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The Valley Of Decision
BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 9
Edith Wharton
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       BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER: CHAPTER 9
       1.9.
       The singular being with whom chance had thus brought him acquainted was
       to have a lasting influence on the formation of Odo's character.
       Vittorio Alfieri, then just concluding, at the age of sixteen, his
       desultory years of academic schooling, was probably the most
       extraordinary youth in Charles Emmanuel's dominion. Of the future
       student, of the tragic poet who was to prepare the liberation of Italy
       by raising the political ideals of his generation, this moody boy with
       his craze for dress and horses, his pride of birth and contempt for his
       own class, his liberal theories and insolently aristocratic practice,
       must have given small promise to the most discerning observer. It seems
       indeed probable that none thought him worth observing and that he passed
       among his townsmen merely as one of the most idle and extravagant young
       noblemen in a society where idleness and extravagance were held to be
       the natural attributes of the great. But in the growth of character the
       light on the road to Damascus is apt to be preceded by faint premonitory
       gleams; and even in his frivolous days at the Academy Alfieri carried a
       Virgil in his pocket and wept and trembled over Ariosto's verse.
       It was the instant response of Odo's imagination that drew the two
       together. Odo, as one of the foreign pupils, was quartered in the same
       wing of the Academy with the students of Alfieri's class, and enjoyed an
       almost equal freedom. Thus, despite the difference of age, the lads
       found themselves allied by taste and circumstances. Among the youth of
       their class they were perhaps the only two who already felt, however
       obscurely, the stirring of unborn ideals, the pressure of that tide of
       renovation that was to sweep them, on widely-sundered currents, to the
       same uncharted deep. Alfieri, at any rate, represented to the younger
       lad the seer who held in his hands the keys of knowledge and beauty. Odo
       could never forget the youth who first leant him Annibale Caro's Aeneid
       and Metastasio's opera libretti, Voltaire's Zaire and the comedies of
       Goldoni; while Alfieri perhaps found in his companion's sympathy with
       his own half-dormant tastes the first incentive to a nobler activity.
       Certain it is that, in the interchange of their daily comradeship, the
       elder gave his friend much that he was himself unconscious of
       possessing, and perhaps first saw reflected in Odo's more vivid
       sensibility an outline of the formless ideals coiled in the depths of
       his own sluggish nature.
       The difference in age, and the possession of an independent fortune,
       which the laws of Savoy had left Alfieri free to enjoy since his
       fifteenth year, gave him an obvious superiority over Odo; but if
       Alfieri's amusements separated him from his young friend, his tastes
       were always drawing them together; and Odo was happily of those who are
       more engaged in profiting by what comes their way than in pining for
       what escapes them. Much as he admired Alfieri, it was somehow impossible
       for the latter to condescend to him; and the equality of intercourse
       between the two was perhaps its chief attraction to a youth surfeited
       with adulation.
       Of the opportunities his new friendship brought him, none became in
       after years a pleasanter memory to Odo than his visits with Vittorio to
       the latter's uncle, the illustrious architect Count Benedetto Alfieri.
       This accomplished and amiable man, who had for many years devoted his
       talents to the King's service, was lodged in a palace adjoining the
       Academy; and thither, one holiday afternoon, Vittorio conducted his
       young friend.
       Ignorant as Odo was of all the arts, he felt on the very threshold the
       new quality of his surroundings. These tall bare rooms, where busts and
       sarcophagi were ranged as in the twilight of a temple, diffused an
       influence that lowered the voice and hushed the step. In the
       semi-Parisian capital where French architects designed the King's
       pleasure-houses and the nobility imported their boudoir-panellings from
       Paris and their damask hangings from Lyons, Benedetto Alfieri
       represented the old classic tradition, the tradition of the "grand
       manner," which had held its own through all later variations of taste,
       running parallel with the barocchismo of the seventeenth century and the
       effeminate caprices of the rococo period. He had lived much in Rome, in
       the company of men like Winckelmann and Maffei, in that society where
       the revival of classical research was being forwarded by the liberality
       of Princes and Cardinals and by the indefatigable zeal of the scholars
       in their pay. From this centre of aesthetic reaction Alfieri had
       returned to the Gallicized Turin, with its preference for the graceful
       and ingenious rather than for the large, the noble, the restrained;
       bringing to bear on the taste of his native city the influence of a view
       raised but perhaps narrowed by close study of the past: the view of a
       generation of architects in whom archeological curiosity had stifled the
       artistic instinct, and who, instead of assimilating the spirit of the
       past like their great predecessors, were engrossed in a sterile
       restoration of the letter. It may be said of this school of architects
       that they were of more service to posterity than to their
       contemporaries; for while they opened the way to modern antiquarian
       research, their pedantry checked the natural development of a style
       which, if left to itself, might in time have found new and more vigorous
       forms of expression.
