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The Valley Of Decision
BOOK III - THE CHOICE   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 2
Edith Wharton
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       BOOK III - THE CHOICE: CHAPTER 2
       "To know Rome is to have assisted at the councils of destiny!" This cry
       of a more famous traveller must have struggled for expression in Odo's
       breast as the great city, the city of cities, laid her irresistible hold
       upon him. His first impression, as he drove in the clear evening light
       from the Porta del Popolo to his lodgings in the Via Sistina, was of a
       prodigious accumulation of architectural effects, a crowding of century
       on century, all fused in the crucible of the Roman sun, so that each
       style seemed linked to the other by some subtle affinity of colour.
       Nowhere else, surely, is the traveller's first sight so crowded with
       surprises, with conflicting challenges to eye and brain. Here, as he
       passed, was a fragment of the ancient Servian wall, there a new stucco
       shrine embedded in the bricks of a medieval palace; on one hand a lofty
       terrace crowned by a row of mouldering busts, on the other a tower with
       machicolated parapet, its flanks encrusted with bits of Roman sculpture
       and the escutcheons of seventeenth-century Popes. Opposite, perhaps, one
       of Fuga's golden-brown churches, with windy saints blowing out of their
       niches, overlooked the nereids of a barocco fountain, or an old house
       propped itself like a palsied beggar against a row of Corinthian
       columns; while everywhere flights of steps led up and down to hanging
       gardens or under archways, and each turn revealed some distant glimpse
       of convent-walls on the slope of a vineyard or of red-brown ruins
       profiled against the dim sea-like reaches of the Campagna.
       Afterward, as order was born out of chaos, and he began to thread his
       way among the centuries, this first vision lost something of its
       intensity; yet it was always, to the last, through the eye that Rome
       possessed him. Her life, indeed, as though in obedience to such a
       setting, was an external, a spectacular business, from the wild
       animation of the cattle-market in the Forum or the hucksters' traffic
       among the fountains of the Piazza Navona, to the pompous entertainments
       in the cardinals' palaces and the ever-recurring religious ceremonies
       and processions. Pius VI., in the reaction from Ganganelli's democratic
       ways, had restored the pomp and ceremonial of the Vatican with the
       religious discipline of the Holy Office; and never perhaps had Rome been
       more splendid on the surface or more silent and empty within. Odo, at
       times, as he moved through some assemblage of cardinals and nobles, had
       the sensation of walking through a huge reverberating palace, decked out
       with all the splendours of art but long since abandoned of men. The
       superficial animation, the taste for music and antiquities, all the
       dilettantisms of an idle and irresponsible society, seemed to him to
       shrivel to dust in the glare of that great past that lit up every corner
       of the present.
       Through his own connections, and the influence of de Crucis, he saw all
       that was best not only among the nobility, but in that ecclesiastical
       life now more than ever predominant in Rome. Here at last he was face to
       face with the mighty Sphinx, and with the bleaching bones of those who
       had tried to guess her riddle. Wherever he went these "lost adventurers"
       walked the streets with him, gliding between the Princes of the Church
       in the ceremonies of Saint Peter's and the Lateran, or mingling in the
       company that ascended the state staircase at some cardinal's levee.
       He met indeed many accomplished and amiable ecclesiastics, but it seemed
       to him that the more thoughtful among them had either acquired their
       peace of mind at the cost of a certain sensitiveness, or had taken
       refuge in a study of the past, as the early hermits fled to the desert
       from the disorders of Antioch and Alexandria. None seemed disposed to
       face the actual problems of life, and this attitude of caution or
       indifference had produced a stagnation of thought that contrasted
       strongly with the animation of Sir William Hamilton's circle in Naples.
       The result in Odo's case was a reaction toward the pleasures of his age;
       and of these Rome had but few to offer. He spent some months in the
       study of the antique, purchasing a few good examples of sculpture for
       the Duke, and then, without great reluctance, set out for Monte Alloro.
       Here he found a changed atmosphere. The Duke welcomed him handsomely,
       and bestowed the highest praise on the rarities he had collected; but
       for the moment the court was ruled by a new favourite, to whom Odo's
       coming was obviously unwelcome. This adroit adventurer, whose name was
       soon to become notorious throughout Europe, had taken the old prince by
       his darling weaknesses, and Odo, having no mind to share in the excesses
       of the precious couple, seized the first occasion to set out again on
       his travels.
