The Market-place.Luitolfoin disguise mingling with thePopulaceassembled opposite theProvost'sPalace.1st Bystander.[ToLuit.]You, a friend of Luitolfo's? Then, your friend is vanished,—in all probability killed on the night that his patron the tyrannical Provost was loyally suppressed here, exactly a month ago, by our illustrious fellow-citizen, thrice-noble savior, and new Provost that is like to be, this very morning,—Chiappino!Luit.He the new Provost?2d By.Up those steps will he go, and beneath yonder pillar stand, while Ogniben, the Pope's Legate from Ravenna, reads the new dignitary's title to the people, according to established custom: for which reason, there is the assemblage you inquire about.Luit.Chiappino—the late Provost's successor? Impossible! But tell me of that presently. What I would know first of all is, wherefore Luitolfo must so necessarily have been killed on that memorable night?3d By.You were Luitolfo's friend? So was I. Never, if you will credit me, did there exist so poor-spirited a milk-sop. He, with all the opportunities in the world, furnished by daily converse with our oppressor, would not stir a finger to help us: and, when Chiappino rose in solitary majesty and ... how does one go on saying?... dealt the godlike blow,—this Luitolfo, not unreasonably fearing the indignation of an aroused and liberated people, fled precipitately. He may have got trodden to death in the press at the southeast gate, when the Provost's guards fled through it to Ravenna, with their wounded master,—if he did not rather hang himself under some hedge.Luit.Or why not simply have lain perdue in some quiet corner,—such as San Cassiano, where his estate was,—receiving daily intelligence from some sure friend, meanwhile, as to the turn matters were taking here—how, for instance, the Provost was not dead, after all, only wounded—or, as to-day's news would seem to prove, how Chiappino was not Brutus the Elder, after all, only the new Provost—and thus Luitolfo be enabled to watch a favorable opportunity for returning? Might it not have been so?3d By.Why, he may have taken that care of himself, certainly, for he came of a cautious stock. I 'll tell you how his uncle, just such another gingerly treader on tiptoes with finger on lip,—how he met his death in the great plague-year:dico vobis!Hearing that the seventeenth house in a certain street was infected, he calculates to pass it in safety by taking plentiful breath, say, when he shall arrive at the eleventh house; then scouring by,holding that breath, till he be got so far on the other side as number twenty-three, and thus elude the danger.—And so did he begin; but, as he arrived at thirteen, we will say,—thinking to improve on his precaution by putting up a little prayer to Saint Nepomucene of Prague, this exhausted so much of his lungs' reserve, that at sixteen it was clean spent,—consequently at the fatal seventeen he inhaled with a vigor and persistence enough to suck you any latent venom out of the heart of a stone—Ha, ha!Luit.[Aside.](If I had not lent that man the money he wanted last spring, I should fear this bitterness was attributable to me.) Luitolfo is dead then, one may conclude?3d By.Why, he had a house here, and a woman to whom he was affianced; and as they both pass naturally to the new Provost, his friend and heir ...Luit.Ah, I suspected you of imposing on me with your pleasantry! I know Chiappino better.1st By.(Our friend has the bile! After all, I do not dislike finding somebody vary a little this general gape of admiration at Chiappino's glorious qualities.) Pray, how much may you know of what has taken place in Faenza since that memorable night?Luit.It is most to the purpose, that I know Chiappino to have been by profession a hater of that very office of Provost, you now charge him with proposing to accept.1st By.Sir, I 'll tell you. That night was indeed memorable. Up we rose, a mass of us, men, women, children; out fled the guards with the body of the tyrant; we were to defy the world: but, next gray morning, "What will Rome say?" began everybody. You know we are governed by Ravenna, which is governed by Rome. And quietly into the town, by the Ravenna road, comes on muleback a portly personage, Ogniben by name, with the quality of Pontifical Legate; trots briskly through the streets humming a "Cur fremuere gentes," and makes directly for the Provost's Palace—there it faces you. "One Messer Chiappino is your leader? I have known three-and-twenty leaders of revolts!" (laughing gently to himself)—"Give me the help of your arm from my mule to yonder steps under the pillar—So! And now, my revolters and good friends, what do you want? The guards burst into Ravenna last night bearing your wounded Provost; and, having had a little talk with him, I take on myself to come and try appease the disorderliness, before Rome, hearing of it, resort to another method: 't is I come, and not another, from a certain love I confess to, of composing differences. So, do you understand, you are about to experience this unheard-of tyranny from me, that there shall be no heading nor hanging, nor confiscation nor exile: I insist on your simply pleasing yourselves. And now, pray, what does please you? To live without any government at all? Or having decided for one, to see its minister murdered by the first of your body that chooses to find himself wronged, or disposed for reverting to first principles and a justice anterior to all institutions,—and so will you carry matters, that the rest of the world must at length unite and put down such a den of wild beasts? As for vengeance on what has just taken place,—once for all, the wounded man assures me he cannot conjecture who struck him; and this so earnestly, that one may be sure he knows perfectly well what intimate acquaintance could find admission to speak with him late last evening. I come not for vengeance therefore, but from pure curiosity to hear what you will do next." And thus he ran on, on, easily and volubly, till he seemed to arrive quite naturally at the praise of law, order, and paternal government by somebody from rather a distance. All our citizens were in the snare, and about to be friends with so congenial an adviser; but that Chiappino suddenly stood forth, spoke out indignantly, and set things right again.Luit.Do you see? I recognize him there!3d By.Ay, but, mark you, at the end of Chiappino's longest period in praise of a pure republic,—"And by whom do I desire such a government should be administered, perhaps, but by one like yourself?" returns the Legate: thereupon speaking for a quarter of an hour together, on the natural and only legitimate government by the best and wisest. And it should seem there was soon discovered to be no such vast discrepancy at bottom between this and Chiappino's theory, place but each in its proper light. "Oh, are you there?" quoth Chiappino: "Ay, in that, I agree," returns Chiappino: and so on.Luit.But did Chiappino cede at once to this?1st By.Why, not altogether at once. For instance, he said that the difference between him and all his fellows was, that they seemed all wishing to be kings in one or another way,—"whereas what right," asked he, "has any man to wish to be superior to another?"—whereat, "Ah, sir," answers the Legate, "this is the death of me, so often as I expect something is really going to be revealed to us by you clearer-seers, deeper-thinkers—this—that your right-hand (to speak by a figure) should be found taking up the weapon it displayed so ostentatiously, not to destroy any dragon in our path, as was prophesied, but simply to cut off its own fellow left-hand: yourself set about attacking yourself. For see now! Here are you who, I make sure, glory exceedingly in knowing the noble nature of the soul, its divine impulses, and so forth; and with such a knowledge you stand, as it were, armed to encounter the natural doubts and fears as to that same inherent nobility, which are apt to waylay us, the weaker ones, in the road of life. And when we look eagerly to see them fall before you, lo, round you wheel, only the left-hand gets the blow; one proof of the soul's nobility destroys simply another proof, quite as good, of the same, for you are found delivering an opinion like this! Why, what is this perpetual yearning to exceed, to subdue, to be better than, anda king over, one's fellows,—all that you so disclaim,—but the very tendency yourself are most proud of, and under another form, would oppose to it,—only in a lower stage of manifestation? You don't want to be vulgarly superior to your fellows after their poor fashion— to have me hold solemnly up your gown's tail, or hand you an express of the last importance from the Pope, with all these bystanders noticing how unconcerned you look the while: but neither does our gaping friend, the burgess yonder, want the other kind of kingship, that consists in understanding better than his fellows this and similar points of human nature, nor to roll under his tongue this sweeter morsel still, —the feeling that, through immense philosophy, he doesnotfeel, he rather thinks, above you and me!" And so chatting, they glided off arm-in-arm.Luit.And the result is ...1st By.Why that, a month having gone by, the indomitable Chiappino, marrying as he will Luitolfo's love—at all events succeeding to Luitolfo's wealth—becomes the first inhabitant of Faenza, and a proper aspirant to the Provostship; which we assemble here to see conferred on him this morning. The Legate's Guard to clear the way! He will follow presently.Luit.[Withdrawing a little.]I understand the drift of Eulalia's communications less than ever. Yet she surely said, in so many words, that Chiappino was in urgent danger: wherefore, disregarding her injunction to continue in my retreat and await the result of—what she called, some experiment yet in process—I hastened here without her leave or knowledge: how could I else? But if this they say be true—if it were for such a purpose, she and Chiappino kept me away ... Oh, no, no! I must confront him and her before I believe this of them. And at the word, see!(EnterChiappinoandEulalia.)Eu.We part here, then? The change in your principles would seem to be complete.Ch.Now, why refuse to see that in my present course I change no principles, only re-adapt them and more adroitly? I had despaired of what you may call the material instrumentality of life; of ever being able to rightly operate on mankind through such a deranged machinery as the existing modes of government: but now, if I suddenly discover how to inform these perverted institutions with fresh purpose, bring the functionary limbs once more into immediate communication with, and subjection to, the soul I am about to bestow on them—do you see? Why should one desire to invent, as long as it remains possible to renew and transform? When all further hope of the old organization shall be extinct, then, I grant you, it may be time to try and create another.Eu.And there being discoverable some hope yet in the hitherto much-abused old system of absolute government by a Provost here, you mean to take your time about endeavoring to realize those visions of a perfect State we once heard of?Ch.Say, I would fain realize my conception of a palace, for instance, and that there is, abstractedly, but a single way of erecting one perfectly. Here, in the market-place is my allotted building-ground; here I stand without a stone to lay, or a laborer to help me,—stand, too, during a short day of life, close on which the night comes. On the other hand, circumstances suddenly offer me (turn and see it!) the old Provost's house to experiment upon—ruinous, if you please, wrongly constructed at the beginning, and ready to tumble now. But materials abound, a crowd of workmen offer their services; here exists yet a Hall of Audience of originally noble proportions, there a Guest-chamber of symmetrical design enough: and I may restore, enlarge, abolish or unite these to heart's content. Ought I not make the best of such an opportunity, rather than continue to gaze disconsolately with folded arms on the flat pavement here, while the sun goes slowly down, never to rise again? Since you cannot understand this nor me, it is better we should part as you desire.Eu.So, the love breaks away too!Ch.No, rather my soul's capacity for love widens—needs more than one object to content it,—and, being better instructed, will not persist in seeing all the component parts of love in what is only a single part,—nor in finding that so many and so various loves are all united in the love of a woman,—manifold uses in one instrument, as the savage has his sword, staff, sceptre and idol, all in one club-stick. Love is a very compound thing. The intellectual part of my love I shall give to men, the mighty dead or the illustrious living; and determine to call a mere sensual instinct by as few fine names as possible. What do I lose?Eu.Nay, I only think, what do I lose? and, one more word—which shall complete my instruction—does friendship go too? What of Luitolfo, the author of your present prosperity?Ch.How the author?Eu.That blow now called yours ...Ch.Struck without principle or purpose, as by a blind natural operation: yet to which all my thought and life directly and advisedly tended. I would have struck it, and could not: he would have done his utmost to avoid striking it, yet did so. I dispute his right to that deed of mine—a final action with him, from the first effect of which he fled away,—a mere first step with me, on which I base a whole mighty superstructure of good to follow. Could he get good from it?Eu.So we profess, so we perform!(EnterOgniben.Eulaliastands apart).Ogniben.I have seen three-and-twenty leaders of revolts. By your leave, sir! Perform? What does the lady say of performing?Ch.Only the trite saying, that we must not trust profession, only performance.Ogni.She 'll not say that, sir, when she knows you longer; you 'll instruct her better. Ever judge of men by their professions! For though the bright moment of promising is but a moment and cannot be prolonged, yet, if sincere in its moment's extravagant goodness, why,trust it and know the man by it, I say—not by his performance; which is half the world's work, interfere as the world needs must, with its accidents and circumstances: the profession was purely the man's own. I judge people by what they might be,—not are, nor will be.Ch.But have there not been found, too, performing natures, not merely promising?Ogni.Plenty. Little Bindo of our town, for instance, promised his friend, great ugly Masaccio, once, "I will repay you!"—for a favor done him. So, when his father came to die, and Bindo succeeded to the inheritance, he sends straightway for Masaccio and shares all with him—gives him half the land, half the money, half the kegs of wine in the cellar. "Good," say you: and it is good. But had little Bindo found himself possessor of all this wealth some five years before—on the happy night when Masaccio procured him that interview in the garden with his pretty cousin Lisa —instead of being the beggar he then was,—I am bound to believe that in the warm moment of promise he would have given away all the wine-kegs and all the money and all the land, and only reserved to himself some hut on a hilltop hard by, whence he might spend his life in looking and seeing his friend enjoy himself: he meant fully that much, but the world interfered. —To our business! Did I understand you just now within-doors? You are not going to marry your old friend's love, after all?Ch.I must have a woman that can sympathize with, and appreciate me, I told you.Ogni.Oh, I remember! You, the greater nature, needs must have a lesser one (—avowedly lesser—contest with you on that score would never do)—such a nature must comprehend you, as the phrase is, accompany and testify of your greatness from point to point onward. Why, that were being not merely as great as yourself, but greater considerably! Meantime, might not the more bounded nature as reasonably count on your appreciation of it, rather?—on your keeping close by it, so far as you both go together, and then going on by yourself as far as you please? Thus God serves us.Ch.And yet a woman that could understand the whole of me, to whom I could reveal alike the strength and the weakness—Ogni.Ah, my friend, wish for nothing so foolish! Worship your love, give her the best of you to see; be to her like the western lands (they bring us such strange news of) to the Spanish Court; send her only your lumps of gold, fans of feathers, your spirit-like birds, and fruits and gems! So shall you, what is unseen of you, be supposed altogether a paradise by her,—as these western lands by Spain: though I warrant there is filth, red baboons, ugly reptiles and squalor enough, which they bring Spain as few samples of as possible. Do you want your mistress to respect your body generally? Offer her your mouth to kiss: don't strip off your boot and put your foot to her lips! You understand my humor by this time? I help men to carry out their own principles: if they please to say two and two make five, I assent, so they will but go on and say, four and four make ten.Ch.But these are my private affairs; what I desire you to occupy yourself about, is my public appearance presently: for when the people hear that I am appointed Provost, though you and I may thoroughly discern—and easily, too—the right principle at bottom of such a movement, and how my republicanism remains thoroughly unaltered, only takes a form of expression hitherto commonly judged (and heretofore by myself) incompatible with its existence,—when thus I reconcile myself to an old form of government instead of proposing a new one—Ogni.Why, you must deal with people broadly. Begin at a distance from this matter and say,—New truths, old truths! sirs, there is nothing new possible to be revealed to us in the moral world; we know all we shall ever know: and it is for simply reminding us, by their various respective expedients, how we do know this and the other matter, that men get called prophets, poets and the like. A philosopher's life is spent in discovering that, of the half-dozen truths he knew when a child, such an one is a lie, as the world states it in set terms; and then, after a weary lapse of years, and plenty of hard thinking, it becomes a truth again after all, as he happens to newly consider it and view it in a different relation with the others: and so he re-states it, to the confusion of somebody else in good time. As for adding to the original stock of truths,—impossible! Thus, you see the expression of them is the grand business:—you have got a truth in your head about the right way of governing people, and you took a mode of expressing it which now you confess to be imperfect. But what then? There is truth in falsehood, falsehood in truth. No man ever told one great truth, that I know, without the help of a good dozen of lies at least, generally unconscious ones. And as when a child comes in breathlessly and relates a strange story, you try to conjecture from the very falsities in it what the reality was,—do not conclude that he saw nothing in the sky, because he assuredly did not see a flying horse there as he says,—so, through the contradictory expression, do you see, men should look painfully for, and trust to arrive eventually at, what you call the true principle at bottom. Ah, what an answer is there! to what will it not prove applicable?—"Contradictions? Of course there were," say you!Ch.Still, the world at large may call it inconsistency, and what shall I urge in reply?Ogni.Why, look you, when they tax you with tergiversation or duplicity, you may answer—you begin to perceive that, when all 's done and said, both great parties in the State, the advocators of change in the present system of things, and the opponents of it, patriot and anti-patriot, are found working together for the common good; and that in the midst of their efforts for and against its progress, the world somehow or other still advances: to which result they contribute in equal proportions,those who spend their life in pushing it onward, as those who give theirs to the business of pulling it back. Now, if you found the world stand still between the opposite forces, and were glad, I should conceive you: but it steadily advances, you rejoice to see! By the side of such a rejoicer, the man who only winks as he keeps cunning and quiet, and says, "Let yonder hot-headed fellow fight out my battle! I, for one, shall win in the end by the blows he gives, and which I ought to be giving,"—even he seems graceful in his avowal, when one considers that he might say, "I shall win quite as much by the blows our antagonist gives him, blows from which he saves me—I thank the antagonist equally!" Moreover, you may enlarge on the loss of the edge of party-animosity with age and experience ...Ch.And naturally time must wear off such asperities: the bitterest adversaries get to discover certain points of similarity between each other, common sympathies—do they not?Ogni.Ay, had the young David but sat first to dine on his cheeses with the Philistine, he had soon discovered an abundance of such common sympathies. He of Gath, it is recorded, was born of a father and mother, had brothers and sisters like another man,—they, no more than the sons of Jesse, were used to eat each other. But, for the sake of one broad antipathy that had existed from the beginning, David slung the stone, cut off the giant's head, made a spoil of it, and after ate his cheeses alone, with the better appetite, for all I can learn. My friend, as you, with a quickened eyesight, go on discovering much good on the worse side, remember that the same process should proportionably magnify and demonstrate to you the much more good on the better side! And when I profess no sympathy for the Goliaths of our time, and you object that a large nature should sympathize with every form of intelligence, and see the good in it, however limited,—I answer, "So I do; but preserve the proportions of my sympathy, however finelier or widelier I may extend its action." I desire to be able, with a quickened eyesight, to descry beauty in corruption where others see foulness only; but I hope I shall also continue to see a redoubled beauty in the higher forms of matter, where already everybody sees no foulness at all. I must retain, too, my old power of selection, and choice of appropriation, to apply to such new gifts; else they only dazzle instead of enlightening me. God has his archangels and consorts with them: though he made too, and intimately sees what is good in, the worm. Observe, I speak only as you profess to think and so ought to speak: I do justice to your own principles, that is all.Ch.But you very well know that the two parties do, on occasion, assume each other's characteristics. What more disgusting, for instance, than to see how promptly the newly emancipated slave will adopt, in his own favor, the very measures of precaution, which pressed soreliest on himself as institutions of the tyranny he has just escaped from? Do the classes, hitherto without opinion, get leave to express it? there follows a confederacy immediately, from which—exercise your individual right and dissent, and woe be to you!Ogni.And a journey over the sea to you! That is the generous way. Cry—"Emancipated slaves, the first excess, and off I go!" The first time a poor devil, who has been bastinadoed steadily his whole life long, finds himself let alone and able to legislate, so, begins pettishly, while he rubs his soles, "Woe be to whoever brings anything in the shape of a stick this way!"