro Soderini, going the one behind the
+other, like storks, and Lorenzo, on entering the church, and lifting
+up the curtain of the door, was seen from the opposite door by Bebo,
+who at the same time noticed how I had left the shop, and so we met
+upon the street as we had agreed, and he told me that Lorenzo was
+inside the church.'
+
+To any one who knows the Campo di San Polo, it will be apparent that
+Lorenzo had crossed from the western side of the piazza and entered
+the church by what is technically called its northern door. Bebo,
+stationed at the southern door, could see him when he pushed the heavy
+_stoia_ or leather curtain aside, and at the same time could
+observe Bibboni's movements in the cobbler's shop. Meanwhile Lorenzo
+walked across the church and came to the same door where Bebo had been
+standing. 'I saw him issue from the church and take the main street;
+then came Alessandro Soderini, and I walked last of all; and when
+we reached the point we had determined on, I jumped in front
+of Alessandro with the poignard in my hand, crying, "Hold hard,
+Alessandro, and get along with you in God's name, for we are not here
+for you!" He then threw himself around my waist, and grasped my arms,
+and kept on calling out. Seeing how wrong I had been to try to spare
+his life, I wrenched myself as well as I could from his grip, and with
+my lifted poignard struck him, as God willed, above the eyebrow, and a
+little blood trickled from the wound. He, in high fury, gave me such a
+thrust that I fell backward, and the ground besides was slippery
+from having rained a little. Then Alessandro drew his sword, which he
+carried in its scabbard, and thrust at me in front, and struck me on
+the corslet, which for my good fortune was of double mail. Before I
+could get ready I received three passes, which, had I worn a doublet
+instead of that mailed corslet, would certainly have run me through.
+At the fourth pass I had regained my strength and spirit, and closed
+with him, and stabbed him four times in the head, and being so close
+he could not use his sword, but tried to parry with his hand and hilt,
+and I, as God willed, struck him at the wrist below the sleeve of
+mail, and cut his hand off clean, and gave him then one last stroke on
+his head. Thereupon he begged for God's sake spare his life, and I, in
+trouble about Bebo, left him in the arms of a Venetian nobleman, who
+held him back from jumping into the canal.'
+
+Who this Venetian nobleman, found unexpectedly upon the scene, was,
+does not appear. Nor, what is still more curious, do we hear anything
+of that Martelli, the bravo, 'who kept his sword for the defence of
+Lorenzo's person.' The one had arrived accidentally, it seems. The
+other must have been a coward and escaped from the scuffle.
+
+'When I turned,' proceeds Bibboni, 'I found Lorenzo on his knees. He
+raised himself, and I, in anger, gave him a great cut across the head,
+which split it in two pieces, and laid him at my feet, and he never
+rose again.'
+
+VI.--THE ESCAPE OF THE BRAVI
+
+Bebo, meanwhile, had made off from the scene of action. And Bibboni,
+taking to his heels, came up with him in the little square of San
+Marcello. They now ran for their lives till they reached the traghetto
+di San Spirito, where they threw their poignards into the water,
+remembering that no man might carry these in Venice under penalty
+of the galleys. Bibboni's white hose were drenched with blood. He
+therefore agreed to separate from Bebo, having named a rendezvous.
+Left alone, his ill luck brought him face to face with twenty
+constables (_sbirri_). 'In a moment I conceived that they knew
+everything, and were come to capture me, and of a truth I saw that it
+was over with me. As swiftly as I could I quickened pace and got into
+a church, near to which was the house of a Compagnia, and the one
+opened into the other, and knelt down and prayed, commending myself
+with fervour to God for my deliverance and safety. Yet while I prayed,
+I kept my eyes well open and saw the whole band pass the church,
+except one man who entered, and I strained my sight so that I seemed
+to see behind as well as in front, and then it was I longed for my
+poignard, for I should not have heeded being in a church.' But the
+constable, it soon appeared, was not looking for Bibboni. So he
+gathered up his courage, and ran for the Church of San Spirito, where
+the Padre Andrea Volterrano was preaching to a great congregation.
+He hoped to go in by one door and out by the other, but the crowd
+prevented him, and he had to turn back and face the _sbirri_. One
+of them followed him, having probably caught sight of the blood upon
+his hose. Then Bibboni resolved to have done with the fellow, and
+rushed at him, and flung him down with his head upon the pavement,
+and ran like mad and came at last, all out of breath, to San Marco. It
+seems clear that before Bibboni separated from Bebo they had crossed
+the water, for the Sestiere di San Polo is separated from the Sestiere
+di San Marco by the Grand Canal. And this they must have done at the
+traghetto di San Spirito. Neither the church nor the traghetto are
+now in existence, and this part of the story is therefore obscure.[14]
+Having reached San Marco, he took a gondola at the Ponte della Paglia,
+where tourists are now wont to stand and contemplate the Ducal Palace
+and the Bridge of Sighs. First, he sought the house of a woman of the
+town who was his friend; then changed purpose, and rowed to the palace
+of the Count Salici da Collalto. 'He was a great friend and intimate
+of ours, because Bebo and I had done him many and great services in
+times passed. There I knocked; and Bebo opened the door, and when he
+saw me dabbled with blood, he marvelled that I had not come to grief
+and fallen into the hands of justice, and, indeed, had feared as much
+because I had remained so long away.' It appears, therefore, that the
+Palazzo Collalto was their rendezvous. 'The Count was from home; but
+being known to all his people, I played the master and went into the
+kitchen to the fire, and with soap and water turned my hose, which had
+been white, to a grey colour.' This is a very delicate way of saying
+that he washed out the blood of Alessandro and Lorenzo!
