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The Valley Of Decision
BOOK IV - THE REWARD   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 11
Edith Wharton
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       BOOK IV - THE REWARD: CHAPTER 11
       The joy of reprisals lasted no longer than a summer storm. To hurt, to
       silence, to destroy, was too easy to be satisfying. The passions of his
       ancestors burned low in Odo's breast: though he felt Bracciaforte's fury
       in his veins he could taste no answering gratification of revenge. And
       the spirit on which he would have spent his hatred was not here or
       there, as an embodied faction, but everywhere as an intangible
       influence. The acqua tofana of his enemies had pervaded every fibre of
       the state.
       The mist of anguish lifted, he saw himself alone among ruins. For a
       moment Fulvia's glowing faith had hung between him and a final vision of
       the truth; and as his convictions weakened he had replaced them with an
       immense pity, an all-sufficing hope. Sentimental verbiage: he saw it
       clearly now. He had been the dupe of the old word-jugglery which was
       forever confounding fact and fancy in men's minds. For it was
       essentially an age of words: the world was drunk with them, as it had
       once been drunk with action; and the former was the deadlier drug of the
       two. He looked about him languidly, letting the facts of life filter
       slowly through his faculties. The sources of energy were so benumbed in
       him that he felt like a man whom long disease had reduced to
       helplessness and who must laboriously begin his bodily education again.
       Hate was the only passion which survived, and that was but a deaf
       intransitive emotion coiled in his nature's depths.
       Sickness at last brought its obliteration. He sank into gulfs of
       weakness and oblivion, and when the rise of the tide floated him back to
       life, it was to a life as faint and colourless as infancy. Colourless
       too were the boundaries on which he looked out: the narrow enclosure of
       white walls, opening on a slit of pale spring landscape. His hands lay
       before him, white and helpless on the white coverlet of his bed. He
       raised his eyes and saw de Crucis at his side. Then he began to
       remember. There had been preceding intervals of consciousness, and in
       one of them, in answer perhaps to some vaguely-uttered wish for light
       and air, he had been carried out of the palace and the city to the
       Benedictine monastery on its wooded knoll beyond the Piana. Then the
       veil had dropped again, and his spirit had wandered in a dim place of
       shades. There was a faint sweetness in coming back at last to familiar
       sights and sounds. They no longer hurt like pressure on an aching nerve:
       they seemed rather, now, the touch of a reassuring hand.
       As the contact with life became closer and more sustained he began to
       watch himself curiously, wondering what instincts and habits of thought
       would survive his long mental death. It was with a bitter, almost
       pitiable disappointment that he found the old man growing again in him.
       Life, with a mocking hand, brought him the cast-off vesture of his past,
       and he felt himself gradually compressed again into the old passions and
       prejudices. Yet he wore them with a difference--they were a cramping
       garment rather than a living sheath. He had brought back from his lonely
       voyagings a sense of estrangement deeper than any surface-affinity with
       things.
       As his physical strength returned, and he was able to leave his room and
       walk through the long corridors to the outer air, he felt the old spell
       which the life of Monte Cassino had cast on him. The quiet garden, with
       its clumps of box and lavender between paths converging to the statue of
       Saint Benedict; the cloisters paved with the monks' nameless graves; the
       traces of devotional painting left here and there on the weather-beaten
       walls, like fragments of prayer in a world-worn mind: these formed a
       circle of tranquillising influences in which he could gradually
       reacquire the habit of living.
       He had never deceived himself as to the cause of the riots. He knew from
       Gamba and Andreoni that the liberals and the court, for once working in
       unison, had provoked the blind outburst of fanaticism which a rasher
       judgment might have ascribed to the clergy. The Dominicans, bigoted and
       eager for power, had been ready enough to serve such an end, and some of
       the begging orders had furnished the necessary points of contact with
       the people; but the movement was at bottom purely political, and
       represented the resistance of the privileged classes to any attack on
       their inherited rights.
       As such, he could no longer regard it as completely unreasonable. He was
       beginning to feel the social and political significance of those old
       restrictions and barriers against which his early zeal had tilted.
