4.10.
The University of Pianura was lodged
in the ancient Signoria or Town Hall of the free city;
and here, on the afternoon of the Duke’s birthday,
the civic dignitaries and the leading men of the learned
professions had assembled to see the doctorate conferred
on the Signorina Fulvia Vivaldi and on several less
conspicuous candidates of the other sex.
The city was again in gala dress.
Early that morning the new constitution had been proclaimed,
with much firing of cannon and display of official
fireworks; but even these great news, and their attendant
manifestations, had failed to enliven the populace,
who, instead of filling the streets with their usual
stir, hung massed at certain points, as though curiously
waiting on events. There are few sights more
ominous than that of a crowd thus observing itself,
watching in inconscient suspense for the unknown crisis
which its own passions have engendered.
It was known that his Highness, after
the public banquet at the palace, was to proceed in
state to the University; and the throng was thick
about the palace gates and in the streets betwixt it
and the Signoria. Here the square was close-packed,
and every window choked with gazers, as the Duke’s
coach came in sight, escorted meagrely by his equerries
and the half-dozen light-horse that preceded him.
The small escort, and the marked absence of military
display, perhaps disappointed the splendour-loving
crowd; and from this cause or another, scarce a cheer
was heard as his Highness descended from his coach,
and walked up the steps to the porch of ancient carved
stone where the faculty awaited him.
The hall was already filled with students
and graduates, and with the guests of the University.
Through this grave assemblage the Duke passed up to
the row of armchairs beneath the dais at the farther
end of the room. Trescorre, who was to have attended
his Highness, had excused himself on the plea of indisposition,
and only a few gentlemen-in-waiting accompanied the
Duke; but in the brown half-light of the old Gothic
hall their glittering uniforms contrasted brilliantly
with the black gowns of the students, and the sober
broadcloth of the learned professions. A discreet
murmur of enthusiasm rose at their approach, mounting
almost to a cheer as the Duke bowed before taking his
seat; for the audience represented the class most in
sympathy with his policy and most confident of its
success.
The meetings of the faculty were held
in the great council-chamber where the Rectors of
the old free city had assembled; and such a setting
was regarded as peculiarly appropriate to the present
occasion. The fact was alluded to, with much
wealth of historical and mythological analogy, by
the President, who opened the ceremonies with a polysyllabic
Latin oration, in which the Duke was compared to Apollo,
Hercules and Jason, as well as to the flower of sublunary
heroes.
This feat of rhetoric over, the candidates
were called on to advance and receive their degrees.
The men came first, profiting by the momentary advantage
of sex, but clearly aware of its inability to confer
even momentary importance in the eyes of the impatient
audience. A pause followed, and then Fulvia appeared.
Against the red-robed faculty at the back of the dais,
she stood tall and slender in her black cap and gown.
The high windows of painted glass shed a paleness on
her face, but her carriage was light and assured as
she advanced to the President and knelt to receive
her degree. The parchment was placed in her hand,
the furred hood laid on her shoulders; then, after
another flourish of rhetoric, she was led to the lectern
from which her discourse was to be delivered.
Odo sat just below her, and as she took her place their
eyes met for an instant. He was caught up in
the serene exaltation of her look, as though she soared
with him above wind and cloud to a region of unshadowed
calm; then her eyes fell and she began to speak.
She had a pretty mastery of Latin,
and though she had never before spoken in public,
her poetical recitations, and the early habit of intercourse
with her father’s friends, had given her a fair
measure of fluency and self-possession. These
qualities were raised to eloquence by the sweetness
of her voice, and by the grave beauty which made the
academic gown seem her natural wear, rather than a
travesty of learning. Odo at first had some difficulty
in fixing his attention on what she said; and when
he controlled his thoughts she was in the height of
her panegyric of constitutional liberty. She
had begun slowly, almost coldly; but now her theme
possessed her. One by one she evoked the familiar
formulas with which his mind had once reverberated.
They woke no echo in him now; but he saw that she
could still set them ringing through the sensibilities
of her hearers. As she stood there, a slight
impassioned figure, warming to her high argument, his
sense of irony was touched by the incongruity of her
background. The wall behind her was covered by
an ancient fresco, fast fading under its touches of
renewed gilding, and representing the patron scholars
of the mediaeval world: the theologians, law-givers
and logicians under whose protection the free city
had placed its budding liberties. There they sat,
rigid and sumptuous on their Gothic thrones:
Origen, Zeno, David, Lycurgus, Aristotle; listening
in a kind of cataleptic helplessness to a confession
of faith that scattered their doctrines to the winds.
