Complete Works of F Marion Crawford

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by F. Marion Crawford


  “Give him to understand that you will vote for his next measure. Nothing could be simpler, I am sure.”

  Del Ferice smiled blandly at his wife’s ideas of parliamentary diplomacy.

  “There are no clerical deputies in the parliament of the nation. If there were the thing might be possible, and it would be very interesting to all the clericals to read an account of the transaction in the Osservatore Romano. In any case, I am not sure that it will be much to our advantage that the wife of the Onorevole Del Ferice should be seen seated in the midst of the Black ladies. It will produce an unfavourable impression.”

  “If you are going to talk of impressions—” Donna Tullia shrugged her massive shoulders.

  “No, my dear. You mistake me. I am not going to talk of them, because, as I at once told you, it is quite right that you should go to this affair. If you go, you must go in the proper way. No doubt there will be people who will have invitations but will not use them. We can perhaps procure you the use of such a ticket.”

  “I do not care what name is on the paper, provided I can sit in the right place.”

  “Very well,” answered Del Ferice. “I will do my best.”

  “I expect it of you, Ugo. It is not often that I ask anything of you, is it? It is the least you can do. The idea of getting a card that is not to be used is good; of course they will all get them, and some of them are sure to be ill.”

  Donna Tullia went away satisfied that what she wanted would be forthcoming at the right moment. What she had said was true. She rarely asked anything of her husband. But when she did, she gave him to understand that she would have it at any price. It was her way of asserting herself from time to time. On the present occasion she had no especial interest at stake and any other woman might have been satisfied with a seat in the diplomatic tribune, which could probably have been obtained without great difficulty. But she had heard that the seats there were to be very high and she did not really wish to be placed in too prominent a position. The light might be unfavourable, and she knew that she was subject to growing very red in places where it was hot. She had once been a handsome woman and a very vain one, but even her vanity could not survive the daily shock of the looking-glass torture. To sit for four or five hours in a high light, facing fifty thousand people, was more than she could bear with equanimity.

  Del Ferice, being left to himself, returned to the question of the mayor’s decoration which was of vastly greater importance to him than his wife’s position at the approaching function. If he failed to get the man what he wanted, the fellow would doubtless apply to some one of the opposite party, would receive the coveted honour and would take the whole voting population of the town with him at the next general election, to the total discomfiture of Del Ferice. It was necessary to find some valid reason for proposing him for the distinction. Ugo could not decide what to do just then, but he ultimately hit upon a successful plan. He advised his correspondent to write a pamphlet upon the rapid improvement of agricultural interests in his district under the existing ministry, and he even went so far as to enclose with his letter some notes on the subject. These notes proved to be so voluminous and complete that when the mayor had copied them he could not find a pretext for adding a single word or correction. They were printed upon excellent paper, with ornamental margins, under the title of “Onward, Parthenope!” Of course every one knows that Parthenope means Naples, the Neapolitans and the Neapolitan Province, a siren of that name having come to final grief somewhere between the Chiatamone and Posilippo. The mayor got his decoration, and Del Ferice was re-elected; but no one has inquired into the truth of the statements made in the pamphlet upon agriculture.

  It is clear that a man who was capable of taking so much trouble for so small a matter would not disappoint his wife when she had set her heart upon such a trifle as a ticket for the Jubilee. Within three days he had the promise of what he wanted. A certain lonely lady of high position lay very ill just then, and it need scarcely be explained that her confidential servant fell upon the invitation as soon as it arrived and sold it for a round sum to the first applicant, who happened to be Count Del Ferice’s valet. So the matter was arranged, privately and without scandal.

