4.1.
One bright March day in the year 1783
the bells of Pianura began to ring at sunrise, and
with their first peal the townsfolk were abroad.
The city was already dressed for a
festival. A canopy of crimson velvet, surmounted
by the ducal crown and by the “Humilitas”
of the Valseccas, concealed the columns of the Cathedral
porch and fell in royal folds about the featureless
porphyry lions who had seen so many successive rulers
ascend the steps between their outstretched paws.
The frieze of ramping and running animals around the
ancient baptistery was concealed by heavy green garlands
alternating with religious banners; and every church
and chapel had draped its doorway with crimson and
placed above the image of its patron saint the ducal
crown of Pianura.
No less sumptuous was the adornment
of the private dwellings. The great families—the
Trescorri, the Belverdi, the Pievepelaghi—had
outdone each other in the display of golden-threaded
tapestries and Genoese velvets emblazoned with armorial
bearings; and even the sombre facade of the Boscofolto
palace showed a rich drapery surmounted by the quarterings
of the new Marchioness.
But it was not only the palace-fronts
that had put on a holiday dress. The contagion
had spread to the poorer quarters, and in many a narrow
street and crooked lane, where surely no part of the
coming pageant might be expected to pass, the crazy
balconies and unglazed windows were decked out with
scraps of finery: a yard or two of velvet filched
from the state hangings of some noble house, a torn
and discoloured church banner, even a cast-off sacque
of brocade or a peasant’s holiday kerchief,
skilfully draped about the rusty iron and held in place
by pots of clove-pink and sweet basil. The half-ruined
palace which had once housed Gamba and Momola showed
a few shreds of colour on its sullen front, and the
abate Crescenti’s modest house, wedged in a corner
of the city walls, was dressed like the altar of a
Lady Chapel; while even the tanners’ quarter
by the river displayed its festoons of coloured paper
and tinsel, ingeniously twisted into the semblance
of a crown.
For the new Duke, who was about to
enter his capital in state, was extraordinarily popular
with all classes. His popularity, as yet, was
mainly due to a general detestation of the rule he
had replaced; but such a sentiment gives to a new
sovereign an impetus which, if he knows how to use
it, will carry him a long way toward success; and among
those in the Duke’s confidence it was rumoured
that he was qualified not only to profit by the expectations
he had raised but to fulfil them. The last months
of the late Duke’s life had plunged the duchy
into such political and financial disorder that all
parties were agreed in welcoming a change. Even
those that had most to lose by the accession of the
new sovereign, or most to fear from the policy he
was known to favour, preferred the possibility of
new evils to a continuance of present conditions.
The expertest angler in troubled waters may find waters
too troubled for his sport; and under a government
where power is passed from hand to hand like the handkerchief
in a children’s game, the most adroit time-server
may find himself grasping the empty air.
It would indeed have been difficult
to say who had ruled during the year preceding the
Duke’s death. Prime ministers had succeeded
each other like the clowns in a harlequinade.
Just as the Church seemed to have gained the upper
hand some mysterious revulsion of feeling would fling
the Duke toward Trescorre and the liberals; and when
these had attempted, by some trifling concession to
popular feeling, to restore the credit of the government,
their sovereign, seized by religious scruples, would
hastily recall the clerical party. So the administration
staggered on, reeling from one policy to another, clutching
now at this support and now at that, while Austria
and the Holy See hung on its steps, awaiting the inevitable
fall.
A cruel winter and a fresh outbreak
of the silkworm disease had aggravated the misery
of the people, while the mounting extravagance of
the Duchess had put a last strain on the exhausted
treasury. The consequent increase of the salt-tax
roused such popular fury that Father Ignazio, who
was responsible for the measure, was dismissed by the
panic-stricken Duke, and Trescorre, as usual, called
in to repair his rival’s mistake. But it
would have taken a greater statesman than Trescorre
to reach the root of such evils; and the new minister
succeeded neither in pacifying the people nor in reassuring
his sovereign.
Meanwhile the Duke was sinking under
the mysterious disease which had hung upon him since
his birth. It was hinted that his last hours were
darkened by hallucinations, and the pious pictured
him as haunted by profligate visions, while the free-thinkers
maintained that he was the dupe of priestly jugglery.