+
+Soon after the Count returned, and 'lavished caresses' upon Bebo and
+his precious comrade. They did not tell him what they had achieved
+that morning, but put him off with a story of having settled a
+_sbirro_ in a quarrel about a girl. Then the Count invited them to
+dinner; and being himself bound to entertain the first physician of
+Venice, requested them to take it in an upper chamber. He and his
+secretary served them with their own hands at table. When the
+physician arrived, the Count went downstairs; and at this moment a
+messenger came from Lorenzo's mother, begging the doctor to go at once
+to San Polo, for that her son had been murdered and Soderini wounded
+to the death. It was now no longer possible to conceal their doings
+from the Count, who told them to pluck up courage and abide in
+patience. He had himself to dine and take his siesta, and then to
+attend a meeting of the Council.
+
+About the hour of vespers, Bibboni determined to seek better refuge.
+Followed at a discreet distance by Bebo, he first called at their
+lodgings and ordered supper. Two priests came in and fell into
+conversation with them. But something in the behaviour of one of
+these good men roused his suspicions. So they left the house, took a
+gondola, and told the man to row hard to S. Maria Zobenigo. On the way
+he bade him put them on shore, paid him well, and ordered him to wait
+for them. They landed near the palace of the Spanish embassy; and here
+Bibboni meant to seek sanctuary. For it must be remembered that the
+houses of ambassadors, no less than of princes of the Church, were
+inviolable. They offered the most convenient harbouring-places to
+rascals. Charles V., moreover, was deeply interested in the vengeance
+taken on Alessandro de' Medici's murderer, for his own natural
+daughter was Alessandro's widow and Duchess of Florence. In the palace
+they were met with much courtesy by about forty Spaniards, who showed
+considerable curiosity, and told them that Lorenzo and Alessandro
+Soderini had been murdered that morning by two men whose description
+answered to their appearance. Bibboni put their questions by and asked
+to see the ambassador. He was not at home. In that case, said Bibboni,
+take us to the secretary. Attended by some thirty Spaniards, 'with
+great joy and gladness,' they were shown into the secretary's chamber.
+He sent the rest of the folk away, 'and locked the door well, and then
+embraced and kissed us before we had said a word, and afterwards bade
+us talk freely without any fear.' When Bibboni had told the whole
+story, he was again embraced and kissed by the secretary, who
+thereupon left them and went to the private apartment of the
+ambassador. Shortly after he returned and led them by a winding
+staircase into the presence of his master. The ambassador greeted
+them with great honour, told them he would strain all the power of
+the empire to hand them in safety over to Duke Cosimo, and that he had
+already sent a courier to the Emperor with the good news.
+
+So they remained in hiding in the Spanish embassy; and in ten days'
+time commands were received from Charles himself that everything
+should be done to convey them safely to Florence. The difficulty was
+how to smuggle them out of Venice, where the police of the Republic
+were on watch, and Florentine outlaws were mounting guard on sea and
+shore to catch them. The ambassador began by spreading reports on the
+Rialto every morning of their having been seen at Padua, at Verona, in
+Friuli. He then hired a palace at Malghera, near Mestre, and went out
+daily with fifty Spaniards, and took carriage or amused himself with
+horse exercise and shooting. The Florentines, who were on watch, could
+only discover from his people that he did this for amusement. When
+he thought that he had put them sufficiently off their guard, the
+ambassador one day took Bibboni and Bebo out by Canaregio and Mestre
+to Malghera, concealed in his own gondola, with the whole train of
+Spaniards in attendance. And though, on landing, the Florentines
+challenged them, they durst not interfere with an ambassador or come
+to battle with his men. So Bebo and Bibboni were hustled into a coach,
+and afterwards provided with two comrades and four horses. They rode
+for ninety miles without stopping to sleep, and on the day following
+this long journey reached Trento, having probably threaded the
+mountain valleys above Bassano, for Bibboni speaks of a certain
+village where the people talked half German. The Imperial Ambassador
+at Trento forwarded them next day to Mantua; from Mantua they came to
+Piacenza; thence, passing through the valley of the Taro, crossing
+the Apennines at Cisa, descending on Pontremoli, and reaching Pisa at
+night, the fourteenth day after their escape from Venice.
+
+When they arrived at Pisa, Duke Cosimo was supping. So they went to
+an inn, and next morning presented themselves to his Grace. Cosimo
+received them kindly, assured them of his gratitude, confirmed them
+in the enjoyment of their rewards and privileges, and swore that they
+might rest secure of his protection in all parts of his dominion. We
+may imagine how the men caroused together after this reception. As
+Bibboni adds, 'We were now able for the whole time of life left us
+to live splendidly, without a thought or care.' The last words of his
+narrative are these: 'Bebo from Pisa, at what date I know not, went
+home to Volterra, his native town, and there finished his days; while
+I abode in Florence, where I have had no further wish to hear of wars,
+but to live my life in holy peace.'
+
+So ends the story of the two _bravi_. We have reason to believe,
+from some contemporary documents which Cantu has brought to light,
+that Bibboni exaggerated his own part in the affair. Luca Martelli,
+writing to Varchi, says that it was Bebo who clove Lorenzo's skull
+with a cutlass. He adds this curious detail, that the weapons of
+both men were poisoned, and that the wound inflicted by Bibboni on
+Soderini's hand was a slight one. Yet, the poignard being poisoned,
+Soderini died of it. In other respects Martelli's brief account agrees
+with that given by Bibboni, who probably did no more, his comrade
+being dead, than claim for himself, at some expense of truth, the
+lion's share of their heroic action.