       His course had now become one of aimless wandering; for prudence still
       forbade his return to Pianura, and his patron's indifference left him
       free to come and go as he chose. He had brought from Rome--that albergo
       d'ira--a settled melancholy of spirit, which sought refuge in such
       distractions as the moment offered. In such a mood change of scene was a
       necessity, and he resolved to employ the next months in visiting several
       of the mid-Italian cities. Toward Florence he was specially drawn by the
       fact that Alfieri now lived there; but, as often happens after such
       separations, the reunion was a disappointment. Alfieri, indeed, warmly
       welcomed his friend; but he was engrossed in his dawning passion for the
       Countess of Albany, and that lady's pitiable situation excluded all
       other interests from his mind. To Odo, to whom the years had brought an
       increasing detachment, this self-absorption seemed an arrest in growth;
       for Alfieri's early worship of liberty had not yet found its destined
       channel of expression, and for the moment his enthusiasms had shrunk to
       the compass of a romantic adventure. The friends parted after a few days
       of unsatisfying intercourse; and it was under the influence of this
       final disenchantment that Odo set out for Venice.
       It was the vintage season, and the travellers descended from the
       Apennines on a landscape diversified by the picturesque incidents of the
       grape-gathering. On every slope stood some villa with awnings spread,
       and merry parties were picnicking among the vines or watching the
       peasants at their work. Cantapresto, who had shown great reluctance at
       leaving Monte Alloro, where, as he declared, he found himself as snug as
       an eel in a pasty, was now all eagerness to press forward; and Odo was
       in the mood to allow any influence to decide his course. He had an
       invaluable courier in Cantapresto, whose enormous pretensions generally
       assured him the best lodging and the fastest conveyance to be obtained,
       and who was never happier than when outwitting a rival emissary, or
       bribing a landlord to serve up on Odo's table the repast ordered in
       advance for some distinguished traveller. His impatience to reach
       Venice, which he described as the scene of all conceivable delights, had
       on this occasion tripled his zeal, and they travelled rapidly to Padua,
       where he had engaged a burchiello for the passage down the Brenta. Here,
       however, he found he had been outdone at his own game; for the servant
       of an English Duke had captured the burchiello and embarked his noble
       party before Cantapresto reached the wharf. This being the season of the
       villeggiatura, when the Venetian nobility were exchanging visits on the
       mainland, every conveyance was in motion and no other boat to be had for
       a week; while as for the "bucentaur" or public bark, which was just then
       getting under way, it was already packed to the gunwale with Jews,
       pedlars and such vermin, and the captain swore by the three thousand
       relics of Saint Justina that he had no room on board for so much as a
       hungry flea.
       Odo, who had accompanied Cantapresto to the water-side, was listening to
       these assurances and to the soprano's vain invectives, when a
       well-dressed young man stepped up to the group. This gentleman, whose
       accent and dress showed him to be a Frenchman of quality, told Odo that
       he was come from Vicenza, whither he had gone to engage a company of
       actors for his friend the Procuratore Bra, who was entertaining a
       distinguished company at his villa on the Brenta; that he was now
       returning with his players, and that he would be glad to convey Odo so
       far on his road to Venice. His friend's seat, he added, was near Oriago,
       but a few miles above Fusina, where a public conveyance might always be
       found; so that Odo would doubtless be able to proceed the same night to
       Venice.
       This civil offer Odo at once accepted, and the Frenchman thereupon
       suggested that, as the party was to set out the next day at sunrise, the
       two should sup together and pass the intervening hours in such
       diversions as the city offered. They returned to the inn, where the
       actors were also lodged, and Odo's host having ordered a handsome
       supper, proposed, with his guest's permission, to invite the leading
       members of the company to partake of it. He departed on this errand; and
       great was Odo's wonder, when the door reopened, to discover, among the
       party it admitted, his old acquaintance of Vercelli, the Count of
       Castelrovinato. The latter, whose dress and person had been refurbished,
       and who now wore an air of rakish prosperity, greeted him with evident
       pleasure, and, while their entertainer was engaged in seating the ladies
       of the company, gave him a brief account of the situation.
