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The Valley Of Decision
BOOK IV - THE REWARD   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 3
Edith Wharton
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       BOOK IV - THE REWARD: CHAPTER 3
       The new Duke sat in his closet. The walls had been stripped of their
       pious relics and lined with books, and above the fireplace hung the
       Venus of Giorgione, liberated at last from her long imprisonment. The
       windows stood open, admitting the soft September air. Twilight had
       fallen on the gardens, and through it a young moon floated above the
       cypresses.
       On just such an evening three years earlier he had ridden down the slope
       of the Monte Baldo with Fulvia Vivaldi at his side. How often, since, he
       had relived the incidents of that night! With singular precision they
       succeeded each other in his thoughts. He felt the wild sweep of the
       storm across the lake, the warmth of her nearness, the sense of her
       complete trust in him; then their arrival at the inn, the dazzle of
       light as they crossed the threshold, and de Crucis confronting them
       within. He heard her voice pleading with him in every accent that pride
       and tenderness and a noble loyalty could command; he felt her will
       slowly dominating his, like a supernatural power forcing him into his
       destined path; he felt--and with how profound an irony of spirit!--the
       passion of self-dedication in which he had taken up his task.
       He had known moments of happiness since; moments when he believed in
       himself and in his calling, and felt himself indeed the man she thought
       him. That was in the exaltation of the first months, when his
       opportunities had seemed as boundless as his dreams, and he had not yet
       learned that the sovereign's power may be a kind of spiritual prison to
       the man. Since then, indeed, he had known another kind of happiness, had
       been aware of a secret voice whispering within him that she was right
       and had chosen wisely for him; but this was when he had realised that he
       lived in a prison, and had begun to admire the sumptuous adornment of
       its walls. For a while the mere external show of power amused him, and
       his imagination was charmed by the historic dignity of his surroundings.
       In such a setting, against the background of such a past, it seemed easy
       to play the benefactor and friend of the people. His sensibility was
       touched by the contrast, and he saw himself as a picturesque figure
       linking the new dreams of liberty and equality to the feudal traditions
       of a thousand years. But this masquerading soon ceased to divert him.
       The round of court ceremonial wearied him, and books and art lost their
       fascination. The more he varied his amusements the more monotonous they
       became, the more he crowded his life with petty duties the more empty of
       achievement it seemed.
       At first he had hoped to bury his personal disappointments in the task
       of reconstructing his little state; but on every side he felt a mute
       resistance to his efforts. The philosophical faction had indeed poured
       forth pamphlets celebrating his reforms, and comparing his reign to the
       return of the Golden Age. But it was not for the philosophers that he
       laboured; and the benefits of free speech, a free press, a secular
       education did not, after all, reach those over whom his heart yearned.
       It was the people he longed to serve; and the people were hungry, were
       fever-stricken, were crushed with tithes and taxes. It was hopeless to
       try to reach them by the diffusion of popular knowledge. They must first
       be fed and clothed; and before they could be fed and clothed the chains
       of feudalism must be broken.
       Men like Gamba and Andreoni saw this clearly enough; but it was not from
       them that help could come. The nobility and clergy must be coaxed or
       coerced into sympathy with the new movement; and to accomplish this
       exceeded Odo's powers. In France, the revolt from feudalism had found
       some of its boldest leaders in the very class that had most to lose by
       the change; but in Italy fewer causes were at work to set such
       disinterested passions in motion. South of the Alps liberalism was
       merely one of the new fashions from France: the men ran after the
       pamphlets from Paris as the women ran after the cosmetics; and the
       politics went no deeper than the powder. Even among the freest
       intellects liberalism resulted in a new way of thinking rather in a new
       way of living. Nowhere among the better classes was there any desire to
       attack existing institutions. The Church had never troubled the Latin
       consciousness. The Renaissance had taught cultivated Italians how to
       live at peace with a creed in which they no longer believed; and their
       easy-going scepticism was combined with a traditional conviction that
       the priest knew better than any one how to deal with the poor, and that
       the clergy were of distinct use in relieving the individual conscience
       of its obligation to its fellows.
