Now, thought he, as he gazed around upon the roofless columns and shattered walls, everywhere visible, over which the starlight shone, ghastly and transparent, backed by the frowning and embattled fortresses of the Frangipani, half hid by the dark foliage that sprung up amidst the very fanes and palaces of oldNature exulting over the frailer Art; now, thought he, bookmen would be inspired, by this scene, with fantastic and dreaming visions of the past. But to me these monuments of high ambition and royal splendour create only images of the future. Rome may yet be, with her seven-hilled diadem, as Rome has been before, the prize of the strongest hand and the boldest warrior,revived, not by her own degenerate sons, but the infused blood of a new race. William the Bastard could scarce have found the hardy Englishers so easy a conquest as Walter the Well-born may find these eunuch Romans. And which conquest were the more glorious,the barbarous Isle, or the Metropolis of the World? Short step from the general to the podestashorter step from the podesta to the king!
While thus revolving his wild, yet not altogether chimerical ambition, a quick light step was heard amidst the long herbage, and, looking up, Montreal perceived the figure of a tall female descending from that part of the hill then covered by many convents, towards the base of the Aventine. She supported her steps with a long staff, and moved with such elasticity and erectness, that now, as her face became visible by the starlight, it was surprising to perceive that it was the face of one advanced in years,a harsh, proud countenance, withered, and deeply wrinkled, but not without a certain regularity of outline.
Merciful Virgin! cried Montreal, starting back as that face gleamed upon him: is it possible? It is she:it is
He sprung forward, and stood right before the old woman, who seemed equally surprised, though more dismayed, at the sight of Montreal.
I have sought thee for years, said the Knight, first breaking the silence; years, long years,thy conscience can tell thee why.
Mine, man of blood! cried the female, trembling with rage or fear; darest thou talk of conscience? Thou, the dishonourerthe robberthe professed homicide! Thou, disgrace to knighthood and to birth! Thou, with the cross of chastity and of peace upon thy breast! Thou talk of conscience, hypocrite!thou?
Ladylady! said Montreal, deprecatingly, and almost quailing beneath the fiery passion of that feeble woman, I have sinned against thee and thine. But remember all my excuses!early lovefatal obstaclesrash vowirresistible temptation! Perhaps, he added, in a more haughty tone, perhaps, yet, I may have the power to atone my error, and wring, with mailed hand, from the successor of St Peter, who hath power to loose as to bind
Perjured and abandoned! interrupted the female; dost thou dream that violence can purchase absolution, or that thou canst ever atone the past?a noble name disgraced, a fathers broken heart and dying curse! Yes, that curse, I hear it now! it rings upon me thrillingly, as when I watched the expiring clay! it cleaves to theeit pursues theeit shall pierce thee through thy corseletit shall smite thee in the meridian of thy power! Genius wastedambition blastedpenitence deferreda life of brawls, and a death of shamethy destruction the offspring of thy crime!To this, to this, an old mans curse hath doomed thee!AND THOU ART DOOMED!
These words were rather shrieked than spoken: and the flashing eye, the lifted hand, the dilated form of the speakerthe hourthe solitude of the ruins aroundall conspired to give to the fearful execration the character of prophecy. The warrior, against whose undaunted breast a hundred spears had shivered in vain, fell appalled and humbled to the ground. He seized the hem of his fierce denouncers robe, and cried, in a choked and hollow voice, Spare me! spare me!
Spare thee! said the unrelenting crone; hast thou ever spared man in thy hatred, or woman in thy lust? Ah, grovel in the dust!crouchcrouch!wild beast as thou art! whose sleek skin and beautiful hues have taught the unwary to be blind to the talons that rend, and the grinders that devour;crouch, that the foot of the old and impotent may spurn thee!
Hag! cried Montreal, in the reaction of sudden fury and maddened pride, springing up to the full height of his stature. Hag! thou hast passed the limits to which, remembering who thou art, my forbearance gave thee licence. I had well-nigh forgot that thou hadst assumed my partI am the Accuser! Woman!the boy!shrink not! equivocate not! lie not!thou wert the thief!
I was. Thou taughtest me the lesson how to steal a
Renderrestore him! interrupted Montreal, stamping on the ground with such force that the splinters of the marble fragments on which he stood shivered under his armed heel.
The woman little heeded a violence at which the fiercest warrior of Italy might have trembled; but she did not make an immediate answer. The character of her countenance altered from passion into an expression of grave, intent, and melancholy thought. At length she replied to Montreal; whose hand had wandered to his dagger-hilt, with the instinct of long habit, whenever enraged or thwarted, rather than from any design of blood; which, stern and vindictive as he was, he would have been incapable of forming against any woman,much less against the one then before him.
Walter de Montreal, said she, in a voice so calm that it almost sounded like that of compassion, the boy, I think, has never known brother or sister: the only child of a once haughty and lordly race, on both sides, though now on both dishonourednay, why so impatient? thou wilt soon learn the worstthe boy is dead!