+
+VII.--LORENZINO BRUTUS
+
+It remains to ask ourselves, What opinion can be justly formed of
+Lorenzino's character and motives? When he murdered his cousin, was
+he really actuated by the patriotic desire to rid his country of a
+monster? Did he imitate the Roman Brutus in the noble spirit of
+his predecessors, Olgiati and Boscoli, martyrs to the creed of
+tyrannicide? Or must this crowning action of a fretful life be
+explained, like his previous mutilation of the statues on the Arch
+of Constantine, by a wild thirst for notoriety? Did he hope that the
+exiles would return to Florence, and that he would enjoy an honourable
+life, an immortality of glorious renown? Did envy for his cousin's
+greatness and resentment of his undisguised contempt--the passions of
+one who had been used for vile ends--conscious of self-degradation and
+the loss of honour, yet mindful of his intellectual superiority--did
+these emotions take fire in him and mingle with a scholar's
+reminiscences of antique heroism, prompting him to plan a deed
+which should at least assume the show of patriotic zeal, and prove
+indubitable courage in its perpetrator? Did he, again, perhaps
+imagine, being next in blood to Alessandro and direct heir to the
+ducal crown by the Imperial Settlement of 1530, that the city would
+elect her liberator for her ruler? Alfieri and Niccolini, having
+taken, as it were, a brief in favour of tyrannicide, praised Lorenzino
+as a hero. De Musset, who wrote a considerable drama on his story,
+painted him as a _roue_ corrupted by society, enfeebled by
+circumstance, soured by commerce with an uncongenial world, who hides
+at the bottom of his mixed nature enough of real nobility to make him
+the leader of a forlorn hope for the liberties of Florence. This is
+the most favourable construction we can put upon Lorenzo's conduct.
+Yet some facts of the case warn us to suspend our judgment. He seems
+to have formed no plan for the liberation of his fellow-citizens. He
+gave no pledge of self-devotion by avowing his deed and abiding by its
+issues. He showed none of the qualities of a leader, whether in the
+cause of freedom or of his own dynastic interests, after the murder.
+He escaped as soon as he was able, as secretly as he could manage,
+leaving the city in confusion, and exposing himself to the obvious
+charge of abominable treason. So far as the Florentines knew, his
+assassination of their Duke was but a piece of private spite, executed
+with infernal craft. It is true that when he seized the pen in exile,
+he did his best to claim the guerdon of a patriot, and to throw the
+blame of failure on the Florentines. In his Apology, and in a letter
+written to Francesco de' Medici, he taunts them with lacking the
+spirit to extinguish tyranny when he had slain the tyrant. He summons
+plausible excuses to his aid--the impossibility of taking persons of
+importance into his confidence, the loss of blood he suffered from
+his wound, the uselessness of rousing citizens whom events proved
+over-indolent for action. He declares that he has nothing to regret.
+Having proved by deeds his will to serve his country, he has saved
+his life in order to spend it for her when occasion offered. But these
+arguments, invented after the catastrophe, these words, so bravely
+penned when action ought to have confirmed his resolution, do not
+meet the case. It was no deed of a true hero to assassinate a despot,
+knowing or half knowing that the despot's subjects would immediately
+elect another. Their languor could not, except rhetorically, be
+advanced in defence of his own flight.
+
+The historian is driven to seek both the explanation and palliation of
+Lorenzo's failure in the temper of his times. There was enough
+daring left in Florence to carry through a plan of brilliant treason,
+modelled on an antique Roman tragedy. But there was not moral force
+in the protagonist to render that act salutary, not public energy
+sufficient in his fellow-citizens to accomplish his drama of
+deliverance. Lorenzo was corrupt. Florence was flaccid. Evil manners
+had emasculated the hero. In the state the last spark of independence
+had expired with Ferrucci.
+
+Still I have not without forethought dubbed this man a Cinque Cento
+Brutus. Like much of the art and literature of his century, his action
+may be regarded as a _bizarre_ imitation of the antique manner.
+Without the force and purpose of a Roman, Lorenzo set himself to copy
+Plutarch's men--just as sculptors carved Neptunes and Apollos without
+the dignity and serenity of the classic style. The antique faith
+was wanting to both murderer and craftsman in those days. Even as
+Renaissance work in art is too often aimless, decorative, vacant of
+intention, so Lorenzino's Brutus tragedy seems but the snapping of
+a pistol in void air. He had the audacity but not the ethical
+consistency of his crime. He played the part of Brutus like a Roscius,
+perfect in its histrionic details. And it doubtless gave to this
+skilful actor a supreme satisfaction--salving over many wounds of
+vanity, quenching the poignant thirst for things impossible and
+draughts of fame--that he could play it on no mimic stage, but on
+the theatre of Europe. The weakness of his conduct was the central
+weakness of his age and country. Italy herself lacked moral purpose,
+sense of righteous necessity, that consecration of self to a noble
+cause, which could alone have justified Lorenzo's perfidy. Confused
+memories of Judith, Jael, Brutus, and other classical tyrannicides,
+exalted his imagination. Longing for violent emotions, jaded with
+pleasure which had palled, discontented with his wasted life, jealous
+of his brutal cousin, appetitive to the last of glory, he conceived
+his scheme. Having conceived, he executed it with that which never
+failed in Cinque Cento Italy--the artistic spirit of perfection. When
+it was over, he shrugged his shoulders, wrote his magnificent Apology
+with a style of adamant upon a plate of steel, and left it for the
+outlaws of Filippo Strozzi's faction to deal with the crisis he
+had brought about. For some years he dragged out an ignoble life
+in obscurity, and died at last, as Varchi puts it, more by his own
+carelessness than by the watchful animosity of others. Over the wild,
+turbid, clever, incomprehensible, inconstant hero-artist's grave we
+write our _Requiescat_. Clio, as she takes the pen in hand to
+record this prayer, smiles disdainfully and turns to graver business.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_TWO DRAMATISTS OF THE LAST CENTURY_
+
+
+There are few contrasts more striking than that which is presented
+by the memoirs of Goldoni and Alfieri. Both of these men bore names
+highly distinguished in the history of Italian literature. Both of
+them were framed by nature with strongly marked characters, and fitted