Toward the end there was the inevitable rumour of
acqua tofana, and the populace cried out that the Jesuits
were at work again. It seems more probable, however,
that his Highness, who had assisted at the annual
festival of the Madonna del Monte, and had mingled
on foot with the swarm of devotees thronging thither
from all parts, had contracted a pestilent disorder
from one of the pilgrims. Certain it is that
death came in a dreadful form. The Duchess, alarmed
for the health of Prince Ferrante, fled with him to
the dower-house by the Piana; and the strange nature
of his Highness’s distemper caused many to follow
her example. Even the Duke’s servants, and
the quacks that lived on his bounty, were said to
have abandoned the death-chamber; and an English traveller
passing through Pianura boasted that, by the payment
of a small fee to the palace porter, he had obtained
leave to enter his Highness’s closet and peer
through the doorway at the dying man. However
this may be, it would appear that the Duke’s
confessor—a monk of the Barnabite order—was
not to be found when his Highness called for him;
and the servant sent forth in haste to fetch a priest
returned, strangely enough, with the abate Crescenti,
whose suspected orthodoxy had so long made him the
object of the Duke’s detestation. He it
was who alone witnessed the end of that tormented life,
and knew upon what hopes or fears it closed.
Meanwhile it appeared that the Duchess’s
precautions were not unfounded; for Prince Ferrante
presently sickened of the same malady which had cut
off his father, and when the Regent, travelling post-haste,
arrived in Pianura, he had barely time to pass from
the Duke’s obsequies to the death-bed of the
heir.
Etiquette required that a year of
mourning should elapse between the accession of the
new sovereign and his state entry into his capital;
so that if Duke Odo’s character and intentions
were still matter of conjecture to his subjects, his
appearance was already familiar to them. His
youth, his good looks, his open mien, his known affability
of manner, were so many arguments in his favour with
an impressionable and impulsive people; and it was
perhaps natural that he should interpret as a tribute
to his principles the sympathy which his person aroused.
It is certain that he fancied himself,
at that time, as well-acquainted with his subjects
as they believed themselves to be with him; and the
understanding supposed to exist was productive of equal
satisfaction to both sides. The new Duke had
thrown himself with extraordinary zeal into the task
of loving and understanding his people. It had
been his refuge from a hundred doubts and uncertainties,
the one clearly-defined object in an obscure and troubled
fate. And their response had, almost immediately,
turned his task into a pleasure. It was so easy
to rule if one’s subjects loved one! And
so easy to be loved if only one loved enough in return!
If he did not, like the Pope, describe himself to his
people as the servant of the servants of God, he at
least longed to make them feel that this new gospel
of service was the base on which all sovereignty must
henceforth repose.
It was not that his first year of
power had been without moments of disillusionment.
He had had more than one embittering experience of
intrigue and perfidy, more than one glimpse of the
pitfalls besetting his course; but his confidence
in his own powers and his faith in his people remained
unshaken, and with two such beliefs to sustain him
it seemed as though no difficulties would prove insurmountable.
Such at least was the mood in which,
on the morning of his entry into Pianura, he prepared
to face his subjects. Strangely enough, the state
entry began at Ponte di Po, the very spot where, on
a stormy midnight some seven years earlier, the new
Duke had landed, a fugitive from his future realm.
Here, according to an ancient custom, the sovereign
awaited the arrival of his ministers and court; and
then, taking seat in his state barge, proceeded by
water to Pianura, followed by an escort of galleys.
A great tent hung with tapestries
had been set up on the river-bank; and here Odo awaited
the approach of the barge. As it touched at the
landing-stage he stepped out, and his prime minister,
Count Trescorre, advanced toward him, accompanied
by the dignitaries of the court. Trescorre had
aged in the intervening years. His delicate features
had withered like a woman’s, and the fine irony
of his smile had taken an edge of cruelty. His
face suggested a worn engraving, the lines of which
have been deepened by a too-incisive instrument.
The functionaries attending him were,
with few exceptions, the same who had figured in a
like capacity at the late sovereign’s court.
With the passing of the years they had grown heavier
or thinner, more ponderous or stiffer in their movements,
and as they advanced, in their splendid but unwieldy
court dress, they seemed to Odo like superannuated
marionettes whose springs and wires have rusted from
disuse.
