One winter evening, in a princely
palace at Ferrara, Don Juan Belvidero was giving a
banquet to a prince of the house of Este. A banquet
in those times was a marvelous spectacle which only
royal wealth or the power of a mightly [sic] lord could
furnish forth. Seated about a table lit up with
perfumed tapers, seven laughter-loving women were
interchanging sweet talk. The white marble of
the noble works of art about them stood out against
the red stucco walls, and made strong contrasts with
the rich Turkey carpets. Clad in satin, glittering
with gold, and covered with gems less brilliant than
their eyes, each told a tale of energetic passions
as diverse as their styles of beauty. They differed
neither in their ideas nor in their language; but the
expression of their eyes, their glances, occasional
gestures, or the tones of their voices supplied a
commentary, dissolute, wanton, melancholy, or satirical,
to their words.
One seemed to be saying—“The
frozen heart of age might kindle at my beauty.”
Another—“I love to
lounge upon cushions, and think with rapture of my
adorers.”
A third, a neophyte at these banquets,
was inclined to blush. “I feel remorse
in the depths of my heart! I am a Catholic, and
afraid of hell. But I love you, I love you so
that I can sacrifice my hereafter to you.”
The fourth drained a cup of Chian
wine. “Give me a joyous life!” she
cried; “I begin life afresh each day with the
dawn. Forgetful of the past, with the intoxication
of yesterday’s rapture still upon me, I drink
deep of life—a whole lifetime of pleasure
and of love!”
The woman who sat next to Juan Belvidero
looked at him with a feverish glitter in her eyes.
She was silent. Then—“I should
need no hired bravo to kill my lover if he forsook
me!” she cried at last, and laughed, but the
marvelously wrought gold comfit box in her fingers
was crushed by her convulsive clutch.
“When are you to be Grand Duke?”
asked the sixth. There was the frenzy of a Bacchante
in her eyes, and her teeth gleamed between the lips
parted with a smile of cruel glee.
“Yes, when is that father of
yours going to die?” asked the seventh, throwing
her bouquet at Don Juan with bewitching playfulness.
It was a childish girl who spoke, and the speaker
was wont to make sport of sacred things.
“Oh! don’t talk about
it,” cried Don Juan, the young and handsome
giver of the banquet. “There is but one
eternal father, and, as ill luck will have it, he
is mine.”
The seven Ferrarese, Don Juan’s
friends, the Prince himself, gave a cry of horror.
Two hundred years later, in the days of Louis XV.,
people of taste would have laughed at this witticism.
Or was it, perhaps, that at the outset of an orgy
there is a certain unwonted lucidity of mind?
Despite the taper light, the clamor of the senses,
the gleam of gold and silver, the fumes of wine, and
the exquisite beauty of the women, there may perhaps
have been in the depths of the revelers’ hearts
some struggling glimmer of reverence for things divine
and human, until it was drowned in glowing floods
of wine! Yet even then the flowers had been crushed,
eyes were growing dull, and drunkenness, in Rabelais’
phrase, had “taken possession of them down to
their sandals.”
During that brief pause a door opened;
and as once the Divine presence was revealed at Belshazzar’s
feast, so now it seemed to be manifest in the apparition
of an old white-haired servant, who tottered in, and
looked sadly from under knitted brows at the revelers.
He gave a withering glance at the garlands, the golden
cups, the pyramids of fruit, the dazzling lights of
the banquet, the flushed scared faces, the hues of
the cushions pressed by the white arms of the women.
“My lord, your father is dying!”
he said; and at those solemn words, uttered in hollow
tones, a veil of crape seemed to be drawn over the
wild mirth.
Don Juan rose to his feet with a gesture
to his guests that might be rendered by, “Excuse
me; this kind of thing does not happen every day.”
Does it so seldom happen that a father’s
death surprises youth in the full-blown splendor of
life, in the midst of the mad riot of an orgy?
Death is as unexpected in his caprice as a courtesan
in her disdain; but death is truer—Death
has never forsaken any man.
Don Juan closed the door of the banqueting-hall;
and as he went down the long gallery, through the
cold and darkness, he strove to assume an expression
in keeping with the part he had to play; he had thrown
off his mirthful mood, as he had thrown down his table
napkin, at the first thought of this role. The
night was dark. The mute servitor, his guide
to the chamber where the dying man lay, lighted the
way so dimly that Death, aided by cold, silence, and
darkness, and it may be by a reaction of drunkenness,
could send some sober thoughts through the spendthrift’s
soul. He examined his life, and became thoughtful,
like a man involved in a lawsuit on his way to the
Court.
Bartolommeo Belvidero, Don Juan’s
father, was an old man of ninety, who had devoted
the greatest part of his life to business pursuits.
He had acquired vast wealth in many a journey to magical
Eastern lands, and knowledge, so it was said, more
valuable than the gold and diamonds, which had almost
ceased to have any value for him.
“I would give more to have a
tooth in my head than for a ruby,” he would
say at times with a smile. The indulgent father
loved to hear Don Juan’s story of this and that
wild freak of youth. “So long as these
follies amuse you, dear boy——”
he would say laughingly, as he lavished money on his
son. Age never took such pleasure in the sight
of youth; the fond father did not remember his own
decaying powers while he looked on that brilliant young
life.