       Certainly in the ideal state the rights and obligations of the different
       classes would be more evenly adjusted. But the ideal state was a figment
       of the brain. The real one, as Crescenti had long ago pointed out, was
       the gradual and heterogeneous product of remote social conditions,
       wherein every seeming inconsistency had its roots in some bygone need,
       and the character of each class, with its special passions, ignorances
       and prejudices, was the sum total of influences so ingrown and
       inveterate that they had become a law of thought. All this, however,
       seemed rather matter for philosophic musing than for definite action.
       His predominant feeling was still that of remoteness from the immediate
       issues of life: the soeva indignatio had been succeeded by a great calm.
       The soothing influences of the monastic life had doubtless helped to
       tide him over the stormy passage of returning consciousness. His
       sensitiveness to these influences inclined him for the first time to
       consider them analytically. Hitherto he had regarded the Church as a
       skilfully-adjusted engine, the product of human passions scientifically
       combined to obtain the greatest sum of tangible results. Now he saw that
       he had never penetrated beneath the surface. For the Church which
       grasped, contrived, calculated, struggled for temporal possessions and
       used material weapons against spiritual foes--this outer Church was
       nothing more than the body, which, like any other animal body, had to
       care for its own gross needs, nourish, clothe, defend itself, fight for
       a footing among the material resistances of life--while the soul, the
       inner animating principle, might dwell aloof from all these things, in a
       clear medium of its own.
       To this soul of the Church his daily life now brought him close. He felt
       it in the ordered beneficence of the great community, in the simplicity
       of its external life and the richness and suavity of its inner
       relations. No alliance based on material interests, no love of power
       working toward a common end, could have created that harmony of thought
       and act which was reflected in every face about him. Each of these men
       seemed to have FOUND OUT SOMETHING of which he was still ignorant.
       What it was, de Crucis tried to tell him as they paced the cloisters
       together or sat in the warm stillness of the budding garden. At the
       first news of the Duke's illness the Jesuit had hastened to Pianura. No
       companionship could have been so satisfying to Odo. De Crucis's mental
       attitude toward mankind might have been defined as an illuminated
       charity. To love men, or to understand them, is not as unusual as to do
       both together; and it was the intellectual acuteness of his friend's
       judgments that made their Christian amenity so seductive to Odo.
       "The highest claim of Christianity," the Jesuit said one morning, as
       they sat on a worn stone bench at the end of the sunny vine-walk, "is
       that it has come nearer to solving the problem of men's relations to
       each other than any system invented by themselves. This, after all, is
       the secret principle of the Church's vitality. She gave a spiritual
       charter of equality to mankind long before the philosophers thought of
       giving them a material one. If, all the while, she has been fighting for
       dominion, arrogating to herself special privileges, struggling to
       preserve the old lines of social and legal demarcation, it has been
       because for nigh two thousand years she has cherished in her breast the
       one free city of the spirit, because to guard its liberties she has had
       to defend and strengthen her own position. I do not ask you to consider
       whence comes this insight into the needs of man, this mysterious power
       over him; I ask you simply to confess them in their results. I am not of
       those who believe that God permits good to come to mankind through one
       channel only, and I doubt not that now and in times past the thinkers
       whom your Highness follows have done much to raise the condition of
       their fellows; but I would have you observe that, where they have done
       so, it has been because, at bottom, their aims coincided with the
       Church's. The deeper you probe into her secret sources of power, the
       more you find there, in the germ if you will, but still potentially
       active, all those humanising energies which work together for the
       lifting of the race. In her wisdom and her patience she may have seen
       fit to withhold their expression, to let them seek another outlet; but
       they are there, stored in her consciousness like the archetypes of the
       Platonists in the Universal Mind. It is the knowledge of this, the sure
       knowledge of it, which creates the atmosphere of serenity that you feel
       about you. From the tilling of the vineyards, or the dressing of a
       beggar's sores, to the loftiest and most complicated intellectual labour
       imposed on him, each brother knows that his daily task is part of a
       great scheme of action, working ever from imperfection to perfection,
       from human incompleteness to the divine completion. This sense of being,
       not straws on a blind wind of chance, but units in an ordered force,
       gives to the humblest Christian an individual security and dignity which
       kings on their thrones might envy.