The barge was a magnificent gilded
Bucentaur, presented to the late Duke’s father
by the Doge of Venice, and carved by his Serenity’s
most famous sculptors in wood. Tritons and sea-goddesses
encircled the prow and throned above the stern, and
the interior of the deck-house was adorned with delicate
rilievi and painted by Tiepolo with scenes from the
myth of Amphitrite. Here the new Duke seated himself,
surrounded by his household, and presently the heavy
craft, rowed by sixty galley-slaves, was moving slowly
up the river toward Pianura.
In the clear spring light the old
walled city, with its domes and towers, rose pleasantly
among budding orchards and fields. Close at hand
were the crenellations of Bracciaforte’s keep,
and just beyond, the ornate cupola of the royal chapel,
symbolising in their proximity the successive ambitions
of the ducal race; while the round-arched campanile
of the Cathedral and the square tower of the mediaeval
town-hall sprang up side by side, marking the centre
of the free city which the Valseccas had subjugated.
It seemed to the new Duke, who was given to such reflections,
that he could read his race’s history in that
broken skyline; but he was soon snatched from its
perusal by the cheers of the crowd who thronged the
river-bank to greet his approach.
As the Bucentaur touched at the landing-stage
and Odo stepped out on the red carpet strewn with
flowers, while cannon thundered from the walls and
the bells burst into renewed jubilation, he felt himself
for the first time face to face with his people.
The very ceremonial which in other cases kept them
apart was now a means of closer communication; for
it was to show himself to them that he was making a
public entry into his capital, and it was to see him
that the city had poured forth her shouting throngs.
The shouts rose and widened as he advanced, enveloping
him in a mounting tide of welcome, in which cannon,
bells and voices—the decreed and the spontaneous
acclamations—were indistinguishably merged.
In like manner, approbation of his person was mingled
with a simple enjoyment of the show of which he formed
a part; and it must have taken a more experienced
head than Odo’s to distinguish between the two
currents of enthusiasm on which he felt himself swept
forward.
The pageant was indeed brilliant enough
to justify the popular transport; and the fact that
the new Duke formed a worthy centre to so much magnificence
was not lost on his splendour-loving subjects.
The late sovereign had so long held himself aloof
that the city was unaccustomed to such shows, and
as the procession wound into the square before the
Cathedral, where the thickest of the crowd was massed,
the very pealing of the church-bells was lost in the
roar of human voices.
Don Serafino, the Bishop’s nephew,
and now Master of the Horse, rode first, on a splendid
charger, preceded by four trumpets and followed by
his esquires; then came the court dignitaries, attended
by their pages and staffieri in gala liveries, the
marshals with their staves, the masters of ceremony,
and the clergy mounted on mules trapped with velvet,
each led by two running footmen. The Duke rode
next, alone and somewhat pale. Two pages of arms,
helmeted and carrying lances, walked at his horse’s
bridle; and behind him came his household and ministers,
with their gentlemen and a long train of servants,
followed by the regiment of light horse which closed
the procession.
The houses surrounding the square
afforded the best point of view to those unwilling
to mix with the crowd in the streets; and among the
spectators thronging the windows and balconies, and
leaning over the edge of the leads, were many who,
from one motive or another, felt a personal interest
in the new Duke. The Marchioness of Boscofolto
had accepted a seat in the windows of the Pievepelaghi
palace, which formed an angle of the square, and she
and her hostess—the same lady who had been
relieved of her diamond necklace by footpads suspected
of wearing the Duchess’s livery—sat
observing the scene behind the garlanded balconies
of the piano nobile. In the mezzanin windows of
a neighbouring wine-shop the bookseller Andreoni,
with half a dozen members of the philosophical society
to which Odo had belonged, peered above the heads
of the crowd thronging the arcade, and through a dormer
of the leads Carlo Gamba, the assistant in the ducal
library, looked out on the triumph of his former patron.
Among the Church dignities grouped about his Highness
was Father Ignazio, the late Duke’s confessor,
now Prior of the Dominicans, and said to be withdrawn
from political life. Seated on his richly-trapped
mule he observed the scene with impassive face; while
from his place in the long line of minor clergy, the
abate Crescenti, with eyes of infinite tenderness
and concern, watched the young Duke solemnly ascending
the Cathedral steps.