Bartolommeo Belvidero, at the age
of sixty, had fallen in love with an angel of peace
and beauty. Don Juan had been the sole fruit
of this late and short-lived love. For fifteen
years the widower had mourned the loss of his beloved
Juana; and to this sorrow of age, his son and his
numerous household had attributed the strange habits
that he had contracted. He had shut himself up
in the least comfortable wing of his palace, and very
seldom left his apartments; even Don Juan himself
must first ask permission before seeing his father.
If this hermit, unbound by vows, came or went in his
palace or in the streets of Ferrara, he walked as
if he were in a dream, wholly engrossed, like a man
at strife with a memory, or a wrestler with some thought.
The young Don Juan might give princely
banquets, the palace might echo with clamorous mirth,
horses pawed the ground in the courtyards, pages quarreled
and flung dice upon the stairs, but Bartolommeo ate
his seven ounces of bread daily and drank water.
A fowl was occasionally dressed for him, simply that
the black poodle, his faithful companion, might have
the bones. Bartolommeo never complained of the
noise. If the huntsmen’s horns and baying
dogs disturbed his sleep during his illness, he only
said, “Ah! Don Juan has come back again.”
Never on earth has there been a father so little exacting
and so indulgent; and, in consequence, young Belvidero,
accustomed to treat his father unceremoniously, had
all the faults of a spoiled child. He treated
old Bartolommeo as a wilful courtesan treats an elderly
adorer; buying indemnity for insolence with a smile,
selling good-humor, submitting to be loved.
Don Juan, beholding scene after scene
of his younger years, saw that it would be a difficult
task to find his father’s indulgence at fault.
Some new-born remorse stirred the depths of his heart;
he felt almost ready to forgive this father now about
to die for having lived so long. He had an accession
of filial piety, like a thief’s return in thought
to honesty at the prospect of a million adroitly stolen.
Before long Don Juan had crossed the
lofty, chilly suite of rooms in which his father lived;
the penetrating influences of the damp close air,
the mustiness diffused by old tapestries and presses
thickly covered with dust had passed into him, and
now he stood in the old man’s antiquated room,
in the repulsive presence of the deathbed, beside
a dying fire. A flickering lamp on a Gothic table
sent broad uncertain shafts of light, fainter or brighter,
across the bed, so that the dying man’s face
seemed to wear a different look at every moment.
The bitter wind whistled through the crannies of the
ill-fitting casements; there was a smothered sound
of snow lashing the windows. The harsh contrast
of these sights and sounds with the scenes which Don
Juan had just quitted was so sudden that he could
not help shuddering. He turned cold as he came
towards the bed; the lamp flared in a sudden vehement
gust of wind and lighted up his father’s face;
the features were wasted and distorted; the skin that
cleaved to their bony outlines had taken wan livid
hues, all the more ghastly by force of contrast with
the white pillows on which he lay. The muscles
about the toothless mouth had contracted with pain
and drawn apart the lips; the moans that issued between
them with appalling energy found an accompaniment
in the howling of the storm without.
In spite of every sign of coming dissolution,
the most striking thing about the dying face was its
incredible power. It was no ordinary spirit that
wrestled there with Death. The eyes glared with
strange fixity of gaze from the cavernous sockets hollowed
by disease. It seemed as if Bartolommeo sought
to kill some enemy sitting at the foot of his bed
by the intent gaze of dying eyes. That steady
remorseless look was the more appalling because the
head that lay upon the pillow was passive and motionless
as a skull upon a doctor’s table. The outlines
of the body, revealed by the coverlet, were no less
rigid and stiff; he lay there as one dead, save for
those eyes. There was something automatic about
the moaning sounds that came from the mouth. Don
Juan felt something like shame that he must be brought
thus to his father’s bedside, wearing a courtesan’s
bouquet, redolent of the fragrance of the banqueting-chamber
and the fumes of wine.
“You were enjoying yourself!”
the old man cried as he saw his son.
Even as he spoke the pure high notes
of a woman’s voice, sustained by the sound of
the viol on which she accompanied her song, rose above
the rattle of the storm against the casements, and
floated up to the chamber of death. Don Juan stopped
his ears against the barbarous answer to his father’s
speech.
“I bear you no grudge, my child,” Bartolommeo
went on.
The words were full of kindness, but
they hurt Don Juan; he could not pardon this heart-searching
goodness on his father’s part.
“What a remorseful memory for
me!” he cried, hypocritically.
“Poor Juanino,” the dying
man went on, in a smothered voice, “I have always
been so kind to you, that you could not surely desire
my death?”
“Oh, if it were only possible
to keep you here by giving up a part of my own life!”
cried Don Juan.
(“We can always say this sort
of thing,” the spendthrift thought; “it
is as if I laid the whole world at my mistress’
feet.”)
The thought had scarcely crossed his
mind when the old poodle barked. Don Juan shivered;
the response was so intelligent that he fancied the
dog must have understood him.
“I was sure that I could count
upon you, my son!” cried the dying man.
“I shall live. So be it; you shall be satisfied.
I shall live, but without depriving you of a single
day of your life.”
“He is raving,” thought
Don Juan. Aloud he added, “Yes, dearest
father, yes; you shall live, of course, as long as
I live, for your image will be for ever in my heart.”
“It is not that kind of life
that I mean,” said the old noble, summoning
all his strength to sit up in bed; for a thrill of
doubt ran through him, one of those suspicions that
come into being under a dying man’s pillow.