—you, rather than give up the very innocent pleasure of carrying one to switch flies with,—you go away, to everybody's sorrow. Yet you were quite reconciled to staying at home while the governors used to pass, every now and then, some such edict as, "Let no man indulge in owning a stick which is not thick enough to chastise our slaves, if need require!" Well, there are pre-ordained hierarchies among us, and a profane vulgar subjected to a different law altogether; yet I am rather sorry you should see it so clearly: for, do you know what is to—all but save you at the Day of Judgment, all you men of genius? It is this: that, while you generally began by pulling down God, and went on to the end of your life in one effort at setting up your own genius in his place,—still, the last, bitterest concession wrung with the utmost unwillingness from the experience of the very loftiest of you, was invariably—would one think it?—that the rest of mankind, down to the lowest of the mass, stood not, nor ever could stand, just on a level and equality with yourselves. That will be a point in the favor of all such, I hope and believe.Ch.Why, men of genius are usually charged, I think, with doing just the reverse; and at once acknowledging the natural inequality of mankind, by themselves participating in the universal craving after, and deference to, the civil distinctions which represent it. You wonder they pay such undue respect to titles and badges of superior rank.Ogni.Not I (always on your own ground and showing, be it noted!) Who doubts that, with a weapon to brandish, a man is the more formidable? Titles and badges are exercised as such a weapon, to which you and I look up wistfully. We could pin lions with it moreover, while in its present owner's hands it hardly prods rats. Nay, better than a mere weapon of easy mastery and obvious use, it is a mysterious divining-rod that may serve us in undreamed-of ways. Beauty, strength, intellect—men often have none of these, and yet conceive pretty accurately what kind of advantages they would bestow on the possessor. We know at least what it is we make up our mind to forego, and so can apply the fittest substitute in our power. Wanting beauty, we cultivate good-humor; missing wit, we get riches: but the mystic unimaginable operation of that gold collar and string of Latin names which suddenly turned poor stupid little peevish Cecco of our town into natural lord of the best of us—a Duke, he is now—there indeed is a virtue to be reverenced!Ch.Ay, by the vulgar: not by Messere Stiatta the poet, who pays moreassiduous court to him than anybody.Ogni.What else should Stiatta pay court to? He has talent, not honor and riches: men naturally covet what they have not.Ch.No; or Cecco would covet talent, which he has not, whereas he covets more riches, of which he has plenty, already.Ogni.Because a purse added to a purse makes the holder twice as rich: but just such another talent as Stiatta's, added to what he now possesses, what would that profit him? Give the talent a purse indeed, to do something with! But lo, how we keep the good people waiting! I only desired to do justice to the noble sentiments which animate you, and which you are too modest to duly enforce. Come, to our main business: shall we ascend the steps? I am going to propose you for Provost to the people; they know your antecedents, and will accept you with a joyful unanimity: whereon I confirm their choice. Rouse up! Are you nerving yourself to an effort? Beware the disaster of Messere Stiatta we were talking of! who, determining to keep an equal mind and constant face on whatever might be the fortune of his last new poem with our townsmen, heard too plainly "hiss, hiss, hiss," increase every moment. Till at last the man fell senseless: not perceiving that the portentous sounds had all the while been issuing from between his own nobly clenched teeth, and nostrils narrowed by resolve.Ch.Do you begin to throw off the mask?—to jest with me, having got me effectually into your trap?Ogni.Where is the trap, my friend? You hear what I engage to do, for my part: you, for yours, have only to fulfil your promise made just now within doors, of professing unlimited obedience to Rome's authority in my person. And I shall authorize no more than the simple re-establishment of the Provostship and the conferment of its privileges upon yourself: the only novel stipulation being a birth of the peculiar circumstances of the time.Ch.And that stipulation?Ogni.Just the obvious one—that in the event of the discovery of the actual assailant of the late Provost ...Ch.Ha!Ogni.Why, he shall suffer the proper penalty, of course; what did you expect?Ch.Who heard of this?Ogni.Rather, who needed to hear of this?Ch.Can it be, the popular rumor never reached you ...Ogni.Many more such rumors reach me, friend, than I choose to receive: those which wait longest have best chance. Has the present one sufficiently waited? Now is its time for entry with effect. See the good people crowding about yonder palace-steps—which we may not have to ascend, after all! My good friends! (nay, two or three of you will answer every purpose)—who was it fell upon and proved nearly the death of your late Provost? His successor desires to hear, that his day of inauguration may be graced by the act of prompt, bare justice we all anticipate. Who dealt the blow that night, does anybody know?Luit.[Coming forward.]I!All.Luitolfo!Luit.I avow the deed, justify and approve it, and stand forth now, to relieve my friend of an unearned responsibility. Having taken thought, I am grown stronger: I shall shrink from nothing that awaits me. Nay, Chiappino—we are friends still: I dare say there is some proof of your superior nature in this starting aside, strange as it seemed at first. So, they tell me, my horse is of the right stock, because a shadow in the path frightens him into a frenzy, makes him dash my brains out. I understand only the dull mule's way of standing stockishly, plodding soberly, suffering on occasion a blow or two with due patience.Eu.I was determined to justify my choice, Chiappino; to let Luitolfo's nature vindicate itself. Henceforth we are undivided, whatever be our fortune.Ogni.Now, in these last ten minutes of silence, what have I been doing, deem you? Putting the finishing stroke to a homily of mine, I have long taken thought to perfect, on the text, "Let whoso thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall." To your house, Luitolfo! Still silent, my patriotic friend? Well, that is a good sign however. And you will go aside for a time? That is better still. I understand: it would be easy for you to die of remorse here on the spot and shock us all, but you mean to live and grow worthy of coming back to us one day. There, I will tell everybody; and you only do right to believe you must get better as you get older. All men do so: they are worst in childhood, improve in manhood, and get ready in old age for another world. Youth, with its beauty and grace, would seem bestowed on us for some such reason as to make us partly endurable till we have time for really becoming so of ourselves, without their aid; when they leave us. The sweetest child we all smile on for his pleasant want of the whole world to break up, or suck in his mouth, seeing no other good in it—would be rudely handled by that world's inhabitants, if he retained those angelic infantine desires when he had grown six feet high, black and bearded. But, little by little, he sees fit to forego claim after claim on the world, puts up with a less and less share of its good as his proper portion; and when the octogenarian asks barely a sup of gruel and a fire of dry sticks, and thanks you as for his full allowance and right in the common good of life,—hoping nobody may murder him,—he who began by asking and expecting the whole of us to bow down in worship to him,—why, I say he is advanced, far onward, very far, nearly out of sight like our friend Chiappino yonder. And now—(ay, good-by to you! He turns round the northwest gate: going to Lugo again? Good-by!)—And now give thanks to God, the keys of the Provost's palace to me, and yourselves to profitable meditation at home! I have knownFour-and-twenty leaders of revolts.
The Market-place.Luitolfoin disguise mingling with thePopulaceassembled opposite theProvost'sPalace.1st Bystander.[ToLuit.]You, a friend of Luitolfo's? Then, your friend is vanished,—in all probability killed on the night that his patron the tyrannical Provost was loyally suppressed here, exactly a month ago, by our illustrious fellow-citizen, thrice-noble savior, and new Provost that is like to be, this very morning,—Chiappino!Luit.He the new Provost?2d By.Up those steps will he go, and beneath yonder pillar stand, while Ogniben, the Pope's Legate from Ravenna, reads the new dignitary's title to the people, according to established custom: for which reason, there is the assemblage you inquire about.Luit.Chiappino—the late Provost's successor? Impossible! But tell me of that presently. What I would know first of all is, wherefore Luitolfo must so necessarily have been killed on that memorable night?3d By.You were Luitolfo's friend? So was I. Never, if you will credit me, did there exist so poor-spirited a milk-sop. He, with all the opportunities in the world, furnished by daily converse with our oppressor, would not stir a finger to help us: and, when Chiappino rose in solitary majesty and ... how does one go on saying?... dealt the godlike blow,—this Luitolfo, not unreasonably fearing the indignation of an aroused and liberated people, fled precipitately. He may have got trodden to death in the press at the southeast gate, when the Provost's guards fled through it to Ravenna, with their wounded master,—if he did not rather hang himself under some hedge.Luit.Or why not simply have lain perdue in some quiet corner,—such as San Cassiano, where his estate was,—receiving daily intelligence from some sure friend, meanwhile, as to the turn matters were taking here—how, for instance, the Provost was not dead, after all, only wounded—or, as to-day's news would seem to prove, how Chiappino was not Brutus the Elder, after all, only the new Provost—and thus Luitolfo be enabled to watch a favorable opportunity for returning? Might it not have been so?3d By.Why, he may have taken that care of himself, certainly, for he came of a cautious stock. I 'll tell you how his uncle, just such another gingerly treader on tiptoes with finger on lip,—how he met his death in the great plague-year:dico vobis!Hearing that the seventeenth house in a certain street was infected, he calculates to pass it in safety by taking plentiful breath, say, when he shall arrive at the eleventh house; then scouring by,holding that breath, till he be got so far on the other side as number twenty-three, and thus elude the danger.—And so did he begin; but, as he arrived at thirteen, we will say,—thinking to improve on his precaution by putting up a little prayer to Saint Nepomucene of Prague, this exhausted so much of his lungs' reserve, that at sixteen it was clean spent,—consequently at the fatal seventeen he inhaled with a vigor and persistence enough to suck you any latent venom out of the heart of a stone—Ha, ha!Luit.[Aside.](If I had not lent that man the money he wanted last spring, I should fear this bitterness was attributable to me.) Luitolfo is dead then, one may conclude?3d By.Why, he had a house here, and a woman to whom he was affianced; and as they both pass naturally to the new Provost, his friend and heir ...Luit.Ah, I suspected you of imposing on me with your pleasantry! I know Chiappino better.1st By.(Our friend has the bile! After all, I do not dislike finding somebody vary a little this general gape of admiration at Chiappino's glorious qualities.) Pray, how much may you know of what has taken place in Faenza since that memorable night?Luit.It is most to the purpose, that I know Chiappino to have been by profession a hater of that very office of Provost, you now charge him with proposing to accept.1st By.Sir, I 'll tell you. That night was indeed memorable. Up we rose, a mass of us, men, women, children; out fled the guards with the body of the tyrant; we were to defy the world: but, next gray morning, "What will Rome say?" began everybody. You know we are governed by Ravenna, which is governed by Rome. And quietly into the town, by the Ravenna road, comes on muleback a portly personage, Ogniben by name, with the quality of Pontifical Legate; trots briskly through the streets humming a "Cur fremuere gentes," and makes directly for the Provost's Palace—there it faces you. "One Messer Chiappino is your leader? I have known three-and-twenty leaders of revolts!" (laughing gently to himself)—"Give me the help of your arm from my mule to yonder steps under the pillar—So! And now, my revolters and good friends, what do you want? The guards burst into Ravenna last night bearing your wounded Provost; and, having had a little talk with him, I take on myself to come and try appease the disorderliness, before Rome, hearing of it, resort to another method: 't is I come, and not another, from a certain love I confess to, of composing differences. So, do you understand, you are about to experience this unheard-of tyranny from me, that there shall be no heading nor hanging, nor confiscation nor exile: I insist on your simply pleasing yourselves. And now, pray, what does please you? To live without any government at all? Or having decided for one, to see its minister murdered by the first of your body that chooses to find himself wronged, or disposed for reverting to first principles and a justice anterior to all institutions,—and so will you carry matters, that the rest of the world must at length unite and put down such a den of wild beasts? As for vengeance on what has just taken place,—once for all, the wounded man assures me he cannot conjecture who struck him; and this so earnestly, that one may be sure he knows perfectly well what intimate acquaintance could find admission to speak with him late last evening. I come not for vengeance therefore, but from pure curiosity to hear what you will do next." And thus he ran on, on, easily and volubly, till he seemed to arrive quite naturally at the praise of law, order, and paternal government by somebody from rather a distance. All our citizens were in the snare, and about to be friends with so congenial an adviser; but that Chiappino suddenly stood forth, spoke out indignantly, and set things right again.Luit.Do you see? I recognize him there!3d By.Ay, but, mark you, at the end of Chiappino's longest period in praise of a pure republic,—"And by whom do I desire such a government should be administered, perhaps, but by one like yourself?" returns the Legate: thereupon speaking for a quarter of an hour together, on the natural and only legitimate government by the best and wisest. And it should seem there was soon discovered to be no such vast discrepancy at bottom between this and Chiappino's theory, place but each in its proper light. "Oh, are you there?" quoth Chiappino: "Ay, in that, I agree," returns Chiappino: and so on.Luit.But did Chiappino cede at once to this?1st By.Why, not altogether at once. For instance, he said that the difference between him and all his fellows was, that they seemed all wishing to be kings in one or another way,—"whereas what right," asked he, "has any man to wish to be superior to another?"—whereat, "Ah, sir," answers the Legate, "this is the death of me, so often as I expect something is really going to be revealed to us by you clearer-seers, deeper-thinkers—this—that your right-hand (to speak by a figure) should be found taking up the weapon it displayed so ostentatiously, not to destroy any dragon in our path, as was prophesied, but simply to cut off its own fellow left-hand: yourself set about attacking yourself. For see now! Here are you who, I make sure, glory exceedingly in knowing the noble nature of the soul, its divine impulses, and so forth; and with such a knowledge you stand, as it were, armed to encounter the natural doubts and fears as to that same inherent nobility, which are apt to waylay us, the weaker ones, in the road of life. And when we look eagerly to see them fall before you, lo, round you wheel, only the left-hand gets the blow; one proof of the soul's nobility destroys simply another proof, quite as good, of the same, for you are found delivering an opinion like this! Why, what is this perpetual yearning to exceed, to subdue, to be better than, anda king over, one's fellows,—all that you so disclaim,—but the very tendency yourself are most proud of, and under another form, would oppose to it,—only in a lower stage of manifestation? You don't want to be vulgarly superior to your fellows after their poor fashion— to have me hold solemnly up your gown's tail, or hand you an express of the last importance from the Pope, with all these bystanders noticing how unconcerned you look the while: but neither does our gaping friend, the burgess yonder, want the other kind of kingship, that consists in understanding better than his fellows this and similar points of human nature, nor to roll under his tongue this sweeter morsel still, —the feeling that, through immense philosophy, he doesnotfeel, he rather thinks, above you and me!" And so chatting, they glided off arm-in-arm.Luit.And the result is ...1st By.Why that, a month having gone by, the indomitable Chiappino, marrying as he will Luitolfo's love—at all events succeeding to Luitolfo's wealth—becomes the first inhabitant of Faenza, and a proper aspirant to the Provostship; which we assemble here to see conferred on him this morning. The Legate's Guard to clear the way! He will follow presently.Luit.[Withdrawing a little.]I understand the drift of Eulalia's communications less than ever. Yet she surely said, in so many words, that Chiappino was in urgent danger: wherefore, disregarding her injunction to continue in my retreat and await the result of—what she called, some experiment yet in process—I hastened here without her leave or knowledge: how could I else? But if this they say be true—if it were for such a purpose, she and Chiappino kept me away ... Oh, no, no! I must confront him and her before I believe this of them. And at the word, see!(EnterChiappinoandEulalia.)Eu.We part here, then? The change in your principles would seem to be complete.Ch.Now, why refuse to see that in my present course I change no principles, only re-adapt them and more adroitly? I had despaired of what you may call the material instrumentality of life; of ever being able to rightly operate on mankind through such a deranged machinery as the existing modes of government: but now, if I suddenly discover how to inform these perverted institutions with fresh purpose, bring the functionary limbs once more into immediate communication with, and subjection to, the soul I am about to bestow on them—do you see? Why should one desire to invent, as long as it remains possible to renew and transform? When all further hope of the old organization shall be extinct, then, I grant you, it may be time to try and create another.Eu.And there being discoverable some hope yet in the hitherto much-abused old system of absolute government by a Provost here, you mean to take your time about endeavoring to realize those visions of a perfect State we once heard of?Ch.Say, I would fain realize my conception of a palace, for instance, and that there is, abstractedly, but a single way of erecting one perfectly. Here, in the market-place is my allotted building-ground; here I stand without a stone to lay, or a laborer to help me,—stand, too, during a short day of life, close on which the night comes. On the other hand, circumstances suddenly offer me (turn and see it!) the old Provost's house to experiment upon—ruinous, if you please, wrongly constructed at the beginning, and ready to tumble now. But materials abound, a crowd of workmen offer their services; here exists yet a Hall of Audience of originally noble proportions, there a Guest-chamber of symmetrical design enough: and I may restore, enlarge, abolish or unite these to heart's content. Ought I not make the best of such an opportunity, rather than continue to gaze disconsolately with folded arms on the flat pavement here, while the sun goes slowly down, never to rise again? Since you cannot understand this nor me, it is better we should part as you desire.Eu.So, the love breaks away too!Ch.No, rather my soul's capacity for love widens—needs more than one object to content it,—and, being better instructed, will not persist in seeing all the component parts of love in what is only a single part,—nor in finding that so many and so various loves are all united in the love of a woman,—manifold uses in one instrument, as the savage has his sword, staff, sceptre and idol, all in one club-stick. Love is a very compound thing. The intellectual part of my love I shall give to men, the mighty dead or the illustrious living; and determine to call a mere sensual instinct by as few fine names as possible. What do I lose?Eu.Nay, I only think, what do I lose? and, one more word—which shall complete my instruction—does friendship go too? What of Luitolfo, the author of your present prosperity?Ch.How the author?Eu.That blow now called yours ...Ch.Struck without principle or purpose, as by a blind natural operation: yet to which all my thought and life directly and advisedly tended. I would have struck it, and could not: he would have done his utmost to avoid striking it, yet did so. I dispute his right to that deed of mine—a final action with him, from the first effect of which he fled away,—a mere first step with me, on which I base a whole mighty superstructure of good to follow. Could he get good from it?Eu.So we profess, so we perform!