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Rienzi, Last of the Roman Tribunes
Book 4. The Triumph And The Pomp   Book 4. The Triumph And The Pomp - chapter 4.7. The Festival
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
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       _ The Festival of that day was far the most sumptuous hitherto known. The hint of Cecco del Vecchio, which so well depicted the character of his fellow-citizens, as yet it exists, though not to such excess, in their love of holyday pomp and gorgeous show, was not lost upon Rienzi. One instance of the universal banqueting (intended, indeed, rather for the people than the higher ranks) may illustrate the more than royal profusion that prevailed. From morn till eve, streams of wine flowed like a fountain from the nostrils of the Horse of the great Equestrian Statue of Constantine. The mighty halls of the Lateran palace, open to all ranks, were prodigally spread; and the games, sports, and buffooneries of the time, were in ample requisition. Apart, the Tribunessa, as Nina was rather unclassically entitled, entertained the dames of Rome; while the Tribune had so effectually silenced or conciliated Raimond, that the good Bishop shared his peculiar table--the only one admitted to that honour. As the eye ranged each saloon and hall--it beheld the space lined with all the nobility and knighthood--the wealth and strength--the learning and the beauty--of the Italian metropolis; mingled with ambassadors and noble strangers, even from beyond the Alps; (The simple and credulous briographer of Rienzi declares his fame to have reached the ears of the Soldan of Babylon.)--envoys not only of the free states that had welcomed the rise of the Tribune, but of the highborn and haughty tyrants who had first derided his arrogance, and now cringed to his power. There, were not only the ambassadors of Florence, of Sienna, of Arezzo (which last subjected its government to the Tribune,) of Todi, of Spoleto, and of countless other lesser towns and states, but of the dark and terrible Visconti, prince of Milan; of Obizzo of Ferrara, and the tyrant rulers of Verona and Bologna; even the proud and sagacious Malatesta, lord of Rimini, whose arm afterwards broke for awhile the power of Montreal, at the head of his Great Company, had deputed his representative in his most honoured noble. John di Vico, the worst and most malignant despot of his day, who had sternly defied the arms of the Tribune, now subdued and humbled, was there in person; and the ambassadors of Hungary and of Naples mingled with those of Bavaria and Bohemia, whose sovereigns that day had been cited to the Roman Judgment Court. The nodding of plumes, the glitter of jewels and cloth of gold, the rustling of silks and jingle of golden spurs, the waving of banners from the roof, the sounds of minstrelsy from the galleries above, all presented a picture of such power and state--a court and chivalry of such show--as the greatest of the feudal kings might have beheld with a sparkling eye and a swelling heart. But at that moment the cause and lord of all that splendour, recovered from his late exhilaration, sat moody and abstracted, remembering with a thoughtful brow the adventure of the past night, and sensible that amongst his gaudiest revellers lurked his intended murtherers. Amidst the swell of the minstrelsy and the pomp of the crowd, he felt that treason scowled beside him; and the image of the skeleton obtruding, as of old, its grim thought of death upon the feast, darkened the ruby of the wine, and chilled the glitter of the scene.
       It was while the feast was loudest that Rienzi's page was seen gliding through the banquet, and whispering several of the nobles; each bowed low, but changed colour as he received the message.
       "My Lord Savelli," said Orsini, himself trembling, "bear yourself more bravely. This must be meant in honour, not revenge. I suppose your summons corresponds with mine."
       "He--he--asks--asks--me to supper at the Capitol; a fri-endly meeting--(pest on his friendship!)--after the noise of the day."
       "The words addressed also to me!" said Orsini, turning to one of the Frangipani.
       Those who received the summons soon broke from the feast, and collected in a group, eagerly conferring. Some were for flight, but flight was confession; their number, rank, long and consecrated impunity, reassured them, and they resolved to obey. The old Colonna, the sole innocent Baron of the invited guests, was also the only one who refused the invitation. "Tush!" said he, peevishly; "here is feasting enough for one day! Tell the Tribune that ere he sups I hope to be asleep. Grey hairs cannot encounter all this fever of festivity."
       As Rienzi rose to depart, which he did early, for the banquet took place while yet morning, Raimond, eager to escape and confer with some of his spiritual friends, as to the report he should make to the Pontiff, was beginning his expressions of farewell, when the merciless Tribune said to him gravely--
       "My Lord, we want you on urgent business at the Capitol. A prisoner--a trial--perhaps (he added with his portentous and prophetic frown) an execution waits us! Come."
       "Verily, Tribune," stammered the good Bishop, "this is a strange time for execution!"
       "Last night was a time yet more strange.--Come."
       There was something in the way in which the final word was pronounced, that Raimond could not resist. He sighed, muttered, twitched his robes, and followed the Tribune. As he passed through the halls, the company rose on all sides. Rienzi repaid their salutations with smiles and whispers of frank courtesy and winning address. Young as he yet was, and of a handsome and noble presence, that took every advantage from splendid attire, and yet more from an appearance of intellectual command in his brow and eye, which the less cultivated signors of that dark age necessarily wanted--he glittered through the court as one worthy to form, and fitted to preside over, it; and his supposed descent from the Teuton Emperor, which, since his greatness, was universally bruited and believed abroad, seemed undeniably visible to the foreign lords in the majesty of his mien and the easy blandness of his address.