       The young French gentleman (whom he named as the Marquis de
       Coeur-Volant) had come to Italy some months previously on the grand
       tour, and having fallen a victim to the charms of Venice, had declared
       that, instead of continuing on his travels, he meant to complete his
       education in that famous school of pleasure. Being master of his own
       fortune, he had hired a palace on the Grand Canal, had dispatched his
       governor (a simple archaeologist) on a mission of exploration to Sicily
       and Greece, and had devoted himself to an assiduous study of Venetian
       manners. Among those contributing to his instruction was Mirandolina of
       Chioggia, who had just completed a successful engagement at the theatre
       of San Moise in Venice. Wishing to detain her in the neighbourhood, her
       adorer had prevailed on his friend the Procuratore to give a series of
       comedies at his villa of Bellocchio and had engaged to provide him with
       a good company of performers. Miranda was of course selected as prima
       amorosa; and the Marquess, under Castelrovinato's guidance, had then set
       out to collect the rest of the company. This he had succeeded in doing,
       and was now returning to Bellocchio, where Miranda was to meet them. Odo
       was the more diverted at the hazard which had brought him into such
       company, as the Procuratore Bra was one of the noblemen to whom the old
       Duke had specially recommended him. On learning this, the Marquess urged
       him to present his letter of introduction on arriving at Bellocchio,
       where the Procuratore, who was noted for hospitality to strangers, would
       doubtless insist on his joining the assembled party. This Odo declined
       to do; but his curiosity to see Mirandolina made him hope that chance
       would soon throw him in the Procuratore's way.
       Meanwhile supper was succeeded by music and dancing, and the company
       broke up only in time to proceed to the landing-place where their barge
       awaited them. This was a private burchiello of the Procuratore's with a
       commodious antechamber for the servants, and a cabin cushioned in
       damask. Into this agreeable retreat the actresses were packed with all
       their bags and band-boxes; and their travelling-cloaks being rolled into
       pillows, they were soon asleep in a huddle of tumbled finery.
       Odo and his host preferred to take the air on deck. The sun was rising
       above the willow-clad banks of the Brenta, and it was pleasant to glide
       in the clear early light past sleeping gardens and villas, and vineyards
       where the peasants were already at work. The wind setting from the sea,
       they travelled slowly and had full leisure to view the succession of
       splendid seats interspersed with gardens, the thriving villages, and the
       poplar-groves festooned with vines. Coeur-Volant spoke eloquently of the
       pleasures to be enjoyed in this delightful season of the villeggiatura.
       "Nowhere," said he, "do people take their pleasures so easily and
       naturally as in Venice. My countrymen claim a superiority in this art,
       and it may be they possessed it a generation ago. But what a morose
       place is France become since philosophy has dethroned enjoyment! If you
       go on a visit to one of our noblemen's seats, what do you find there, I
       ask? Cards, comedies, music, the opportunity for an agreeable intrigue
       in the society of your equals? No--but a hostess engaged in suckling and
       bathing her brats, or in studying chemistry and optics with some dirty
       school-master, who is given the seat of honour at table and a pavilion
       in the park to which he may retire when weary of the homage of the
       great; while as for the host, he is busy discussing education or
       political economy with his unfortunate guests, if, indeed, he is not
       dragging them through leagues of mud and dust to inspect his latest
       experiments in forestry and agriculture, or to hear a pack of snuffling
       school-children singing hymns to the God of Nature! And what," he
       continued, "is the result of it all? The peasants are starving, the
       taxes are increasing, the virtuous landlords are ruining themselves in
       farming on scientific principles, the tradespeople are grumbling because
       the nobility do not spend their money in Paris, the court is dull, the
       clergy are furious, the Queen mopes, the King is frightened, and the
       whole French people are yawning themselves to death from Normandy to
       Provence."
       "Yes," said Castelrovinato with his melancholy smile, "the test of
       success is to have had one's money's worth; but experience, which is
       dried pleasure, is at best a dusty diet, as we know. Yonder, in a fold
       of those hills," he added, pointing to the cluster of Euganean mountains
       just faintly pencilled above the plain, "lies the little fief from which
       I take my name. Acre by acre, tree by tree, it has gone to pay for my
       experiments, not in agriculture but in pleasure; and whenever I look
       over at it from Venice and reflect on what each rood of ground or trunk
       of tree has purchased, I wonder to see my life as bare as ever for all
       that I have spent on it."
       The young Marquess shrugged his shoulders. "And would your life," he
       exclaimed, "have been a whit less bare had you passed it in your
       ancestral keep among those windy hills, in the company of swineherds and
       charcoal-burners, with a milk-maid for your mistress and the village
       priest for your partner at picquet?"
       "Perhaps not," the other agreed. "There is a tale of a man who spent his
       life in wishing he had lived differently; and when he died he was
       surrounded by a throng of spectral shapes, each one exactly like the
       other, who, on his asking what they were, replied: 'We are all the
       different lives you might have lived.'"
       "If you are going to tell ghost-stories," cried Coeur-Volant, "I will
       call for a bottle of Canary!"