+to perform a special work in the world. Both have left behind them
+records of their lives and literary labours, singularly illustrative
+of their peculiar differences. There is no instance in which we see
+more clearly the philosophical value of autobiographies, than in these
+vivid pictures which the great Italian tragedian and comic author have
+delineated. Some of the most interesting works of Lionardo da Vinci,
+Giorgione, Albert Duerer, Rembrandt, Rubens, and Andrea del Sarto, are
+their portraits painted by themselves. These pictures exhibit not only
+the lineaments of the masters, but also their art. The hand which drew
+them was the hand which drew the 'Last Supper,' or the 'Madonna of
+the Tribune:' colour, method, chiaroscuro, all that makes up manner in
+painting, may be studied on the same canvas as that which faithfully
+represents the features of the man whose genius gave his style its
+special character. We seem to understand the clear calm majesty of
+Lionardo's manner, the silver-grey harmonies and smooth facility of
+Andrea's Madonnas, the better for looking at their faces drawn by
+their own hands at Florence. And if this be the case with a dumb
+picture, how far higher must be the interest and importance of the
+written life of a known author! Not only do we recognise in its
+composition the style and temper and habits of thought which are
+familiar to us in his other writings; but we also hear from his
+own lips how these were formed, how his tastes took their peculiar
+direction, what circumstances acted on his character, what hopes he
+had, and where he failed. Even should his autobiography not bear
+the marks of uniform candour, it probably reveals more of the actual
+truth, more of the man's real nature in its height and depth, than
+any memoir written by friend or foe. Its unconscious admissions, its
+general spirit, and the inferences which we draw from its perusal,
+are far more valuable than any mere statement of facts or external
+analysis, however scientific. When we become acquainted with
+the series of events which led to the conception or attended the
+production of some masterpiece of literature, a new light is thrown
+upon its beauties, fresh life bursts forth from every chapter, and we
+seem to have a nearer and more personal interest in its success. What
+a powerful sensation, for instance, is that which we experience when,
+after studying the 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,' Gibbon
+tells us how the thought of writing it came to him upon the Capitol,
+among the ruins of dead Rome, and within hearing of the mutter of the
+monks of Ara Coeli, and how he finished it one night by Lake Geneva,
+and laid his pen down and walked forth and saw the stars above his
+terrace at Lausanne!
+
+The memoirs of Alfieri and Goldoni are not deficient in any of the
+characteristics of good autobiography. They seem to bear upon their
+face the stamp of truthfulness, they illustrate their authors' lives
+with marvellous lucidity, and they are full of interest as stories.
+But it is to the contrast which they present that our attention should
+be chiefly drawn. Other biographies may be as interesting and amusing.
+None show in a more marked manner two distinct natures endowed with
+genius for one art, and yet designed in every possible particular for
+different branches of that art. Alfieri embodies Tragedy; Goldoni
+is the spirit of Comedy. They are both Italians: their tragedies and
+comedies are by no means cosmopolitan; but this national identity of
+character only renders more remarkable the individual divergences by
+which they were impelled into their different paths. Thalia seems to
+have made the one, body, soul, and spirit; and Melpomene the other;
+each goddess launched her favourite into circumstances suited to the
+evolution of his genius, and presided over his development, so that at
+his death she might exclaim,--Behold the living model of my Art!
+
+Goldoni was born at Venice in the year 1707; he had already reached
+celebrity when Alfieri saw the light for the first time, in 1749, at
+Asti. Goldoni's grandfather was a native of Modena, who had settled
+in Venice, and there lived with the prodigality of a rich and
+ostentatious 'bourgeois.' 'Amid riot and luxury did I enter the
+world,' says the poet, after enumerating the banquets and theatrical
+displays with which the old Goldoni entertained his guests in his
+Venetian palace and country-house. Venice at that date was certainly
+the proper birthplace for a comic poet. The splendour of the
+Renaissance had thoroughly habituated her nobles to pleasures of the
+sense, and had enervated their proud, maritime character, while the
+great name of the republic robbed them of the caution for which they
+used to be conspicuous. Yet the real strength of Venice was almost
+spent, and nothing remained but outward insolence and prestige.
+Everything was gay about Goldoni in his earliest childhood.
+Puppet-shows were built to amuse him by his grandfather. 'My
+mother,' he says, 'took charge of my education, and my father of my
+amusements.' Let us turn to the opening scene in Alfieri's life,
+and mark the difference. A father above sixty, 'noble, wealthy, and
+respectable,' who died before his son had reached the age of one year
+old. A mother devoted to religion, the widow of one marquis, and after
+the death of a second husband, Alfieri's father, married for the third
+time to a nobleman of ancient birth. These were Alfieri's parents. He
+was born in a solemn palazzo in the country town of Asti, and at the
+age of five already longed for death as an escape from disease and
+other earthly troubles. So noble and so wealthy was the youthful poet
+that an abbe was engaged to carry out his education, but not to teach
+him more than a count should know. Except this worthy man he had no
+companions whatever. Strange ideas possessed the boy. He ruminated on
+his melancholy, and when eight years old attempted suicide. At this
+age he was sent to the academy at Turin, attended, as befitted a lad
+of his rank, by a man-servant, who was to remain and wait on him at
+school. Alfieri stayed here several years without revisiting his home,
+tyrannised over by the valet who added to his grandeur, constantly
+subject to sickness, and kept in almost total ignorance by his
+incompetent preceptors. The gloom and pride and stoicism of his
+temperament were augmented by this unnatural discipline. His spirit
+did not break, but took a haughtier and more disdainful tone. He
+became familiar with misfortunes. He learned to brood over and
+intensify his passions. Every circumstance of his life seemed strung
+up to a tragic pitch. This at least is the impression which remains
+upon our mind after reading in his memoirs the narrative of what must
+in many of its details have been a common schoolboy's life at that
+time.