As he looked and listened, a weary sense of the reiterance
of things came over him. For what were these
ancient manipulators of ideas, prestidigitators of
a vanished world of thought, but the forbears of the
long line of theorists of whom Fulvia was the last
inconscient mouthpiece? The new game was still
played with the old counters, the new jugglers repeated
the old tricks; and the very words now poured out in
defence of the new cause were but mercenaries scarred
in the service of its enemies. For generations,
for centuries, man had fought on; crying for liberty,
dreaming it was won, waking to find himself the slave
of the new forces he had generated, burning and being
burnt for the same beliefs under different guises,
calling his instinct ideas and his ideas revelations;
destroying, rebuilding, falling, rising, mending broken
weapons, championing extinct illusions, mistaking
his failures for achievements and planting his flag
on the ramparts as they fell. And as the vision
of this inveterate conflict rose before him, Odo saw
that the beauty, the power, the immortality, dwelt
not in the idea but in the struggle for it.
His resistance yielded as this sense
stole over him, and with an almost physical relief
he felt himself drawn once more into the familiar
current of emotion. Yes, it was better after all
to be one of that great unconquerable army, though,
like the Trojans fighting for a phantom Helen, they
might be doing battle for the shadow of a shade; better
to march in their ranks, endure with them, fight with
them, fall with them, than to miss the great enveloping
sense of brotherhood that turned defeat to victory.
As the conviction grew in him, Fulvia’s
words regained their lost significance. Through
the set mask of language the living thoughts looked
forth, old indeed as the world, but renewed with the
new life of every heart that bore them. She had
left the abstract and dropped to concrete issues:
to the gift of the constitution, the benefits and
obligations it implied, the new relations it established
between ruler and subject and between man and man.
Odo saw that she approached the question without flinching.
No trace remained of the trembling woman who had clung
to him the night before. Her old convictions repossessed
her and she soared above human fears.
So engrossed was he that he had been
unaware of a growing murmur of sound which seemed
to be forcing its way from without through the walls
of the ancient building. As Fulvia’s oration
neared its end the murmur rose to a roar. Startled
faces were turned toward the doors of the council-chamber,
and one of the Duke’s gentlemen left his seat
and made his way through the audience. Odo sat
motionless, his eyes on Fulvia. He noticed that
her face paled as the sound reached her, but there
was no break in the voice with which she uttered the
closing words of her peroration. As she ended,
the noise was momentarily drowned under a loud burst
of clapping; but this died in a hush of apprehension
through which the outer tumult became more ominously
audible. The equerry reentered the hall with
a disordered countenance. He hastened to the Duke
and addressed him urgently.
“Your Highness,” he said,
“the crowd has thickened and wears an ugly look.
There are many friars abroad, and images of the Mountain
Virgin are being carried in procession. Will
your Highness be pleased to remain here while I summon
an escort from the barracks?”
Odo was still watching Fulvia.
She had received the applause of the audience with
a deep reverence, and was now in the act of withdrawing
to the inner room at the back of the dais. Her
eyes met Odo’s; she smiled and the door closed
on her. He turned to the equerry.
“There is no need of an escort,”
he said. “I trust my people if they do
not trust me.”
“But, your Highness, the streets
are full of demagogues who have been haranguing the
people since morning. The crowd is shouting against
the constitution and against the Signorina Vivaldi.”
A flame of anger passed over the Duke’s
face; but he subdued it instantly.
“Go to the Signorina Vivaldi,”
he said, pointing to the door by which Fulvia had
left the hall. “Assure her that there is
no danger, but ask her to remain where she is till
the crowd disperses, and request the faculty in my
name to remain with her.”
The equerry bowed, and hurried up
the steps of the dais, while the Duke signed to his
other companions to precede him to the door of the
hall. As they walked down the long room, between
the close-packed ranks of the audience, the outer
tumult surged threateningly toward them. Near
the doorway, another of the gentlemen-in-waiting was
seen to speak with the Duke.