  All Rome was alive with expectation. The date fixed was the first of January, and as the day approached the curious foreigner mustered in his thousands and tens of thousands and took the city by storm. The hotels were thronged. The billiard tables were let as furnished rooms, people slept in the lifts, on the landings, in the porters’ lodges. The thrifty Romans retreated to roofs and cellars and let their small dwellings. People reaching the city on the last night slept in the cabs they had hired to take them to St. Peter’s before dawn. Even the supplies of food ran low and the hungry fed on what they could get, while the delicate of taste very often did not feed at all. There was of course the usual scare about a revolutionary demonstration, to which the natives paid very little attention, but which delighted the foreigners.

  Not more than half of those who hoped to witness the ceremony saw anything of it, though the basilica will hold some eighty thousand people at a pinch, and the crowd on that occasion was far greater than at the opening of the Oecumenical Council in 1869.

  Madame d’Aragona had also determined to be present, and she expressed her desire to Gouache. She had spoken the strict truth when she had said that she knew no one in Rome, and so far as general accuracy is concerned it was equally true that she had not fixed the length of her stay. She had not come with any settled purpose beyond a vague idea of having her portrait painted by the French artist, and unless she took the trouble to make acquaintances, there was nothing attractive enough about the capital to keep her. She allowed herself to be driven about the town, on pretence of seeing churches and galleries, but in reality she saw very little of either. She was preoccupied with her own thoughts and subject to fits of abstraction. Most things seemed to her intensely dull, and the unhappy guide who had been selected to accompany her on her excursions, wasted his learning upon her on the first morning, and subsequently exhausted the magnificent catalogue of impossibilities which he had concocted for the especial benefit of the uncultivated foreigner, without eliciting so much as a look of interest or an expression of surprise. He was a young and fascinating guide, wearing a white satin tie, and on the third day he recited some verses of Stecchetti and was about to risk a declaration of worship in ornate prose, when he was suddenly rather badly scared by the lady’s yellow eyes, and ran on nervously with a string of deceased popes and their dates.

  “Get me a card for the Jubilee,” she said abruptly.

  “An entrance is very easily procured,” answered the guide. “In fact I have one in my pocket, as it happens. I bought it for twenty francs this morning, thinking that one of my foreigners would perhaps take it of me. I do not even gain a franc — my word of honour.”

  Madame d’Aragona glanced at the slip of paper.

  “Not that,” she answered. “Do you imagine that I will stand? I want a seat in one of the tribunes.”

  The guide lost himself in apologies, but explained that he could not get what she desired.

  “What are you for?” she inquired.

  She was an indolent woman, but when by any chance she wanted anything, Donna Tullia herself was not more restless. She drove at once to Gouache’s studio. He was alone and she told him what she needed.

  “The Jubilee, Madame? Is it possible that you have been forgotten?”

  “Since they have never heard of me! I have not the slightest claim to a place.”

  “It is you who say that. But your place is already secured. Fear nothing. You will be with the Roman ladies.”

  “I do not understand—”

  “It is simple. I was thinking of it yesterday. Young Saracinesca comes in and begins to talk about you. There is Madame d’Aragona who has no seat, he says. One must arrange that. So it is arranged.”

  “By Don Orsino?”

  “You would not accept? No. A
young man, and you have only met once. But tell me what you think of him. Do you like him?”

  “One does not like people so easily as that,” said Madame d’Aragona, “How have you arranged about the seat?”

  “It is very simple. There are to be two days, you know. My wife has her cards for both, of course. She will only go once. If you will accept the one for the first day, she will be very happy.”

  “You are angelic, my dear friend! Then I go as your wife?” She laughed.

  “Precisely. You will be Faustina Gouache instead of Madame d’Aragona.”

  “How delightful! By the bye, do not call me Madame d’Aragona. It is not my name. I might as well call you Monsieur de Paris, because you are a Parisian.”

  “I do not put Anastase Gouache de Paris on my cards,” answered Gouache with a laugh. “What may I call you? Donna Maria?”

  “My name is Maria Consuelo d’Aranjuez.”

  “An ancient Spanish name,” said Gouache.

  “My husband was an Italian.”