(EnterOgniben.Eulaliastands apart).Ogniben.I have seen three-and-twenty leaders of revolts. By your leave, sir! Perform? What does the lady say of performing?Ch.Only the trite saying, that we must not trust profession, only performance.Ogni.She 'll not say that, sir, when she knows you longer; you 'll instruct her better. Ever judge of men by their professions! For though the bright moment of promising is but a moment and cannot be prolonged, yet, if sincere in its moment's extravagant goodness, why,trust it and know the man by it, I say—not by his performance; which is half the world's work, interfere as the world needs must, with its accidents and circumstances: the profession was purely the man's own. I judge people by what they might be,—not are, nor will be.Ch.But have there not been found, too, performing natures, not merely promising?Ogni.Plenty. Little Bindo of our town, for instance, promised his friend, great ugly Masaccio, once, "I will repay you!"—for a favor done him. So, when his father came to die, and Bindo succeeded to the inheritance, he sends straightway for Masaccio and shares all with him—gives him half the land, half the money, half the kegs of wine in the cellar. "Good," say you: and it is good. But had little Bindo found himself possessor of all this wealth some five years before—on the happy night when Masaccio procured him that interview in the garden with his pretty cousin Lisa —instead of being the beggar he then was,—I am bound to believe that in the warm moment of promise he would have given away all the wine-kegs and all the money and all the land, and only reserved to himself some hut on a hilltop hard by, whence he might spend his life in looking and seeing his friend enjoy himself: he meant fully that much, but the world interfered. —To our business! Did I understand you just now within-doors? You are not going to marry your old friend's love, after all?Ch.I must have a woman that can sympathize with, and appreciate me, I told you.Ogni.Oh, I remember! You, the greater nature, needs must have a lesser one (—avowedly lesser—contest with you on that score would never do)—such a nature must comprehend you, as the phrase is, accompany and testify of your greatness from point to point onward. Why, that were being not merely as great as yourself, but greater considerably! Meantime, might not the more bounded nature as reasonably count on your appreciation of it, rather?—on your keeping close by it, so far as you both go together, and then going on by yourself as far as you please? Thus God serves us.Ch.And yet a woman that could understand the whole of me, to whom I could reveal alike the strength and the weakness—Ogni.Ah, my friend, wish for nothing so foolish! Worship your love, give her the best of you to see; be to her like the western lands (they bring us such strange news of) to the Spanish Court; send her only your lumps of gold, fans of feathers, your spirit-like birds, and fruits and gems! So shall you, what is unseen of you, be supposed altogether a paradise by her,—as these western lands by Spain: though I warrant there is filth, red baboons, ugly reptiles and squalor enough, which they bring Spain as few samples of as possible. Do you want your mistress to respect your body generally? Offer her your mouth to kiss: don't strip off your boot and put your foot to her lips! You understand my humor by this time? I help men to carry out their own principles: if they please to say two and two make five, I assent, so they will but go on and say, four and four make ten.Ch.But these are my private affairs; what I desire you to occupy yourself about, is my public appearance presently: for when the people hear that I am appointed Provost, though you and I may thoroughly discern—and easily, too—the right principle at bottom of such a movement, and how my republicanism remains thoroughly unaltered, only takes a form of expression hitherto commonly judged (and heretofore by myself) incompatible with its existence,—when thus I reconcile myself to an old form of government instead of proposing a new one—Ogni.Why, you must deal with people broadly. Begin at a distance from this matter and say,—New truths, old truths! sirs, there is nothing new possible to be revealed to us in the moral world; we know all we shall ever know: and it is for simply reminding us, by their various respective expedients, how we do know this and the other matter, that men get called prophets, poets and the like. A philosopher's life is spent in discovering that, of the half-dozen truths he knew when a child, such an one is a lie, as the world states it in set terms; and then, after a weary lapse of years, and plenty of hard thinking, it becomes a truth again after all, as he happens to newly consider it and view it in a different relation with the others: and so he re-states it, to the confusion of somebody else in good time. As for adding to the original stock of truths,—impossible! Thus, you see the expression of them is the grand business:—you have got a truth in your head about the right way of governing people, and you took a mode of expressing it which now you confess to be imperfect. But what then? There is truth in falsehood, falsehood in truth. No man ever told one great truth, that I know, without the help of a good dozen of lies at least, generally unconscious ones. And as when a child comes in breathlessly and relates a strange story, you try to conjecture from the very falsities in it what the reality was,—do not conclude that he saw nothing in the sky, because he assuredly did not see a flying horse there as he says,—so, through the contradictory expression, do you see, men should look painfully for, and trust to arrive eventually at, what you call the true principle at bottom. Ah, what an answer is there! to what will it not prove applicable?—"Contradictions? Of course there were," say you!Ch.Still, the world at large may call it inconsistency, and what shall I urge in reply?Ogni.Why, look you, when they tax you with tergiversation or duplicity, you may answer—you begin to perceive that, when all 's done and said, both great parties in the State, the advocators of change in the present system of things, and the opponents of it, patriot and anti-patriot, are found working together for the common good; and that in the midst of their efforts for and against its progress, the world somehow or other still advances: to which result they contribute in equal proportions,those who spend their life in pushing it onward, as those who give theirs to the business of pulling it back. Now, if you found the world stand still between the opposite forces, and were glad, I should conceive you: but it steadily advances, you rejoice to see! By the side of such a rejoicer, the man who only winks as he keeps cunning and quiet, and says, "Let yonder hot-headed fellow fight out my battle! I, for one, shall win in the end by the blows he gives, and which I ought to be giving,"—even he seems graceful in his avowal, when one considers that he might say, "I shall win quite as much by the blows our antagonist gives him, blows from which he saves me—I thank the antagonist equally!" Moreover, you may enlarge on the loss of the edge of party-animosity with age and experience ...Ch.And naturally time must wear off such asperities: the bitterest adversaries get to discover certain points of similarity between each other, common sympathies—do they not?Ogni.Ay, had the young David but sat first to dine on his cheeses with the Philistine, he had soon discovered an abundance of such common sympathies. He of Gath, it is recorded, was born of a father and mother, had brothers and sisters like another man,—they, no more than the sons of Jesse, were used to eat each other. But, for the sake of one broad antipathy that had existed from the beginning, David slung the stone, cut off the giant's head, made a spoil of it, and after ate his cheeses alone, with the better appetite, for all I can learn. My friend, as you, with a quickened eyesight, go on discovering much good on the worse side, remember that the same process should proportionably magnify and demonstrate to you the much more good on the better side! And when I profess no sympathy for the Goliaths of our time, and you object that a large nature should sympathize with every form of intelligence, and see the good in it, however limited,—I answer, "So I do; but preserve the proportions of my sympathy, however finelier or widelier I may extend its action." I desire to be able, with a quickened eyesight, to descry beauty in corruption where others see foulness only; but I hope I shall also continue to see a redoubled beauty in the higher forms of matter, where already everybody sees no foulness at all. I must retain, too, my old power of selection, and choice of appropriation, to apply to such new gifts; else they only dazzle instead of enlightening me. God has his archangels and consorts with them: though he made too, and intimately sees what is good in, the worm. Observe, I speak only as you profess to think and so ought to speak: I do justice to your own principles, that is all.Ch.But you very well know that the two parties do, on occasion, assume each other's characteristics. What more disgusting, for instance, than to see how promptly the newly emancipated slave will adopt, in his own favor, the very measures of precaution, which pressed soreliest on himself as institutions of the tyranny he has just escaped from? Do the classes, hitherto without opinion, get leave to express it? there follows a confederacy immediately, from which—exercise your individual right and dissent, and woe be to you!Ogni.And a journey over the sea to you! That is the generous way. Cry—"Emancipated slaves, the first excess, and off I go!" The first time a poor devil, who has been bastinadoed steadily his whole life long, finds himself let alone and able to legislate, so, begins pettishly, while he rubs his soles, "Woe be to whoever brings anything in the shape of a stick this way!"—you, rather than give up the very innocent pleasure of carrying one to switch flies with,—you go away, to everybody's sorrow. Yet you were quite reconciled to staying at home while the governors used to pass, every now and then, some such edict as, "Let no man indulge in owning a stick which is not thick enough to chastise our slaves, if need require!" Well, there are pre-ordained hierarchies among us, and a profane vulgar subjected to a different law altogether; yet I am rather sorry you should see it so clearly: for, do you know what is to—all but save you at the Day of Judgment, all you men of genius? It is this: that, while you generally began by pulling down God, and went on to the end of your life in one effort at setting up your own genius in his place,—still, the last, bitterest concession wrung with the utmost unwillingness from the experience of the very loftiest of you, was invariably—would one think it?—that the rest of mankind, down to the lowest of the mass, stood not, nor ever could stand, just on a level and equality with yourselves. That will be a point in the favor of all such, I hope and believe.Ch.Why, men of genius are usually charged, I think, with doing just the reverse; and at once acknowledging the natural inequality of mankind, by themselves participating in the universal craving after, and deference to, the civil distinctions which represent it. You wonder they pay such undue respect to titles and badges of superior rank.Ogni.Not I (always on your own ground and showing, be it noted!) Who doubts that, with a weapon to brandish, a man is the more formidable? Titles and badges are exercised as such a weapon, to which you and I look up wistfully. We could pin lions with it moreover, while in its present owner's hands it hardly prods rats. Nay, better than a mere weapon of easy mastery and obvious use, it is a mysterious divining-rod that may serve us in undreamed-of ways. Beauty, strength, intellect—men often have none of these, and yet conceive pretty accurately what kind of advantages they would bestow on the possessor. We know at least what it is we make up our mind to forego, and so can apply the fittest substitute in our power. Wanting beauty, we cultivate good-humor; missing wit, we get riches: but the mystic unimaginable operation of that gold collar and string of Latin names which suddenly turned poor stupid little peevish Cecco of our town into natural lord of the best of us—a Duke, he is now—there indeed is a virtue to be reverenced!Ch.Ay, by the vulgar: not by Messere Stiatta the poet, who pays moreassiduous court to him than anybody.Ogni.What else should Stiatta pay court to? He has talent, not honor and riches: men naturally covet what they have not.Ch.No; or Cecco would covet talent, which he has not, whereas he covets more riches, of which he has plenty, already.Ogni.Because a purse added to a purse makes the holder twice as rich: but just such another talent as Stiatta's, added to what he now possesses, what would that profit him? Give the talent a purse indeed, to do something with! But lo, how we keep the good people waiting! I only desired to do justice to the noble sentiments which animate you, and which you are too modest to duly enforce. Come, to our main business: shall we ascend the steps? I am going to propose you for Provost to the people; they know your antecedents, and will accept you with a joyful unanimity: whereon I confirm their choice. Rouse up! Are you nerving yourself to an effort? Beware the disaster of Messere Stiatta we were talking of! who, determining to keep an equal mind and constant face on whatever might be the fortune of his last new poem with our townsmen, heard too plainly "hiss, hiss, hiss," increase every moment. Till at last the man fell senseless: not perceiving that the portentous sounds had all the while been issuing from between his own nobly clenched teeth, and nostrils narrowed by resolve.Ch.Do you begin to throw off the mask?—to jest with me, having got me effectually into your trap?Ogni.Where is the trap, my friend? You hear what I engage to do, for my part: you, for yours, have only to fulfil your promise made just now within doors, of professing unlimited obedience to Rome's authority in my person. And I shall authorize no more than the simple re-establishment of the Provostship and the conferment of its privileges upon yourself: the only novel stipulation being a birth of the peculiar circumstances of the time.Ch.And that stipulation?Ogni.Just the obvious one—that in the event of the discovery of the actual assailant of the late Provost ...Ch.Ha!Ogni.Why, he shall suffer the proper penalty, of course; what did you expect?Ch.Who heard of this?Ogni.Rather, who needed to hear of this?Ch.Can it be, the popular rumor never reached you ...Ogni.Many more such rumors reach me, friend, than I choose to receive: those which wait longest have best chance. Has the present one sufficiently waited? Now is its time for entry with effect. See the good people crowding about yonder palace-steps—which we may not have to ascend, after all! My good friends! (nay, two or three of you will answer every purpose)—who was it fell upon and proved nearly the death of your late Provost? His successor desires to hear, that his day of inauguration may be graced by the act of prompt, bare justice we all anticipate. Who dealt the blow that night, does anybody know?Luit.[Coming forward.]I!All.Luitolfo!Luit.I avow the deed, justify and approve it, and stand forth now, to relieve my friend of an unearned responsibility. Having taken thought, I am grown stronger: I shall shrink from nothing that awaits me. Nay, Chiappino—we are friends still: I dare say there is some proof of your superior nature in this starting aside, strange as it seemed at first. So, they tell me, my horse is of the right stock, because a shadow in the path frightens him into a frenzy, makes him dash my brains out. I understand only the dull mule's way of standing stockishly, plodding soberly, suffering on occasion a blow or two with due patience.Eu.I was determined to justify my choice, Chiappino; to let Luitolfo's nature vindicate itself. Henceforth we are undivided, whatever be our fortune.Ogni.Now, in these last ten minutes of silence, what have I been doing, deem you? Putting the finishing stroke to a homily of mine, I have long taken thought to perfect, on the text, "Let whoso thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall." To your house, Luitolfo! Still silent, my patriotic friend? Well, that is a good sign however. And you will go aside for a time? That is better still. I understand: it would be easy for you to die of remorse here on the spot and shock us all, but you mean to live and grow worthy of coming back to us one day. There, I will tell everybody; and you only do right to believe you must get better as you get older. All men do so: they are worst in childhood, improve in manhood, and get ready in old age for another world. Youth, with its beauty and grace, would seem bestowed on us for some such reason as to make us partly endurable till we have time for really becoming so of ourselves, without their aid; when they leave us. The sweetest child we all smile on for his pleasant want of the whole world to break up, or suck in his mouth, seeing no other good in it—would be rudely handled by that world's inhabitants, if he retained those angelic infantine desires when he had grown six feet high, black and bearded. But, little by little, he sees fit to forego claim after claim on the world, puts up with a less and less share of its good as his proper portion; and when the octogenarian asks barely a sup of gruel and a fire of dry sticks, and thanks you as for his full allowance and right in the common good of life,—hoping nobody may murder him,—he who began by asking and expecting the whole of us to bow down in worship to him,—why, I say he is advanced, far onward, very far, nearly out of sight like our friend Chiappino yonder. And now—(ay, good-by to you! He turns round the northwest gate: going to Lugo again? Good-by!)—And now give thanks to God, the keys of the Provost's palace to me, and yourselves to profitable meditation at home! I have knownFour-and-twenty leaders of revolts.
The Market-place.Luitolfoin disguise mingling with thePopulaceassembled opposite theProvost'sPalace.
1st Bystander.[ToLuit.]You, a friend of Luitolfo's? Then, your friend is vanished,—in all probability killed on the night that his patron the tyrannical Provost was loyally suppressed here, exactly a month ago, by our illustrious fellow-citizen, thrice-noble savior, and new Provost that is like to be, this very morning,—Chiappino!
Luit.He the new Provost?
2d By.Up those steps will he go, and beneath yonder pillar stand, while Ogniben, the Pope's Legate from Ravenna, reads the new dignitary's title to the people, according to established custom: for which reason, there is the assemblage you inquire about.
Luit.Chiappino—the late Provost's successor? Impossible! But tell me of that presently. What I would know first of all is, wherefore Luitolfo must so necessarily have been killed on that memorable night?
3d By.You were Luitolfo's friend? So was I. Never, if you will credit me, did there exist so poor-spirited a milk-sop. He, with all the opportunities in the world, furnished by daily converse with our oppressor, would not stir a finger to help us: and, when Chiappino rose in solitary majesty and ... how does one go on saying?... dealt the godlike blow,—this Luitolfo, not unreasonably fearing the indignation of an aroused and liberated people, fled precipitately. He may have got trodden to death in the press at the southeast gate, when the Provost's guards fled through it to Ravenna, with their wounded master,—if he did not rather hang himself under some hedge.
Luit.Or why not simply have lain perdue in some quiet corner,—such as San Cassiano, where his estate was,—receiving daily intelligence from some sure friend, meanwhile, as to the turn matters were taking here—how, for instance, the Provost was not dead, after all, only wounded—or, as to-day's news would seem to prove, how Chiappino was not Brutus the Elder, after all, only the new Provost—and thus Luitolfo be enabled to watch a favorable opportunity for returning? Might it not have been so?
3d By.Why, he may have taken that care of himself, certainly, for he came of a cautious stock. I 'll tell you how his uncle, just such another gingerly treader on tiptoes with finger on lip,—how he met his death in the great plague-year:dico vobis!Hearing that the seventeenth house in a certain street was infected, he calculates to pass it in safety by taking plentiful breath, say, when he shall arrive at the eleventh house; then scouring by,holding that breath, till he be got so far on the other side as number twenty-three, and thus elude the danger.—And so did he begin; but, as he arrived at thirteen, we will say,—thinking to improve on his precaution by putting up a little prayer to Saint Nepomucene of Prague, this exhausted so much of his lungs' reserve, that at sixteen it was clean spent,—consequently at the fatal seventeen he inhaled with a vigor and persistence enough to suck you any latent venom out of the heart of a stone—Ha, ha!