       To Odo, happily, Count Benedetto's surroundings spoke more forcibly than
       his theories. Every object in the calm severe rooms appealed to the boy
       with the pure eloquence of form. Casts of the Vatican busts stood
       against the walls and a niche at one end of the library contained a
       marble copy of the Apollo Belvedere. The sarcophagi with their winged
       genii, their garlands and bucranes, and porphyry tazzas, the fragments
       of Roman mosaic and Pompeian fresco-painting, roused Odo's curiosity as
       if they had been the scattered letters of a new alphabet; and he saw
       with astonishment his friend Vittorio's indifference to these wonders.
       Count Benedetto, it was clear, was resigned to his nephew's lack of
       interest. The old man doubtless knew that he represented to the youth
       only the rich uncle whose crotchets must be humoured for the sake of
       what his pocket may procure; and such kindly tolerance made Odo regret
       that Vittorio should not at least affect an interest in his uncle's
       pursuits.
       Odo's eagerness to see and learn filled Count Benedetto with a simple
       joy. He brought forth all his treasures for the boy's instruction and
       the two spent many an afternoon poring over Piranesi's Roman etchings,
       Maffei's Verona Illustrata, and Count Benedetto's own elegant
       pencil-drawings of classical remains. Like all students of his day he
       had also his cabinet of antique gems and coins, from which Odo obtained
       more intimate glimpses of that buried life so marvellously exhumed
       before him: hints of traffic in far-off market-places and familiar
       gestures of hands on which those very jewels might have sparkled. Nor
       did the Count restrict the boy's enquiries to that distant past; and for
       the first time Odo heard of the masters who had maintained the great
       classical tradition on Latin soil: Sanmichele, Vignola, Sansovino, and
       the divine Michael Angelo, whom the old architect never named without
       baring his head. From the works of these architects Odo formed his first
       conception of the earlier, more virile manner which the first contact
       with Graeco-Roman antiquity had produced. The Count told him, too, of
       the great painters whose popularity had been lessened, if their fame had
       not been dimmed, by the more recent achievements of Correggio, Guido,
       Guercino, and the Bolognese school. The splendour of the stanze of the
       Vatican, the dreadful majesty of the Sistine ceiling, revealed to Odo
       the beauty of that unmatched moment before grandeur broke into bombast.
       His early association with the expressive homely art of the chapel at
       Pontesordo and with the half-pagan beauty of Luini's compositions had
       formed his taste on soberer lines than the fashion of the day affected;
       and his imagination breathed freely on the heights of the Latin
       Parnassus. Thus, while his friend Vittorio stormed up and down the quiet
       rooms, chattering about his horses, boasting of his escapades, or
       ranting against the tyranny of the Sardinian government, Odo, at the old
       Count's side, was entering on the great inheritance of the past.
       Such an initiation was the more precious to him from the indifference of
       those about him to all forms of liberal culture. Among the greater
       Italian cities, Turin was at that period the least open to new
       influences, the most rigidly bound up in the formulas of the past. While
       Milan, under the Austrian rule, was becoming a centre of philosophic
       thought; while Naples was producing a group of economists such as
       Galiani, Gravina and Filangieri; while ecclesiastical Rome was
       dedicating herself to the investigation of ancient art and polity, and
       even flighty Venice had her little set of "liberals," who read Voltaire
       and Hume and wept over the rights of man, the old Piedmontese capital
       lay in the grasp of a bigoted clergy and of a reigning house which was
       already preparing to superimpose Prussian militarism on the old feudal
       discipline of the border. Generations of hard fighting and rigorous
       living had developed in the nobles the qualities which were preparing
       them for the great part their country was to play; and contact with the
       Waldensian and Calvinist heresies had stiffened Piedmontese piety into a
       sombre hatred of schism and a minute observance of the mechanical rules
       of the faith. Such qualities could be produced only at the expense of
       intellectual freedom; and if Piedmont could show a few nobles like
       Massimo d'Azeglio's father, who "made the education of his children his
       first and gravest thought" and supplemented the deficiencies of his
       wife's conventual training by "consecrating to her daily four hours of
       reading, translating and other suitable exercises," the commoner view
       was that of Alfieri's own parents, who frequently repeated in their
       son's hearing "the old maxim of the Piedmontese nobility" that there is
       no need for a gentleman to be a scholar. Such at any rate was the