       "And I," rejoined the Count good-humouredly, "will try to coax the
       ladies forth with a song;" and picking up his lute, which always lay
       within reach, he began to sing in the Venetian dialect:--
       There's a villa on the Brenta
       Where the statues, white as snow,
       All along the water-terrace
       Perch like sea-gulls in a row.
       There's a garden on the Brenta
       Where the fairest ladies meet,
       Picking roses from the trellis
       For the gallants at their feet.
       There's an arbour on the Brenta
       Made of yews that screen the light,
       Where I kiss my girl at midday
       Close as lovers kiss at night.
       The players soon emerged at this call and presently the deck resounded
       with song and laughter. All the company were familiar with the Venetian
       bacaroles, and Castelrovinato's lute was passed from hand to hand, as
       one after another, incited by the Marquess's Canary, tried to recall
       some favourite measure--"La biondina in gondoleta" or "Guarda, che bella
       luna."
       Meanwhile life was stirring in the villages and gardens, and groups of
       people appearing on the terraces overhanging the water. Never had Odo
       beheld a livelier scene. The pillared houses with their rows of statues
       and vases, the flights of marble steps descending to the gilded
       river-gates, where boats bobbed against the landings and boatmen gasped
       in the shade of their awnings; the marble trellises hung with grapes,
       the gardens where parterres of flowers and parti-coloured gravel
       alternated with the dusk of tunnelled yew-walks; the company playing at
       bowls in the long alleys, or drinking chocolate in gazebos above the
       river; the boats darting hither and thither on the stream itself, the
       travelling-chaises, market-waggons and pannier-asses crowding the
       causeway along the bank--all were unrolled before him with as little
       effect of reality as the episodes woven in some gaily-tinted tapestry.
       Even the peasants in the vineyards seemed as merry and thoughtless as
       the quality in their gardens. The vintage-time is the holiday of the
       rural year and the day's work was interspersed with frequent intervals
       of relaxation. At the villages where the burchiello touched for
       refreshments, handsome young women in scarlet bodices came on board with
       baskets of melons, grapes, figs and peaches; and under the trellises on
       the landings, lads and girls with flowers in their hair were dancing the
       monferrina to the rattle of tambourines or the chant of some wandering
       ballad-singer. These scenes were so engaging to the comedians that they
       could not be restrained from going ashore and mingling in the village
       diversions; and the Marquess, though impatient to rejoin his divinity,
       was too volatile not to be drawn into the adventure. The whole party
       accordingly disembarked, and were presently giving an exhibition of
       their talents to the assembled idlers, the Pantaloon, Harlequin and
       Doctor enacting a comical intermezzo which Cantapresto had that morning
       composed for them, while Scaramouch and Columbine joined the dancers,
       and the rest of the company, seizing on a train of donkeys laden with
       vegetables for the Venetian market, stripped these patient animals of
       their panniers, and mounting them bareback started a Corso around the
       village square amid the invectives of the drivers and the applause of
       the crowd.
       Day was declining when the Marquess at last succeeded in driving his
       flock to their fold, and the moon sent a quiver of brightness across the
       water as the burchiello touched at the landing of a villa set amid
       close-massed foliage high above the river. Gardens peopled with statues
       descended from the portico of the villa to the marble platform on the
       water's edge, where a throng of boatmen in the Procuratore's livery
       hurried forward to receive the Marquess and his companions. The
       comedians, sobered by the magnificence of their surroundings, followed
       their leader like awe-struck children. Light and music streamed from the
       long facade overhead, but the lower gardens lay hushed and dark, the air
       fragrant with unseen flowers, the late moon just burnishing the edges of
       the laurel-thickets from which, now and again, a nightingale's song
       gushed in a fountain of sound. Odo, spellbound, followed the others
       without a thought of his own share in the adventure. Never before had
       beauty so ministered to every sense. He felt himself lost in his
       surroundings, absorbed in the scent and murmur of the night.
       Content of BOOK III - THE CHOICE: CHAPTER 2 [Edith Wharton's novel: The Valley Of Decision]
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本书目录

BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 1
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 2
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 3
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 4
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 5
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 6
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 7
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 8
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 9
BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 1
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 2
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 3
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 4
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 5
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 6
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 7
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 8
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 9
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 10
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 11
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 12
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 13
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 14
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 15
BOOK III - THE CHOICE
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 1
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 2
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 3
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 4
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 5
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 6
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 7
BOOK IV - THE REWARD
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 1
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 2
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 3
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 4
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 5
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 6
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 7
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 8
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 9
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 10
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 11