Luit.[Aside.](If I had not lent that man the money he wanted last spring, I should fear this bitterness was attributable to me.) Luitolfo is dead then, one may conclude?
3d By.Why, he had a house here, and a woman to whom he was affianced; and as they both pass naturally to the new Provost, his friend and heir ...
Luit.Ah, I suspected you of imposing on me with your pleasantry! I know Chiappino better.
1st By.(Our friend has the bile! After all, I do not dislike finding somebody vary a little this general gape of admiration at Chiappino's glorious qualities.) Pray, how much may you know of what has taken place in Faenza since that memorable night?
Luit.It is most to the purpose, that I know Chiappino to have been by profession a hater of that very office of Provost, you now charge him with proposing to accept.
1st By.Sir, I 'll tell you. That night was indeed memorable. Up we rose, a mass of us, men, women, children; out fled the guards with the body of the tyrant; we were to defy the world: but, next gray morning, "What will Rome say?" began everybody. You know we are governed by Ravenna, which is governed by Rome. And quietly into the town, by the Ravenna road, comes on muleback a portly personage, Ogniben by name, with the quality of Pontifical Legate; trots briskly through the streets humming a "Cur fremuere gentes," and makes directly for the Provost's Palace—there it faces you. "One Messer Chiappino is your leader? I have known three-and-twenty leaders of revolts!" (laughing gently to himself)—"Give me the help of your arm from my mule to yonder steps under the pillar—So! And now, my revolters and good friends, what do you want? The guards burst into Ravenna last night bearing your wounded Provost; and, having had a little talk with him, I take on myself to come and try appease the disorderliness, before Rome, hearing of it, resort to another method: 't is I come, and not another, from a certain love I confess to, of composing differences. So, do you understand, you are about to experience this unheard-of tyranny from me, that there shall be no heading nor hanging, nor confiscation nor exile: I insist on your simply pleasing yourselves. And now, pray, what does please you? To live without any government at all? Or having decided for one, to see its minister murdered by the first of your body that chooses to find himself wronged, or disposed for reverting to first principles and a justice anterior to all institutions,—and so will you carry matters, that the rest of the world must at length unite and put down such a den of wild beasts? As for vengeance on what has just taken place,—once for all, the wounded man assures me he cannot conjecture who struck him; and this so earnestly, that one may be sure he knows perfectly well what intimate acquaintance could find admission to speak with him late last evening. I come not for vengeance therefore, but from pure curiosity to hear what you will do next." And thus he ran on, on, easily and volubly, till he seemed to arrive quite naturally at the praise of law, order, and paternal government by somebody from rather a distance. All our citizens were in the snare, and about to be friends with so congenial an adviser; but that Chiappino suddenly stood forth, spoke out indignantly, and set things right again.
Luit.Do you see? I recognize him there!
3d By.Ay, but, mark you, at the end of Chiappino's longest period in praise of a pure republic,—"And by whom do I desire such a government should be administered, perhaps, but by one like yourself?" returns the Legate: thereupon speaking for a quarter of an hour together, on the natural and only legitimate government by the best and wisest. And it should seem there was soon discovered to be no such vast discrepancy at bottom between this and Chiappino's theory, place but each in its proper light. "Oh, are you there?" quoth Chiappino: "Ay, in that, I agree," returns Chiappino: and so on.
Luit.But did Chiappino cede at once to this?
1st By.Why, not altogether at once. For instance, he said that the difference between him and all his fellows was, that they seemed all wishing to be kings in one or another way,—"whereas what right," asked he, "has any man to wish to be superior to another?"—whereat, "Ah, sir," answers the Legate, "this is the death of me, so often as I expect something is really going to be revealed to us by you clearer-seers, deeper-thinkers—this—that your right-hand (to speak by a figure) should be found taking up the weapon it displayed so ostentatiously, not to destroy any dragon in our path, as was prophesied, but simply to cut off its own fellow left-hand: yourself set about attacking yourself. For see now! Here are you who, I make sure, glory exceedingly in knowing the noble nature of the soul, its divine impulses, and so forth; and with such a knowledge you stand, as it were, armed to encounter the natural doubts and fears as to that same inherent nobility, which are apt to waylay us, the weaker ones, in the road of life. And when we look eagerly to see them fall before you, lo, round you wheel, only the left-hand gets the blow; one proof of the soul's nobility destroys simply another proof, quite as good, of the same, for you are found delivering an opinion like this! Why, what is this perpetual yearning to exceed, to subdue, to be better than, anda king over, one's fellows,—all that you so disclaim,—but the very tendency yourself are most proud of, and under another form, would oppose to it,—only in a lower stage of manifestation? You don't want to be vulgarly superior to your fellows after their poor fashion— to have me hold solemnly up your gown's tail, or hand you an express of the last importance from the Pope, with all these bystanders noticing how unconcerned you look the while: but neither does our gaping friend, the burgess yonder, want the other kind of kingship, that consists in understanding better than his fellows this and similar points of human nature, nor to roll under his tongue this sweeter morsel still, —the feeling that, through immense philosophy, he doesnotfeel, he rather thinks, above you and me!" And so chatting, they glided off arm-in-arm.
Luit.And the result is ...
1st By.Why that, a month having gone by, the indomitable Chiappino, marrying as he will Luitolfo's love—at all events succeeding to Luitolfo's wealth—becomes the first inhabitant of Faenza, and a proper aspirant to the Provostship; which we assemble here to see conferred on him this morning. The Legate's Guard to clear the way! He will follow presently.
Luit.[Withdrawing a little.]I understand the drift of Eulalia's communications less than ever. Yet she surely said, in so many words, that Chiappino was in urgent danger: wherefore, disregarding her injunction to continue in my retreat and await the result of—what she called, some experiment yet in process—I hastened here without her leave or knowledge: how could I else? But if this they say be true—if it were for such a purpose, she and Chiappino kept me away ... Oh, no, no! I must confront him and her before I believe this of them. And at the word, see!
(EnterChiappinoandEulalia.)
Eu.We part here, then? The change in your principles would seem to be complete.
Ch.Now, why refuse to see that in my present course I change no principles, only re-adapt them and more adroitly? I had despaired of what you may call the material instrumentality of life; of ever being able to rightly operate on mankind through such a deranged machinery as the existing modes of government: but now, if I suddenly discover how to inform these perverted institutions with fresh purpose, bring the functionary limbs once more into immediate communication with, and subjection to, the soul I am about to bestow on them—do you see? Why should one desire to invent, as long as it remains possible to renew and transform? When all further hope of the old organization shall be extinct, then, I grant you, it may be time to try and create another.
Eu.And there being discoverable some hope yet in the hitherto much-abused old system of absolute government by a Provost here, you mean to take your time about endeavoring to realize those visions of a perfect State we once heard of?
Ch.Say, I would fain realize my conception of a palace, for instance, and that there is, abstractedly, but a single way of erecting one perfectly. Here, in the market-place is my allotted building-ground; here I stand without a stone to lay, or a laborer to help me,—stand, too, during a short day of life, close on which the night comes. On the other hand, circumstances suddenly offer me (turn and see it!) the old Provost's house to experiment upon—ruinous, if you please, wrongly constructed at the beginning, and ready to tumble now. But materials abound, a crowd of workmen offer their services; here exists yet a Hall of Audience of originally noble proportions, there a Guest-chamber of symmetrical design enough: and I may restore, enlarge, abolish or unite these to heart's content. Ought I not make the best of such an opportunity, rather than continue to gaze disconsolately with folded arms on the flat pavement here, while the sun goes slowly down, never to rise again? Since you cannot understand this nor me, it is better we should part as you desire.
Eu.So, the love breaks away too!
Ch.No, rather my soul's capacity for love widens—needs more than one object to content it,—and, being better instructed, will not persist in seeing all the component parts of love in what is only a single part,—nor in finding that so many and so various loves are all united in the love of a woman,—manifold uses in one instrument, as the savage has his sword, staff, sceptre and idol, all in one club-stick. Love is a very compound thing. The intellectual part of my love I shall give to men, the mighty dead or the illustrious living; and determine to call a mere sensual instinct by as few fine names as possible. What do I lose?
Eu.Nay, I only think, what do I lose? and, one more word—which shall complete my instruction—does friendship go too? What of Luitolfo, the author of your present prosperity?
Ch.How the author?
Eu.That blow now called yours ...
Ch.Struck without principle or purpose, as by a blind natural operation: yet to which all my thought and life directly and advisedly tended. I would have struck it, and could not: he would have done his utmost to avoid striking it, yet did so. I dispute his right to that deed of mine—a final action with him, from the first effect of which he fled away,—a mere first step with me, on which I base a whole mighty superstructure of good to follow. Could he get good from it?
Eu.So we profess, so we perform!
(EnterOgniben.Eulaliastands apart).
Ogniben.I have seen three-and-twenty leaders of revolts. By your leave, sir! Perform? What does the lady say of performing?
Ch.Only the trite saying, that we must not trust profession, only performance.
Ogni.She 'll not say that, sir, when she knows you longer; you 'll instruct her better. Ever judge of men by their professions! For though the bright moment of promising is but a moment and cannot be prolonged, yet, if sincere in its moment's extravagant goodness, why,trust it and know the man by it, I say—not by his performance; which is half the world's work, interfere as the world needs must, with its accidents and circumstances: the profession was purely the man's own. I judge people by what they might be,—not are, nor will be.
Ch.But have there not been found, too, performing natures, not merely promising?
Ogni.Plenty. Little Bindo of our town, for instance, promised his friend, great ugly Masaccio, once, "I will repay you!"—for a favor done him. So, when his father came to die, and Bindo succeeded to the inheritance, he sends straightway for Masaccio and shares all with him—gives him half the land, half the money, half the kegs of wine in the cellar. "Good," say you: and it is good. But had little Bindo found himself possessor of all this wealth some five years before—on the happy night when Masaccio procured him that interview in the garden with his pretty cousin Lisa —instead of being the beggar he then was,—I am bound to believe that in the warm moment of promise he would have given away all the wine-kegs and all the money and all the land, and only reserved to himself some hut on a hilltop hard by, whence he might spend his life in looking and seeing his friend enjoy himself: he meant fully that much, but the world interfered. —To our business! Did I understand you just now within-doors? You are not going to marry your old friend's love, after all?
Ch.I must have a woman that can sympathize with, and appreciate me, I told you.
Ogni.Oh, I remember! You, the greater nature, needs must have a lesser one (—avowedly lesser—contest with you on that score would never do)—such a nature must comprehend you, as the phrase is, accompany and testify of your greatness from point to point onward. Why, that were being not merely as great as yourself, but greater considerably! Meantime, might not the more bounded nature as reasonably count on your appreciation of it, rather?—on your keeping close by it, so far as you both go together, and then going on by yourself as far as you please? Thus God serves us.
Ch.And yet a woman that could understand the whole of me, to whom I could reveal alike the strength and the weakness—
Ogni.Ah, my friend, wish for nothing so foolish! Worship your love, give her the best of you to see; be to her like the western lands (they bring us such strange news of) to the Spanish Court; send her only your lumps of gold, fans of feathers, your spirit-like birds, and fruits and gems! So shall you, what is unseen of you, be supposed altogether a paradise by her,—as these western lands by Spain: though I warrant there is filth, red baboons, ugly reptiles and squalor enough, which they bring Spain as few samples of as possible. Do you want your mistress to respect your body generally? Offer her your mouth to kiss: don't strip off your boot and put your foot to her lips! You understand my humor by this time? I help men to carry out their own principles: if they please to say two and two make five, I assent, so they will but go on and say, four and four make ten.
Ch.But these are my private affairs; what I desire you to occupy yourself about, is my public appearance presently: for when the people hear that I am appointed Provost, though you and I may thoroughly discern—and easily, too—the right principle at bottom of such a movement, and how my republicanism remains thoroughly unaltered, only takes a form of expression hitherto commonly judged (and heretofore by myself) incompatible with its existence,—when thus I reconcile myself to an old form of government instead of proposing a new one—
Ogni.Why, you must deal with people broadly. Begin at a distance from this matter and say,—New truths, old truths! sirs, there is nothing new possible to be revealed to us in the moral world; we know all we shall ever know: and it is for simply reminding us, by their various respective expedients, how we do know this and the other matter, that men get called prophets, poets and the like. A philosopher's life is spent in discovering that, of the half-dozen truths he knew when a child, such an one is a lie, as the world states it in set terms; and then, after a weary lapse of years, and plenty of hard thinking, it becomes a truth again after all, as he happens to newly consider it and view it in a different relation with the others: and so he re-states it, to the confusion of somebody else in good time. As for adding to the original stock of truths,—impossible! Thus, you see the expression of them is the grand business:—you have got a truth in your head about the right way of governing people, and you took a mode of expressing it which now you confess to be imperfect. But what then? There is truth in falsehood, falsehood in truth. No man ever told one great truth, that I know, without the help of a good dozen of lies at least, generally unconscious ones. And as when a child comes in breathlessly and relates a strange story, you try to conjecture from the very falsities in it what the reality was,—do not conclude that he saw nothing in the sky, because he assuredly did not see a flying horse there as he says,—so, through the contradictory expression, do you see, men should look painfully for, and trust to arrive eventually at, what you call the true principle at bottom. Ah, what an answer is there! to what will it not prove applicable?—"Contradictions? Of course there were," say you!
Ch.Still, the world at large may call it inconsistency, and what shall I urge in reply?
Ogni.Why, look you, when they tax you with tergiversation or duplicity, you may answer—you begin to perceive that, when all 's done and said, both great parties in the State, the advocators of change in the present system of things, and the opponents of it, patriot and anti-patriot, are found working together for the common good; and that in the midst of their efforts for and against its progress, the world somehow or other still advances: to which result they contribute in equal proportions,those who spend their life in pushing it onward, as those who give theirs to the business of pulling it back. Now, if you found the world stand still between the opposite forces, and were glad, I should conceive you: but it steadily advances, you rejoice to see! By the side of such a rejoicer, the man who only winks as he keeps cunning and quiet, and says, "Let yonder hot-headed fellow fight out my battle! I, for one, shall win in the end by the blows he gives, and which I ought to be giving,"—even he seems graceful in his avowal, when one considers that he might say, "I shall win quite as much by the blows our antagonist gives him, blows from which he saves me—I thank the antagonist equally!" Moreover, you may enlarge on the loss of the edge of party-animosity with age and experience ...
Ch.And naturally time must wear off such asperities: the bitterest adversaries get to discover certain points of similarity between each other, common sympathies—do they not?
Ogni.Ay, had the young David but sat first to dine on his cheeses with the Philistine, he had soon discovered an abundance of such common sympathies. He of Gath, it is recorded, was born of a father and mother, had brothers and sisters like another man,—they, no more than the sons of Jesse, were used to eat each other. But, for the sake of one broad antipathy that had existed from the beginning, David slung the stone, cut off the giant's head, made a spoil of it, and after ate his cheeses alone, with the better appetite, for all I can learn. My friend, as you, with a quickened eyesight, go on discovering much good on the worse side, remember that the same process should proportionably magnify and demonstrate to you the much more good on the better side! And when I profess no sympathy for the Goliaths of our time, and you object that a large nature should sympathize with every form of intelligence, and see the good in it, however limited,—I answer, "So I do; but preserve the proportions of my sympathy, however finelier or widelier I may extend its action." I desire to be able, with a quickened eyesight, to descry beauty in corruption where others see foulness only; but I hope I shall also continue to see a redoubled beauty in the higher forms of matter, where already everybody sees no foulness at all. I must retain, too, my old power of selection, and choice of appropriation, to apply to such new gifts; else they only dazzle instead of enlightening me. God has his archangels and consorts with them: though he made too, and intimately sees what is good in, the worm. Observe, I speak only as you profess to think and so ought to speak: I do justice to your own principles, that is all.
Ch.But you very well know that the two parties do, on occasion, assume each other's characteristics. What more disgusting, for instance, than to see how promptly the newly emancipated slave will adopt, in his own favor, the very measures of precaution, which pressed soreliest on himself as institutions of the tyranny he has just escaped from? Do the classes, hitherto without opinion, get leave to express it? there follows a confederacy immediately, from which—exercise your individual right and dissent, and woe be to you!
Ogni.And a journey over the sea to you! That is the generous way. Cry—"Emancipated slaves, the first excess, and off I go!" The first time a poor devil, who has been bastinadoed steadily his whole life long, finds himself let alone and able to legislate, so, begins pettishly, while he rubs his soles, "Woe be to whoever brings anything in the shape of a stick this way!"—you, rather than give up the very innocent pleasure of carrying one to switch flies with,—you go away, to everybody's sorrow. Yet you were quite reconciled to staying at home while the governors used to pass, every now and then, some such edict as, "Let no man indulge in owning a stick which is not thick enough to chastise our slaves, if need require!" Well, there are pre-ordained hierarchies among us, and a profane vulgar subjected to a different law altogether; yet I am rather sorry you should see it so clearly: for, do you know what is to—all but save you at the Day of Judgment, all you men of genius? It is this: that, while you generally began by pulling down God, and went on to the end of your life in one effort at setting up your own genius in his place,—still, the last, bitterest concession wrung with the utmost unwillingness from the experience of the very loftiest of you, was invariably—would one think it?—that the rest of mankind, down to the lowest of the mass, stood not, nor ever could stand, just on a level and equality with yourselves. That will be a point in the favor of all such, I hope and believe.
Ch.Why, men of genius are usually charged, I think, with doing just the reverse; and at once acknowledging the natural inequality of mankind, by themselves participating in the universal craving after, and deference to, the civil distinctions which represent it. You wonder they pay such undue respect to titles and badges of superior rank.