       opinion of the old Marquess of Donnaz, and of all the frequenters of
       Casa Valdu. Odo's stepfather was engrossed in the fulfilment of his
       duties about the court, and Donna Laura, under the influence of poverty
       and ennui, had sunk into a state of rigid pietism; so that the lad, on
       his visits to his mother, found himself in a world where art was
       represented by the latest pastel-portrait of a court beauty, literature
       by Liguori's Glories of Mary or the blessed Battista's Mental Sorrows of
       Christ, and history by the conviction that Piedmont's efforts to stamp
       out the enemies of the Church had distinguished her above every other
       country of Europe. Donna Laura's cicisbeo was indeed a member of the
       local Arcadia, and given to celebrating in verse every incident in the
       noble household of Valdu, from its lady's name-day to the death of a pet
       canary; but his own tastes inclined to the elegant Bettinelli, whose
       Lettere Virgiliane had so conclusively shown Dante to be a writer of
       barbarous doggerel; and among the dilettanti of the day one heard less
       of Raphael than of Carlo Maratta, less of Ariosto and Petrarch than of
       the Jesuit poet Padre Cevo, author of the sublime "heroico-comic" poem
       on the infancy of Jesus.
       It was in fact mainly to the Jesuits that Italy, in the early part of
       the eighteenth century, owed her literature and her art, as well as the
       direction of her religious life. Though the reaction against the order
       was everywhere making itself felt, though one Italian sovereign after
       another had been constrained to purchase popularity or even security by
       banishing the Society from his dominions, the Jesuits maintained their
       hold on the aristocracy, whose pretentions they flattered, whose tastes
       they affected, and to whom they represented the spirit of religious and
       political conservatism, against which invisible forces were already felt
       to be moving. For the use of their noble supporters, the Jesuits had
       devised a religion as elaborate and ceremonious as the social usages of
       the aristocracy: a religion which decked its chapels in imitation of
       great ladies' boudoirs and prescribed observances in keeping with the
       vapid and gossiping existence of their inmates.
       To Odo, fresh from the pure air of Donnaz, where the faith of his
       kinsfolk expressed itself in charity, self-denial and a noble decency of
       life, there was something stifling in the atmosphere of languishing
       pietism in which his mother's friends veiled the emptiness of their
       days. Under the instruction of the Countess's director the boy's
       conscience was enervated by the casuistries of Liguorianism and his
       devotion dulled by the imposition of interminable "pious practices." It
       was in his nature to grudge no sacrifice to his ideals, and he might
       have accomplished without question the monotonous observances his
       confessor exacted, but for the changed aspect of the Deity in whose name
       they were imposed.
       As with most thoughtful natures, Odo's first disillusionment was to come
       from discovering not what his God condemned, but what He condoned.
       Between Cantapresto's coarse philosophy of pleasure and the refined
       complaisances of his new confessor he felt the distinction to be one
       rather of taste than of principle; and it seemed to him that the
       religion of the aristocracy might not unfairly be summed up in the
       ex-soprano's cynical aphorism: "As respectful children of our Heavenly
       Father it behoves us not to speak till we are spoken to."
       Even the religious ceremonies he witnessed did not console him for that
       chill hour of dawn, when, in the chapel at Donnaz, he had served the
       mass for Don Gervaso, with a heart trembling at its own unworthiness yet
       uplifted by the sense of the Divine Presence. In the churches adorned
       like aristocratic drawing-rooms, of which some Madonna, wreathed in
       artificial flowers, seemed the amiable and indulgent hostess, and where
       the florid passionate music of the mass was rendered by the King's opera
       singers before a throng of chattering cavaliers and ladies, Odo prayed
       in vain for a reawakening of the old emotion. The sense of sonship was
       gone. He felt himself an alien in the temple of this affable divinity,
       and his heart echoed no more than the cry which had once lifted him on
       wings of praise to the very threshold of the hidden glory--
       Domine, dilexi decorem domus tuae et locum habitationis gloriae tuae!
       It was in the first reaction from this dimly felt loss that he lit one
       day on a volume which Alfieri had smuggled into the Academy--the Lettres
       Philosophiques of Francois Arouet de Voltaire.
       Content of BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER: CHAPTER 9 [Edith Wharton's novel: The Valley Of Decision]
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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