Dead! repeated Montreal, recoiling and growing pale; dead!no, nosay not that! He has a mother,you know he has!a fond, meekhearted, anxious, hoping mother!no!no, he is not dead!
Thou canst feel, then, for a mother? said the old woman, seemingly touched by the tone of the Provencal. Yet, bethink thee; is it not better that the grave should save him from a life of riot, of bloodshed, and of crime? Better to sleep with God than to wake with the fiends!
Dead! echoed Montreal; dead!the pretty one!so young!those eyesthe mothers eyesclosed so soon?
Hast thou aught else to say? Thy sight scares my very womanhood from my soul!let me be gone.
Dead!may I believe thee? or dost thou mock me? Thou hast uttered thy curse, hearken to my warning:If thou hast lied in this, thy last hour shall dismay thee, and thy death-bed shall be the death-bed of despair!
Thy lips, replied the female, with a scornful smile, are better adapted for lewd vows to unhappy maidens, than for the denunciations which sound solemn only when coming from the good. Farewell!
Stay! inexorable woman! stay!where sleeps he? Masses shall be sung! priests shall pray!the sins of the father shall not be visited on that young head!
At Florence! returned the woman, hastily. But no stone records the departed one!The dead boy had no name!
Waiting for no further questionings, the woman now passed on,pursued her way;and the long herbage, and the winding descent, soon snatched her ill-omened apparition from the desolate landscape.
Montreal, thus alone, sunk with a deep and heavy sigh upon the ground, covered his face with his hands, and burst into an agony of grief; his chest heaved, his whole frame trembled, and he wept and sobbed aloud, with all the fearful vehemence of a man whose passions are strong and fierce, but to whom the violence of grief alone is novel and unfamiliar.
Montreal, thus alone, sunk with a deep and heavy sigh upon the ground, covered his face with his hands, and burst into an agony of grief; his chest heaved, his whole frame trembled, and he wept and sobbed aloud, with all the fearful vehemence of a man whose passions are strong and fierce, but to whom the violence of grief alone is novel and unfamiliar.
He remained thus, prostrate and unmanned, for a considerable time, growing slowly and gradually more calm as tears relieved his emotion; and, at length, rather indulging a gloomy reverie than a passionate grief. The moon was high and the hour late when he arose, and then few traces of the past excitement remained upon his countenance; for Walter de Montreal was not of that mould in which woe can force a settlement, or to which any affliction can bring the continued and habitual melancholy that darkens those who feel more enduringly, though with emotions less stormy. His were the elements of the true Franc character, though carried to excess: his sternest and his deepest qualities were mingled with fickleness and caprice; his profound sagacity often frustrated by a whim; his towering ambition deserted for some frivolous temptation; and his elastic, sanguine, and high-spirited nature, faithful only to the desire of military glory, to the poetry of a daring and stormy life, and to the susceptibilities of that tender passion without whose colourings no portrait of chivalry is complete, and in which he was capable of a sentiment, a tenderness, and a loyal devotion, which could hardly have been supposed compatible with his reckless levity and his undisciplined career.
Well, said he, as he rose slowly, folded his mantle round him, and resumed his way, it was not for myself I grieved thus. But the pang is past, and the worst is known. Now, then, back to those things that never dierestless projects and daring schemes. That hags curse keeps my blood cold still, and this solitude has something in it weird and awful. Ha!what sudden light is that?
The light which caught Montreals eye broke forth almost like a star, scarcely larger, indeed, but more red and intense in its ray. Of itself it was nothing uncommon, and might have shone either from convent or cottage. But it streamed from a part of the Aventine which contained no habitations of the living, but only the empty ruins and shattered porticoes, of which even the names and memories of the ancient inhabitants were dead. Aware of this, Montreal felt a slight awe (as the beam threw its steady light over the dreary landscape); for he was not without the knightly superstitions of the age, and it was now the witching hour consecrated to ghost and spirit. But fear, whether of this world or the next, could not long daunt the mind of the hardy freebooter; and, after a short hesitation, he resolved to make a digression from his way, and ascertain the cause of the phenomenon. Unconsciously, the martial tread of the barbarian passed over the site of the famed, or infamous, Temple of Isis, which had once witnessed those wildest orgies commemorated by Juvenal; and came at last to a thick and dark copse, from an opening in the centre of which gleamed the mysterious light. Penetrating the gloomy foliage, the Knight now found himself before a large ruin, grey and roofless, from within which came, indistinct and muffled, the sound of voices. Through a rent in the wall, forming a kind of casement, and about ten feet from the ground, the light now broke over the matted and rank soil, embedded, as it were, in vast masses of shade, and streaming through a mouldering portico hard at hand. The Provencal stood, though he knew it not, on the very place once consecrated by the Temple: the Portico and the Library of Liberty (the first public library instituted in Rome). The wall of the ruin was covered with innumerable creepers and wild brushwood, and it required but little agility on the part of Montreal, by the help of these, to raise himself to the height of the aperture, and, concealed by the luxuriant foliage, to gaze within. He saw a table, lighted with tapers, in the centre of which was a crucifix; a dagger, unsheathed; an open scroll, which the event proved to be of sacred character; and a brazen bowl. About a hundred men, in cloaks, and with black vizards, stood motionless around; and one, taller than the rest, without disguise or maskwhose pale brow and stern features seemed by that light yet paler and yet more sternappeared to be concluding some address to his companions.