“Listen, my son,” he went on, in a voice
grown weak with that last effort, “I have no
more wish to give up life than you to give up wine
and mistresses, horses and hounds, and hawks and gold——”
“I can well believe it,”
thought the son; and he knelt down by the bed and
kissed Bartolommeo’s cold hands. “But,
father, my dear father,” he added aloud, “we
must submit to the will of God.”
“I am God!” muttered the dying man.
“Do not blaspheme!” cried
the other, as he saw the menacing expression on his
father’s face. “Beware what you say;
you have received extreme unction, and I should be
inconsolable if you were to die before my eyes in
mortal sin.”
“Will you listen to me?”
cried Bartolommeo, and his mouth twitched.
Don Juan held his peace; an ugly silence
prevailed. Yet above the muffled sound of the
beating of the snow against the windows rose the sounds
of the beautiful voice and the viol in unison, far
off and faint as the dawn. The dying man smiled.
“Thank you,” he said,
“for bringing those singing voices and the music,
a banquet, young and lovely women with fair faces and
dark tresses, all the pleasure of life! Bid them
wait for me; for I am about to begin life anew.”
“The delirium is at its height,”
said Don Juan to himself.
“I have found out a way of coming
to life again,” the speaker went on. “There,
just look in that table drawer, press the spring hidden
by the griffin, and it will fly open.”
“I have found it, father.”
“Well, then, now take out a little phial of
rock crystal.”
“I have it.”
“I have spent twenty years in——”
but even as he spoke the old man felt how very near
the end had come, and summoned all his dying strength
to say, “As soon as the breath is out of me,
rub me all over with that liquid, and I shall come
to life again.”
“There is very little of it,” his son
remarked.
Though Bartolommeo could no longer
speak, he could still hear and see. When those
words dropped from Don Juan, his head turned with
appalling quickness, his neck was twisted like the
throat of some marble statue which the sculptor had
condemned to remain stretched out for ever, the wide
eyes had come to have a ghastly fixity.
He was dead, and in death he lost his last and sole
illusion.
He had sought a shelter in his son’s
heart, and it had proved to be a sepulchre, a pit
deeper than men dig for their dead. The hair
on his head had risen and stiffened with horror, his
agonized glance still spoke. He was a father rising
in just anger from his tomb, to demand vengeance at
the throne of God.
“There! it is all over with the old man!”
cried Don Juan.
He had been so interested in holding
the mysterious phial to the lamp, as a drinker holds
up the wine-bottle at the end of a meal, that he had
not seen his father’s eyes fade. The cowering
poodle looked from his master to the elixir, just
as Don Juan himself glanced again and again from his
father to the flask. The lamplight flickered.
There was a deep silence; the viol was mute.
Juan Belvidero thought that he saw his father stir,
and trembled. The changeless gaze of those accusing
eyes frightened him; he closed them hastily, as he
would have closed a loose shutter swayed by the wind
of an autumn night. He stood there motionless,
lost in a world of thought.
Suddenly the silence was broken by
a shrill sound like the creaking of a rusty spring.
It startled Don Juan; he all but dropped the phial.
A sweat, colder than the blade of a dagger, issued
through every pore. It was only a piece of clockwork,
a wooden cock that sprang out and crowed three times,
an ingenious contrivance by which the learned of that
epoch were wont to be awakened at the appointed hour
to begin the labors of the day. Through the windows
there came already a flush of dawn. The thing,
composed of wood, and cords, and wheels, and pulleys,
was more faithful in its service than he in his duty
to Bartolommeo —he, a man with that peculiar
piece of human mechanism within him that we call a
heart.
Don Juan the sceptic shut the flask
again in the secret drawer in the Gothic table—he
meant to run no more risks of losing the mysterious
liquid.
Even at that solemn moment he heard
the murmur of a crowd in the gallery, a confused sound
of voices, of stifled laughter and light footfalls,
and the rustling of silks—the sounds of
a band of revelers struggling for gravity. The
door opened, and in came the Prince and Don Juan’s
friends, the seven courtesans, and the singers, disheveled
and wild like dancers surprised by the dawn, when
the tapers that have burned through the night struggle
with the sunlight.
They had come to offer the customary
condolence to the young heir.
“Oho! is poor Don Juan really
taking this seriously?” said the Prince in Brambilla’s
ear.
“Well, his father was very good,” she
returned.
But Don Juan’s night-thoughts
had left such unmistakable traces on his features,
that the crew was awed into silence. The men
stood motionless. The women, with wine-parched
lips and cheeks marbled with kisses, knelt down and
began a prayer. Don Juan could scarce help trembling
when he saw splendor and mirth and laughter and song
and youth and beauty and power bowed in reverence
before Death. But in those times, in that adorable
Italy of the sixteenth century, religion and revelry
went hand in hand; and religious excess became a sort
of debauch, and a debauch a religious rite!
The Prince grasped Don Juan’s
hand affectionately, then when all faces had simultaneously
put on the same grimace—half-gloomy, half-indifferent—the
whole masque disappeared, and left the chamber of
death empty. It was like an allegory of life.
As they went down the staircase, the
Prince spoke to Rivabarella: “Now, who
would have taken Don Juan’s impiety for a boast?
He loves his father.”
“Did you see that black dog?” asked La
Brambilla.