       It was against such deep-seated habits of thought that Odo had to
       struggle. Centuries of fierce individualism, or of sullen apathy under a
       foreign rule, had left the Italians incapable of any concerted political
       action; but suspicion, avarice and vanity, combined with a lurking fear
       of the Church, united all parties in a kind of passive opposition to
       reform. Thus the Duke's resolve to put the University under lay
       direction had excited the enmity of the Barnabites, who had been at its
       head since the suppression of the Society of Jesus; his efforts to
       partition among the peasantry the Caccia del Vescovo, that great waste
       domain of the see of Pianura, had roused a storm of fear among all who
       laid claim to feudal rights; and his own personal attempts at
       retrenchment, which necessitated the suppression of numerous court
       offices, had done more than anything else to increase his unpopularity.
       Even the people, in whose behalf these sacrifices were made, looked
       askance at his diminished state, and showed a perverse sympathy with the
       dispossessed officials who had taken so picturesque a part in the public
       ceremonials of the court. All Odo's philosophy could not fortify him
       against such disillusionments. He felt the lack of Fulvia's
       unquestioning faith not only in the abstract beauty of the new ideals
       but in their immediate adaptability to the complex conditions of life.
       Only a woman's convictions, nourished on sentiment and self-sacrifice,
       could burn with that clear unwavering flame: his own beliefs were at the
       mercy of every wind of doubt or ingratitude that blew across his
       unsheltered sensibilities.
       It was more than a year since he had had news of Fulvia. For a while
       they had exchanged letters, and it had been a consolation to tell her of
       his struggles and experiments, of his many failures and few results. She
       had encouraged him to continue the struggle, had analysed his various
       plans of reform, and had given her enthusiastic support to the
       partitioning of the Bishop's fief and the secularisation of the
       University. Her own life, she said, was too uneventful to write of; but
       she spoke of the kindness of her hosts, the Professor and his wife, of
       the simple unceremonious way of living in the old Calvinist city, and of
       the number of distinguished persons drawn thither by its atmosphere of
       intellectual and social freedom.
       Odo suspected a certain colourlessness in the life she depicted. The
       tone of her letters was too uniformly cheerful not to suggest a lack of
       emotional variety; and he knew that Fulvia's nature, however much she
       fancied it under the rule of reason, was in reality fed by profound
       currents of feeling. Something of her old ardour reappeared when she
       wrote of the possibility of publishing her father's book. Her friends in
       Geneva, having heard of her difficulty with the Dutch publisher, had
       undertaken to vindicate her claims; and they had every hope that the
       matter would be successfully concluded. The joy of renewed activity with
       which this letter glowed would have communicated itself to Odo had he
       received it at a different time; but it came on the day of his marriage,
       and since then he had never written to her.
       Now he felt a sudden longing to break the silence between them, and
       seating himself at his desk he began to write. A moment later there was
       a knock on the door and one of his gentlemen entered. The Count Vittorio
       Alfieri, with a dozen horses and as many servants, was newly arrived at
       the Golden Cross, and desired to know when he might have the honour of
       waiting on his Highness.
       Odo felt the sudden glow of pleasure that the news of Alfieri's coming
       always brought. Here was a friend at last! He forgot the constraint of
       their last meeting in Florence, and remembered only the happy
       interchange of ideas and emotions that had been one of the quickening
       influences of his youth.