Ogni.Not I (always on your own ground and showing, be it noted!) Who doubts that, with a weapon to brandish, a man is the more formidable? Titles and badges are exercised as such a weapon, to which you and I look up wistfully. We could pin lions with it moreover, while in its present owner's hands it hardly prods rats. Nay, better than a mere weapon of easy mastery and obvious use, it is a mysterious divining-rod that may serve us in undreamed-of ways. Beauty, strength, intellect—men often have none of these, and yet conceive pretty accurately what kind of advantages they would bestow on the possessor. We know at least what it is we make up our mind to forego, and so can apply the fittest substitute in our power. Wanting beauty, we cultivate good-humor; missing wit, we get riches: but the mystic unimaginable operation of that gold collar and string of Latin names which suddenly turned poor stupid little peevish Cecco of our town into natural lord of the best of us—a Duke, he is now—there indeed is a virtue to be reverenced!
Ch.Ay, by the vulgar: not by Messere Stiatta the poet, who pays moreassiduous court to him than anybody.
Ogni.What else should Stiatta pay court to? He has talent, not honor and riches: men naturally covet what they have not.
Ch.No; or Cecco would covet talent, which he has not, whereas he covets more riches, of which he has plenty, already.
Ogni.Because a purse added to a purse makes the holder twice as rich: but just such another talent as Stiatta's, added to what he now possesses, what would that profit him? Give the talent a purse indeed, to do something with! But lo, how we keep the good people waiting! I only desired to do justice to the noble sentiments which animate you, and which you are too modest to duly enforce. Come, to our main business: shall we ascend the steps? I am going to propose you for Provost to the people; they know your antecedents, and will accept you with a joyful unanimity: whereon I confirm their choice. Rouse up! Are you nerving yourself to an effort? Beware the disaster of Messere Stiatta we were talking of! who, determining to keep an equal mind and constant face on whatever might be the fortune of his last new poem with our townsmen, heard too plainly "hiss, hiss, hiss," increase every moment. Till at last the man fell senseless: not perceiving that the portentous sounds had all the while been issuing from between his own nobly clenched teeth, and nostrils narrowed by resolve.
Ch.Do you begin to throw off the mask?—to jest with me, having got me effectually into your trap?
Ogni.Where is the trap, my friend? You hear what I engage to do, for my part: you, for yours, have only to fulfil your promise made just now within doors, of professing unlimited obedience to Rome's authority in my person. And I shall authorize no more than the simple re-establishment of the Provostship and the conferment of its privileges upon yourself: the only novel stipulation being a birth of the peculiar circumstances of the time.
Ch.And that stipulation?
Ogni.Just the obvious one—that in the event of the discovery of the actual assailant of the late Provost ...
Ch.Ha!
Ogni.Why, he shall suffer the proper penalty, of course; what did you expect?
Ch.Who heard of this?
Ogni.Rather, who needed to hear of this?
Ch.Can it be, the popular rumor never reached you ...
Ogni.Many more such rumors reach me, friend, than I choose to receive: those which wait longest have best chance. Has the present one sufficiently waited? Now is its time for entry with effect. See the good people crowding about yonder palace-steps—which we may not have to ascend, after all! My good friends! (nay, two or three of you will answer every purpose)—who was it fell upon and proved nearly the death of your late Provost? His successor desires to hear, that his day of inauguration may be graced by the act of prompt, bare justice we all anticipate. Who dealt the blow that night, does anybody know?
Luit.[Coming forward.]I!
All.Luitolfo!
Luit.I avow the deed, justify and approve it, and stand forth now, to relieve my friend of an unearned responsibility. Having taken thought, I am grown stronger: I shall shrink from nothing that awaits me. Nay, Chiappino—we are friends still: I dare say there is some proof of your superior nature in this starting aside, strange as it seemed at first. So, they tell me, my horse is of the right stock, because a shadow in the path frightens him into a frenzy, makes him dash my brains out. I understand only the dull mule's way of standing stockishly, plodding soberly, suffering on occasion a blow or two with due patience.
Eu.I was determined to justify my choice, Chiappino; to let Luitolfo's nature vindicate itself. Henceforth we are undivided, whatever be our fortune.
Ogni.Now, in these last ten minutes of silence, what have I been doing, deem you? Putting the finishing stroke to a homily of mine, I have long taken thought to perfect, on the text, "Let whoso thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall." To your house, Luitolfo! Still silent, my patriotic friend? Well, that is a good sign however. And you will go aside for a time? That is better still. I understand: it would be easy for you to die of remorse here on the spot and shock us all, but you mean to live and grow worthy of coming back to us one day. There, I will tell everybody; and you only do right to believe you must get better as you get older. All men do so: they are worst in childhood, improve in manhood, and get ready in old age for another world. Youth, with its beauty and grace, would seem bestowed on us for some such reason as to make us partly endurable till we have time for really becoming so of ourselves, without their aid; when they leave us. The sweetest child we all smile on for his pleasant want of the whole world to break up, or suck in his mouth, seeing no other good in it—would be rudely handled by that world's inhabitants, if he retained those angelic infantine desires when he had grown six feet high, black and bearded. But, little by little, he sees fit to forego claim after claim on the world, puts up with a less and less share of its good as his proper portion; and when the octogenarian asks barely a sup of gruel and a fire of dry sticks, and thanks you as for his full allowance and right in the common good of life,—hoping nobody may murder him,—he who began by asking and expecting the whole of us to bow down in worship to him,—why, I say he is advanced, far onward, very far, nearly out of sight like our friend Chiappino yonder. And now—(ay, good-by to you! He turns round the northwest gate: going to Lugo again? Good-by!)—And now give thanks to God, the keys of the Provost's palace to me, and yourselves to profitable meditation at home! I have knownFour-and-twenty leaders of revolts.
A TRAGEDY
I DEDICATE THIS LAST ATTEMPT FOR THE PRESENT AT DRAMATIC POETRY TO A GREAT DRAMATIC POET;"WISHING WHAT I WRITE MAY BE READ BY HIS LIGHT:"IF A PHRASE ORIGINALLY ADDRESSED, BY NOT THE LEAST WORTHY OF HIS CONTEMPORARIES, TO SHAKESPEARE,MAY BE APPLIED HERE, BY ONE WHOSE SOLE PRIVILEGE IS IN A GRATEFUL ADMIRATION,To WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR
London, 1846.
PERSONSLuria, a Moor, Commander of the Florentine Forces.Husain, a Moor, his friend.Puccio, the old Florentine Commander, nowLuria'sChief Officer.Braccio, Commissary of the Republic of Florence.Jacopo(Lapo), his Secretary.Tiburzio, Commander of the Pisans.Domizia, a noble Florentine Lady.Time, 14—.Scene. Luria'sCamp between Florence and Pisa.
PERSONSLuria, a Moor, Commander of the Florentine Forces.Husain, a Moor, his friend.Puccio, the old Florentine Commander, nowLuria'sChief Officer.Braccio, Commissary of the Republic of Florence.Jacopo(Lapo), his Secretary.Tiburzio, Commander of the Pisans.Domizia, a noble Florentine Lady.Time, 14—.Scene. Luria'sCamp between Florence and Pisa.
PERSONS
PERSONS
Luria, a Moor, Commander of the Florentine Forces.Husain, a Moor, his friend.Puccio, the old Florentine Commander, nowLuria'sChief Officer.Braccio, Commissary of the Republic of Florence.Jacopo(Lapo), his Secretary.Tiburzio, Commander of the Pisans.Domizia, a noble Florentine Lady.
Luria, a Moor, Commander of the Florentine Forces.
Husain, a Moor, his friend.
Puccio, the old Florentine Commander, nowLuria'sChief Officer.
Braccio, Commissary of the Republic of Florence.
Jacopo(Lapo), his Secretary.
Tiburzio, Commander of the Pisans.
Domizia, a noble Florentine Lady.
Time, 14—.
Time, 14—.
Scene. Luria'sCamp between Florence and Pisa.
Scene. Luria'sCamp between Florence and Pisa.
MORNING
Braccio,as dictating to hisSecretary;Pucciostanding by.Braccio.[ToPuccio.]Then, you join battle in an hour?Puccio.Not I;Luria, the captain.Brac.[To theSec.]"In an hour, the battle."[ToPuc.]Sir, let your eye run o'er this loose digest,And see if very much of your reportHave slipped away through my civilian phrase.Does this instruct the Signory arightHow army stands with army?Puc.[Taking the paper.]All seems here:—That Luria, seizing with our city's forceThe several points of vantage, hill and plain,Shuts Pisa safe from help on every side,And, baffling the Lucchese arrived too late,Must, in the battle he delivers now,Beat her best troops and first of chiefs.Brac.So sure?Tiburzio 's a consummate captain too!Puc.Luria holds Pisa's fortune in his hand.Brac.[To theSec.]"The Signory hold Pisa in their hand."Your own proved soldiership 's our warrant, sir:So, while my secretary ends his task,Have out two horsemen, by the open roads,To post with it to Florence!Puc.[Returning the paper.]All seems here;Unless ... Ser Braccio, 't is my last report!Since Pisa's outbreak, and my overthrow,And Luria's hastening at the city's callTo save her, as he only could, no doubt;Till now that she is saved or sure to be,—Whatever you tell Florence, I tell you:Each day's note you, her Commissary, makeOf Luria's movements, I myself supply.No youngster am I longer, to my cost;Therefore while Florence gloried in her choiceAnd vaunted Luria, whom but Luria, still,As if zeal, courage, prudence, conduct, faith,Had never met in any man before,I saw no pressing need to swell the cry.But now, this last report and I have done:So, ere to-night comes with its roar of praise,'T were not amiss if some one old i' the tradeSubscribed with, "True, for once rash counsel 's best.This Moor of the bad faith and doubtful race,This boy to whose untried sagacity,Raw valor, Florence trusts without reserveThe charge to save her,—justifies her choice;In no point has this stranger failed his friends.Now praise!" I say this, and it is not here.Brac.[To theSec.]Write, "Puccio, superseded in the charge,By Luria, bears full witness to his worth,Aid no reward our Signory can giveTheir champion but he 'll back it cheerfully."Aught more? Five minutes hence, both messengers![Pucciogoes.Brac.[After a pause, and while he slowly tears the paper into shreds.]I think ... (pray God, I hold in fit contemptThis warfare 's noble art and ordering,And,—once the brace of prizers fairly matched,Poleaxe with poleaxe, knife with knife as good,—Spit properly at what men term their skill!—)Yet here I think our fighter has the odds.With Pisa's strength diminished thus and thus,Such points of vantage in our hands and such,Lucca still off the stage, too,—all 's assured:Luria must win this battle. Write the Court,That Luria's trial end and sentence pass!Secretary.Patron,—Brac.Ay, Lapo?Sec.If you trip, I fall;'T is in self-interest I speak—Brac.Nay, nay,You overshoot the mark, my Lapo! Nay!When did I say pure love 's impossible?I make you daily write those red cheeks thin,Load your young brow with what concerns it least,And, when we visit Florence, let you paceThe Piazza by my side as if we talked,Where all your old acquaintances may see:You 'd die for me, I should not be surprised.Now then!Sec.Sir, look about and love yourself!Step after step, the Signory and youTread gay till this tremendous point 's to pass;Which pass not, pass not, ere you ask yourself,—Bears the brain steadily such draughts of fire,Or too delicious may not prove the prideOf this long secret trial you dared plan,Dare execute, you solitary here,With the gray-headed toothless fools at home,Who think themselves your lords, such slaves are they?If they pronounce this sentence as you bid,Declare the treason, claim its penalty,—And sudden out of all the blaze of life,On the best minute of his brightest day,From that adoring army at his back,Through Florence' joyous crowds before his face,Into the dark you beckon Luria ...Brac.Then—Why, Lapo, when the fighting-people vaunt,We of the other craft and mystery,May we not smile demure, the danger past?Sec.Sir, no, no, no,—the danger, and your spiritAt watch and ward? Where 's danger on your part,With that thin flitting instantaneous steel'Gainst the blind bull-front of a brute-force world?If Luria, that 's to perish sure as fate,Should have been really guiltless after all?Brac.Ah, you have thought that?Sec.Here I sit, your scribe,And in and out goes Luria, days and nights;This Puccio comes; the Moor his other friend,Husain; they talk—that 's all feigned easily;He speaks (I would not listen if I could),Reads, orders, counsels:—but he rests sometimes,—I see him stand and eat, sleep stretched an hourOn the lynx-skins yonder; hold his bared black armsInto the sun from the tent-opening; laughWhen his horse drops the forage from his teethAnd neighs to hear him hum his Moorish songs.That man believes in Florence, as the saintTied to the wheel believes in God.Brac.How strange!You too have thought that!Sec.Do but you think too,And all is saved! I only have to write,"The man seemed false awhile, proves true at last;Bury it"—so I write the Signory—"Bury this trial in your breast forever,Blot it from things or done or dreamed about!So Luria shall receive his meed to-dayWith no suspicion what reverse was near,—As if no meteoric finger hushedThe doom-word just on the destroyer's lip,Motioned him off, and let life's sun fall straight."Brac.[Looks to the wall of the tent.]Did he draw that?Sec.With charcoal, when the watchMade the report at midnight; Lady DomiziaSpoke of the unfinished Duomo, you remember;That is his fancy how a Moorish frontMight join to, and complete, the body,—a sketch,—And again where the cloak hangs, yonder in the shadow.Brac.He loves that woman.Sec.She is sent the spyOf Florence,—spies on you as you on him:Florence, if only for Domizia's sake,Is surely safe. What shall I write?Brac.I see—A Moorish front, nor of such ill design!Lapo, there 's one thing plain and positive;Man seeks his own good at the whole world's cost.What? If to lead our troops, stand forth out chiefs,And hold our fate, and see us at their beck,Yet render up the charge when peace return,Have ever proved too much for Florentines,Even for the best and bravest of ourselves—If in the struggle when the soldier's swordShould sink its point before the statist's pen,And the calm head replace the violent hand,Virtue on virtue still have fallen awayBefore ambition with unvarying fate,Till Florence' self at last in bitternessBe forced to own such falls the natural end,And, sparing further to expose her sonsTo a vain strife and profitless disgrace,Declare, "The foreigner, one not my child,Shall henceforth lead my troops, reach height by heightThe glory, then descend into the shame;So shall rebellion be less guilt in him,And punishment the easier task for me:"—If on the best of us such brand she set,Can I suppose an utter alien here,This Luria, our inevitable foe,Confessed a mercenary and a Moor,Born free from many ties that bind the restOf common faith in Heaven or hope on earth,No past with us, no future,—such a spiritShall hold the path from which our stanchest broke,Stand firm where every famed precursor fell?My Lapo, I will frankly say, these proofsSo duly noted of the man's intent,Are for the doting fools at home, not me.The charges here, they may be true or false:—What is set down? Errors and oversights,A dallying interchange of courtesiesWith Pisa's General,—all that, hour by hour,Puccio's pale discontent has furnished us,Of petulant speeches, inconsiderate acts,Now overhazard, overcaution now;Even that he loves this lady who believesShe outwits Florence, and whom Florence postedBy my procurement here, to spy on me,Lest I one minute lose her from my sight—She who remembering her whole House's fall,That nest of traitors strangled in the birth,Now labors to make Luria (poor deviceAs plain) the instrument of her revenge!—That she is ever at his ear to promptInordinate conceptions of his worth,Exorbitant belief in worth's reward,And after, when sure disappointment follows,Proportionable rage at such a wrong—Why, all these reasons, while I urge them most,Weigh with me less than least; as nothing weigh.Upon that broad man's-heart of his, I go:On what I know must be, yet while I liveShall never be, because I live and know.Brute-force shall not rule Florence! IntellectMay rule her, bad or good as chance supplies:But intellect it shall be, pure if bad,And intellect's tradition so kept up!Till the good come—'t was intellect that ruled,Not brute-force bringing from the battlefieldThe attributes of wisdom, foresight's gracesWe lent it there to lure its grossness on;All which it took for earnest and kept safeTo show against us in our market-place,Just as the plumes and tags and swordsman's-gear(Fetched from the camp where, at their foolish best,When all was done they frightened nobody)Perk in our faces in the street, forsooth,With our own warrant and allowance. No!The whole procedure's overcharged,—its endIn too strict keeping with the bad first step.To conquer Pisa was sheer inspiration?Well then, to perish for a single fault,Let that be simple justice! There, my Lapo!A Moorish front ill suits our Duomo's body:Blot it out—and bid Luria's sentence come!(Luria,who, withDomizia,has entered unobservedat the close of the last phrase, now advances.)Luria.And Luria, Luria, what of Luria now?Brac.Ah, you so close, sir? Lady Domizia too?I said it needs must be a busy momentFor one like you; that you were now i' the thickOf your duties, doubtless, while we idlers sat ...Lur.No—in that paper,—it was in that paperWhat you were saving!Brac.Oh—my day's despatch!I censure you to Florence: will you see?Lur.See your despatch, your last, for the first time?Well, if I should, now? For in truth, Domizia,He would be forced to set about another,In his sly cool way, the true Florentine,To mention that important circumstance.So, while he wrote I should gain time, such time!Do not send this!Brac.And wherefore?Lur.These LuccheseAre not arrived—they never will arrive!And I must fight to-day, arrived or not,And I shall beat Tiburzio, that is sure:And then will be arriving his Lucchese,But slowly, oh so slowly, just in timeTo look upon my battle from the hills,Like a late moon, of use to nobody!And I must break my battle up, send forth,Surround on this side, hold in check on that.Then comes to-morrow, we negotiate,You make me send for fresh instructions home,—Incompleteness, incompleteness!Brac.Ah, we scribes!Why, I had registered that very point,The non-appearance of our foes' ally,As a most happy fortune; both at onceWere formidable: singly faced, each falls.Lur.So, no great battle for my Florentines!No crowning deed, decisive and complete,For all of them, the simple as the wise,Old, young, alike, that do not understandOur wearisome pedantic art of war,By which we prove retreat may be success,Delay—best speed,—half loss, at times,—whole gain:They want results: as if it were their fault!And you, with warmest wish to be my friend,Will not be able now to simply say"Your servant has performed his task—enough!You ordered, he has executed: good!Now walk the streets in holiday attire,Congratulate your friends, till noon strikes fierce,Then form bright groups beneath the Duomo's shade!"No, you will have to argue and explain,Persuade them, all is not so ill in the end,Tease, tire them out! Arrive, arrive, Lucchese!Domizia.Well, you will triumph for the past enough,Whatever be the present chance; no serviceFalls to the ground with Florence: she awaitsHer savior, will receive him fittingly.Lur.Ah, Braccio, you know Florence! Will she, think you,Receive one ... what means "fittingly receive"?—Receive compatriots, doubtless—I am none:And yet Domizia promises so much!Brac.Kind women still give men a woman's prize.I know not o'er which gate most boughs will arch.Nor if the Square will wave red flags or blue.I should have judged, the fullest of rewardsOur state gave Luria, when she made him chiefOf her whole force, in her best captain's place.Lur.That, my reward? Florence on my accountRelieved Ser Puccio?