“Your Highness,” he said,
“there is a private way at the back by which
you may yet leave the building unobserved.”
“You appear to forget that I
entered it publicly,” said Odo.
“But, your Highness, we cannot
answer for the consequences—”
The Duke signed to the ushers to throw
open the doors. They obeyed, and he stepped out
into the stone vestibule preceding the porch.
The iron-barred outer doors of this vestibule were
securely bolted, and the porter hung back in affright
at the order to unlock them.
“Your Highness, the people are
raving mad,” he said, flinging himself on his
knees.
Odo turned impatiently to his escort.
“Unbar the doors, gentlemen,” he said.
The blood was drumming in his ears, but his eye was
clear and steady, and he noted with curious detachment
the comic agony of the fat porter’s face, and
the strain and swell of the equerry’s muscles
as he dragged back the ponderous bolts.
The doors swung open, and the Duke
emerged. Below him, still with that unimpaired
distinctness of vision which seemed a part of his heightened
vitality, he saw a great gesticulating mass of people.
They packed the square so closely that their own numbers
held them immovable, save for their swaying arms and
heads; and those whom the square could not contain
had climbed to porticoes, balconies and cornices, and
massed themselves in the neck of the adjoining streets.
The handful of light-horse who had escorted the Duke’s
carriage formed a single line at the foot of the steps,
so that the approach to the porch was still clear;
but it was plain that the crowd, with its next movement,
would break through this slender barrier and hem in
the Duke.
At Odo’s appearance the shouting
had ceased and every eye was turned on him. He
stood there, a brilliant target, in his laced coat
of peach-coloured velvet, his breast covered with
orders, a hand on his jewelled sword-hilt. For
a moment sovereign and subjects measured each other;
and in that moment Odo drank his deepest draught of
life. He was not thinking now of the constitution
or its opponents. His present business was to
get down the steps and into the carriage, returning
to the palace as openly as he had come. He was
conscious of neither pity nor hatred for the throng
in his path. For the moment he regarded them
merely as a natural force, to be fought against like
storm or flood. His clearest sensation was one
of relief at having at last some material obstacle
to spend his strength against, instead of the impalpable
powers which had so long beset him. He felt,
too, a boyish satisfaction at his own steadiness of
pulse and eye, at the absence of that fatal inertia
which he had come to dread. So clear was his mental
horizon that it embraced not only the present crisis,
but a dozen incidents leading up to it. He remembered
that Trescorre had urged him to take a larger escort,
and that he had refused on the ground that any military
display might imply a doubt of his people. He
was glad now that he had done so. He would have
hated to slink to his carriage behind a barrier of
drawn swords. He wanted no help to see him through
this business. The blood sang in his veins at
the thought of facing it alone.
The silence lasted but a moment; then
an image of the Mountain Virgin was suddenly thrust
in air, and a voice cried out: “Down with
our Lady’s enemies! We want no laws against
the friars!”
A howl caught up the words and tossed
them to and fro above the seething heads. Images
of the Virgin, religious banners, the blue-and-white
of the Madonna’s colours, suddenly canopied
the crowd.
“We want the Barnabites back!” sang out
another voice.
“Down with the free-thinkers!” yelled
a hundred angry throats.
A stone or two sped through the air
and struck the sculptures of the porch.
“Your Highness!” cried
the equerry who stood nearest, and would have snatched
the Duke back within doors.
For all answer, Odo stepped clear
of the porch and advanced to the edge of the steps.
As he did so, a shower of missiles hummed about him,
and a stone struck him on the lip. The blood
rushed to his head, and he swayed in the sudden grip
of anger; but he mastered himself and raised his lace
handkerchief to the cut.
His gentlemen had drawn their swords;
but he signed to them to sheathe again. His first
thought was that he must somehow make the people hear
him. He lifted his hand and advanced a step; but
as he did so a shot rang out, followed by a loud cry.
The lieutenant of the light-horse, infuriated by the
insult to his master, had drawn the pistol from his
holster and fired blindly into the crowd. His
bullet had found a mark, and the throng hissed and
seethed about the spot where a man had fallen.
At the same instant Odo was aware of a commotion in
the group behind him, and with a great plunge of the
heart he saw Fulvia at his side. She still wore
the academic dress, and her black gown detached itself
sharply against the bright colours of the ducal uniforms.