“He is enormously rich now,” sighed Bianca
Cavatolino.
“What is that to me?”
cried the proud Veronese (she who had crushed the
comfit-box).
“What does it matter to you,
forsooth?” cried the Duke. “With his
money he is as much a prince as I am.”
At first Don Juan was swayed hither
and thither by countless thoughts, and wavered between
two decisions. He took counsel with the gold
heaped up by his father, and returned in the evening
to the chamber of death, his whole soul brimming over
with hideous selfishness. He found all his household
busy there. “His lordship” was to
lie in state to-morrow; all Ferrara would flock to
behold the wonderful spectacle; and the servants were
busy decking the room and the couch on which the dead
man lay. At a sign from Don Juan all his people
stopped, dumfounded and trembling.
“Leave me alone here,”
he said, and his voice was changed, “and do
not return until I leave the room.”
When the footsteps of the old servitor,
who was the last to go, echoed but faintly along the
paved gallery, Don Juan hastily locked the door, and
sure that he was quite alone, “Let us try,”
he said to himself.
Bartolommeo’s body was stretched
on a long table. The embalmers had laid a sheet
over it, to hide from all eyes the dreadful spectacle
of a corpse so wasted and shrunken that it seemed like
a skeleton, and only the face was uncovered. This
mummy-like figure lay in the middle of the room.
The limp clinging linen lent itself to the outlines
it shrouded—so sharp, bony, and thin.
Large violet patches had already begun to spread over
the face; the embalmers’ work had not been finished
too soon.
Don Juan, strong as he was in his
scepticism, felt a tremor as he opened the magic crystal
flask. When he stood over that face, he was trembling
so violently, that he was actually obliged to wait
for a moment. But Don Juan had acquired an early
familiarity with evil; his morals had been corrupted
by a licentious court, a reflection worthy of the
Duke of Urbino crossed his mind, and it was a keen
sense of curiosity that goaded him into boldness.
The devil himself might have whispered the words that
were echoing through his brain, Moisten one of
the eyes with the liquid! He took up a linen
cloth, moistened it sparingly with the precious fluid,
and passed it lightly over the right eyelid of the
corpse. The eye unclosed. . . .
“Aha!” said Don Juan.
He gripped the flask tightly, as we clutch in dreams
the branch from which we hang suspended over a precipice.
For the eye was full of life.
It was a young child’s eye set in a death’s
head; the light quivered in the depths of its youthful
liquid brightness. Shaded by the long dark lashes,
it sparkled like the strange lights that travelers
see in lonely places in winter nights. The eye
seemed as if it would fain dart fire at Don Juan;
he saw it thinking, upbraiding, condemning, uttering
accusations, threatening doom; it cried aloud, and
gnashed upon him. All anguish that shakes human
souls was gathered there; supplications the most tender,
the wrath of kings, the love in a girl’s heart
pleading with the headsman; then, and after all these,
the deeply searching glance a man turns on his fellows
as he mounts the last step of the scaffold. Life
so dilated in this fragment of life that Don Juan
shrank back; he walked up and down the room, he dared
not meet that gaze, but he saw nothing else.
The ceiling and the hangings, the whole room was sown
with living points of fire and intelligence.
Everywhere those gleaming eyes haunted him.
“He might very likely have lived
another hundred years!” he cried involuntarily.
Some diabolical influence had drawn him to his father,
and again he gazed at that luminous spark. The
eyelid closed and opened again abruptly; it was like
a woman’s sign of assent. It was an intelligent
movement. If a voice had cried “Yes!”
Don Juan could not have been more startled.
“What is to be done?” he thought.
He nerved himself to try to close the white eyelid.
In vain.
“Kill it? That would perhaps
be parricide,” he debated with himself.
“Yes,” the eye said, with a strange sardonic
quiver of the lid.
“Aha!” said Don Juan to
himself, “here is witchcraft at work!”
And he went closer to crush the thing. A great
tear trickled over the hollow cheeks, and fell on
Don Juan’s hand.
“It is scalding!” he cried.
He sat down. The struggle exhausted him; it was
as if, like Jacob of old, he was wrestling with an
angel.
At last he rose. “So long
as there is no blood——” he
muttered.
Then, summoning all the courage needed
for a coward’s crime, he extinguished the eye,
pressing it with the linen cloth, turning his head
away. A terrible groan startled him. It was
the poor poodle, who died with a long-drawn howl.
“Could the brute have been in
the secret?” thought Don Juan, looking down
at the faithful creature.
Don Juan Belvidero was looked upon
as a dutiful son. He reared a white marble monument
on his father’s tomb, and employed the greatest
sculptors of the time upon it. He did not recover
perfect ease of mind till the day when his father knelt
in marble before Religion, and the heavy weight of
the stone had sealed the mouth of the grave in which
he had laid the one feeling of remorse that sometimes
flitted through his soul in moments of physical weariness.
He had drawn up a list of the wealth
heaped up by the old merchant in the East, and he
became a miser: had he not to provide for a second
lifetime? His views of life were the more profound
and penetrating; he grasped its significance, as a
whole, the better, because he saw it across a grave.
All men, all things, he analyzed once and for all;
he summed up the Past, represented by its records;
the Present in the law, its crystallized form; the
Future, revealed by religion. He took spirit
and matter, and flung them into his crucible, and found
—Nothing. Thenceforward he became Don
Juan.