  “Ah! Of Spanish descent, originally of Aragona. Of course.”

  “Exactly. Since I am here, shall I sit for you? You might almost finish to-day.”

  “Not so soon as that. It is Don Orsino’s hour, but as he has not come, and since you are so kind — by all means.”

  “Ah! Is he punctual?”

  “He is probably running after those abominable dogs in pursuit of the feeble fox — what they call the noble sport.”

  Gouache’s face expressed considerable disgust.”

  “Poor fellow!” said Maria Consuelo. “He has nothing else to do.”

  “He will get used to it. They all do. Besides, it is really the natural condition of man. Total idleness is his element. If Providence meant man to work, it should have given him two heads, one for his profession and one for himself. A man needs one entire and undivided intelligence for the study of his own individuality.”

  “What an idea!”

  “Do not men of great genius notoriously forget themselves, forget to eat and drink and dress themselves like Christians? That is because they have not two heads. Providence expects a man to do two things at once — an air from an opera and invent the steam-engine at the same moment. Nature rebels. Then Providence and Nature do not agree. What becomes of religion? It is all a mystery. Believe me, Madame, art is easier than, nature, and painting is simpler than theology.”

  Maria Consuelo listened to Gouache’s extraordinary remarks with a smile.

  “You are either paradoxical, or irreligious, or both,” she said.

  “Irreligious? I, who carried a rifle at Mentana? No, Madame, I am a good Catholic.”

  “What does that mean?”

  “I believe in God, and I love my wife. I leave it to the Church to define my other articles of belief. I have only one head, as you see.”

  Gouache smiled, but there was a note of sincerity in the odd statement which did not escape his hearer.

  “You are not of the type which belongs to the end of the century,” she said.

  “That type was not invented when I was forming myself.”

  “Perhaps you belong rather to the coming age — the age of simplification.”

  “As distinguished from the age of mystification — religious, political, scientific and artistic,” suggested Gouache. “The people of that day will guess the Sphynx’s riddle.”

  “Mine? You were comparing me to a sphynx the other day.”

  “Yours, perhaps, Madame. Who knows? Are you the typical woman of the ending century?”

  “Why not?” asked Maria Consuelo with a sleepy look.

  CHAPTER V.

  THERE IS SOMETHING grand in any great assembly of animals belonging to the same race. The very idea of an immense number of living creatures conveys an impression not suggested by anything else. A compact herd of fifty or sixty thousand lions would be an appalling vision, beside which a like multitude of human beings would sink into insignificance. A drove of wild cattle is, I think, a finer sight than a regiment of cavalry in motion, for the cavalry is composite, half man and half horse, whereas the cattle have the advantage of unity. But we can never see so many animals of any species driven together into one limited space as to be equal to a vast throng of men and women, and we conclude naturally enough that a crowd consisting solely of our own kind is the most imposing one conceivable.

  It was scarcely light on the morning of New Year’s Day when the Princess Sant’ Ilario found herself seated in one of the low tribunes on the north side of the high altar in Saint Peter’s. Her husband and her eldest son had accompanied her, and having placed her in a position from which they judged she could easily escape at the end of the ceremony, they remained standing in the narrow, winding passage between improvised barriers which led from the tribune to the door of the sacristy, and which had been so arranged as to prevent confusion. Here they waited, greeting their acquaintances when they could recognise them in the dim twilight of the church, and watching the ever-increasing crowd that surged slowly backward and forward outside the barrier. The old prince was entitled by an hereditary office to a place in the great procession of the day, and was not now with them.

  Orsino felt as though the whole world were assembled about him within the huge cathedral, as though its heart were beating audibly and its muffled breathing rising and falling in his hearing. The unceasing sound that went up from the compact mass of living beings was soft in quality, but enormous in volume and sustained in tone, a great whispering which, might have been heard a mile away. One hears in mammoth musical festivals the extraordinary effect of four or five thousand voices singing very softly; it is not to be compared to the unceasing whisper of fifty thousand men.