       "My Lord Prefect," said he to a dark and sullen personage in black velvet, the powerful and arrogant John di Vico, prefect of Rome, "we are rejoiced to find so noble a guest at Rome: we must repay the courtesy by surprising you in your own palace ere long;--nor will you, Signor (as he turned to the envoy from Tivoli,) refuse us a shelter amidst your groves and waterfalls ere the vintage be gathered. Methinks Rome, united with sweet Tivoli, grows reconciled to the Muses. Your suit is carried, Master Venoni: the council recognises its justice; but I reserved the news for this holyday--you do not blame me, I trust." This was whispered, with a half-affectionate frankness, to a worthy citizen, who, finding himself amidst so many of the great, would have shrunk from the notice of the Tribune; but it was the policy of Rienzi to pay an especial and marked attention to those engaged in commercial pursuits. As, after tarrying a moment or two with the merchant, he passed on, the tall person of the old Colonna caught his eye--
       "Signor," said he, with a profound inclination of his head, but with a slight emphasis of tone, "you will not fail us this evening."
       "Tribune--" began the Colonna.
       "We receive no excuse," interrupted the Tribune, hastily, and passed on.
       He halted for a few moments before a small group of men plainly attired, who were watching him with intense interest; for they, too, were scholars, and in Rienzi's rise they saw another evidence of that wonderful and sudden power which intellect had begun to assume over brute force. With these, as if abruptly mingled with congenial spirits, the Tribune relaxed all the gravity of his brow. Happier, perhaps, his living career--more unequivocal his posthumous renown--had his objects as his tastes been theirs!
       "Ah, carissime!" said he to one, whose arm he drew within his own,--"and how proceeds thy interpretation of the old marbles?--half unravelled? I rejoice to hear it! Confer with me as of old, I pray thee. Tomorrow--no, nor the day after, but next week--we will have a tranquil evening. Dear poet, your ode transported me to the days of Horace; yet, methinks, we do wrong to reject the vernacular for the Latin. You shake your head? Well, Petrarch thinks with you: his great epic moves with the stride of a giant--so I hear from his friend and envoy,--and here he is. My Laeluis, is that not your name with Petrarch? How shall I express my delight at his comforting, his inspiring letter? Alas! he overrates not my intentions, but my power. Of this hereafter."
       A slight shade darkened the Tribune's brow at these words: but moving on, a long line of nobles and princes on either side, he regained his self-possession, and the dignity he had dropped with his former equals. Thus he passed through the crowd, and gradually disappeared.
       "He bears him bravely," said one, as the revellers reseated themselves. "Noticed you the 'we'--the style royal?"
       "But it must be owned that he lords it well," said the ambassador of the Visconti: "less pride would be cringing to his haughty court."
       "Why," said a professor of Bologna, "why is the Tribune called proud? I see no pride in him."
       "Nor I," said a wealthy jeweller.
       While these, and yet more contradictory, comments followed the exit of the Tribune, he passed into the saloon, where Nina presided; and here his fair person and silver tongue ("Suavis colorataeque sententiae," according to the description of Petrarch) won him a more general favour with the matrons than he experienced with their lords, and not a little contrasted the formal and nervous compliments of the good Bishop, who served him on such occasions with an excellent foil.
       But as soon as these ceremonies were done, and Rienzi mounted his horse, his manner changed at once into a stern and ominous severity.
       "Vicar," said he, abruptly, to the Bishop, "we might well need your presence. Learn that at the Capitol now sits the Council in judgment upon an assassin. Last night, but for Heaven's mercy, I should have fallen a victim to a hireling's dagger, Knew you aught of this?"
       And he turned so sharply on the Bishop, that the poor canonist nearly dropped from his horse in surprise and terror.
       "I,--" said he.
       Rienzi smiled--"No, good my Lord Bishop! I see you are of no murtherer's mould. But to continue:--that I might not appear to act in mine own cause, I ordered the prisoner to be tried in my absence. In his trial (you marked the letter brought me at our banquet?)--"
       "Ay, and you changed colour."
       "Well I might: in his trial, I say, he has confessed that nine of the loftiest lords of Rome were his instigators. They sup with me tonight!--Vicar, forwards!" _
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Preface
Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.1. The Brothers
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.2. An Historical Survey...
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.3. The Brawl
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.4. An Adventure
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.5. The Description Of A Conspirator...
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.6. Irene In The Palace Of Adrian Di Castello
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.7. Upon Love And Lovers
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.8. The Enthusiastic Man...
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.9. "When The People Saw This Picture, Every One Marvelled"
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.10. A Rough Spirit Raised...