+
+Meanwhile, what had become of young Goldoni? His boyhood was as
+thoroughly plebeian, various, and comic as Alfieri's had been
+patrician, monotonous, and tragical. Instead of one place of
+residence, we read of twenty. Scrape succeeds to scrape, adventure to
+adventure. Knowledge of the world, and some book learning also, flow
+in upon the boy, and are eagerly caught up by him and heterogeneously
+amalgamated in his mind. Alfieri learned nothing, wrote nothing, in
+his youth, and heard his parents say--'A nobleman need never strive to
+be a doctor of the faculties.' Goldoni had a little medicine and much
+law thrust upon him. At eight he wrote a comedy, and ere long began
+to read the plays of Plautus, Terence, Aristophanes, and Machiavelli.
+Between the nature of the two poets there was a marked and
+characteristic difference as to their mode of labour and of acquiring
+knowledge. Both of them loved fame, and wrought for it; but Alfieri
+did so from a sense of pride and a determination to excel;
+while Goldoni loved the approbation of his fellows, sought their
+compliments, and basked in the sunshine of smiles. Alfieri wrote with
+labour. Each tragedy he composed went through a triple process of
+composition, and received frequent polishing when finished. Goldoni
+dashed off his pieces with the greatest ease on every possible
+subject. He once produced sixteen comedies in one theatrical season.
+Alfieri's were like lion's whelps--brought forth with difficulty,
+and at long intervals; Goldoni's, like the brood of a hare--many,
+frequent, and as agile as their parent. Alfieri amassed knowledge
+scrupulously, but with infinite toil. He mastered Greek and Hebrew
+when he was past forty. Goldoni never gave himself the least trouble
+to learn anything, but trusted to the ready wit, good memory, and
+natural powers, which helped him in a hundred strange emergencies.
+Power of will and pride sustained the one; facility and a
+good-humoured vanity the other. This contrast was apparent at a very
+early age. We have seen how Alfieri passed his time at Turin, in
+a kind of aristocratic prison of educational ignorance. Goldoni's
+grandfather died when he was five years old, and left his family in
+great embarrassment. The poet's father went off to practise medicine
+at Perugia. His son followed him, acquired the rudiments of knowledge
+in that town, and then proceeded to study philosophy alone at Rimini.
+There was no man-servant or academy in his case. He was far too
+plebeian and too free. The boy lodged with a merchant, and got some
+smattering of Thomas Aquinas and the Peripatetics into his small
+brain, while he contrived to form a friendship with an acting company.
+They were on the wing for Venice in a coasting boat, which would touch
+at Chiozza, where Goldoni's mother then resided. The boy pleased them.
+Would he like the voyage? This offer seemed too tempting, and away
+he rushed, concealed himself on board, and made one of a merry motley
+shipload. 'Twelve persons, actors as well as actresses, a prompter,
+a machinist, a storekeeper, eight domestics, four chambermaids, two
+nurses, children of every age, cats, dogs, monkeys, parrots, birds,
+pigeons, and a lamb; it was another Noah's ark.' The young poet felt
+at home; how could a comic poet feel otherwise? They laughed, they
+sang, they danced; they ate and drank, and played at cards. 'Macaroni!
+Every one fell on it, and three dishes were devoured. We had also
+alamode beef, cold fowl, a loin of veal, a dessert, and excellent
+wine. What a charming dinner! No cheer like a good appetite.' Their
+harmony, however, was disturbed. The 'premiere amoureuse,' who, in
+spite of her rank and title, was ugly and cross, and required to be
+coaxed with cups of chocolate, lost her cat. She tried to kill the
+whole boat-load of beasts--cats, dogs, monkeys, parrots, pigeons, even
+the lamb stood in danger of her wrath. A regular quarrel ensued, was
+somehow set at peace, and all began to laugh again. This is a sample
+of Goldoni's youth. Comic pleasures, comic dangers; nothing deep or
+lasting, but light and shadow cheerfully distributed, clouds lowering
+with storm, a distant growl of thunder, then a gleam of light and
+sunshine breaking overhead. He gets articled to an attorney at Venice,
+then goes to study law at Pavia; studies society instead, and flirts,
+and finally is expelled for writing satires. Then he takes a turn at
+medicine with his father in Friuli, and acts as clerk to the criminal
+chancellor at Chiozza.