—mark you, my reward!And Puccio's having all the fight's true joy—Goes here and there, gets close, may fight, himself,While I must order, stand aloof, o'ersee.That was my calling, there was my true place!I should have felt, in some one over me,Florence impersonate, my visible head,As I am over Puccio,—taking lifeDirectly from her eye! They give me you:But do you cross me, set me half to work?I enjoy nothing—though I will, for once!Decide, shall we join battle? may I wait?Brac.Let us compound the matter; wait till noon:Then, no arrival,—Lur.Ah, noon comes too fast!I wonder, do you guess why I delayInvoluntarily the final blowAs long as possible? Peace follows it!Florence at peace, and the calm studious headsCome out again, the penetrating eyes;As if a spell broke, all 's resumed, each artYou boast, more vivid that it slept awhile.'Gainst the glad heaven, o'er the white palace-frontThe interrupted scaffold climbs anew;The walls are peopled by the painter's brush;The statue to its niche ascends to dwell.The present noise and trouble have retiredAnd left the eternal past to rule once more;You speak its speech and read its records plain,Greece lives with you, each Roman breathes your friend:But Luria—where will then be Luria's place?Dom.Highest in honor, for that past's own sake,Of which his actions, sealing up the sumBy saving all that went before from wreck,Will range as part, with which be worshipped too.Lur.Then I may walk and watch you in your streets,Lead the smooth life my rough life helps no more,So different, so new, so beautiful—Nor fear that you will tire to see paradeThe club that slew the lion, now that crooksAnd shepherd-pipes come into use again?For very lone and silent seems my EastIn its drear vastness: still it spreads, and stillNo Braccios, no Domizias anywhere—Not ever more! Well, well, to-day is ours!Dom.[ToBrac.]Should he not have been one of us?Lur.Oh, no!Not one of you, and so escape the thrillOf coming into you, of changing thus,—Feeling a soul grow on me that restrictsThe boundless unrest of the savage heart!The sea heaves up, hangs loaded o'er the land,Breaks there and buries its tumultuous strength;Horror, and silence, and a pause awhile:Lo, inland glides the gulf-stream, miles away,In rapture of assent, subdued and still,'Neath those strange banks, those unimagined skies.Well, 't is not sure the quiet lasts forever!Your placid heads still find rough hands new work;Some minute's chance—there comes the need of mine:And, all resolved on, I too hear at last.Oh, you must find some use for me, Ser Braccio!You hold my strength; 't were best dispose of it:What you created, see that you find food for—I shall be dangerous else!Brac.How dangerous, sir?Lur.There are so many ways, Domizia warns me,And one with half the power that I possess,—Grows very formidable! Do you doubt?Why, first, who holds the army ...Dom.While we talk,Morn wears; we keep you from your proper place,The field.Lur.Nay, to the field I move no more;My part is done, and Puccio's may begin:I cannot trench upon his province longerWith any face.—You think yourselves so safe?Why, see—in concert with Tiburzio, now—One could ...Dom.A trumpet!Lur.My Lucchese at last!Arrived, as sure as Florence stands! Your leave![Springs out.Dom.How plainly is true greatness characteredBy such unconscious sport as Luria's here,Strength sharing least the secret of itself!Be it with head that schemes or hand that acts,Such save the world which none but they could save,Yet think whate'er they did, that world could do.Brac.Yes: and how worthy note, that these same great onesIn hand or head, with such unconsciousnessAnd all its due entailed humility,Should never shrink, so far as I perceive,From taking up whatever tool there beEffects the whole world's safety or mishap,Into their mild hands as a thing of course!The statist finds it natural to leadThe mob who might as easily lead him—The captain marshals troops born skilled in war—Statist and captain verily believe!While we poor scribes ... you catch me thinking now,That I shall in this very letter writeWhat none of you are able! To it, Lapo![Domiziagoes.This last worst all-affected childish fitOf Luria's, this be-praised unconsciousness,Convinces me; the past was no child's play:It was a man beat Pisa,—not a child.All 's mere dissimulation—to removeThe fear, he best knows we should entertain.The utmost danger was at hand. Is 't written?Now make a duplicate, lest this should fail,And speak your fullest on the other side.Sec.I noticed he was busily repairingMy half-effacement of his Duomo sketch,And, while he spoke of Florence, turned to it,As the Mage Negro king to Christ the babe.I judge his childishness the mere relapseTo boyhood of a man who has worked lately,And presently will work, so, meantime, plays:Whence, more than ever I believe in him.Brac.[After a pause.]The sword! At best, the soldier, as he says,In Florence—the black face, the barbarous name,For Italy to boast her show of the age,Her man of men!—To Florence with each letter!
Braccio,as dictating to hisSecretary;Pucciostanding by.Braccio.[ToPuccio.]Then, you join battle in an hour?Puccio.Not I;Luria, the captain.Brac.[To theSec.]"In an hour, the battle."[ToPuc.]Sir, let your eye run o'er this loose digest,And see if very much of your reportHave slipped away through my civilian phrase.Does this instruct the Signory arightHow army stands with army?Puc.[Taking the paper.]All seems here:—That Luria, seizing with our city's forceThe several points of vantage, hill and plain,Shuts Pisa safe from help on every side,And, baffling the Lucchese arrived too late,Must, in the battle he delivers now,Beat her best troops and first of chiefs.Brac.So sure?Tiburzio 's a consummate captain too!Puc.Luria holds Pisa's fortune in his hand.Brac.[To theSec.]"The Signory hold Pisa in their hand."Your own proved soldiership 's our warrant, sir:So, while my secretary ends his task,Have out two horsemen, by the open roads,To post with it to Florence!Puc.[Returning the paper.]All seems here;Unless ... Ser Braccio, 't is my last report!Since Pisa's outbreak, and my overthrow,And Luria's hastening at the city's callTo save her, as he only could, no doubt;Till now that she is saved or sure to be,—Whatever you tell Florence, I tell you:Each day's note you, her Commissary, makeOf Luria's movements, I myself supply.No youngster am I longer, to my cost;Therefore while Florence gloried in her choiceAnd vaunted Luria, whom but Luria, still,As if zeal, courage, prudence, conduct, faith,Had never met in any man before,I saw no pressing need to swell the cry.But now, this last report and I have done:So, ere to-night comes with its roar of praise,'T were not amiss if some one old i' the tradeSubscribed with, "True, for once rash counsel 's best.This Moor of the bad faith and doubtful race,This boy to whose untried sagacity,Raw valor, Florence trusts without reserveThe charge to save her,—justifies her choice;In no point has this stranger failed his friends.Now praise!" I say this, and it is not here.Brac.[To theSec.]Write, "Puccio, superseded in the charge,By Luria, bears full witness to his worth,Aid no reward our Signory can giveTheir champion but he 'll back it cheerfully."Aught more? Five minutes hence, both messengers![Pucciogoes.Brac.[After a pause, and while he slowly tears the paper into shreds.]I think ... (pray God, I hold in fit contemptThis warfare 's noble art and ordering,And,—once the brace of prizers fairly matched,Poleaxe with poleaxe, knife with knife as good,—Spit properly at what men term their skill!—)Yet here I think our fighter has the odds.With Pisa's strength diminished thus and thus,Such points of vantage in our hands and such,Lucca still off the stage, too,—all 's assured:Luria must win this battle. Write the Court,That Luria's trial end and sentence pass!Secretary.Patron,—Brac.Ay, Lapo?Sec.If you trip, I fall;'T is in self-interest I speak—Brac.Nay, nay,You overshoot the mark, my Lapo! Nay!When did I say pure love 's impossible?I make you daily write those red cheeks thin,Load your young brow with what concerns it least,And, when we visit Florence, let you paceThe Piazza by my side as if we talked,Where all your old acquaintances may see:You 'd die for me, I should not be surprised.Now then!Sec.Sir, look about and love yourself!Step after step, the Signory and youTread gay till this tremendous point 's to pass;Which pass not, pass not, ere you ask yourself,—Bears the brain steadily such draughts of fire,Or too delicious may not prove the prideOf this long secret trial you dared plan,Dare execute, you solitary here,With the gray-headed toothless fools at home,Who think themselves your lords, such slaves are they?If they pronounce this sentence as you bid,Declare the treason, claim its penalty,—And sudden out of all the blaze of life,On the best minute of his brightest day,From that adoring army at his back,Through Florence' joyous crowds before his face,Into the dark you beckon Luria ...Brac.Then—Why, Lapo, when the fighting-people vaunt,We of the other craft and mystery,May we not smile demure, the danger past?Sec.Sir, no, no, no,—the danger, and your spiritAt watch and ward? Where 's danger on your part,With that thin flitting instantaneous steel'Gainst the blind bull-front of a brute-force world?If Luria, that 's to perish sure as fate,Should have been really guiltless after all?Brac.Ah, you have thought that?Sec.Here I sit, your scribe,And in and out goes Luria, days and nights;This Puccio comes; the Moor his other friend,Husain; they talk—that 's all feigned easily;He speaks (I would not listen if I could),Reads, orders, counsels:—but he rests sometimes,—I see him stand and eat, sleep stretched an hourOn the lynx-skins yonder; hold his bared black armsInto the sun from the tent-opening; laughWhen his horse drops the forage from his teethAnd neighs to hear him hum his Moorish songs.That man believes in Florence, as the saintTied to the wheel believes in God.Brac.How strange!You too have thought that!Sec.Do but you think too,And all is saved! I only have to write,"The man seemed false awhile, proves true at last;Bury it"—so I write the Signory—"Bury this trial in your breast forever,Blot it from things or done or dreamed about!So Luria shall receive his meed to-dayWith no suspicion what reverse was near,—As if no meteoric finger hushedThe doom-word just on the destroyer's lip,Motioned him off, and let life's sun fall straight."Brac.[Looks to the wall of the tent.]Did he draw that?Sec.With charcoal, when the watchMade the report at midnight; Lady DomiziaSpoke of the unfinished Duomo, you remember;That is his fancy how a Moorish frontMight join to, and complete, the body,—a sketch,—And again where the cloak hangs, yonder in the shadow.Brac.He loves that woman.Sec.She is sent the spyOf Florence,—spies on you as you on him:Florence, if only for Domizia's sake,Is surely safe. What shall I write?Brac.I see—A Moorish front, nor of such ill design!Lapo, there 's one thing plain and positive;Man seeks his own good at the whole world's cost.What? If to lead our troops, stand forth out chiefs,And hold our fate, and see us at their beck,Yet render up the charge when peace return,Have ever proved too much for Florentines,Even for the best and bravest of ourselves—If in the struggle when the soldier's swordShould sink its point before the statist's pen,And the calm head replace the violent hand,Virtue on virtue still have fallen awayBefore ambition with unvarying fate,Till Florence' self at last in bitternessBe forced to own such falls the natural end,And, sparing further to expose her sonsTo a vain strife and profitless disgrace,Declare, "The foreigner, one not my child,Shall henceforth lead my troops, reach height by heightThe glory, then descend into the shame;So shall rebellion be less guilt in him,And punishment the easier task for me:"—If on the best of us such brand she set,Can I suppose an utter alien here,This Luria, our inevitable foe,Confessed a mercenary and a Moor,Born free from many ties that bind the restOf common faith in Heaven or hope on earth,No past with us, no future,—such a spiritShall hold the path from which our stanchest broke,Stand firm where every famed precursor fell?My Lapo, I will frankly say, these proofsSo duly noted of the man's intent,Are for the doting fools at home, not me.The charges here, they may be true or false:—What is set down? Errors and oversights,A dallying interchange of courtesiesWith Pisa's General,—all that, hour by hour,Puccio's pale discontent has furnished us,Of petulant speeches, inconsiderate acts,Now overhazard, overcaution now;Even that he loves this lady who believesShe outwits Florence, and whom Florence postedBy my procurement here, to spy on me,Lest I one minute lose her from my sight—She who remembering her whole House's fall,That nest of traitors strangled in the birth,Now labors to make Luria (poor deviceAs plain) the instrument of her revenge!—That she is ever at his ear to promptInordinate conceptions of his worth,Exorbitant belief in worth's reward,And after, when sure disappointment follows,Proportionable rage at such a wrong—Why, all these reasons, while I urge them most,Weigh with me less than least; as nothing weigh.Upon that broad man's-heart of his, I go:On what I know must be, yet while I liveShall never be, because I live and know.Brute-force shall not rule Florence! IntellectMay rule her, bad or good as chance supplies:But intellect it shall be, pure if bad,And intellect's tradition so kept up!Till the good come—'t was intellect that ruled,Not brute-force bringing from the battlefieldThe attributes of wisdom, foresight's gracesWe lent it there to lure its grossness on;All which it took for earnest and kept safeTo show against us in our market-place,Just as the plumes and tags and swordsman's-gear(Fetched from the camp where, at their foolish best,When all was done they frightened nobody)Perk in our faces in the street, forsooth,With our own warrant and allowance. No!The whole procedure's overcharged,—its endIn too strict keeping with the bad first step.To conquer Pisa was sheer inspiration?Well then, to perish for a single fault,Let that be simple justice! There, my Lapo!A Moorish front ill suits our Duomo's body:Blot it out—and bid Luria's sentence come!(Luria,who, withDomizia,has entered unobservedat the close of the last phrase, now advances.)Luria.And Luria, Luria, what of Luria now?Brac.Ah, you so close, sir? Lady Domizia too?I said it needs must be a busy momentFor one like you; that you were now i' the thickOf your duties, doubtless, while we idlers sat ...Lur.No—in that paper,—it was in that paperWhat you were saving!Brac.Oh—my day's despatch!I censure you to Florence: will you see?Lur.See your despatch, your last, for the first time?Well, if I should, now? For in truth, Domizia,He would be forced to set about another,In his sly cool way, the true Florentine,To mention that important circumstance.So, while he wrote I should gain time, such time!Do not send this!Brac.And wherefore?Lur.These LuccheseAre not arrived—they never will arrive!And I must fight to-day, arrived or not,And I shall beat Tiburzio, that is sure:And then will be arriving his Lucchese,But slowly, oh so slowly, just in timeTo look upon my battle from the hills,Like a late moon, of use to nobody!And I must break my battle up, send forth,Surround on this side, hold in check on that.Then comes to-morrow, we negotiate,You make me send for fresh instructions home,—Incompleteness, incompleteness!Brac.Ah, we scribes!Why, I had registered that very point,The non-appearance of our foes' ally,As a most happy fortune; both at onceWere formidable: singly faced, each falls.Lur.So, no great battle for my Florentines!No crowning deed, decisive and complete,For all of them, the simple as the wise,Old, young, alike, that do not understandOur wearisome pedantic art of war,By which we prove retreat may be success,Delay—best speed,—half loss, at times,—whole gain:They want results: as if it were their fault!And you, with warmest wish to be my friend,Will not be able now to simply say"Your servant has performed his task—enough!You ordered, he has executed: good!Now walk the streets in holiday attire,Congratulate your friends, till noon strikes fierce,Then form bright groups beneath the Duomo's shade!"No, you will have to argue and explain,Persuade them, all is not so ill in the end,Tease, tire them out! Arrive, arrive, Lucchese!Domizia.Well, you will triumph for the past enough,Whatever be the present chance; no serviceFalls to the ground with Florence: she awaitsHer savior, will receive him fittingly.Lur.Ah, Braccio, you know Florence! Will she, think you,Receive one ... what means "fittingly receive"?—Receive compatriots, doubtless—I am none:And yet Domizia promises so much!Brac.Kind women still give men a woman's prize.I know not o'er which gate most boughs will arch.Nor if the Square will wave red flags or blue.I should have judged, the fullest of rewardsOur state gave Luria, when she made him chiefOf her whole force, in her best captain's place.Lur.That, my reward? Florence on my accountRelieved Ser Puccio?—mark you, my reward!And Puccio's having all the fight's true joy—Goes here and there, gets close, may fight, himself,While I must order, stand aloof, o'ersee.That was my calling, there was my true place!I should have felt, in some one over me,Florence impersonate, my visible head,As I am over Puccio,—taking lifeDirectly from her eye! They give me you:But do you cross me, set me half to work?I enjoy nothing—though I will, for once!Decide, shall we join battle? may I wait?Brac.Let us compound the matter; wait till noon:Then, no arrival,—Lur.Ah, noon comes too fast!I wonder, do you guess why I delayInvoluntarily the final blowAs long as possible? Peace follows it!Florence at peace, and the calm studious headsCome out again, the penetrating eyes;As if a spell broke, all 's resumed, each artYou boast, more vivid that it slept awhile.'Gainst the glad heaven, o'er the white palace-frontThe interrupted scaffold climbs anew;The walls are peopled by the painter's brush;The statue to its niche ascends to dwell.The present noise and trouble have retiredAnd left the eternal past to rule once more;You speak its speech and read its records plain,Greece lives with you, each Roman breathes your friend:But Luria—where will then be Luria's place?Dom.Highest in honor, for that past's own sake,Of which his actions, sealing up the sumBy saving all that went before from wreck,Will range as part, with which be worshipped too.Lur.Then I may walk and watch you in your streets,Lead the smooth life my rough life helps no more,So different, so new, so beautiful—Nor fear that you will tire to see paradeThe club that slew the lion, now that crooksAnd shepherd-pipes come into use again?For very lone and silent seems my EastIn its drear vastness: still it spreads, and stillNo Braccios, no Domizias anywhere—Not ever more! Well, well, to-day is ours!Dom.[ToBrac.]Should he not have been one of us?Lur.Oh, no!Not one of you, and so escape the thrillOf coming into you, of changing thus,—Feeling a soul grow on me that restrictsThe boundless unrest of the savage heart!The sea heaves up, hangs loaded o'er the land,Breaks there and buries its tumultuous strength;Horror, and silence, and a pause awhile:Lo, inland glides the gulf-stream, miles away,In rapture of assent, subdued and still,'Neath those strange banks, those unimagined skies.Well, 't is not sure the quiet lasts forever!Your placid heads still find rough hands new work;Some minute's chance—there comes the need of mine:And, all resolved on, I too hear at last.Oh, you must find some use for me, Ser Braccio!You hold my strength; 't were best dispose of it:What you created, see that you find food for—I shall be dangerous else!Brac.How dangerous, sir?Lur.There are so many ways, Domizia warns me,And one with half the power that I possess,—Grows very formidable! Do you doubt?Why, first, who holds the army ...Dom.While we talk,Morn wears; we keep you from your proper place,The field.Lur.Nay, to the field I move no more;My part is done, and Puccio's may begin:I cannot trench upon his province longerWith any face.—You think yourselves so safe?Why, see—in concert with Tiburzio, now—One could ...Dom.A trumpet!Lur.My Lucchese at last!Arrived, as sure as Florence stands! Your leave![Springs out.Dom.How plainly is true greatness characteredBy such unconscious sport as Luria's here,Strength sharing least the secret of itself!Be it with head that schemes or hand that acts,Such save the world which none but they could save,Yet think whate'er they did, that world could do.Brac.Yes: and how worthy note, that these same great onesIn hand or head, with such unconsciousnessAnd all its due entailed humility,Should never shrink, so far as I perceive,From taking up whatever tool there beEffects the whole world's safety or mishap,Into their mild hands as a thing of course!The statist finds it natural to leadThe mob who might as easily lead him—The captain marshals troops born skilled in war—Statist and captain verily believe!While we poor scribes ... you catch me thinking now,That I shall in this very letter writeWhat none of you are able! To it, Lapo![Domiziagoes.This last worst all-affected childish fitOf Luria's, this be-praised unconsciousness,Convinces me; the past was no child's play:It was a man beat Pisa,—not a child.All 's mere dissimulation—to removeThe fear, he best knows we should entertain.The utmost danger was at hand. Is 't written?Now make a duplicate, lest this should fail,And speak your fullest on the other side.Sec.I noticed he was busily repairingMy half-effacement of his Duomo sketch,And, while he spoke of Florence, turned to it,As the Mage Negro king to Christ the babe.I judge his childishness the mere relapseTo boyhood of a man who has worked lately,And presently will work, so, meantime, plays:Whence, more than ever I believe in him.Brac.[After a pause.]The sword! At best, the soldier, as he says,In Florence—the black face, the barbarous name,For Italy to boast her show of the age,Her man of men!—To Florence with each letter!