At the outset of his life, in the
prime of youth and the beauty of youth, he knew the
illusions of life for what they were; he despised
the world, and made the utmost of the world. His
felicity could not have been of the bourgeois kind,
rejoicing in periodically recurrent bouilli,
in the comforts of a warming-pan, a lamp of a night,
and a new pair of slippers once a quarter. Nay,
rather he seized upon existence as a monkey snatches
a nut, and after no long toying with it, proceeds
deftly to strip off the mere husks to reach the savory
kernel within.
Poetry and the sublime transports
of passion scarcely reached ankle-depth with him now.
He in nowise fell into the error of strong natures
who flatter themselves now and again that little souls
will believe in a great soul, and are willing to barter
their own lofty thoughts of the future for the small
change of our life-annuity ideas. He, even as
they, had he chosen, might well have walked with his
feet on the earth and his head in the skies; but he
liked better to sit on earth, to wither the soft,
fresh, fragrant lips of a woman with kisses, for like
Death, he devoured everything without scruple as he
passed; he would have full fruition; he was an Oriental
lover, seeking prolonged pleasures easily obtained.
He sought nothing but a woman in women, and cultivated
cynicism, until it became with him a habit of mind.
When his mistress, from the couch on which she lay,
soared and was lost in regions of ecstatic bliss, Don
Juan followed suit, earnest, expansive, serious as
any German student. But he said I, while she,
in the transports of intoxication, said We. He
understood to admiration the art of abandoning himself
to the influence of a woman; he was always clever
enough to make her believe that he trembled like some
boy fresh from college before his first partner at
a dance, when he asks her, “Do you like dancing?”
But, no less, he could be terrible at need, could
unsheathe a formidable sword and make short work of
Commandants. Banter lurked beneath his simplicity,
mocking laughter behind his tears—for he
had tears at need, like any woman nowadays who says
to her husband, “Give me a carriage, or I shall
go into a consumption.”
For the merchant the world is a bale
of goods or a mass of circulating bills; for most
young men it is a woman, and for a woman here and
there it is a man; for a certain order of mind it
is a salon, a coterie, a quarter of the town, or some
single city; but Don Juan found his world in himself.
This model of grace and dignity, this
captivating wit, moored his bark by every shore; but
wherever he was led he was never carried away, and
was only steered in a course of his own choosing.
The more he saw, the more he doubted. He watched
men narrowly, and saw how, beneath the surface, courage
was often rashness; and prudence, cowardice; generosity,
a clever piece of calculation; justice, a wrong; delicacy,
pusillanimity; honesty, a modus vivendi; and
by some strange dispensation of fate, he must see
that those who at heart were really honest, scrupulous,
just, generous, prudent, or brave were held cheaply
by their fellow-men.
“What a cold-blooded jest!”
said he to himself. “It was not devised
by a God.”
From that time forth he renounced
a better world, and never uncovered himself when a
Name was pronounced, and for him the carven saints
in the churches became works of art. He understood
the mechanism of society too well to clash wantonly
with its prejudices; for, after all, he was not as
powerful as the executioner, but he evaded social
laws with the wit and grace so well rendered in the
scene with M. Dimanche. He was, in fact, Moliere’s
Don Juan, Goethe’s Faust, Byron’s Manfred,
Mathurin’s Melmoth—great allegorical
figures drawn by the greatest men of genius in Europe,
to which Mozart’s harmonies, perhaps, do no
more justice than Rossini’s lyre. Terrible
allegorical figures that shall endure as long as the
principle of evil existing in the heart of man shall
produce a few copies from century to century.
Sometimes the type becomes half-human when incarnate
as a Mirabeau, sometimes it is an inarticulate force
in a Bonaparte, sometimes it overwhelms the universe
with irony as a Rabelais; or, yet again, it appears
when a Marechal de Richelieu elects to laugh at human
beings instead of scoffing at things, or when one
of the most famous of our ambassadors goes a step further
and scoffs at both men and things. But the profound
genius of Juan Belvidero anticipated and resumed all
these. All things were a jest to him. His
was the life of a mocking spirit. All men, all
institutions, all realities, all ideas were within
its scope. As for eternity, after half an hour
of familiar conversation with Pope Julius II. he said,
laughing:
“If it is absolutely necessary
to make a choice, I would rather believe in God than
in the Devil; power combined with goodness always
offers more resources than the spirit of Evil can boast.”
“Yes; still God requires repentance
in this present world——”
“So you always think of your
indulgences,” returned Don Juan Belvidero.
“Well, well, I have another life in reserve in
which to repent of the sins of my previous existence.”
“Oh, if you regard old age in
that light,” cried the Pope, “you are
in danger on canonization——”
“After your elevation to the
Papacy nothing is incredible.” And they
went to watch the workmen who were building the huge
basilica dedicated to Saint Peter.
“Saint Peter, as the man of
genius who laid the foundation of our double power,”
the Pope said to Don Juan, “deserves this monument.
Sometimes, though, at night, I think that a deluge
will wipe all this out as with a sponge, and it will
be all to begin over again.”
Don Juan and the Pope began to laugh;
they understood each other. A fool would have
gone on the morrow to amuse himself with Julius II.
in Raphael’s studio or at the delicious Villa
Madama; not so Belvidero. He went to see the
Pope as pontiff, to be convinced of any doubts that
he (Don Juan) entertained. Over his cups the
Rovere would have been capable of denying his own infallibility
and of commenting on the Apocalypse.