In the porch the Bishop waited, impressive
as ever in his white and gold dalmatic, against the
red robes of the chapter. Preceded by two chamberlains
Odo mounted the steps amid the sudden silence of the
people. The great bronze portals of the Cathedral,
which were never opened save on occasions of state,
swung slowly inward, pouring a wave of music and incense
out upon the hushed sunlit square; then they closed
again, engulphing the brilliant procession—the
Duke, the Bishop, the clergy and the court—and
leaving the populace to scatter in search of the diversions
prepared for them at every street-corner.
It was not till late that night that
the new Duke found himself alone. He had withdrawn
at last from the torch-lit balcony overlooking the
square, whither the shouts of his subjects had persistently
recalled him. Silence was falling on the illuminated
streets, and the dimness of midnight upon the sky
through which rocket after rocket had torn its brilliant
furrows. In the palace a profounder stillness
reigned. Since his accession Odo, out of respect
for the late Duke, had lodged in one of the wings
of the great building; but tradition demanded that
he should henceforth inhabit the ducal apartments,
and thither, at the close of the day’s ceremonies,
his gentlemen had conducted him.
Trescorre had asked permission to
wait on him before he slept; and he knew that the
prime minister would be kept late by his conference
with the secret police, whose nightly report could
not be handed in till the festivities were over.
Meanwhile Odo was in no mood for sleep. He sat
alone in the closet, still hung with saints’
images and jewelled reliquaries, where his cousin
had so often given him audience, and whence, through
the open door, he could see the embroidered curtains
and plumed baldachin of the state bed which was presently
to receive him. All day his heart had beat with
high ambitions; but now a weight sank upon his spirit.
The reaction from the tumultuous welcome of the streets
to the closely-guarded silence of the palace made him
feel how unreal was the fancied union between himself
and his people, how insuperable the distance that
tradition and habit had placed between them. In
the narrow closet where his predecessor had taken
refuge from the detested task of reigning, the new
Duke felt the same moral lassitude steal over him.
How was such a puny will as his to contend against
the great forces of greed and prejudice? All
the influences arrayed against him—tradition,
superstition, the lust of power, the arrogance of
race—seemed concentrated in the atmosphere
of that silent room, with its guarded threshold, its
pious relics, and lying on the desk in the embrasure
of the window, the manuscript litany which the late
Duke had not lived to complete.
Oppressed by his surroundings, Odo
rose and entered the bed-chamber. A lamp burned
before the image of the Madonna at the head of the
bed, and two lighted flambeaux flanked the picture
of the Last Judgment on the opposite wall. Odo
remembered the look of terror which the Duke had fixed
on the picture during their first strange conversation.
A praying-stool stood beneath it, and it was said
that here, rather than before the Virgin’s image,
the melancholy prince performed his private devotions.
The horrors of the scene were depicted with a childish
minuteness of detail, as though the painter had sought
to produce an impression of moral anguish by the accumulation
of physical sufferings; and just such puerile images
of the wrath to come may have haunted the mysterious
recesses of the Duke’s imagination. Crescenti
had told Odo how the dying man’s thoughts had
seemed to centre upon this dreadful subject, and how
again and again, amid his ravings, he had cried out
that the picture must be burned, as though the sight
of it was become intolerable to him.
Odo’s own mind, across which
the events and emotions of the day still threw the
fantastic shadows of an expiring illumination, was
wrought to the highest state of impressionability.
He saw in a flash all that the picture must have symbolised
to his cousin’s fancy; and in his desire to
reconstruct that dying vision of fleshly retribution,
he stepped close to the diptych, resting a knee on
the stool beneath it. As he did so, the picture
suddenly opened, disclosing the inner panel. Odo
caught up one of the flambeaux, and in its light,
as on a sunlit wave, there stepped forth to him the
lost Venus of Giorgione.
He knew the picture in an instant.
There was no mistaking the glow of the limbs, the
midsummer languor of the smile, the magical atmosphere
in which the gold of sunlight, of autumn leaves, of
amber grapes, seemed fused by some lost alchemy of
the brush. As he gazed, the scene changed, and
he saw himself in a darkened room with cabalistic hangings.
He saw Heiligenstern’s tall figure, towering
in supernatural light, the Duke leaning eagerly forward,
the Duchess with set lips and troubled eyes, the little
prince bent wonderingly above the magic crystal…
A step in the antechamber announced
Trescorre’s approach. Odo returned to the
cabinet and the minister advanced with a low bow.