       "But not only does the Church anticipate every tendency of mankind;
       alone of all powers she knows how to control and direct the passions she
       excites. This it is which makes her an auxiliary that no temporal prince
       can well despise. It is in this aspect that I would have your Highness
       consider her. Do not underrate her power because it seems based on the
       commoner instincts rather than on the higher faculties of man. That is
       one of the sources of her strength. She can support her claims by reason
       and argument, but it is because her work, like that of her divine
       Founder, lies chiefly among those who can neither reason nor argue, that
       she chooses to rest her appeal on the simplest and most universal
       emotions. As, in our towns, the streets are lit mainly by the tapers
       before the shrines of the saints, so the way of life would be dark to
       the great multitude of men but for the light of faith burning within
       them..."
       Meanwhile the shufflings of destiny had brought to Trescorre the prize
       for which he waited. During the Duke's illness he had been appointed
       regent of Pianura, and his sovereign's reluctance to take up the cares
       of government had now left him for six months in authority. The day
       after the proclaiming of the constitution Odo had withdrawn his
       signature from it, on the ground that the concessions it contained were
       inopportune. The functions of government went on again in the old way.
       The old abuses persisted, the old offences were condoned: it was as
       though the apathy of the sovereign had been communicated to his people.
       Centuries of submission were in their blood, and for two generations
       there had been no warfare south of the Alps.
       For the moment men's minds were turned to the great events going forward
       in France. It had not yet occurred to the Italians that the recoil of
       these events might be felt among themselves. They were simply amused
       spectators, roused at last to the significance of the show, but never
       dreaming that they might soon be called from the wings to the
       footlights. To de Crucis, however, the possibility of such a call was
       already present, and it was he who pressed the Duke to return to his
       post. A deep reluctance held Odo back. He would have liked to linger on
       in the monastery, leading the tranquil yet busy life of the monks, and
       trying to read the baffling riddle of its completeness. At that moment
       it seemed to him of vastly more importance to discover the exact nature
       of the soul--whether it was in fact a metaphysical entity, as these men
       believed, or a mere secretion of the brain, as he had been taught to
       think--than to go back and govern his people. For what mattered the
       rest, if he had been mistaken about the soul?
       With a start he realised that he was going as his cousin had gone--that
       this was but another form of the fatal lethargy that hung upon his race.
       An effort of the will drew him back to Pianura, and made him resume the
       semblance of authority; but it carried him no farther. Trescorre
       ostensibly became prime minister, and in reality remained the head of
       the state. The Duke was present at the cabinet meetings but took no part
       in the direction of affairs. His mind was lost in a maze of metaphysical
       speculations; and even these served him merely as some
       cunningly-contrived toy with which to trick his leisure.
       His revocation of the charter had necessarily separated him from Gamba
       and the advanced liberals. He knew that the hunchback, ever scornful of
       expediency, charged him with disloyalty to the people; but such charges
       could no longer wound. The events following the Duke's birthday had
       served to crystallise the schemes of the little liberal group, and they
       now formed a campaign of active opposition to the government, attacking
       it by means of pamphlets and lampoons, and by such public speaking as
       the police allowed. The new professors of the University, ardently in
       sympathy with the constitutional movement, used their lectures as means
       of political teaching, and the old stronghold of dogma became the centre
       of destructive criticism. But as yet these ideas formed but a single
       live point in the general numbness.
       Two years passed in this way. North of the Alps, all Europe was
       convulsed, while Italy was still but a sleeper who tosses in his sleep.