Nevertheless, this legend has not
been undertaken to furnish materials for future biographies
of Don Juan; it is intended to prove to honest folk
that Belvidero did not die in a duel with stone, as
some lithographers would have us believe.
When Don Juan Belvidero reached the
age of sixty he settled in Spain, and there in his
old age he married a young and charming Andalusian
wife. But of set purpose he was neither a good
husband nor a good father. He had observed that
we are never so tenderly loved as by women to whom
we scarcely give a thought. Dona Elvira had been
devoutly brought up by an old aunt in a castle a few
leagues from San-Lucar in a remote part of Andalusia.
She was a model of devotion and grace. Don Juan
foresaw that this would be a woman who would struggle
long against a passion before yielding, and therefore
hoped to keep her virtuous until his death. It
was a jest undertaken in earnest, a game of chess which
he meant to reserve till his old age. Don Juan
had learned wisdom from the mistakes made by his father
Bartolommeo; he determined that the least details
of his life in old age should be subordinated to one
object—the success of the drama which was
to be played out upon his death-bed.
For the same reason the largest part
of his wealth was buried in the cellars of his palace
at Ferrara, whither he seldom went. As for the
rest of his fortune, it was invested in a life annuity,
with a view to give his wife and children an interest
in keeping him alive; but this Machiavellian piece
of foresight was scarcely necessary. His son,
young Felipe Belvidero, grew up as a Spaniard as religiously
conscientious as his father was irreligious, in virtue,
perhaps, of the old rule, “A miser has a spendthrift
son.” The Abbot of San-Lucar was chosen
by Don Juan to be the director of the consciences
of the Duchess of Belvidero and her son Felipe.
The ecclesiastic was a holy man, well shaped, and
admirably well proportioned. He had fine dark
eyes, a head like that of Tiberius, worn with fasting,
bleached by an ascetic life, and, like all dwellers
in the wilderness, was daily tempted. The noble
lord had hopes, it may be, of despatching yet another
monk before his term of life was out.
But whether because the Abbot was
every whit as clever as Don Juan himself, or Dona
Elvira possessed more discretion or more virtue than
Spanish wives are usually credited with, Don Juan was
compelled to spend his declining years beneath his
own roof, with no more scandal under it than if he
had been an ancient country parson. Occasionally
he would take wife and son to task for negligence
in the duties of religion, peremptorily insisting that
they should carry out to the letter the obligations
imposed upon the flock by the Court of Rome.
Indeed, he was never so well pleased as when he had
set the courtly Abbot discussing some case of conscience
with Dona Elvira and Felipe.
At length, however, despite the prodigious
care that the great magnifico, Don Juan Belvidero,
took of himself, the days of decrepitude came upon
him, and with those days the constant importunity
of physical feebleness, an importunity all the more
distressing by contrast with the wealth of memories
of his impetuous youth and the sensual pleasures of
middle age. The unbeliever who in the height
of his cynical humor had been wont to persuade others
to believe in laws and principles at which he scoffed,
must repose nightly upon a perhaps. The
great Duke, the pattern of good breeding, the champion
of many a carouse, the proud ornament of Courts, the
man of genius, the graceful winner of hearts that
he had wrung as carelessly as a peasant twists an
osier withe, was now the victim of a cough, of a ruthless
sciatica, of an unmannerly gout. His teeth gradually
deserted him, as at the end of an evening the fairest
and best-dressed women take their leave one by one
till the room is left empty and desolate. The
active hands became palsy-stricken, the shapely legs
tottered as he walked. At last, one night, a stroke
of apoplexy caught him by the throat in its icy clutch.
After that fatal day he grew morose and stern.
He would reproach his wife and son
with their devotion, casting it in their teeth that
the affecting and thoughtful care that they lavished
so tenderly upon him was bestowed because they knew
that his money was invested in a life annuity.
Then Elvira and Felipe would shed bitter tears and
redouble their caresses, and the wicked old man’s
insinuating voice would take an affectionate tone—“Ah,
you will forgive me, will you not, dear friends, dear
wife? I am rather a nuisance. Alas, Lord
in heaven, how canst Thou use me as the instrument
by which Thou provest these two angelic creatures?
I who should be the joy of their lives am become their
scourge . . .”
In this manner he kept them tethered
to his pillow, blotting out the memory of whole months
of fretfulness and unkindness in one short hour when
he chose to display for them the ever-new treasures
of his pinchbeck tenderness and charm of manner—a
system of paternity that yielded him an infinitely
better return than his own father’s indulgence
had formerly gained. At length his bodily infirmities
reached a point when the task of laying him in bed
became as difficult as the navigation of a felucca
in the perils of an intricate channel. Then came
the day of his death; and this brilliant sceptic,
whose mental faculties alone had survived the most
dreadful of all destructions, found himself between
his two special antipathies—the doctor and
the confessor. But he was jovial with them.
Did he not see a light gleaming in the future beyond
the veil? The pall that is like lead for other
men was thin and translucent for him; the light-footed,
irresistible delights of youth danced beyond it like
shadows.
It was on a beautiful summer evening
that Don Juan felt the near approach of death.