The two men had had time to grow accustomed to the
new relation in which they stood to one another, yet
there were moments when, to Odo, the past seemed to
lie like fallen leaves beneath Trescorre’s steps—Donna
Laura, fond and foolish in her weeds, Gamba, Momola,
and the pure featherhead Cerveno, dying at nineteen
of a distemper because he had stood in the other’s
way. The impression was strong on him now—but
it was only momentary. Habit reasserted itself,
and the minister effaced the man. Odo signed to
Trescorre to seat himself and the latter silently presented
his report.
He was a diligent and capable administrator,
and however mixed might be the motives which attached
him to his sovereign, they did not interfere with
the exact performance of his duties. Odo knew
this and was grateful for it. He knew that Trescorre,
ambitious of the regency, had intrigued against him
to the last. He knew that an intemperate love
of power was the mainspring of that seemingly dispassionate
nature. But death had crossed Trescorre’s
schemes; and he was too adroit an opportunist not to
see that his best chance now lay in making himself
indispensable to his new sovereign. Of all this
Odo was aware; but his own motives in appointing Trescorre
did not justify his looking for great disinterestedness
in his minister. The irony of circumstances had
forced them upon each other, and each knew that the
other understood the situation and was prepared to
make the best of it.
The Duke presently rose, and handed
back to Trescorre the reports of the secret police.
They were the documents he most disliked to handle.
“You have acquitted yourself
admirably of your disagreeable duties,” he said
with a smile. “I hope I have done as well.
At any rate the day is over.”
Trescorre returned the smile, with
his usual tinge of irony. “Another has
already begun,” said he.
“Ah,” said Odo, with a
touch of impatience, “are we not to sleep on
our laurels?”
Trescorre bowed. “Austria, your Highness,
never sleeps.”
Odo looked at him with surprise. “What
do you mean?”
“That I have to remind your Highness—”
“Of what—?”
Trescorre had one of his characteristic pauses.
“That the Duke of Monte Alloro
is in failing health—and that her Highness’s
year of widowhood ended yesterday.”
There was a silence. Odo, who
had reseated himself, rose and walked to the window.
The shutters stood open and he looked out over the
formless obscurity of the gardens. Above the
intervening masses of foliage the Borromini wing raised
its vague grey bulk. He saw lights in Maria Clementina’s
apartments and wondered if she still waked. An
hour or two earlier she had given him her hand in
the contra-dance at the state ball. It was her
first public appearance since the late Duke’s
death, and with the laying off of her weeds she had
regained something of her former brilliancy.
At the moment he had hardly observed her: she
had seemed a mere inanimate part of the pageant of
which he formed the throbbing centre. But now
the sense of her nearness pressed upon him. She
seemed close to him, ingrown with his fate; and with
the curious duality of vision that belongs to such
moments he beheld her again as she had first shone
on him—the imperious child whom he had angered
by stroking her spaniel, the radiant girl who had
welcomed him on his return to Pianura. Trescorre’s
voice aroused him.
“At any moment,” the minister
was saying, “her Highness may fall heir to Monte
Alloro. It is the moment for which Austria waits.
There is always an Archduke ready—and her
Highness is still a young woman.”
Odo turned slowly from the window.
“I have told you that this is impossible,”
he murmured.
Trescorre looked down and thoughtfully
fingered the documents in his hands.
“Your Highness,” said
he, “is as well-acquainted as your ministers
with the difficulties that beset us. Monte Alloro
is one of the richest states in Italy. It is
a pity to alienate such revenues from Pianura.”
The new Duke was silent. His
minister’s words were merely the audible expression
of his own thoughts. He knew that the future welfare
of Pianura depended on the annexation of Monte Alloro.
He owed it to his people to unite the two sovereignties.
At length he said: “You
are building on an unwarrantable assumption.”
Trescorre raised an interrogative glance.
“You assume her Highness’s consent.”
The minister again paused; and his
pause seemed to flash an ironical light on the poverty
of the other’s defences.
“I come straight from her Highness,”
said he quietly, “and I assume nothing that
I am not in a position to affirm.”
Odo turned on him with a start.
“Do I understand that you have presumed—?”
His minister raised a deprecating
hand. “Sir,” said he, “the Archduke’s
envoy is in Pianura.”