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.11. Nina Di Raselli
   Book 1. The Time, The Place, And The Men - Chapter 1.12. The Strange Adventures...
Book 2. The Revolution
   Book 2. The Revolution - Chapter 2.1. The Knight Of Provence, And His Proposal
   Book 2. The Revolution - Chapter 2.2. The Interview, And The Doubt
   Book 2. The Revolution - Chapter 2.3. The Situation Of A Popular Patrician...
   Book 2. The Revolution - Chapter 2.4. The Ambitious Citizen, And The Ambitious Soldier
   Book 2. The Revolution - Chapter 2.5. The Procession Of The Barons...
   Book 2. The Revolution - Chapter 2.6. The Conspirator Becomes The Magistrate
   Book 2. The Revolution - Chapter 2.7. Looking After The Halter When The Mare Is Stolen
   Book 2. The Revolution - Chapter 2.8. The Attack...
Book 3. The Freedom Without Law
   Book 3. The Freedom Without Law - Chapter 3.1. The Return Of Walter De Montreal To His Fortress
   Book 3. The Freedom Without Law - Chapter 3.2. The Life Of Love And War...
   Book 3. The Freedom Without Law - Chapter 3.3. The Conversation Between The Roman And The Provencal...
Book 4. The Triumph And The Pomp
   Book 4. The Triumph And The Pomp - Chapter 4.1. The Boy Angelo...
   Book 4. The Triumph And The Pomp - Chapter 4.2. The Blessing Of A Councillor...
   Book 4. The Triumph And The Pomp - Chapter 4.3. The Actor Unmasked
   Book 4. The Triumph And The Pomp - Chapter 4.4. The Enemy's Camp
   Book 4. The Triumph And The Pomp - Chapter 4.5. The Night And Its Incidents
   Book 4. The Triumph And The Pomp - Chapter 4.6. The Celebrated Citation
   Book 4. The Triumph And The Pomp - chapter 4.7. The Festival
Book 5. The Crisis
   Book 5. The Crisis - Chapter 5.1. The Judgment Of The Tribune
   Book 5. The Crisis - Chapter 5.2. The Flight
   Book 5. The Crisis - Chapter 5.3. The Battle
   Book 5. The Crisis - Chapter 5.4. The Hollowness Of The Base
   Book 5. The Crisis - Chapter 5.5. The Rottenness Of The Edifice
   Book 5. The Crisis - Chapter 5.6. The Fall Of The Temple
   Book 5. The Crisis - Chapter 5.7. The Successors...
Book 6. The Plague
   Book 6. The Plague - Chapter 6.1. The Retreat Of The Lover
   Book 6. The Plague - Chapter 6.2. The Seeker
   Book 6. The Plague - Chapter 6.3. The Flowers Amidst The Tombs
   Book 6. The Plague - Chapter 6.4. We Obtain What We Seek, And Know It Not
   Book 6. The Plague - Chapter 6.5. The Error
Book 7. The Prison
   Book 7. The Prison - Chapter 7.1. Avignon...
   Book 7. The Prison - Chapter 7.2. The Character Of A Warrior Priest...
   Book 7. The Prison - Chapter 7.3. Holy Men...
   Book 7. The Prison - Chapter 7.4. The Lady And The Page
   Book 7. The Prison - Chapter 7.5. The Inmate Of The Tower
   Book 7. The Prison - Chapter 7.6. The Scent Does Not Lie...
   Book 7. The Prison - Chapter 7.7. Vaucluse And Its Genius Loci...
   Book 7. The Prison - Chapter 7.8. The Crowd...
   Book 7. The Prison - Chapter 7.9. Albornoz And Nina
Book 8. The Grand Company
   Book 8. The Grand Company - Chapter 8.1. The Encampment
   Book 8. The Grand Company - Chapter 8.2. Adrian Once More The Guest Of Montreal
   Book 8. The Grand Company - Chapter 8.3. Faithful And Ill-Fated Love...
Book 9. The Return
   Book 9. The Return - Chapter 9.1. The Triumphal Entrance
   Book 9. The Return - Chapter 9.2. The Masquerade
   Book 9. The Return - Chapter 9.3. Adrian's Adventures At Palestrina
   Book 9. The Return - Chapter 9.4. The Position Of The Senator...
   Book 9. The Return - Chapter 9.5. The Biter Bit
   Book 9. The Return - Chapter 9.6. The Events Gather To The End
Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Chapter 10.1. The Conjunction Of Hostile Planets...
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Chapter 10.2. Montreal At Rome.--His Reception Of Angelo Villani
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Chapter 10.3. Montreal's Banquet
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Chapter 10.4. The Sentence Of Walter De Montreal
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Chapter 10.5. The Discovery
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Chapter 10.6. The Suspense
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Chapter 10.7. The Tax
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Chapter 10.8. The Threshold Of The Event
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Chapter The Last. The Close Of The Chase
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Appendix I...Life And Character Of Rienzi
   Book 10. The Lion Of Basalt - Appendix 2