The sky of Spain was serene and cloudless; the air
was full of the scent of orange-blossom; the stars
shed clear, pure gleams of light; nature without seemed
to give the dying man assurance of resurrection; a
dutiful and obedient son sat there watching him with
loving and respectful eyes. Towards eleven o’clock
he desired to be left alone with this single-hearted
being.
“Felipe,” said the father,
in tones so soft and affectionate that the young man
trembled, and tears of gladness came to his eyes;
never had that stern father spoken his name in such
a tone. “Listen, my son,” the dying
man went on. “I am a great sinner.
All my life long, however, I have thought of my death.
I was once the friend of the great Pope Julius II.;
and that illustrious Pontiff, fearing lest the excessive
excitability of my senses should entangle me in mortal
sin between the moment of my death and the time of
my anointing with the holy oil, gave me a flask that
contains a little of the holy water that once issued
from the rock in the wilderness. I have kept
the secret of this squandering of a treasure belonging
to Holy Church, but I am permitted to reveal the mystery
in articulo mortis to my son. You will
find the flask in a drawer in that Gothic table that
always stands by the head of the bed. . . . The
precious little crystal flask may be of use yet again
for you, dearest Felipe. Will you swear to me,
by your salvation, to carry out my instructions faithfully?”
Felipe looked at his father, and Don
Juan was too deeply learned in the lore of the human
countenance not to die in peace with that look as
his warrant, as his own father had died in despair
at meeting the expression in his son’s eyes.
“You deserved to have a better
father,” Don Juan went on. “I dare
to confess, my child, that while the reverend Abbot
of San-Lucar was administering the Viaticum I was
thinking of the incompatibility of the co-existence
of two powers so infinite as God and the Devil——”
“Oh, father!”
“And I said to myself, when
Satan makes his peace he ought surely to stipulate
for the pardon of his followers, or he will be the
veriest scoundrel. The thought haunted me; so
I shall go to hell, my son, unless you carry out my
wishes.”
“Oh, quick; tell me quickly, father.”
“As soon as I have closed my
eyes,” Don Juan went on, “and that may
be in a few minutes, you must take my body before it
grows cold and lay it on a table in this room.
Then put out the lamp; the light of the stars should
be sufficient. Take off my clothes, reciting
Aves and Paters the while, raising your soul to God
in prayer, and carefully anoint my lips and eyes with
this holy water; begin with the face, and proceed
successively to my limbs and the rest of my body;
my dear son, the power of God is so great that you
must be astonished at nothing.”
Don Juan felt death so near, that
he added in a terrible voice, “Be careful not
to drop the flask.”
Then he breathed his last gently in
the arms of his son, and his son’s tears fell
fast over his sardonic, haggard features.
It was almost midnight when Don Felipe
Belvidero laid his father’s body upon the table.
He kissed the sinister brow and the gray hair; then
he put out the lamp.
By the soft moonlight that lit strange
gleams across the country without, Felipe could dimly
see his father’s body, a vague white thing among
the shadows. The dutiful son moistened a linen
cloth with the liquid, and, absorbed in prayer, he
anointed the revered face. A deep silence reigned.
Felipe heard faint, indescribable rustlings; it was
the breeze in the tree-tops, he thought. But
when he had moistened the right arm, he felt himself
caught by the throat, a young strong hand held him
in a tight grip—it was his father’s
hand! He shrieked aloud; the flask dropped from
his hand and broke in pieces. The liquid evaporated;
the whole household hurried into the room, holding
torches aloft. That shriek had startled them,
and filled them with as much terror as if the Trumpet
of the Angel sounding on the Last Day had rung through
earth and sky. The room was full of people, and
a horror-stricken crowd beheld the fainting Felipe
upheld by the strong arm of his father, who clutched
him by the throat. They saw another thing, an
unearthly spectacle—Don Juan’s face
grown young and beautiful as Antinous, with its dark
hair and brilliant eyes and red lips, a head that
made horrible efforts, but could not move the dead,
wasted body.
An old servitor cried, “A miracle!
a miracle!” and all the Spaniards echoed, “A
miracle! a miracle!”
Dona Elvira, too pious to attribute
this to magic, sent for the Abbot of San-Lucar; and
the Prior beholding the miracle with his own eyes,
being a clever man, and withal an Abbot desirous of
augmenting his revenues, determined to turn the occasion
to profit. He immediately gave out that Don Juan
would certainly be canonized; he appointed a day for
the celebration of the apotheosis in his convent,
which thenceforward, he said, should be called the
convent of San Juan of Lucar. At these words a
sufficiently facetious grimace passed over the features
of the late Duke.
The taste of the Spanish people for
ecclesiastical solemnities is so well known, that
it should not be difficult to imagine the religious
pantomime by which the Convent of San-Lucar celebrated
the translation of the blessed Don Juan Belvidero
to the abbey-church. The tale of the partial
resurrection had spread so quickly from village to
village, that a day or two after the death of the
illustrious nobleman the report had reached every
place within fifty miles of San-Lucar, and it was as
good as a play to see the roads covered already with
crowds flocking in on all sides, their curiosity whetted
still further by the prospect of a Te Deum
sung by torchlight. The old abbey church of San-Lucar,
a marvelous building erected by the Moors, a mosque
of Allah, which for three centuries had heard the
name of Christ, could not hold the throng that poured
in to see the ceremony. Hidalgos in their velvet
mantles, with their good swords at their sides, swarmed
like ants, and were so tightly packed in among the
pillars that they had not room to bend the knees, which
never bent save to God. Charming peasant girls,
in the basquina that defines the luxuriant outlines
of their figures, lent an arm to white-haired old
men. Young men, with eyes of fire, walked beside
aged crones in holiday array. Then came couples
tremulous with joy, young lovers led thither by curiosity,
newly-wedded folk; children timidly clasping each
other by the hand. This throng, so rich in coloring,
in vivid contrasts, laden with flowers, enameled like
a meadow, sent up a soft murmur through the quiet
night. Then the great doors of the church opened.