       In the two Sicilies, the arrogance and perfidy of the government gave a
       few martyrs to the cause, and in Bologna there was a brief revolutionary
       outbreak; but for the most part the Italian states were sinking into
       inanition. Venice, by recalling her fleet from Greece, let fall the
       dominion of the sea. Twenty years earlier Genoa had basely yielded
       Corsica to France. The Pope condemned the French for their outrages on
       religion, and his subjects murdered Basseville, the agent of the new
       republic. The sympathies and impulses of the various states were as
       contradictory as they were ineffectual.
       Meanwhile, in France, Europe was trying to solve at a stroke the
       problems of a thousand years. All the repressed passions which
       civilisation had sought, however imperfectly, to curb, stalked abroad
       destructive as flood and fire. The great generation of the
       Encyclopaedists had passed away, and the teachings of Rousseau had
       prevailed over those of Montesquieu and Voltaire. The sober sense of the
       economists was swept aside by the sound and fury of the demagogues, and
       France was become a very Babel of tongues. The old malady of words had
       swept over the world like a pestilence.
       To the little Italian courts, still dozing in fancied security under the
       wing of Bourbon and Hapsburg suzerains, these rumours were borne by the
       wild flight of emigres--dead leaves loosened by the first blast of the
       storm. Month by month they poured across the Alps in ever-increasing
       numbers, bringing confused contradictory tales of anarchy and outrage.
       Among those whom chance thus carried to Pianura were certain familiars
       of the Duke's earlier life--the Count Alfieri and his royal mistress,
       flying from Paris, and arriving breathless with the tale of their
       private injuries. To the poet of revolt this sudden realisation of his
       doctrines seemed in fact a purely personal outrage. It was as though a
       man writing an epic poem on an earthquake should suddenly find himself
       engulphed. To Alfieri the downfall of the French monarchy and the
       triumph of democratic ideas meant simply that his French investments had
       shrunk to nothing, and that he, the greatest poet of the age, had been
       obliged, at an immense sacrifice of personal dignity, to plead with a
       drunken mob for leave to escape from Paris. To the wider aspect of the
       "tragic farce," as he called it, his eyes remained obstinately closed.
       He viewed the whole revolutionary movement as a conspiracy against his
       comfort, and boasted that during his enforced residence in France he had
       not so much as exchanged a word with one of the "French slaves,
       instigators of false liberty," who, by trying to put into action the
       principles taught in his previous works, had so grievously interfered
       with the composition of fresh masterpieces.
       The royal pretensions of the Countess of Albany--pretentions affirmed
       rather than abated as the tide of revolution rose--made it impossible
       that she should be received at the court of Pianura; but the Duke found
       a mild entertainment in Alfieri's company. The poet's revulsion of
       feeling seemed to Odo like the ironic laughter of the fates. His
       thoughts returned to the midnight meetings of the Honey Bees, and to the
       first vision of that face which men had lain down their lives to see.
       Men had looked on that face since then, and its horror was reflected in
       their own.
       Other fugitives to Pianura brought another impression of events--that
       comic note which life, the supreme dramatic artist, never omits from her
       tragedies. These were the Duke's old friend the Marquis de Coeur-Volant,
       fleeing from his chateau as the peasants put the torch to it, and
       arriving in Pianura destitute, gouty and middle-aged, but imperturbable
       and epigrammatic as ever. With him came his Marquise, a dark-eyed lady,
       stout to unwieldiness and much given to devotion, in whom it was
       whispered (though he introduced her as the daughter of a Venetian
       Senator) that a reminiscent eye might still detect the outline of the
       gracefullest Columbine who had ever flitted across the Italian stage.
       These visitors were lodged by the Duke's kindness in the Palazzo
       Cerveno, near the ducal residence; and though the ladies of Pianura were
       inclined to look askance on the Marquise's genealogy, yet his Highness's
       condescension, and her own edifying piety, had soon allayed these
       scruples, and the salon of Madame de Coeur-Volant became the rival of
       Madame d'Albany's.