+
+Every employment seems easy to him, but he really cares for none but
+literature. He spends all his spare time in reading and in amusements,
+and begins to write a tragic opera. This proves, however, eminently
+unsuccessful, and he burns it in a comic fit of anger. One laughable
+love-affair in which he engaged at Udine exhibits his adventures
+in their truly comic aspect. It reminds us of the scene in 'Don
+Giovanni,' where Leporello personates the Don and deceives Donna
+Elvira. Goldoni had often noticed a beautiful young lady at church
+and on the public drives: she was attended by a waiting-maid, who soon
+perceived that her mistress had excited the young man's admiration,
+and who promised to befriend him in his suit. Goldoni was told to
+repair at night to the palace of his mistress, and to pour his passion
+forth beneath her window. Impatiently he waited for the trysting
+hour, conned his love-sentences, and gloried in the romance of the
+adventure. When night came, he found the window, and a veiled figure
+of a lady in the moonlight, whom he supposed at once to be his
+mistress. Her he eloquently addressed in the true style of Romeo's
+rapture, and she answered him. Night after night this happened,
+but sometimes he was a little troubled by a sound of ill-suppressed
+laughter interrupting the _tete-a-tete_. Meanwhile Teresa,
+the waiting-maid, received from his hands costly presents for her
+mistress, and made him promises on her part in exchange. As she proved
+unable to fulfil them, Goldoni grew suspicious, and at last discovered
+that the veiled figure to whom he had poured out his tale of love was
+none other than Teresa, and that the laughter had proceeded from
+her mistress, whom the faithless waiting-maid regaled at her lover's
+expense. Thus ended this ridiculous matter. Goldoni was not, however,
+cured by his experience. One other love-affair rendered Udine too hot
+to hold him, and in consequence of a third he had to fly from Venice
+just when he was beginning to flourish there. At length he married
+comfortably and suitably, settling down into a quiet life with a woman
+whom, if he did not love her with passion, he at least respected and
+admired. Goldoni, in fact, had no real passion in his nature.
+
+Alfieri, on the other hand, was given over to volcanic ebullitions of
+the most ungovernable hate and affection, joy and sorrow. The chains
+of love which Goldoni courted so willingly, Alfieri regarded with
+the greatest shyness. But while Goldoni healed his heart of all its
+bruises in a week or so, the tragic poet bore about him wounds that
+would not close. He enumerates three serious passions which possessed
+his whole nature, and at times deprived him almost of his reason. A
+Dutch lady first won his heart, and when he had to leave her, Alfieri
+suffered so intensely that he never opened his lips during the course
+of a long journey through Germany, Switzerland, and Piedmont. Fevers,
+and suicides attempted but interrupted, marked the termination of this
+tragic amour. His second passion had for its object an English lady,
+with whose injured husband he fought a duel, although his collarbone
+was broken at the time. The lady proved unworthy of Alfieri as well
+as of her husband, and the poet left her in a most deplorable state
+of hopelessness and intellectual prostration. At last he formed
+a permanent affection for the wife of Prince Charles Edward, the
+Countess of Albany, in close friendship with whom he lived after her
+husband's death. The society of this lady gave him perfect happiness;
+but it was founded on her lofty beauty, the pathos of her situation,
+and her intellectual qualities. Melpomene presided at this union,
+while Thalia blessed the nuptials of Goldoni. How characteristic
+also were the adventures which these two pairs of lovers encountered!
+Goldoni once carried his wife upon his back across two rivers in their
+flight from the Spanish to the Austrian camp at Rimini, laughing and
+groaning, and perceiving the humour of his situation all the time.
+Alfieri, on an occasion of even greater difficulty, was stopped with
+his illustrious friend at the gates of Paris in 1792. They were flying
+in post-chaises, with their servants and their baggage, from the
+devoted city, when a troop of _sansculottes_ rushed on them,
+surged around the carriage, called them aristocrats, and tried to drag
+them off to prison. Alfieri, with his tall gaunt figure, pallid face,
+and red voluminous hair, stormed, raged, and raised his deep bass
+voice above the tumult. For half an hour he fought with them, then
+made his coachmen gallop through the gates, and scarcely halted till
+they got to Gravelines. By this prompt movement they escaped arrest
+and death at Paris. These two scenes would make agreeable companion
+pictures: Goldoni staggering beneath his wife across the muddy bed
+of an Italian stream--the smiling writer of agreeable plays, with his
+half-tearful helpmate ludicrous in her disasters; Alfieri mad with
+rage among Parisian Maenads, his princess quaking in her carriage, the
+air hoarse with cries, and death and safety trembling in the balance.
+It is no wonder that the one man wrote 'La Donna di Garbo' and the
+'Cortese Veneziano,' while the other was inditing essays on Tyranny
+and dramas of 'Antigone,' 'Timoleon,' and 'Brutus.'
+
+The difference between the men is seen no less remarkably in regard
+to courage. Alfieri was a reckless rider, and astonished even English
+huntsmen by his desperate leaps. In one of them he fell and broke
+his collar-bone, but not the less he held his tryst with a fair lady,
+climbed her park gates, and fought a duel with her husband. Goldoni
+was a pantaloon for cowardice. In the room of an inn at Desenzano
+which he occupied together with a female fellow-traveller, an attempt
+was made to rob them by a thief at night. All Goldoni was able to do
+consisted in crying out for help, and the lady called him 'M. l'Abbe'
+ever after for his want of pluck. Goldoni must have been by far the
+more agreeable of the two. In all his changes from town to town of
+Italy he found amusement and brought gaiety. The sights, the theatres,
+the society aroused his curiosity. He trembled with excitement at the
+performance of his pieces, made friends with the actors, taught them,
+and wrote parts to suit their qualities. At Pisa he attended as
+a stranger the meeting of the Arcadian Academy, and at its close
+attracted all attention to himself by his clever improvisation. He was
+in truth a ready-witted man, pliable, full of resource, bred half a
+valet, half a Roman _graeculus_. Alfieri saw more of Europe than
+Goldoni. France, Germany, Holland, Switzerland, England, Spain, all
+parts of Italy he visited with restless haste. From land to land he
+flew, seeking no society, enjoying nothing, dashing from one inn door
+to another with his servants and his carriages, and thinking chiefly
+of the splendid stud of horses which he took about with him upon his
+travels. He was a lonely, stiff, self-engrossed, indomitable man. He
+could not rest at home: he could not bear to be the vassal of a king
+and breathe the air of courts. So he lived always on the wing, and
+ended by exiling himself from Sardinia in order to escape the trammels
+of paternal government. As for his tragedies, he wrote them to win
+laurels from posterity. He never cared to see them acted; he bullied
+even his printers and correctors; he cast a glove down in defiance
+of his critics. Goldoni sought the smallest meed of approbation. It
+pleased him hugely in his old age to be Italian master to a French
+princess. Alfieri openly despised the public. Goldoni wrote because he
+liked to write; Alfieri, for the sake of proving his superior powers.
