登陆注册
38026400000006

第6章 MASSIMILLA DONI(5)

A whole tribe of workmen were hurriedly completing the furnishing and redecoration of the palace. The first floor, worthy of the antique glories of Venice, displayed to Emilio's waking eyes the magnificence of which he had just been dreaming, and the fairy had exercised admirable taste. Splendor worthy of a parvenu sovereign was to be seen even in the smallest details. Emilio wandered about without remark from anybody, and surprise followed on surprise.

Curious, then, to know what was going forward on the second floor, he went up, and found everything finished. The unknown laborers, commissioned by a wizard to revive the marvels of the Arabian nights in behalf of an impoverished Italian prince, were exchanging some inferior articles of furniture brought in for the nonce. Prince Emilio made his way into the bedroom, which smiled on him like a shell just deserted by Venus. The room was so charmingly pretty, so daintily smart, so full of elegant contrivance, that he straightway seated himself in an armchair of gilt wood, in front of which a most appetizing cold supper stood ready, and, without more ado, proceeded to eat.

"In all the world there is no one but Massimilla who would have thought of this surprise," thought he. "She heard that I was now a prince; Duke Cataneo is perhaps dead, and has left her his fortune; she is twice as rich as she was; she will marry me----"

And he ate in a way that would have roused the envy of an invalid Croesus, if he could have seen him; and he drank floods of capital port wine.

"Now I understand the knowing little air she put on as she said, 'Till this evening!' Perhaps she means to come and break the spell. What a fine bed! and in the bed-place such a pretty lamp! Quite a Florentine idea!"

There are some strongly blended natures on which extremes of joy or of grief have a soporific effect. Now on a youth so compounded that he could idealize his mistress to the point of ceasing to think of her as a woman, this sudden incursion of wealth had the effect of a dose of opium. When the Prince had drunk the whole of the bottle of port, eaten half a fish and some portion of a French pate, he felt an irresistible longing for bed. Perhaps he was suffering from a double intoxication. So he pulled off the counterpane, opened the bed, undressed in a pretty dressing-room, and lay down to meditate on destiny.

"I forgot poor Carmagnola," said he; "but my cook and butler will have provided for him."

At this juncture, a waiting-woman came in, lightly humming an air from the /Barbiere/. She tossed a woman's dress on a chair, a whole outfit for the night, and said as she did so:

"Here they come!"

And in fact a few minutes later a young lady came in, dressed in the latest French style, who might have sat for some English fancy portrait engraved for a /Forget-me-not/, a /Belle Assemblee/, or a /Book of Beauty/.

The Prince shivered with delight and with fear, for, as you know, he was in love with Massimilla. But, in spite of this faith in love which fired his blood, and which of old inspired the painters of Spain, which gave Italy her Madonnas, created Michael Angelo's statues and Ghilberti's doors of the Baptistery,--desire had him in its toils, and agitated him without infusing into his heart that warm, ethereal glow which he felt at a look or a word from the Duchess. His soul, his heart, his reason, every impulse of his will, revolted at the thought of an infidelity; and yet that brutal, unreasoning infidelity domineered over his spirit. But the woman was not alone.

The Prince saw one of those figures in which nobody believes when they are transferred from real life, where we wonder at them, to the imaginary existence of a more or less literary description. The dress of this stranger, like that of all Neapolitans, displayed five colors, if the black of his hat may count for a color; his trousers were olive-brown, his red waistcoat shone with gilt buttons, his coat was greenish, and his linen was more yellow than white. This personage seemed to have made it his business to verify the Neapolitan as represented by Gerolamo on the stage of his puppet show. His eyes looked like glass beads. His nose, like the ace of clubs, was horribly long and bulbous; in fact, it did its best to conceal an opening which it would be an insult to the human countenance to call a mouth; within, three or four tusks were visible, endowed, as it seemed, with a proper motion and fitting into each other. His fleshy ears drooped by their own weight, giving the creature a whimsical resemblance to a dog.

His complexion, tainted, no doubt, by various metallic infusions as prescribed by some Hippocrates, verged on black. A pointed skull, scarcely covered by a few straight hairs like spun glass, crowned this forbidding face with red spots. Finally, though the man was very thin and of medium height, he had long arms and broad shoulders.

In spite of these hideous details, and though he looked fully seventy, he did not lack a certain cyclopean dignity; he had aristocratic manners and the confident demeanor of a rich man.

Any one who could have found courage enough to study him, would have seen his history written by base passions on this noble clay degraded to mud. Here was the man of high birth, who, rich from his earliest youth, had given up his body to debauchery for the sake of extravagant enjoyment. And debauchery had destroyed the human being and made another after its own image. Thousands of bottles of wine had disappeared under the purple archway of that preposterous nose, and left their dregs on his lips. Long and slow digestion had destroyed his teeth. His eyes had grown dim under the lamps of the gaming table.