       It was, in fact, the more entertaining of the two; for, in spite of his
       lady's austere views, the Marquis retained that gift of social
       flexibility that was already becoming the tradition of a happier day. To
       the Marquis, indeed, the revolution was execrable not so much because of
       the hardships it inflicted, as because it was the forerunner of social
       dissolution--the breaking-up of the regime which had made manners the
       highest morality, and conversation the chief end of man. He could have
       lived gaily on a crust in good company and amid smiling faces; but the
       social deficiencies of Pianura were more difficult to endure than any
       material privation. In Italy, as the Marquis had more than once
       remarked, people loved, gambled, wrote poetry, and patronised the arts;
       but, alas, they did not converse. Coeur-Volant could not conceal from
       his Highness that there was no conversation in Pianura; but he did his
       best to fill the void by the constant exercise of his own gift in that
       direction, and to Odo at least his talk seemed as good as it was
       copious. Misfortune had given a finer savour to the Marquis's
       philosophy, and there was a kind of heroic grace in his undisturbed
       cultivation of the amenities.
       While the Marquis was struggling to preserve the conversational art, and
       Alfieri planning the savage revenge of the Misogallo, the course of
       affairs in France had gained a wilder impetus. The abolition of the
       nobility, the flight and capture of the King, his enforced declaration
       of war against Austria, the massacres of Avignon, the sack of the
       Tuileries--such events seemed incredible enough till the next had
       crowded them out of mind. The new year rose in blood and mounted to a
       bloodier noon. All the old defences were falling. Religion, monarchy,
       law, were sucked down into the whirlpool of liberated passions. Across
       that sanguinary scene passed, like a mocking ghost, the philosophers'
       vision of the perfectibility of man. Man was free at last--freer than
       his would-be liberators had ever dreamed of making him--and he used his
       freedom like a beast. For the multitude had risen--that multitude which
       no man could number, which even the demagogues who ranted in its name
       had never seriously reckoned with--that dim, grovelling
       indistinguishable mass on which the whole social structure rested. It
       was as though the very soil moved, rising in mountains or yawning in
       chasms about the feet of those who had so long securely battened on it.
       The earth shook, the sun and moon were darkened, and the people, the
       terrible unknown people, had put in the sickle to the harvest.
       Italy roused herself at last. The emissaries of the new France were
       swarming across the Alps, pervading the peninsula as the Jesuits had
       once pervaded Europe; and in the mind of a young general of the
       republican army visions of Italian conquest were already forming. In
       Pianura the revolutionary agents found a strong republican party headed
       by Gamba and his friends, and a government weakened by debt and
       dissensions. The air was thick with intrigue. The little army could no
       longer be counted on, and a prolonged bread-riot had driven Trescorre
       out of the ministry and compelled the Duke to appoint Andreoni in his
       place. Behind Andreoni stood Gamba and the radicals. There could be no
       doubt which way the fortunes of the duchy tended. The Duke's would-be
       protectors, Austria and the Holy See, were too busy organising the hasty
       coalition of the powers to come to his aid, had he cared to call on
       them. But to do so would have been but another way of annihilation. To
       preserve the individuality of his state, or to merge it in the vision of
       a United Italy, seemed to him the only alternatives worth fighting for.
       The former was a futile dream, the latter seemed for a brief moment
       possible. Piedmont, ever loyal to the monarchical principle, was calling
       on her sister states to arm themselves against the French invasion. But
       the response was reluctant and uncertain. Private ambitions and petty
       jealousies hampered every attempt at union. Austria, the Bourbons and
       the Holy See held the Italian principalities in a network of conflicting
       interests and obligations that rendered free action impossible. Sadly
       Victor Amadeus armed himself alone against the enemy.
       Under such conditions Odo could do little to direct the course of
       events. They had passed into more powerful hands than his. But he could
       at least declare himself for or against the mighty impulse which was
       behind them. The ideas he had striven for had triumphed at last, and his
       surest hold on authority was to share openly in their triumph. A
       profound horror dragged him back. The new principles were not those for
       which he had striven. The goddess of the new worship was but a bloody
       Maenad who had borrowed the attributes of freedom. He could not bow the
       knee in such a charnel-house. Tranquilly, resolutely, he took up the
       policy of repression. He knew the attempt was foredoomed to failure, but
       that made no difference now: he was simply acting out the inevitable.