+Against Alfieri's hatred of Turin and its trivial solemnities, we
+have to set Goldoni's love of Venice and its petty pleasures. He would
+willingly have drunk chocolate and played at dominoes or picquet all
+his life on the Piazza di San Marco, when Alfieri was crossing the
+sierras on his Andalusian horse, and devouring a frugal meal of rice
+in solitude. Goldoni glided through life an easy man, with genial,
+venial thoughts; with a clear, gay, gentle temper; a true sense of
+what is good and just; and a heart that loved diffusively, if not too
+warmly. Many were the checks and obstacles thrown on his path; but
+round them or above them he passed nimbly, without scar or scathe.
+Poverty went close behind him, but he kept her off, and never felt
+the pinch of need. Alfieri strained and strove against the barriers
+of fate; a sombre, rugged man, proud, candid, and self-confident, who
+broke or bent all opposition; now moving solemnly with tragic pomp,
+now dashing passionately forward by the might of will. Goldoni drew
+his inspirations from the moment and surrounding circumstances.
+Alfieri pursued an ideal, slowly formed, but strongly fashioned and
+resolutely followed. Of wealth he had plenty and to spare, but
+he disregarded it, and was a Stoic in his mode of life. He was an
+unworldly man, and hated worldliness. Goldoni, but for his authorship,
+would certainly have grown a prosperous advocate, and died of gout
+in Venice. Goldoni liked smart clothes; Alfieri went always in
+black. Goldoni's fits of spleen--for he _was_ melancholy now and
+then--lasted a day or two, and disappeared before a change of place.
+Alfieri dragged his discontent about with him all over Europe, and let
+it interrupt his work and mar his intellect for many months together.
+Alfieri was a patriot, and hated France. Goldoni never speaks
+of politics, and praises Paris as a heaven on earth. The genial
+moralising of the latter appears childish by the side of Alfieri's
+terse philosophy and pregnant remarks on the development of character.
+What suits the page of Plautus would look poor in 'Oedipus' or
+'Agamemnon.' Goldoni's memoirs are diffuse and flippant in their light
+French dress. They seem written to please. Alfieri's Italian style
+marches with dignity and Latin terseness. He rarely condescends to
+smile. He writes to instruct the world and to satisfy himself. Grim
+humour sometimes flashes out, as when he tells the story of the Order
+of Homer, which he founded. How different from Goldoni's naive account
+of his little ovation in the theatre at Paris!
+
+But it would be idle to carry on this comparison, already tedious. The
+life of Goldoni was one long scene of shifts and jests, of frequent
+triumphs and some failures, of lessons hard at times, but kindly.
+Passions and _ennui_, flashes of heroic patriotism, constant
+suffering and stoical endurance, art and love idealised, fill up the
+life of Alfieri. Goldoni clung much to his fellow-men, and shared
+their pains and pleasures. Alfieri spent many of his years in almost
+absolute solitude. On the whole character and deeds of the one man was
+stamped Comedy: the other was own son of Tragedy.
+
+If, after reading the autobiographies of Alfieri and Goldoni, we turn
+to the perusal of their plays, we shall perceive that there is no
+better commentary on the works of an artist than his life, and no
+better life than one written by himself. The old style of criticism,
+which strove to separate an author's productions from his life, and
+even from the age in which he lived, to set up an arbitrary canon
+of taste, and to select one or two great painters or poets as ideals
+because they seemed to illustrate that canon, has passed away. We are
+beginning to feel that art is a part of history and of physiology.
+That is to say, the artist's work can only be rightly understood by
+studying his age and temperament. Goldoni's versatility and want of
+depth induced him to write sparkling comedies. The merry life men
+passed at Venice in its years of decadence proved favourable to his
+genius. Alfieri's melancholy and passionate qualities, fostered in
+solitude, and aggravated by a tyranny he could not bear, led him
+irresistibly to tragic composition. Though a noble, his nobility only
+added to his pride, and insensibly his intellect had been imbued with
+the democratic sentiments which were destined to shake Europe in his
+lifetime. This, in itself, was a tragic circumstance, bringing him
+into close sympathy with the Brutus, the Prometheus, the Timoleon of
+ancient history. Goldoni's _bourgeoisie_, in the atmosphere of
+which he was born and bred, was essentially comic. The true comedy
+of manners, which is quite distinct from Shakspere's fancy or from
+Aristophanic satire, is always laid in middle life. Though Goldoni
+tried to write tragedies, they were unimpassioned, dull, and tame. He
+lacked altogether the fire, high-wrought nobility of sentiment, and
+sense of form essential for tragic art. On the other hand, Alfieri
+composed some comedies before his death which were devoid of humour,
+grace, and lightness. A strange elephantine eccentricity is their
+utmost claim to comic character. Indeed, the temper of Alfieri, ever
+in extremes, led him even to exaggerate the qualities of tragedy.