Yes, said he, in the church of the Lateran I will make the last appeal to the people. Supported by the Vicar of the Pope, myself an officer of the Pontiff, it will be seen that Religion and Libertythe heroes and the martyrsare united in one cause. After that time, words are idle; action must begin. By this crucifix I pledge my faith, on this blade I devote my life, to the regeneration of Rome! And you (then no need for mask or mantle!), when the solitary trump is heard, when the solitary horseman is seen,you, swear to rally round the standard of the Republic, and resistwith heart and hand, with life and soul, in defiance of death, and in hope of redemptionthe arms of the oppressor!
We swearwe swear! exclaimed every voice: and, crowding toward cross and weapon, the tapers were obscured by the intervening throng, and Montreal could not perceive the ceremony, nor hear the muttered formula of the oath: but he could guess that the rite then common to conspiraciesand which required each conspirator to shed some drops of his own blood, in token that life itself was devoted to the enterprisehad not been omitted, when, the group again receding, the same figure as before had addressed the meeting, holding on high the bowl with both hands,while from the left arm, which was bared, the blood weltered slowly, and trickled, drop by drop, upon the ground,said, in a solemn voice and upturned eyes:
Amidst the ruins of thy temple, O Liberty! we, Romans, dedicate to thee this libation! We, befriended and inspired by no unreal and fabled idols, but by the Lord of Hosts, and Him who, descending to earth, appealed not to emperors and to princes, but to the fisherman and the peasant,giving to the lowly and the poor the mission of Revelation. Then, turning suddenly to his companions, as his features, singularly varying in their character and expression, brightened, from solemn awe, into a martial and kindling enthusiasm, he cried aloud, Death to the Tyranny! Life to the Republic! The effect of the transition was startling. Each man, as by an involuntary and irresistible impulse, laid his hand upon his sword, as he echoed the sentiment; some, indeed, drew forth their blades, as if for instant action.
I have seen enow: they will break up anon, said Montreal to himself: and I would rather face an army of thousands, than even half-a-dozen enthusiasts, so inflamed,and I thus detected. And, with this thought, he dropped on the ground, and glided away, as, once again, through the still midnight air, broke upon his ear the muffled shoutDEATH TO THE TYRANNY!LIFE TO THE REPUBLIC!
BOOK II. THE REVOLUTION
Ogni Lascivia, ogni male, nulla giustizia, nullo freno.
Non cera piu remedia, ogni persona periva. Allora Cola di Rienzi. &c.Vita di Cola di Rienzi, lib. i. chap. 2.
Every kind of lewdness, every form of evil; no justice, no restraint. Remedy there was none; perdition fell on all. Then Cola di Rienzi, &c.Life of Cola di Rienzi.
Chapter 2.I. The Knight of Provence, and his Proposal
It was nearly noon as Adrian entered the gates of the palace of Stephen Colonna. The palaces of the nobles were not then as we see them now, receptacles for the immortal canvas of Italian, and the imperishable sculpture of Grecian Art; but still to this day are retained the massive walls, and barred windows, and spacious courts, which at that time protected their rude retainers. High above the gates rose a lofty and solid tower, whose height commanded a wide view of the mutilated remains of Rome: the gate itself was adorned and strengthened on either side by columns of granite, whose Doric capitals betrayed the sacrilege that had torn them from one of the many temples that had formerly crowded the sacred Forum. From the same spoils came, too, the vast fragments of travertine which made the walls of the outer court. So common at that day were these barbarous appropriations of the most precious monuments of art, that the columns and domes of earlier Rome were regarded by all classes but as quarries, from which every man was free to gather the materials, whether for his castle or his cottage,a wantonness of outrage far greater than the Goths, to whom a later age would fain have attributed all the disgrace, and which, more perhaps than even heavier offences, excited the classical indignation of Petrarch, and made him sympathise with Rienzi in his hopes of Rome. Still may you see the churches of that or even earlier dates, of the most shapeless architecture, built on the sites, and from the marbles, consecrating (rather than consecrated by) the names of Venus, of Jupiter, of Minerva. The palace of the Prince of the Orsini, duke of Gravina, is yet reared above the graceful arches (still visible) of the theatre of Marcellus; then a fortress of the Savelli.