       The last act came with unexpected suddenness. The Duke woke one morning
       to find the citadel in the possession of the people. The impregnable
       stronghold of Bracciaforte was in the hands of the serfs whose fathers
       had toiled to build it, and the last descendant of Bracciaforte was
       virtually a prisoner in his palace. The revolution took place quietly,
       without violence or bloodshed. Andreoni waited on the Duke, and a
       cabinet-council was summoned. The ministers affected to have yielded
       reluctantly to popular pressure. All they asked was a constitution and
       the assurance that no resistance would be offered to the French.
       The Duke requested a few hours for deliberation. Left alone, he summoned
       the Duchess's chamberlain. The ducal pair no longer met save on
       occasions of state: they had not exchanged a word since the death of
       Fulvia Vivaldi. Odo sent word to her Highness that he could no longer
       answer for her security while she remained in the duchy, and that he
       begged her to leave immediately for Vienna. She replied that she was
       obliged for his warning, but that while he remained in Pianura her place
       was at his side. It was the answer he had expected--he had never doubted
       her courage--but it was essential to his course that she should leave
       the duchy without delay, and after a moment's reflection he wrote a
       letter in which he informed her that he must insist on her obedience. No
       answer was returned, but he learned that she had turned white, and
       tearing the letter in shreds had called for her travelling-carriage
       within the hour. He sent to enquire when he might take leave of her, but
       she excused herself on the plea of indisposition, and before nightfall
       he heard the departing rattle of her wheels.
       He immediately summoned Andreoni and announced his unconditional refusal
       of the terms proposed to him. He would not give a constitution or
       promise allegiance to the French. The minister withdrew, and Odo was
       left alone. He had dismissed his gentlemen, and as he sat in his closet
       a sense of deathlike isolation came over him. Never had the palace
       seemed so silent or so vast. He had not a friend to turn to. De Crucis
       was in Germany, and Trescorre, it was reported, had privately attended
       the Duchess in her flight. The waves of destiny seemed closing over Odo,
       and the circumstances of his past rose, poignant and vivid, before his
       drowning sight.
       And suddenly, in that moment of failure and abandonment, it seemed to
       him again that life was worth the living. His indifference fell from him
       like a garment. The old passion of action awoke and he felt a new warmth
       in his breast. After all, the struggle was not yet over: though Piedmont
       had called in vain on the Italian states, an Italian sword might still
       be drawn in her service. If his people would not follow him against
       France he could still march against her alone. Old memories hummed in
       him at the thought. He recalled how his Piedmontese ancestors had gone
       forth against the same foe, and the stout Donnaz blood began to bubble
       in his veins.
       A knock roused him and Gamba entered by the private way. His appearance
       was not unexpected to Odo, and served only to reinforce his new-found
       energy. He felt that the issue was at hand. As he expected, Gamba had
       been sent to put before him more forcibly and unceremoniously the veiled
       threat of the ministers. But the hunchback had come also to plead with
       his master in his own name, and in the name of the ideas for which they
       had once laboured together. He could not believe that the Duke's
       reaction was more than momentary. He could not calculate the strength of
       the old associations which, now that the tide had set the other way,
       were dragging Odo back to the beliefs and traditions of his caste.
       The Duke listened in silence; then he said: "Discussion is idle. I have
       no answer to give but that which I have already given." He rose from his
       seat in token of dismissal.
       The moment was painful to both men. Gamba drew nearer and fell at the
       Duke's feet.
       "Your Highness," he said, "consider what this means. We hold the state
       in our hands. If you are against us you are powerless. If you are with
       us we can promise you more power than you ever dreamed of possessing."
       The Duke looked at him with a musing smile. "It is as though you offered
       me gold in a desert island," he said. "Do not waste such poor bribes on
       me. I care for no power but the power to wipe out the work of these last
       years. Failing that, I want nothing that you or any other man can give."