Braccio,as dictating to hisSecretary;Pucciostanding by.
Braccio,as dictating to hisSecretary;Pucciostanding by.
Braccio.[ToPuccio.]Then, you join battle in an hour?
Braccio.[ToPuccio.]Then, you join battle in an hour?
Puccio.Not I;Luria, the captain.
Puccio.Not I;
Luria, the captain.
Brac.[To theSec.]"In an hour, the battle."[ToPuc.]Sir, let your eye run o'er this loose digest,And see if very much of your reportHave slipped away through my civilian phrase.Does this instruct the Signory arightHow army stands with army?
Brac.[To theSec.]"In an hour, the battle."
[ToPuc.]Sir, let your eye run o'er this loose digest,
And see if very much of your report
Have slipped away through my civilian phrase.
Does this instruct the Signory aright
How army stands with army?
Puc.[Taking the paper.]All seems here:—That Luria, seizing with our city's forceThe several points of vantage, hill and plain,Shuts Pisa safe from help on every side,And, baffling the Lucchese arrived too late,Must, in the battle he delivers now,Beat her best troops and first of chiefs.
Puc.[Taking the paper.]All seems here:
—That Luria, seizing with our city's force
The several points of vantage, hill and plain,
Shuts Pisa safe from help on every side,
And, baffling the Lucchese arrived too late,
Must, in the battle he delivers now,
Beat her best troops and first of chiefs.
Brac.So sure?Tiburzio 's a consummate captain too!
Brac.So sure?
Tiburzio 's a consummate captain too!
Puc.Luria holds Pisa's fortune in his hand.
Puc.Luria holds Pisa's fortune in his hand.
Brac.[To theSec.]"The Signory hold Pisa in their hand."Your own proved soldiership 's our warrant, sir:So, while my secretary ends his task,Have out two horsemen, by the open roads,To post with it to Florence!
Brac.[To theSec.]"The Signory hold Pisa in their hand."
Your own proved soldiership 's our warrant, sir:
So, while my secretary ends his task,
Have out two horsemen, by the open roads,
To post with it to Florence!
Puc.[Returning the paper.]All seems here;Unless ... Ser Braccio, 't is my last report!Since Pisa's outbreak, and my overthrow,And Luria's hastening at the city's callTo save her, as he only could, no doubt;Till now that she is saved or sure to be,—Whatever you tell Florence, I tell you:Each day's note you, her Commissary, makeOf Luria's movements, I myself supply.No youngster am I longer, to my cost;Therefore while Florence gloried in her choiceAnd vaunted Luria, whom but Luria, still,As if zeal, courage, prudence, conduct, faith,Had never met in any man before,I saw no pressing need to swell the cry.But now, this last report and I have done:So, ere to-night comes with its roar of praise,'T were not amiss if some one old i' the tradeSubscribed with, "True, for once rash counsel 's best.This Moor of the bad faith and doubtful race,This boy to whose untried sagacity,Raw valor, Florence trusts without reserveThe charge to save her,—justifies her choice;In no point has this stranger failed his friends.Now praise!" I say this, and it is not here.
Puc.[Returning the paper.]All seems here;
Unless ... Ser Braccio, 't is my last report!
Since Pisa's outbreak, and my overthrow,
And Luria's hastening at the city's call
To save her, as he only could, no doubt;
Till now that she is saved or sure to be,—
Whatever you tell Florence, I tell you:
Each day's note you, her Commissary, make
Of Luria's movements, I myself supply.
No youngster am I longer, to my cost;
Therefore while Florence gloried in her choice
And vaunted Luria, whom but Luria, still,
As if zeal, courage, prudence, conduct, faith,
Had never met in any man before,
I saw no pressing need to swell the cry.
But now, this last report and I have done:
So, ere to-night comes with its roar of praise,
'T were not amiss if some one old i' the trade
Subscribed with, "True, for once rash counsel 's best.
This Moor of the bad faith and doubtful race,
This boy to whose untried sagacity,
Raw valor, Florence trusts without reserve
The charge to save her,—justifies her choice;
In no point has this stranger failed his friends.
Now praise!" I say this, and it is not here.
Brac.[To theSec.]Write, "Puccio, superseded in the charge,By Luria, bears full witness to his worth,Aid no reward our Signory can giveTheir champion but he 'll back it cheerfully."Aught more? Five minutes hence, both messengers![Pucciogoes.
Brac.[To theSec.]Write, "Puccio, superseded in the charge,
By Luria, bears full witness to his worth,
Aid no reward our Signory can give
Their champion but he 'll back it cheerfully."
Aught more? Five minutes hence, both messengers![Pucciogoes.
Brac.[After a pause, and while he slowly tears the paper into shreds.]I think ... (pray God, I hold in fit contemptThis warfare 's noble art and ordering,And,—once the brace of prizers fairly matched,Poleaxe with poleaxe, knife with knife as good,—Spit properly at what men term their skill!—)Yet here I think our fighter has the odds.With Pisa's strength diminished thus and thus,Such points of vantage in our hands and such,Lucca still off the stage, too,—all 's assured:Luria must win this battle. Write the Court,That Luria's trial end and sentence pass!
Brac.[After a pause, and while he slowly tears the paper into shreds.]
I think ... (pray God, I hold in fit contempt
This warfare 's noble art and ordering,
And,—once the brace of prizers fairly matched,
Poleaxe with poleaxe, knife with knife as good,—
Spit properly at what men term their skill!—)
Yet here I think our fighter has the odds.
With Pisa's strength diminished thus and thus,
Such points of vantage in our hands and such,
Lucca still off the stage, too,—all 's assured:
Luria must win this battle. Write the Court,
That Luria's trial end and sentence pass!
Secretary.Patron,—
Secretary.Patron,—
Brac.Ay, Lapo?
Brac.Ay, Lapo?
Sec.If you trip, I fall;'T is in self-interest I speak—
Sec.If you trip, I fall;
'T is in self-interest I speak—
Brac.Nay, nay,You overshoot the mark, my Lapo! Nay!When did I say pure love 's impossible?I make you daily write those red cheeks thin,Load your young brow with what concerns it least,And, when we visit Florence, let you paceThe Piazza by my side as if we talked,Where all your old acquaintances may see:You 'd die for me, I should not be surprised.Now then!
Brac.Nay, nay,
You overshoot the mark, my Lapo! Nay!
When did I say pure love 's impossible?
I make you daily write those red cheeks thin,
Load your young brow with what concerns it least,
And, when we visit Florence, let you pace
The Piazza by my side as if we talked,
Where all your old acquaintances may see:
You 'd die for me, I should not be surprised.
Now then!
Sec.Sir, look about and love yourself!Step after step, the Signory and youTread gay till this tremendous point 's to pass;Which pass not, pass not, ere you ask yourself,—Bears the brain steadily such draughts of fire,Or too delicious may not prove the prideOf this long secret trial you dared plan,Dare execute, you solitary here,With the gray-headed toothless fools at home,Who think themselves your lords, such slaves are they?If they pronounce this sentence as you bid,Declare the treason, claim its penalty,—And sudden out of all the blaze of life,On the best minute of his brightest day,From that adoring army at his back,Through Florence' joyous crowds before his face,Into the dark you beckon Luria ...
Sec.Sir, look about and love yourself!
Step after step, the Signory and you
Tread gay till this tremendous point 's to pass;
Which pass not, pass not, ere you ask yourself,—
Bears the brain steadily such draughts of fire,
Or too delicious may not prove the pride
Of this long secret trial you dared plan,
Dare execute, you solitary here,
With the gray-headed toothless fools at home,
Who think themselves your lords, such slaves are they?
If they pronounce this sentence as you bid,
Declare the treason, claim its penalty,—
And sudden out of all the blaze of life,
On the best minute of his brightest day,
From that adoring army at his back,
Through Florence' joyous crowds before his face,
Into the dark you beckon Luria ...
Brac.Then—Why, Lapo, when the fighting-people vaunt,We of the other craft and mystery,May we not smile demure, the danger past?
Brac.Then—
Why, Lapo, when the fighting-people vaunt,
We of the other craft and mystery,
May we not smile demure, the danger past?
Sec.Sir, no, no, no,—the danger, and your spiritAt watch and ward? Where 's danger on your part,With that thin flitting instantaneous steel'Gainst the blind bull-front of a brute-force world?If Luria, that 's to perish sure as fate,Should have been really guiltless after all?
Sec.Sir, no, no, no,—the danger, and your spirit
At watch and ward? Where 's danger on your part,
With that thin flitting instantaneous steel
'Gainst the blind bull-front of a brute-force world?
If Luria, that 's to perish sure as fate,
Should have been really guiltless after all?
Brac.Ah, you have thought that?
Brac.Ah, you have thought that?
Sec.Here I sit, your scribe,And in and out goes Luria, days and nights;This Puccio comes; the Moor his other friend,Husain; they talk—that 's all feigned easily;He speaks (I would not listen if I could),Reads, orders, counsels:—but he rests sometimes,—I see him stand and eat, sleep stretched an hourOn the lynx-skins yonder; hold his bared black armsInto the sun from the tent-opening; laughWhen his horse drops the forage from his teethAnd neighs to hear him hum his Moorish songs.That man believes in Florence, as the saintTied to the wheel believes in God.
Sec.Here I sit, your scribe,
And in and out goes Luria, days and nights;
This Puccio comes; the Moor his other friend,
Husain; they talk—that 's all feigned easily;
He speaks (I would not listen if I could),
Reads, orders, counsels:—but he rests sometimes,—
I see him stand and eat, sleep stretched an hour
On the lynx-skins yonder; hold his bared black arms
Into the sun from the tent-opening; laugh
When his horse drops the forage from his teeth
And neighs to hear him hum his Moorish songs.
That man believes in Florence, as the saint
Tied to the wheel believes in God.
Brac.How strange!You too have thought that!
Brac.How strange!
You too have thought that!
Sec.Do but you think too,And all is saved! I only have to write,"The man seemed false awhile, proves true at last;Bury it"—so I write the Signory—"Bury this trial in your breast forever,Blot it from things or done or dreamed about!So Luria shall receive his meed to-dayWith no suspicion what reverse was near,—As if no meteoric finger hushedThe doom-word just on the destroyer's lip,Motioned him off, and let life's sun fall straight."
Sec.Do but you think too,
And all is saved! I only have to write,
"The man seemed false awhile, proves true at last;
Bury it"—so I write the Signory—
"Bury this trial in your breast forever,
Blot it from things or done or dreamed about!
So Luria shall receive his meed to-day
With no suspicion what reverse was near,—
As if no meteoric finger hushed
The doom-word just on the destroyer's lip,
Motioned him off, and let life's sun fall straight."
Brac.[Looks to the wall of the tent.]Did he draw that?
Brac.[Looks to the wall of the tent.]Did he draw that?
Sec.With charcoal, when the watchMade the report at midnight; Lady DomiziaSpoke of the unfinished Duomo, you remember;That is his fancy how a Moorish frontMight join to, and complete, the body,—a sketch,—And again where the cloak hangs, yonder in the shadow.
Sec.With charcoal, when the watch
Made the report at midnight; Lady Domizia
Spoke of the unfinished Duomo, you remember;
That is his fancy how a Moorish front
Might join to, and complete, the body,—a sketch,—
And again where the cloak hangs, yonder in the shadow.
Brac.He loves that woman.
Brac.He loves that woman.
Sec.She is sent the spyOf Florence,—spies on you as you on him:Florence, if only for Domizia's sake,Is surely safe. What shall I write?
Sec.She is sent the spy
Of Florence,—spies on you as you on him:
Florence, if only for Domizia's sake,
Is surely safe. What shall I write?
Brac.I see—A Moorish front, nor of such ill design!Lapo, there 's one thing plain and positive;Man seeks his own good at the whole world's cost.What? If to lead our troops, stand forth out chiefs,And hold our fate, and see us at their beck,Yet render up the charge when peace return,Have ever proved too much for Florentines,Even for the best and bravest of ourselves—If in the struggle when the soldier's swordShould sink its point before the statist's pen,And the calm head replace the violent hand,Virtue on virtue still have fallen awayBefore ambition with unvarying fate,Till Florence' self at last in bitternessBe forced to own such falls the natural end,And, sparing further to expose her sonsTo a vain strife and profitless disgrace,Declare, "The foreigner, one not my child,Shall henceforth lead my troops, reach height by heightThe glory, then descend into the shame;So shall rebellion be less guilt in him,And punishment the easier task for me:"—If on the best of us such brand she set,Can I suppose an utter alien here,This Luria, our inevitable foe,Confessed a mercenary and a Moor,Born free from many ties that bind the restOf common faith in Heaven or hope on earth,No past with us, no future,—such a spiritShall hold the path from which our stanchest broke,Stand firm where every famed precursor fell?My Lapo, I will frankly say, these proofsSo duly noted of the man's intent,Are for the doting fools at home, not me.The charges here, they may be true or false:—What is set down? Errors and oversights,A dallying interchange of courtesiesWith Pisa's General,—all that, hour by hour,Puccio's pale discontent has furnished us,Of petulant speeches, inconsiderate acts,Now overhazard, overcaution now;Even that he loves this lady who believesShe outwits Florence, and whom Florence postedBy my procurement here, to spy on me,Lest I one minute lose her from my sight—She who remembering her whole House's fall,That nest of traitors strangled in the birth,Now labors to make Luria (poor deviceAs plain) the instrument of her revenge!—That she is ever at his ear to promptInordinate conceptions of his worth,Exorbitant belief in worth's reward,And after, when sure disappointment follows,Proportionable rage at such a wrong—Why, all these reasons, while I urge them most,Weigh with me less than least; as nothing weigh.Upon that broad man's-heart of his, I go:On what I know must be, yet while I liveShall never be, because I live and know.Brute-force shall not rule Florence! IntellectMay rule her, bad or good as chance supplies:But intellect it shall be, pure if bad,And intellect's tradition so kept up!Till the good come—'t was intellect that ruled,Not brute-force bringing from the battlefieldThe attributes of wisdom, foresight's gracesWe lent it there to lure its grossness on;All which it took for earnest and kept safeTo show against us in our market-place,Just as the plumes and tags and swordsman's-gear(Fetched from the camp where, at their foolish best,When all was done they frightened nobody)Perk in our faces in the street, forsooth,With our own warrant and allowance. No!The whole procedure's overcharged,—its endIn too strict keeping with the bad first step.To conquer Pisa was sheer inspiration?Well then, to perish for a single fault,Let that be simple justice! There, my Lapo!A Moorish front ill suits our Duomo's body:Blot it out—and bid Luria's sentence come!