Late comers who remained without saw
afar, through the three great open doorways, a scene
of which the theatrical illusions of modern opera
can give but a faint idea. The vast church was
lighted up by thousands of candles, offered by saints
and sinners alike eager to win the favor of this new
candidate for canonization, and these self-commending
illuminations turned the great building into an enchanted
fairyland. The black archways, the shafts and
capitals, the recessed chapels with gold and silver
gleaming in their depths, the galleries, the Arab
traceries, all the most delicate outlines of that delicate
sculpture, burned in the excess of light like the fantastic
figures in the red heart of a brazier. At the
further end of the church, above that blazing sea,
rose the high altar like a splendid dawn. All
the glories of the golden lamps and silver candlesticks,
of banners and tassels, of the shrines of the saints
and votive offerings, paled before the gorgeous brightness
of the reliquary in which Don Juan lay. The blasphemer’s
body sparkled with gems, and flowers, and crystal,
with diamonds and gold, and plumes white as the wings
of seraphim; they had set it up on the altar, where
the pictures of Christ had stood. All about him
blazed a host of tall candles; the air quivered in
the radiant light. The worthy Abbot of San-Lucar,
in pontifical robes, with his mitre set with precious
stones, his rochet and golden crosier, sat enthroned
in imperial state among his clergy in the choir.
Rows of impassive aged faces, silver-haired old men
clad in fine linen albs, were grouped about him, as
the saints who confessed Christ on earth are set by
painters, each in his place, about the throne of God
in heaven. The precentor and the dignitaries
of the chapter, adorned with the gorgeous insignia
of ecclesiastical vanity, came and went through the
clouds of incense, like stars upon their courses in
the firmament.
When the hour of triumph arrived,
the bells awoke the echoes far and wide, and the whole
vast crowd raised to God the first cry of praise that
begins the Te Deum. A sublime cry!
High, pure notes, the voices of women in ecstasy,
mingled in it with the sterner and deeper voices of
men; thousands of voices sent up a volume of sound
so mighty, that the straining, groaning organ-pipes
could not dominate that harmony. But the shrill
sound of children’s singing among the choristers,
the reverberation of deep bass notes, awakened gracious
associations, visions of childhood, and of man in
his strength, and rose above that entrancing harmony
of human voices blended in one sentiment of love.
Te Deum laudamus!
The chant went up from the black masses
of men and women kneeling in the cathedral, like a
sudden breaking out of light in darkness, and the
silence was shattered as by a peal of thunder.
The voices floated up with the clouds of incense that
had begun to cast thin bluish veils over the fanciful
marvels of the architecture, and the aisles were filled
with splendor and perfume and light and melody.
Even at the moment when that music of love and thanksgiving
soared up to the altar, Don Juan, too well bred not
to express his acknowledgments, too witty not to understand
how to take a jest, bridled up in his reliquary, and
responded with an appalling burst of laughter.
Then the Devil having put him in mind of the risk
he was running of being taken for an ordinary man,
a saint, a Boniface, a Pantaleone, he interrupted
the melody of love by a yell, the thousand voices of
hell joined in it. Earth blessed, Heaven banned.
The church was shaken to its ancient foundations.
Te Deum laudamus! cried the many voices.
“Go to the devil, brute beasts
that you are! Dios! Dios! Garajos demonios!
Idiots! What fools you are with your dotard God!”
and a torrent of imprecations poured forth like a
stream of red-hot lava from the mouth of Vesuvius.
“Deus Sabaoth! . . . Sabaoth!”
cried the believers.
“You are insulting the majesty
of Hell,” shouted Don Juan, gnashing his teeth.
In another moment the living arm struggled out of
the reliquary, and was brandished over the assembly
in mockery and despair.
“The saint is blessing us,”
cried the old women, children, lovers, and the credulous
among the crowd.
And note how often we are deceived
in the homage we pay; the great man scoffs at those
who praise him, and pays compliments now and again
to those whom he laughs at in the depths of his heart.
Just as the Abbot, prostrate before
the altar, was chanting “Sancte Johannes,
ora pro noblis!” he heard a voice exclaim
sufficiently distinctly: “O coglione!”
“What can be going on up there?”
cried the Sub-prior, as he saw the reliquary move.
“The saint is playing the devil,” replied
the Abbot.
Even as he spoke the living head tore
itself away from the lifeless body, and dropped upon
the sallow cranium of the officiating priest.
“Remember Dona Elvira!”
cried the thing, with its teeth set fast in the Abbot’s
head.
The Abbot’s horror-stricken
shriek disturbed the ceremony; all the ecclesiastics
hurried up and crowded about their chief.
“Idiot, tell us now if there
is a God!” the voice cried, as the Abbot, bitten
through the brain, drew his last breath.
PARIS, October 1830.