       Gamba was silent a moment. He turned aside into the embrasure of the
       window, and when he spoke again it was in a voice broken with grief.
       "Your Highness," he said, "if your choice is made, ours is made also. It
       is a hard choice, but these are fratricidal hours. We have come to the
       parting of the ways."
       The Duke made no sign, and Gamba went on with gathering anguish: "We
       would have gone to the world's end with your Highness for our leader!"
       "With a leader whom you could lead," Odo interposed. He went up to Gamba
       and laid a hand on his shoulder. "Speak out, man," he said. "Say what
       you were sent to say. Am I a prisoner?"
       The hunchback burst into tears. Odo, with his arms crossed, stood
       leaning against the window. The other's anguish seemed to deepen his
       detachment.
       "Your Highness--your Highness--" Gamba stammered.
       The Duke made an impatient gesture. "Come, make an end," he said.
       Gamba fell back with a profound bow.
       "We do not ask the surrender of your Highness's person," he said.
       "Not even that?" Odo returned with a faint sneer.
       Gamba flushed to the temples, but the retort died on his lips.
       "Your Highness," he said, scarce above a whisper, "the gates are
       guarded; but the word for tonight is 'Humilitas.'" He knelt and kissed
       Odo's hand. Then he rose and passed out of the room...
       ***
       Before dawn the Duke left the palace. The high emotions of the night had
       ebbed. He saw himself now, in the ironic light of morning, as a fugitive
       too harmless to be worth pursuing. His enemies had let him keep his
       sword because they had no cause to fear it. Alone he passed through the
       gardens of the palace, and out into the desert darkness of the streets.
       Skirting the wall of the Benedictine convent where Fulvia had lodged, he
       gained a street leading to the marketplace. In the pallor of the waning
       night the ancient monuments of his race stood up mournful and deserted
       as a line of tombs. The city seemed a grave-yard and he the ineffectual
       ghost of its dead past. He reached the gates and gave the watchword. The
       gates were guarded, as he had been advised; but the captain of the watch
       let him pass without show of hesitation or curiosity. Though he made no
       effort at disguise he went forth unrecognised, and the city closed her
       doors on him as carelessly as on any passing wanderer.
       Beyond the gates a lad from the ducal stables waited with a horse. Odo
       sprang into the saddle and rode on toward Pontesordo. The darkness was
       growing thinner, and the meagre details of the landscape, with its
       huddled farm-houses and mulberry-orchards, began to define themselves as
       he advanced. To his left the field stretched, grey and sodden; ahead, on
       his right, hung the dark woods of the ducal chase. Presently a bend of
       the road brought him within sight of the keep of Pontesordo. His way led
       past it, toward Valsecca; but some obscure instinct laid a detaining
       hand on him, and at the cross-roads he bent to the right and rode across
       the marshland to the old manor-house.
       The farmyard lay hushed and deserted. The peasants who lived there would
       soon be afoot; but for the moment Odo had the place to himself. He
       tethered his horse to a gate-post and walked across the rough
       cobble-stones to the chapel. Its floor was still heaped with farm-tools
       and dried vegetables, and in the dimness a heavier veil of dust seemed
       to obscure the painted walls. Odo advanced, picking his way among broken
       ploughshares and stacks of maize, till he stood near the old marble
       altar, with its sea-gods and acanthus volutes. The place laid its
       tranquillising hush on him, and he knelt on the step beneath the altar.
       Something stirred in him as he knelt there--a prayer, yet not a
       prayer--a reaching out, obscure and inarticulate, toward all that had
       survived of his early hopes and faiths, a loosening of old founts of
       pity, a longing to be somehow, somewhere reunited to his old belief in
       life.
       How long he knelt he knew not; but when he looked up the chapel was full
       of a pale light, and in the first shaft of the sunrise the face of Saint
       Francis shone out on him...He went forth into the daybreak and rode away
       toward Piedmont.
       Content of BOOK IV - THE REWARD: CHAPTER 11
       -THE END-
       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