Brac.I see—
A Moorish front, nor of such ill design!
Lapo, there 's one thing plain and positive;
Man seeks his own good at the whole world's cost.
What? If to lead our troops, stand forth out chiefs,
And hold our fate, and see us at their beck,
Yet render up the charge when peace return,
Have ever proved too much for Florentines,
Even for the best and bravest of ourselves—
If in the struggle when the soldier's sword
Should sink its point before the statist's pen,
And the calm head replace the violent hand,
Virtue on virtue still have fallen away
Before ambition with unvarying fate,
Till Florence' self at last in bitterness
Be forced to own such falls the natural end,
And, sparing further to expose her sons
To a vain strife and profitless disgrace,
Declare, "The foreigner, one not my child,
Shall henceforth lead my troops, reach height by height
The glory, then descend into the shame;
So shall rebellion be less guilt in him,
And punishment the easier task for me:"
—If on the best of us such brand she set,
Can I suppose an utter alien here,
This Luria, our inevitable foe,
Confessed a mercenary and a Moor,
Born free from many ties that bind the rest
Of common faith in Heaven or hope on earth,
No past with us, no future,—such a spirit
Shall hold the path from which our stanchest broke,
Stand firm where every famed precursor fell?
My Lapo, I will frankly say, these proofs
So duly noted of the man's intent,
Are for the doting fools at home, not me.
The charges here, they may be true or false:
—What is set down? Errors and oversights,
A dallying interchange of courtesies
With Pisa's General,—all that, hour by hour,
Puccio's pale discontent has furnished us,
Of petulant speeches, inconsiderate acts,
Now overhazard, overcaution now;
Even that he loves this lady who believes
She outwits Florence, and whom Florence posted
By my procurement here, to spy on me,
Lest I one minute lose her from my sight—
She who remembering her whole House's fall,
That nest of traitors strangled in the birth,
Now labors to make Luria (poor device
As plain) the instrument of her revenge!
—That she is ever at his ear to prompt
Inordinate conceptions of his worth,
Exorbitant belief in worth's reward,
And after, when sure disappointment follows,
Proportionable rage at such a wrong—
Why, all these reasons, while I urge them most,
Weigh with me less than least; as nothing weigh.
Upon that broad man's-heart of his, I go:
On what I know must be, yet while I live
Shall never be, because I live and know.
Brute-force shall not rule Florence! Intellect
May rule her, bad or good as chance supplies:
But intellect it shall be, pure if bad,
And intellect's tradition so kept up!
Till the good come—'t was intellect that ruled,
Not brute-force bringing from the battlefield
The attributes of wisdom, foresight's graces
We lent it there to lure its grossness on;
All which it took for earnest and kept safe
To show against us in our market-place,
Just as the plumes and tags and swordsman's-gear
(Fetched from the camp where, at their foolish best,
When all was done they frightened nobody)
Perk in our faces in the street, forsooth,
With our own warrant and allowance. No!
The whole procedure's overcharged,—its end
In too strict keeping with the bad first step.
To conquer Pisa was sheer inspiration?
Well then, to perish for a single fault,
Let that be simple justice! There, my Lapo!
A Moorish front ill suits our Duomo's body:
Blot it out—and bid Luria's sentence come!
(Luria,who, withDomizia,has entered unobservedat the close of the last phrase, now advances.)
(Luria,who, withDomizia,has entered unobservedat the close of the last phrase, now advances.)
Luria.And Luria, Luria, what of Luria now?
Luria.And Luria, Luria, what of Luria now?
Brac.Ah, you so close, sir? Lady Domizia too?I said it needs must be a busy momentFor one like you; that you were now i' the thickOf your duties, doubtless, while we idlers sat ...
Brac.Ah, you so close, sir? Lady Domizia too?
I said it needs must be a busy moment
For one like you; that you were now i' the thick
Of your duties, doubtless, while we idlers sat ...
Lur.No—in that paper,—it was in that paperWhat you were saving!
Lur.No—in that paper,—it was in that paper
What you were saving!
Brac.Oh—my day's despatch!I censure you to Florence: will you see?
Brac.Oh—my day's despatch!
I censure you to Florence: will you see?
Lur.See your despatch, your last, for the first time?Well, if I should, now? For in truth, Domizia,He would be forced to set about another,In his sly cool way, the true Florentine,To mention that important circumstance.So, while he wrote I should gain time, such time!Do not send this!
Lur.See your despatch, your last, for the first time?
Well, if I should, now? For in truth, Domizia,
He would be forced to set about another,
In his sly cool way, the true Florentine,
To mention that important circumstance.
So, while he wrote I should gain time, such time!
Do not send this!
Brac.And wherefore?
Brac.And wherefore?
Lur.These LuccheseAre not arrived—they never will arrive!And I must fight to-day, arrived or not,And I shall beat Tiburzio, that is sure:And then will be arriving his Lucchese,But slowly, oh so slowly, just in timeTo look upon my battle from the hills,Like a late moon, of use to nobody!And I must break my battle up, send forth,Surround on this side, hold in check on that.Then comes to-morrow, we negotiate,You make me send for fresh instructions home,—Incompleteness, incompleteness!
Lur.These Lucchese
Are not arrived—they never will arrive!
And I must fight to-day, arrived or not,
And I shall beat Tiburzio, that is sure:
And then will be arriving his Lucchese,
But slowly, oh so slowly, just in time
To look upon my battle from the hills,
Like a late moon, of use to nobody!
And I must break my battle up, send forth,
Surround on this side, hold in check on that.
Then comes to-morrow, we negotiate,
You make me send for fresh instructions home,
—Incompleteness, incompleteness!
Brac.Ah, we scribes!Why, I had registered that very point,The non-appearance of our foes' ally,As a most happy fortune; both at onceWere formidable: singly faced, each falls.
Brac.Ah, we scribes!
Why, I had registered that very point,
The non-appearance of our foes' ally,
As a most happy fortune; both at once
Were formidable: singly faced, each falls.
Lur.So, no great battle for my Florentines!No crowning deed, decisive and complete,For all of them, the simple as the wise,Old, young, alike, that do not understandOur wearisome pedantic art of war,By which we prove retreat may be success,Delay—best speed,—half loss, at times,—whole gain:They want results: as if it were their fault!And you, with warmest wish to be my friend,Will not be able now to simply say"Your servant has performed his task—enough!You ordered, he has executed: good!Now walk the streets in holiday attire,Congratulate your friends, till noon strikes fierce,Then form bright groups beneath the Duomo's shade!"No, you will have to argue and explain,Persuade them, all is not so ill in the end,Tease, tire them out! Arrive, arrive, Lucchese!
Lur.So, no great battle for my Florentines!
No crowning deed, decisive and complete,
For all of them, the simple as the wise,
Old, young, alike, that do not understand
Our wearisome pedantic art of war,
By which we prove retreat may be success,
Delay—best speed,—half loss, at times,—whole gain:
They want results: as if it were their fault!
And you, with warmest wish to be my friend,
Will not be able now to simply say
"Your servant has performed his task—enough!
You ordered, he has executed: good!
Now walk the streets in holiday attire,
Congratulate your friends, till noon strikes fierce,
Then form bright groups beneath the Duomo's shade!"
No, you will have to argue and explain,
Persuade them, all is not so ill in the end,
Tease, tire them out! Arrive, arrive, Lucchese!
Domizia.Well, you will triumph for the past enough,Whatever be the present chance; no serviceFalls to the ground with Florence: she awaitsHer savior, will receive him fittingly.
Domizia.Well, you will triumph for the past enough,
Whatever be the present chance; no service
Falls to the ground with Florence: she awaits
Her savior, will receive him fittingly.
Lur.Ah, Braccio, you know Florence! Will she, think you,Receive one ... what means "fittingly receive"?—Receive compatriots, doubtless—I am none:And yet Domizia promises so much!
Lur.Ah, Braccio, you know Florence! Will she, think you,
Receive one ... what means "fittingly receive"?
—Receive compatriots, doubtless—I am none:
And yet Domizia promises so much!
Brac.Kind women still give men a woman's prize.I know not o'er which gate most boughs will arch.Nor if the Square will wave red flags or blue.I should have judged, the fullest of rewardsOur state gave Luria, when she made him chiefOf her whole force, in her best captain's place.
Brac.Kind women still give men a woman's prize.
I know not o'er which gate most boughs will arch.
Nor if the Square will wave red flags or blue.
I should have judged, the fullest of rewards
Our state gave Luria, when she made him chief
Of her whole force, in her best captain's place.
Lur.That, my reward? Florence on my accountRelieved Ser Puccio?—mark you, my reward!And Puccio's having all the fight's true joy—Goes here and there, gets close, may fight, himself,While I must order, stand aloof, o'ersee.That was my calling, there was my true place!I should have felt, in some one over me,Florence impersonate, my visible head,As I am over Puccio,—taking lifeDirectly from her eye! They give me you:But do you cross me, set me half to work?I enjoy nothing—though I will, for once!Decide, shall we join battle? may I wait?
Lur.That, my reward? Florence on my account
Relieved Ser Puccio?—mark you, my reward!
And Puccio's having all the fight's true joy—
Goes here and there, gets close, may fight, himself,
While I must order, stand aloof, o'ersee.
That was my calling, there was my true place!
I should have felt, in some one over me,
Florence impersonate, my visible head,
As I am over Puccio,—taking life
Directly from her eye! They give me you:
But do you cross me, set me half to work?
I enjoy nothing—though I will, for once!
Decide, shall we join battle? may I wait?
Brac.Let us compound the matter; wait till noon:Then, no arrival,—
Brac.Let us compound the matter; wait till noon:
Then, no arrival,—
Lur.Ah, noon comes too fast!I wonder, do you guess why I delayInvoluntarily the final blowAs long as possible? Peace follows it!Florence at peace, and the calm studious headsCome out again, the penetrating eyes;As if a spell broke, all 's resumed, each artYou boast, more vivid that it slept awhile.'Gainst the glad heaven, o'er the white palace-frontThe interrupted scaffold climbs anew;The walls are peopled by the painter's brush;The statue to its niche ascends to dwell.The present noise and trouble have retiredAnd left the eternal past to rule once more;You speak its speech and read its records plain,Greece lives with you, each Roman breathes your friend:But Luria—where will then be Luria's place?
Lur.Ah, noon comes too fast!
I wonder, do you guess why I delay
Involuntarily the final blow
As long as possible? Peace follows it!
Florence at peace, and the calm studious heads
Come out again, the penetrating eyes;
As if a spell broke, all 's resumed, each art
You boast, more vivid that it slept awhile.
'Gainst the glad heaven, o'er the white palace-front
The interrupted scaffold climbs anew;
The walls are peopled by the painter's brush;
The statue to its niche ascends to dwell.
The present noise and trouble have retired
And left the eternal past to rule once more;
You speak its speech and read its records plain,
Greece lives with you, each Roman breathes your friend:
But Luria—where will then be Luria's place?
Dom.Highest in honor, for that past's own sake,Of which his actions, sealing up the sumBy saving all that went before from wreck,Will range as part, with which be worshipped too.
Dom.Highest in honor, for that past's own sake,
Of which his actions, sealing up the sum
By saving all that went before from wreck,
Will range as part, with which be worshipped too.
Lur.Then I may walk and watch you in your streets,Lead the smooth life my rough life helps no more,So different, so new, so beautiful—Nor fear that you will tire to see paradeThe club that slew the lion, now that crooksAnd shepherd-pipes come into use again?For very lone and silent seems my EastIn its drear vastness: still it spreads, and stillNo Braccios, no Domizias anywhere—Not ever more! Well, well, to-day is ours!
Lur.Then I may walk and watch you in your streets,
Lead the smooth life my rough life helps no more,
So different, so new, so beautiful—
Nor fear that you will tire to see parade
The club that slew the lion, now that crooks
And shepherd-pipes come into use again?
For very lone and silent seems my East
In its drear vastness: still it spreads, and still
No Braccios, no Domizias anywhere—
Not ever more! Well, well, to-day is ours!
Dom.[ToBrac.]Should he not have been one of us?
Dom.[ToBrac.]Should he not have been one of us?
Lur.Oh, no!Not one of you, and so escape the thrillOf coming into you, of changing thus,—Feeling a soul grow on me that restrictsThe boundless unrest of the savage heart!The sea heaves up, hangs loaded o'er the land,Breaks there and buries its tumultuous strength;Horror, and silence, and a pause awhile:Lo, inland glides the gulf-stream, miles away,In rapture of assent, subdued and still,'Neath those strange banks, those unimagined skies.Well, 't is not sure the quiet lasts forever!Your placid heads still find rough hands new work;Some minute's chance—there comes the need of mine:And, all resolved on, I too hear at last.Oh, you must find some use for me, Ser Braccio!You hold my strength; 't were best dispose of it:What you created, see that you find food for—I shall be dangerous else!
Lur.Oh, no!
Not one of you, and so escape the thrill
Of coming into you, of changing thus,—
Feeling a soul grow on me that restricts
The boundless unrest of the savage heart!
The sea heaves up, hangs loaded o'er the land,
Breaks there and buries its tumultuous strength;
Horror, and silence, and a pause awhile:
Lo, inland glides the gulf-stream, miles away,
In rapture of assent, subdued and still,
'Neath those strange banks, those unimagined skies.
Well, 't is not sure the quiet lasts forever!
Your placid heads still find rough hands new work;
Some minute's chance—there comes the need of mine:
And, all resolved on, I too hear at last.
Oh, you must find some use for me, Ser Braccio!
You hold my strength; 't were best dispose of it:
What you created, see that you find food for—
I shall be dangerous else!
Brac.How dangerous, sir?
Brac.How dangerous, sir?
Lur.There are so many ways, Domizia warns me,And one with half the power that I possess,—Grows very formidable! Do you doubt?Why, first, who holds the army ...
Lur.There are so many ways, Domizia warns me,
And one with half the power that I possess,
—Grows very formidable! Do you doubt?
Why, first, who holds the army ...
Dom.While we talk,Morn wears; we keep you from your proper place,The field.
Dom.While we talk,
Morn wears; we keep you from your proper place,
The field.
Lur.Nay, to the field I move no more;My part is done, and Puccio's may begin:I cannot trench upon his province longerWith any face.—You think yourselves so safe?Why, see—in concert with Tiburzio, now—One could ...
Lur.Nay, to the field I move no more;
My part is done, and Puccio's may begin:
I cannot trench upon his province longer
With any face.—You think yourselves so safe?
Why, see—in concert with Tiburzio, now—
One could ...
Dom.A trumpet!
Dom.A trumpet!
Lur.My Lucchese at last!Arrived, as sure as Florence stands! Your leave![Springs out.
Lur.My Lucchese at last!
Arrived, as sure as Florence stands! Your leave![Springs out.
Dom.How plainly is true greatness characteredBy such unconscious sport as Luria's here,Strength sharing least the secret of itself!Be it with head that schemes or hand that acts,Such save the world which none but they could save,Yet think whate'er they did, that world could do.
Dom.How plainly is true greatness charactered
By such unconscious sport as Luria's here,
Strength sharing least the secret of itself!
Be it with head that schemes or hand that acts,
Such save the world which none but they could save,
Yet think whate'er they did, that world could do.
Brac.Yes: and how worthy note, that these same great onesIn hand or head, with such unconsciousnessAnd all its due entailed humility,Should never shrink, so far as I perceive,From taking up whatever tool there beEffects the whole world's safety or mishap,Into their mild hands as a thing of course!The statist finds it natural to leadThe mob who might as easily lead him—The captain marshals troops born skilled in war—Statist and captain verily believe!While we poor scribes ... you catch me thinking now,That I shall in this very letter writeWhat none of you are able! To it, Lapo![Domiziagoes.This last worst all-affected childish fitOf Luria's, this be-praised unconsciousness,Convinces me; the past was no child's play:It was a man beat Pisa,—not a child.All 's mere dissimulation—to removeThe fear, he best knows we should entertain.The utmost danger was at hand. Is 't written?Now make a duplicate, lest this should fail,And speak your fullest on the other side.
Brac.Yes: and how worthy note, that these same great ones
In hand or head, with such unconsciousness
And all its due entailed humility,
Should never shrink, so far as I perceive,
From taking up whatever tool there be
Effects the whole world's safety or mishap,
Into their mild hands as a thing of course!
The statist finds it natural to lead
The mob who might as easily lead him—
The captain marshals troops born skilled in war—
Statist and captain verily believe!
While we poor scribes ... you catch me thinking now,
That I shall in this very letter write
What none of you are able! To it, Lapo![Domiziagoes.
This last worst all-affected childish fit
Of Luria's, this be-praised unconsciousness,
Convinces me; the past was no child's play:
It was a man beat Pisa,—not a child.
All 's mere dissimulation—to remove
The fear, he best knows we should entertain.
The utmost danger was at hand. Is 't written?
Now make a duplicate, lest this should fail,
And speak your fullest on the other side.
Sec.I noticed he was busily repairingMy half-effacement of his Duomo sketch,And, while he spoke of Florence, turned to it,As the Mage Negro king to Christ the babe.I judge his childishness the mere relapseTo boyhood of a man who has worked lately,And presently will work, so, meantime, plays:Whence, more than ever I believe in him.
Sec.I noticed he was busily repairing
My half-effacement of his Duomo sketch,
And, while he spoke of Florence, turned to it,
As the Mage Negro king to Christ the babe.
I judge his childishness the mere relapse
To boyhood of a man who has worked lately,
And presently will work, so, meantime, plays:
Whence, more than ever I believe in him.
Brac.[After a pause.]The sword! At best, the soldier, as he says,In Florence—the black face, the barbarous name,For Italy to boast her show of the age,Her man of men!—To Florence with each letter!
Brac.[After a pause.]The sword! At best, the soldier, as he says,
In Florence—the black face, the barbarous name,
For Italy to boast her show of the age,
Her man of men!—To Florence with each letter!
NOON