       Alfieri, in the intervening years, was grown to be one of the foremost
       figures in Italy. His love for the Countess of Albany, persisting
       through the vicissitudes of her tragic marriage, had rallied the
       scattered forces of his nature. Ambitious to excel for her sake, to show
       himself worthy of such a love, he had at last shaken off the strange
       torpor of his youth, and revealed himself as the poet for whom Italy
       waited. In ten months of feverish effort he had poured forth fourteen
       tragedies--among them the Antigone, the Virginia, and the Conjuration of
       the Pazzi. Italy started up at the sound of a new voice vibrating with
       passions she had long since unlearned. Since Filicaja's thrilling appeal
       to his enslaved country no poet had challenged the old Roman spirit
       which Petrarch had striven to rouse. While the literati were busy
       discussing Alfieri's blank verse, while the grammarians wrangled over
       his syntax and ridiculed his solecisms, the public, heedless of such
       niceties, was glowing with the new wine which he had poured into the old
       vessels of classic story. "Liberty" was the cry that rang on the lips of
       all his heroes, in accents so new and stirring that his audience never
       wearied of its repetition. It was no secret that his stories of ancient
       Greece and Rome were but allegories meant to teach the love of freedom;
       yet the Antigone had been performed in the private theatre of the
       Spanish Ambassador at Rome, the Virginia had been received with applause
       on the public boards at Turin, and after the usual difficulties with the
       censorship the happy author had actually succeeded in publishing his
       plays at Siena. These volumes were already in Odo's hands, and a
       manuscript copy of the Odes to Free America was being circulated among
       the liberals in Pianura, and had been brought to his notice by Andreoni.
       To those hopeful spirits who looked for the near approach of a happier
       era, Alfieri was the inspired spokesman of reform, the heaven-sent
       prophet who was to lead his country out of bondage. The eyes of the
       Italian reformers were fixed with passionate eagerness on the course of
       events in England and France. The conclusion of peace between England
       and America, recently celebrated in Alfieri's fifth Ode, seemed to the
       most sceptical convincing proof that the rights of man were destined to
       a speedy triumph throughout the civilised world. It was not of a united
       Italy that these enthusiasts dreamed. They were not so much patriots as
       philanthropists; for the teachings of Rousseau and his school, while
       intensifying the love of man for man, had proportionately weakened the
       sense of patriotism, of the interets du clocher. The new man prided
       himself on being a citizen of the world, on sympathising as warmly with
       the poetic savage of Peru as with his own prosaic and narrow-minded
       neighbours. Indeed, the prevalent belief that the savage's mode of life
       was much nearer the truth than that of civilised Europeans, made it
       appear superfluous to enter into the grievances and difficulties of what
       was but a passing phase of human development. To cast off clothes and
       codes, and live in a peaceful socialism "under the amiable reign of
       Truth and Nature," seemed on the whole much easier than to undertake the
       systematic reform of existing abuses.
       To such dreamers--whose ideas were those of the majority of intelligent
       men in France and Italy--Alfieri's high-sounding tirades embodied the
       noblest of political creeds; and even the soberer judgment of statesmen
       and men of affairs was captivated by the grandeur of his verse and the
       heroic audacity of his theme. For the first time in centuries the
       Italian Muse spoke with the voice of a man; and every man's heart in
       Italy sprang up at the call.
       In the midst of these triumphs, fate in the shape of Cardinal York had
       momentarily separated Alfieri from his mistress, despatching the
       too-tender Countess to a discreet retreat in Alsace, and signifying to
       her turbulent adorer that he was not to follow her. Distracted by this
       prohibition, Alfieri had resumed the nomadic habits of his youth, now
       wandering from one Italian city to another, now pushing as far as Paris,
       which he hated but was always revisiting, now dashing across the Channel
       to buy thoroughbreds in England--for his passion for horses was
       unabated. He was lately returned from such an expedition, having led his
       cavalcade across the Alps in person, with a boyish delight in the
       astonishment which this fantastic exploit excited.
       The meeting between the two friends was all that Odo could have wished.