  The young fellow was conscious of a strange, irregular thrill of enthusiasm which ran through him from time to time and startled his imagination into life. It was only the instinct of a strong vitality unconsciously longing to be the central point of the vitalities around it. But he could not understand that. It seemed to him like a great opportunity brought “within reach but slipping by untaken, not to return again. He felt a strange, almost uncontrollable longing to spring upon one of the tribunes, to raise his voice, to speak to the great multitude, to fire all those men to break out and carry everything before them. He laughed audibly at himself. Sant’ Ilario looked at his son with some curiosity.

  “What amuses you?” he asked.

  “A dream,” answered Orsino, still smiling. “Who knows?” he exclaimed after a pause. “What would happen, if at the right moment the right man could stir such a crowd as this?”

  “Strange things,” replied Sant’ Ilario gravely. “A crowd is a terrible weapon.”

  “Then my dream was not so foolish after all. One might make history to-day.”

  Sant’ Ilario made a gesture expressive of indifference.

  “What is history?” he asked. “A comedy in which the actors have no written parts, but improvise their speeches and actions as best they can. That is the reason why history is so dull and so full of mistakes.”

  “And of surprises,” suggested Orsino.

  “The surprises in history are always disagreeable, my boy,” answered Sant’ Ilario.

  Orsino felt the coldness in the answer and felt even more his father’s readiness to damp any expression of enthusiasm. Of late he had encountered this chilling indifference at almost every turn, whenever he gave vent to his admiration for any sort of activity.

  It was not that Giovanni Saracinesca had any intention of repressing his son’s energetic instincts, and he assuredly had no idea of the effect his words often produced. He sometimes wondered at the sudden silence which came over the young man after such conversations, but he did not understand it and on the whole paid little attention to it. He remembered that he himself had been different, and had been wont to argue hotly and not unfrequently to quarrel with his father about trifles. He himself had been headstrong, passionate, often intractable in his early youth, and
his father had been no better at sixty and was little improved in that respect even at his present great age. But Orsino did not argue. He suggested, and if any one disagreed with him he became silent. He seemed to possess energy in action, and a number of rather fantastic aspirations, but in conversation he was easily silenced and in outward manner he would have seemed too yielding if he had not often seemed too cold.

  Giovanni did not see that Orsino was most like his mother in character, while the contact with a new generation had given him something unfamiliar to the old, an affectation at first, but one which habit was amalgamating with the real nature beneath.

  No doubt, it was wise and right to discourage ideas which would tend in any way to revolution. Giovanni had seen revolutions and had been the loser by them. It was not wise and was certainly not necessary to throw cold water on the young fellow’s harmless aspirations. But Giovanni had lived for many years in his own way, rich, respected and supremely happy, and he believed that his way was good enough for Orsino. He had, in his youth, tried most things for himself, and had found them failures so far as happiness was concerned. Orsino might make the series of experiments in his turn if he pleased, but there was no adequate reason for such an expenditure of energy. The sooner the boy loved some girl who would make him a good wife, and the sooner he married her, the sooner he would find that calm, satisfactory existence which had not finally come to Giovanni until after thirty years of age.

  As for the question of fortune, it was true that there were four sons, but there was Giovanni’s mother’s fortune, there was Corona’s fortune, and there was the great Saracinesca estate behind both. They were all so extremely rich that the deluge must be very distant.

  Orsino understood none of these things. He only realised that his father had the faculty and apparently the intention of freezing any originality he chanced to show, and he inwardly resented the coldness, quietly, if foolishly, resolving to astonish those who misunderstood him by seizing the first opportunity of doing something out of the common way. For some time he stood in silence watching the people who came by and glancing from time to time at the dense crowd outside the barrier. He was suddenly aware that his father was observing intently a lady who advanced along the open, way.

 

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