Groans and hisses received her, but
the mob hung back, as though her look had checked
them. Then a voice shrieked out: “Down
with the atheist! We want no foreign witches!”
and another caught it up with the yell: “She
poisoned the weaver’s boy! Her father was
hanged for murdering Christian children!”
The cry set the crowd in motion again,
and it rolled toward the line of mounted soldiers
at the foot of the steps. The men had their hands
on their holsters; but the Duke’s call rang
out: “No firing!” and drawing their
blades, they sat motionless to receive the shock.
It came, dashed against them and dispersed
them. Only a few yards lay now between the people
and their sovereign. But at that moment another
shot was fired. This time it came from the thick
of the crowd. The equerries’ swords leapt
forth again, and they closed around the Duke and Fulvia.
“Save yourself, sir! Back
into the building!” one of the gentlemen shouted;
but Odo had no eyes for what was coming. For as
the shot was heard he had seen a change in Fulvia.
A moment they had stood together, smiling, undaunted,
hands locked and wedded eyes, then he felt her dissolve
against him and drop between his arms.
A cry had gone out that the Duke was
wounded, and a leaden silence fell on the crowd.
In that silence Odo knelt, lifting Fulvia’s head
to his breast. No wound showed through her black
gown. She lay as though smitten by some invisible
hand. So deep was the hush that her least whisper
must have reached him; but though he bent close no
whisper came. The invisible hand had struck the
very source of life; and to these two, in their moment
of final reunion, with so much unsaid between them
that now at last they longed to say, there was left
only the dumb communion of fast-clouding eyes…
A clatter of cavalry was heard down
the streets that led to the square. The equerry
sent to warn Fulvia had escaped from the back of the
building and hastened to the barracks to summon a regiment.
But the soldiery were no longer needed. The blind
fury of the mob had died of its own excess. The
rumour that the Duke was hurt brought a chill reaction
of dismay, and the rioters were already scattering
when the cavalry came in sight. Their approach
turned the slow dispersal to a stampede. A few
arrests were made, the remaining groups were charged
by the soldiers, and presently the square lay bare
as a storm-swept plain, though the people still hung
on its outskirts, ready to disband at the first threat
of the troops.
It was on this solitude that the Duke
looked out as he regained a sense of his surroundings.
Fulvia had been carried into the audience-chamber
and laid on the dais, her head resting on the velvet
cushions of the ducal chair. She had died instantly,
shot through the heart, and the surgeons summoned
in haste had soon ceased from their ineffectual efforts.
For a long time Odo knelt beside her, unconscious of
all but that one wild moment when life at its highest
had been dashed into the gulf of death. Thought
had ceased, and neither rage nor grief moved as yet
across the chaos of his being. All his life was
in his eyes, as they drew up, drop by drop, the precious
essence of her loveliness. For she had grown,
beneath the simplifying hand of death, strangely yet
most humanly beautiful. Life had fallen from
her like the husk from the flower, and she wore the
face of her first hopes. The transition had been
too swift for any backward look, any anguished rending
of the fibres, and he felt himself, not detached by
the stroke, but caught up with her into some great
calm within the heart of change.
He knew not how he found himself once
more on the steps above the square. Below him
his state carriage stood in the same place, flanked
by the regiment of cavalry. Down the narrow streets
he saw the brooding cloud of people, and the sight
roused his blood. They were his enemies now—he
felt the warm hate in his veins. They were his
enemies, and he would face them openly. No closed
chariot guarded by troops—he would not
have so much as a pane of glass between himself and
his subjects. He descended the steps, bade the
colonel of the regiment dismount, and sprang into
his saddle. Then, at the head of his soldiers,
at a foot-pace, he rode back through the packed streets
to the palace.
In the palace, courtyard and vestibule
were thronged with courtiers and lacqueys. He
walked through them with his head high, the cut on
his lip like the mark of a hot iron in the dead whiteness
of his face. At the head of the great staircase
Maria Clementina waited. She sprang forward,
distraught and trembling, her face as blanched as his.
“You are safe—you
are safe—you are not hurt—”
she stammered, catching at his hands.
A shudder seized him as he put her aside.
“Odo! Odo!” she cried passionately,
and made as though to bar his way.
He gave her a blind look and passed
on down the long gallery to his closet.