       Though affecting to scorn the courts of princes, Alfieri was not averse
       to showing himself there as the poet of the democracy, and to hearing
       his heroes mouth their tyrannicidal speeches on the boards of royal and
       ducal stages. He had lately made some stay in Milan, where he had
       arrived in time to see his Antigone performed before the vice-regal
       court, and to be enthusiastically acclaimed as the high-priest of
       liberty by a community living placidly under the Austrian yoke. Alfieri
       was not the man to be struck by such incongruities. It was his fate to
       formulate creeds in which he had no faith: to recreate the political
       ideals of Italy while bitterly opposed to any actual effort at reform,
       and to be regarded as the mouthpiece of the Revolution while he
       execrated the Revolution with the whole force of his traditional
       instincts. As usual he was too deeply engrossed in his own affairs to
       feel much interest in any others; but it was enough for Odo to clasp the
       hand of the man who had given a voice to the highest aspirations of his
       countrymen. The poet gave more than he could expect from the friend; and
       he was satisfied to listen to Alfieri's account of his triumphs,
       interspersed with bitter diatribes against the public whose applause he
       courted, and the Pope to whom, on bended knee, he had offered a copy of
       his plays.
       Odo eagerly pressed Alfieri to remain in Pianura, offering to put one of
       the ducal villas at his disposal, and suggesting that the Virginia
       should be performed before the court on the Duchess's birthday.
       "It is true," he said, "that we can offer you but an indifferent company
       of actors; but it might be possible to obtain one or two of the leading
       tragedians from Turin or Milan, so that the principal parts should at
       least be worthily filled."
       Alfieri replied with a contemptuous gesture. "Your Highness, our leading
       tragedians are monkeys trained to dance to the tune of Goldoni and
       Metastasio. The best are no better than the worst. We have no tragedians
       in Italy because--hitherto--we have had no tragic dramatist." He drew
       himself up and thrust a hand in his bosom. "Ah!" he exclaimed, "if I
       could see the part of Virginia acted by the lady who recently recited,
       before a small company in Milan, my Odes to Free America! There indeed
       were fire, sublimity and passion! And the countenance had not lost its
       freshness, the eye its lustre. But," he suddenly added, "your Highness
       knows of whom I speak. The lady is Fulvia Vivaldi, the daughter of the
       philosopher at whose feet we sat in our youth."
       Fulvia Vivaldi! Odo raised his head with a start. She had left Geneva
       then, had returned to Italy. The Alps no longer divided them--a scant
       day's journey would bring him to her side! It was strange how the mere
       thought seemed to fill the room with her presence. He felt her in the
       quickened beat of his pulses, in the sudden lightness of the air, in a
       lifting and widening of the very bounds of thought.
       From Alfieri he learned that she had lived for some months in the
       household of the distinguished naturalist, Count Castiglione, with whose
       daughter's education she was charged. In such surroundings her wit and
       learning could not fail to attract the best company of Milan, and she
       was become one of the most noted figures of the capital. There had been
       some talk of offering her the chair of poetry at the Brera; but the
       report of her liberal views had deterred the faculty. Meanwhile the very
       fact that she represented the new school of thought gave an added zest
       to her conversation in a society which made up for its mild servitude
       under the Austrian by much talk of liberalism and independence. The
       Signorina Vivaldi became the fashion. The literati celebrated her
       scholarship, the sonneteers her eloquence and beauty; and no foreigner
       on the grand tour was content to leave Milan without having beheld the
       fair prodigy and heard her recite Petrarch's Ode to Italy, or the latest
       elegy of Pindamonte.
       Odo scarce knew with what feelings he listened. He could not but
       acknowledge that such a life was better suited to one of Fulvia's gifts
       and ambitions than the humdrum existence of a Swiss town; yet his first
       sensation was one of obscure jealousy, of reluctance to think of her as
       having definitely broken with the past. He had pictured her as adrift,
       like himself, on a dark sea of uncertainties; and to learn that she had
       found a safe anchorage was almost to feel himself deserted.
       The court was soon busy with preparations for the coming performance. A
       celebrated actress from Venice was engaged to play the part of Virginia,
       and the rehearsals went rapidly forward under the noble author's
       supervision. At last the great day arrived, and for the first time in
       the history of the little theatre, operetta and pastoral were replaced
       by the buskined Muse of tragedy. The court and all the nobility were
       present, and though it was no longer thought becoming for ecclesiastics
       to visit the theatre, the easy-going Bishop appeared in a side-box in
       company with his chaplains and the Vicar-general.