The blood tainted with impurities had vitiated the nervous system. The expenditure of force in the task of digestion had undermined his intellect. Finally, amours had thinned his hair. Each vice, like a greedy heir, had stamped possession on some part of the living body.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 神之浩劫寂黄昏

    神之浩劫寂黄昏

    惩戒之剑追人命雷神之锤赶流星神魂颠倒月之舞奥林匹斯守护神漫天箭雨是森女萝莉海妖犬如龙气场爆发爱之杖双枪音乐神光芒冥界道标羊头杖死神之镰攫灵魂潮起潮落三叉戟战神重剑战争铐时光逆流时光钩神圣裁决似剪刀
  • 苏不平的彪悍人生

    苏不平的彪悍人生

    开局一个没有操作说明的残废系统,左有主神空间追杀,右有魔神虎视眈眈,只有一个史莱姆帮手的苏不平欲哭无泪。这怎么解?在线等,很急。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 大神!来呀来呀

    大神!来呀来呀

    都说天上掉下个猪八戒,眼前这是天上掉下只“烟雨阑珊”啊!帮会的小伙伴们表示受到了惊吓!大上午的一个严肃的帮会被眼前这一幕刷新三观!天上掉下来什么不重要!重要的是掉下来的烟雨大神此刻正将他们的帮主压在身下!这……一定是他们今天的打开方式不对,非礼勿视非礼勿视啊!烟雨睁大眼睛,看着眼前的一幕,天啊!她的瞬间移动竟然还能进别的帮的内部!这招也太炫了!只是,她此刻的关注点是不是错了?“起来,你压到他了。”“他?”“老二。”帮会的小伙伴们几乎是秒懂的啊有木有!世界频道瞬间炸开!【网游】
  • 堕落三天使的恨意

    堕落三天使的恨意

    三公主与假冒公主的对决与复仇!都怪她们,还有她们的父母!!!
  • 除锈

    除锈

    大家好,我叫陈煌,耳东陈,火皇煌。是这样的,我前几天睡过头了,一不小心穿越了。我本以为我会开启一段奇幻之旅,从此之后虐菜打渣,坐拥天下美人,走上人生巅峰,再不济也是利用我现代科学知识所向披靡,重塑原主悲惨人生。但是,我错了,大错特错。我没想到前身如此厉害,仗着自己出身显贵,处处树敌,我反而成了那忍辱负重的背锅侠。然而在经历无数次背锅与被复仇之后,我逐渐地发现,原来我本就深陷权力斗争的漩涡中,而在夹缝中求生,也实属不易……
  • 我居然成为了一拳超人

    我居然成为了一拳超人

    为了调查爷爷失踪的真相,杜灿与其他十四名大学同学参加了前往澳国的毕业旅行,杜灿在一口洞窟跟前发现了爷爷随身携带的手机,进入了洞窟之内,却遭遇了洞窟崩塌,好不容易活下来的众人发现,他们来到了一个超乎他们想象的世界,出现在他们面前的,竟然是一群巨大的猛犸象!而在这个世界里,杜灿意外发现,自己竟然是无敌的!不论什么厉害的妖魔鬼怪,他都能够一拳搞定!嗯,这就是一个爱生活、爱妹子、充满正能量的故事嘛!
  • 听说,你曾爱过我

    听说,你曾爱过我

    “我爱上了一个爱不上我的一个人,你说,我该怎么办?”——乔艾艾全世界都知道乔艾艾喜欢聂晟,可聂晟不知道啊。“对他,我终究不知道是想念,还是念想。”——乔艾艾“如果,我娶了夏夏,是不是就等于娶了你呢?艾艾?”——聂晟“我从没有这么的爱上了一个人,也从没有这么恨一个人。聂晟,你做了这两个的第一人啊!”——夏夏
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 京城往事1

    京城往事1

    1967年,父亲因内部斗争自杀,母亲被监管,为了养活三个妹妹,陈成踏入江湖,与各派流氓厮杀混战,制造血案无数,迅速成长为京城流氓头子,在各种传闻中被夸张渲染为凶神恶煞的杀人恶魔,市民闻之色变;而那时,他不过是一个年仅17岁的少年。此后数十年间,文革、武斗、下放当知青、返城上大学、当组织部副部长、辞职、经商、行贿、盗窃、诈骗、倒卖煤炭、闯海南、搞房地产、搞信托投资,跌荡起伏,几度生死,陈成一直在时代的刀尖上舔血生存。当他离市民的传说越来越远,身影逐渐模糊,几乎就要被遗忘的时候,人们已经注意不到,在报纸、杂志、电视、网络的各种财经新闻中,一直隐藏着一个他们曾经熟悉的面孔。