+He carried its severity to a pitch of dulness and monotony. His
+chiaroscuro was too strong; virtue and villany appearing in pure
+black and white upon his pages. His hatred of tyrants induced him to
+transgress the rules of probability, so that it has been well said
+that if his wicked kings had really had such words of scorn and hatred
+thrown at them by their victims, they were greatly to be pitied. On
+the other hand, his pithy laconisms have often a splendidly tragical
+effect. There is nothing in the modern drama more rhetorically
+impressive, though spasmodic, than the well-known dialogue between
+Antigone and Creon:--
+
+'_Cr_. Scegliesti?
+
+'_Ant_. Ho scelto.
+
+'_Cr_. Emon?
+
+'_Ant_. Morte.
+
+'_Cr_. L'avrai!'
+
+Goldoni's comedies, again, have not enough of serious thought or of
+true creative imagination to be works of high art. They lean too much
+to the side of farce; they have none of the tragic salt which gives
+a dignity to Tartuffe. They are, in a word, almost too enethistically
+comic.
+
+The contrast between these authors might lead us to raise the question
+long ago discussed by Socrates at Agathon's banquet--Can the same man
+write both comedies and tragedies? We in England are accustomed to
+read the serious and comic plays of Shakspere, Fletcher, Jonson, and
+to think that one poet could excel in either branch. The custom of
+the Elizabethan theatre obliged this double authorship; yet it must be
+confessed that Shakspere's comedies are not such comedies as Greek
+or Romnan or French critics would admit. They are works of the purest
+imagination, wholly free from the laws of this world; while the
+tragedies of Fletcher have a melodramatic air equally at variance with
+the classical Melpomene. It may very seriously be doubted whether the
+same mind could produce, with equal power, a comedy like the 'Cortese
+Veneziano' and a tragedy like Alfieri's 'Brutus.' At any rate,
+returning to our old position, we find in these two men the very
+opposite conditions of dramatic genius. They are, as it were,
+specimens prepared by Nature for the instruction of those who analyse
+genius in its relations to temperament, to life, and to external
+circumstances.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [Footnote 1: This Essay was written in 1866, and published
+ in 1867. Reprinting it in 1879, after eighteen months spent
+ continuously in one high valley of the Grisons, I feel how
+ slight it is. For some amends, I take this opportunity of
+ printing at the end of it a description of Davos in winter.]
+
+ [Footnote 2: See, however, what is said about Leo Battista
+ Alberti in the sketch of Rimini in the second series.]
+
+ [Footnote 3: The Grisons surname Campell may derive from the
+ Romansch Campo Bello. The founder of the house was one
+ Kaspar Campell, who in the first half of the sixteenth
+ century preached the Reformed religion in the Engadine.]
+
+ [Footnote 4: I have translated and printed at the end of the
+ second volume some sonnets of Petrarch as a kind of palinode
+ for this impertinence.]
+
+ [Footnote 5: This begs the question whether [Greek:
+ leukoion] does not properly mean snowflake, or some such
+ flower. Violets in Greece, however, were often used for
+ crowns: [Greek: iostephanos] is the epithet of Homer for
+ Aphrodite, and of Aristophanes for Athens.]
+
+ [Footnote 6: Olive-trees must be studied at Mentone or San
+ Remo, in Corfu, at Tivoli, on the coast between Syracuse and
+ Catania, or on the lowlands of Apulia. The stunted but
+ productive trees of the Rhone valley, for example, are no
+ real measure of the beauty they can exhibit.]
+
+ [Footnote 7: Dante, Par. xi. 106.]
+
+ [Footnote 8: It is but just to Doctor Pasta to remark that
+ the above sentence was written more than ten years ago.
+ Since then he has enlarged and improved his house in many
+ ways, furnished it more luxuriously, made paths through the
+ beechwoods round it, and brought excellent water at a great
+ cost from a spring near the summit of the mountain. A more
+ charming residence from early spring to late autumn can
+ scarcely be discovered.]
+
+ [Footnote 9: 'The down upon their cheeks and chin was
+ yellower than helichrysus, and their breasts gleamed whiter
+ far than thou, O Moon.']
+
+ [Footnote 10: 'Thy tresses have I oftentimes compared to
+ Ceres' yellow autumn sheaves, wreathed in curled bands
+ around thy head.']
+
+ [Footnote 11: Both these and the large frescoes in the choir
+ have been chromolithographed by the Arundel Society.]
+
+ [Footnote 12: I cannot see clearly through these
+ transactions, the muddy waters of decadent Italian plot and
+ counterplot being inscrutable to senses assisted by nothing
+ more luminous than mere tradition.]
+
+ [Footnote 13: Those who are interested in such matters may
+ profitably compare this description of a planned murder in
+ the sixteenth century with the account written by Ambrogio
+ Tremazzi of the way in which he tracked and slew Troilo
+ Orsini in Paris in the year 1577. It is given by Gnoli in
+ his _Vittoria Accoramboni_, pp. 404-414.]
+
+ [Footnote 14: So far as I can discover, the only church of
+ San Spirito in Venice was a building on the island of San
+ Spirito, erected by Sansavino, which belonged to the
+ Sestiere di S. Croce, and which was suppressed in 1656. Its
+ plate and the fine pictures which Titian painted there were
+ transferred at that date to S.M. della Salute. I cannot help
+ inferring that either Bibboni's memory failed him, or that
+ his words were wrongly understood by printer or amanuensis.
+ If for S. Spirito we substitute S. Stefano, the account
+ would be intelligible.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketches and Studies in Italy and
+Greece, by John Addington Symonds
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