       The performance was brilliantly successful. Frantic applause greeted the
       tirades of the young Icilius. Every outburst against the abuse of
       privileges and the insolence of the patricians was acclaimed by
       ministers and courtiers, and the loudest in approval were the Marquess
       Pievepelago, the recognised representative of the clericals, the
       Marchioness of Boscofolto, whose harsh enforcement of her feudal rights
       was among the bitterest grievances of the peasantry, and the good
       Bishop, who had lately roused himself from his habitual indolence to
       oppose the threatened annexation of the Caccia del Vescovo. One and all
       proclaimed their ardent sympathy with the proletariat, their scorn of
       tyranny and extortion in high places; and if the Marchioness, on her
       return home, ordered one of her linkmen to be flogged for having trod on
       her gown; if Pievepelago the next morning refused to give audience to a
       poor devil of a pamphleteer that was come to ask his intercession with
       the Holy Office; if the Bishop at the same moment concluded the purchase
       of six able-bodied Turks from the galleys of his Serenity the Doge of
       Genoa--it is probable that, like the illustrious author of the drama,
       all were unconscious of any incongruity between their sentiments and
       actions.
       As to Odo, seated in the state box, with Maria Clementina at his side,
       and the court dignitaries grouped in the background, he had not listened
       to a dozen lines before all sense of his surroundings vanished and he
       became the passive instrument on which the poet played his mighty
       harmonies. All the incidental difficulties of life, all the vacillations
       of an unsatisfied spirit, were consumed in that energising emotion which
       seemed to leave every faculty stripped for action. Profounder meaning
       and more subtle music he had found in the great poets of the past; but
       here was an appeal to the immediate needs of the hour, uttered in notes
       as thrilling as a trumpet-call, and brought home to every sense by the
       vivid imagery of the stage. Once more he felt the old ardour of belief
       that Fulvia's nearness had fanned in him. His convictions had flagged
       rather than his courage: now they started up as at her summons, and he
       heard the ring of her voice in every line.
       He left the theatre still vibrating with this new inrush of life, and
       jealous of any interruption that should check it. The Duchess's birthday
       was being celebrated by illuminations and fireworks, and throngs of
       merry-makers filled the moonlit streets; but Odo, after appearing for a
       moment at his wife's side on the balcony above the public square,
       withdrew quietly to his own apartments. The casement of his closet stood
       wide, and he leaned against the window-frame, looking out on the silent
       radiance of the gardens. As he stood there he saw two figures flit
       across the farther end of one of the long alleys. The moonlight
       surrendered them for a moment, the shade almost instantly reclaiming
       them--strayed revellers, doubtless, escaping from the lights and music
       of the Duchess's circle.
       A knock roused the Duke and he remembered that he had bidden Gamba wait
       on him after the performance. He had been curious to hear what
       impression Alfieri's drama had produced upon the hunchback; but now any
       interruption seemed unwelcome, and he turned to Gamba with a gesture of
       dismissal.
       The latter however remained on the threshold.
       "Your Highness," he said, "the bookseller Andreoni craves the privilege
       of an audience."
       "Andreoni? At this hour?"
       "For reasons so urgent that he makes no doubt of your Highness's
       consent; and to prove his good faith, and the need of presenting himself
       at so undue an hour, and in this private manner, he charged me to give
       this to your Highness."
       He laid in the Duke's hand a small object in blackened silver, which on
       nearer inspection proved to be the ducal coat-of-arms.
       Odo stood gazing fixedly at this mysterious token, which seemed to come
       as an answer to his inmost thoughts. His heart beat high with confused
       hopes and fears, and he could hardly control the voice in which he
       answered: "Bid Andreoni come to me."
       Content of BOOK IV - THE REWARD: CHAPTER 3 [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