His vocation, nom de Dieu,
is to be an abbot first, and then a monsignore, and then a bishop, if he can—and
to the devil with your cowls and cloisters!" And he gave orders that Odo
should hunt with him next morning.
The
chaplain smiled. "Hubert was a huntsman," said he, "and yet he
died a saint."
From
that time forth the old Marquess kept Odo oftener at his side, making his
grandson ride with him about his estates and on such hunting-parties as were
not beyond the boy's strength. The domain of Donnaz included many a mile of
vine and forest, over which, till the fifteenth century, its lords had ruled as
sovereign Marquesses. They still retained a part of their feudal privileges,
and Odo's grandfather, tenacious of these dwindling rights, was for ever
engaged in vain contests with his peasantry. To see these poor creatures cursed
and brow-beaten, their least offences punished, their few claims disputed, must
have turned Odo's fear of his grandfather to hatred, had he not observed that
the old man gave with one hand what he took with the other, so that, in his
dealings with his people, he resembled one of those torrents which now
devastate and now enrich their banks. The Marquess, in fact, while he held
obstinately to his fishing rights, prosecuted poachers, enforced the corvee and
took toll at every ford, yet laboured to improve his lands, exterminated the
wild beasts that preyed on them, helped his peasants in sickness, nourished
them in old age and governed them with a paternal tyranny doubtless less
insufferable than the negligence of the great land-owners who lived at court.
To
Odo, however, these rides among the tenantry were less agreeable than the
hunting-expeditions which carried them up the mountain in the solitude of
morning. Here the wild freshness of the scene and the exhilaration of pursuit
roused the fighting strain in the boy's blood, and so stirred his memory with
tales of prowess that sometimes, as they climbed the stony defiles in the clear
shadow before sunrise, he fancied himself riding forth to exterminate the
Waldenses who, according to the chaplain, still lurked like basilisks and dragons
in the recesses of the mountains. Certain it is that his rides with the old
Marquess, if they inflamed his zeal against heresy, cooled the ardour of his
monastic vocation; and if he pondered on his future, it was to reflect that
doubtless he would some day be a bishop, and that bishops were territorial
lords, we might hunt the wolf and boar in their own domains.
Reluctantly,
every year about the Epiphany, the old Marquess rode down from Donnaz to spend
two months in Turin. It was a service exacted by King Charles Emanuel, who viewed with a
jealous eye those of his nobles inclined to absent themselves from court and
rewarded their presence with privileges and preferments. At the same time the
two canonesses descended to their abbey in the plain, and thus with the closing
in of winter the old Marchioness, Odo and his mother were left alone in the
castle.
To
the Marchioness this was an agreeable period of spiritual compunction and
bodily repose; but to Donna Laura a season of despair. The poor lady, who had
been early removed from the rough life at Donnaz to the luxurious court of
Pianura, and was yet in the fulness of youth and vivacity, could not resign
herself to an existence no better, as she declared,
than that of any herdsman's wife upon the mountains. Here was neither music nor
cards, scandal nor love-making; no news of the fashions, no visits from
silk-mercers or jewellers, no Monsu to curl her hair and tempt her with new
lotions, or so much as a strolling soothsayer or juggler to lighten the
dullness of the long afternoons. The only visitors to the castle were the
mendicant friars drawn thither by the Marchioness's pious repute; and though
Donna Laura disdained not to call these to her chamber and question them for
news, yet their country-side scandals were no more to her fancy than the
two-penny wares of the chapmen who unpacked their baubles on the kitchen
hearth.
She
pined for some word of Pianura; but when a young abate, who had touched there
on his way from Tuscany, called for a night at the castle to pay his duty to
Don Gervaso, the word he brought with him of the birth of an heir to the duchy
was so little to Donna Laura's humour that she sprang up from the supper-table,
and crying out to the astonished Odo, "Ah, now you are for the Church
indeed," withdrew in disorder to her chamber. The abate, who ascribed her
commotion to a sudden seizure, continued to retail the news of Pianura, and
Odo, listening with his elders, learned that Count Lelio Trescorre had been
appointed Master of the Horse, to the indignation of the Bishop, who desired
the place for his nephew, Don Serafino; that the Duke and Duchess were never together;
that the Duchess was suspected of being in secret correspondence with the
Austrians, and that the young Marquess of Cerveno was gone to the baths of
Lucca to recover from an attack of tertian fever contracted the previous autumn
at the Duke's hunting-lodge near Pontesordo. Odo listened for some mention of
his humpbacked friend, or of Momola the foundling; but the
abate's talk kept a higher level and no one less than a cavaliere
figured on his lips. He was the only visitor of quality who came that winter to
Donnaz, and after his departure a fixed gloom settled on Donna Laura's spirits.
Dusk at that season fell early in the gorge, fierce winds blew off the
glaciers, and Donna Laura sat shivering and lamenting on one side of the
hearth, while the old Marchioness, on the other, strained her eyes over an
embroidery in which the pattern repeated itself like the invocations of a
litany, and Don Gervaso, near the smoking oil-lamp, read aloud from the Glories
of Mary or the Way of Perfection of Saint Theresa.
On
such evenings Odo, stealing from the tapestry parlour, would seek out Bruno,
who sat by the kitchen hearth with the old hound's nose at his feet. The
kitchen, indeed, on winter nights, was the pleasantest place in the castle. The
fire-light from its great stone chimney shone on the strings of maize and
bunches of dried vegetables that hung from the roof and on the copper kettles
and saucepans ranged along the wall. The wind raged against the shutters of the
unglazed windows, and the maid-servants, distaff in hand, crowded closer to the
blaze, listening to the songs of some wandering fiddler or to the stories of a
ruddy-nosed Capuchin monk who was being regaled, by the steward's orders, on a
supper of tripe and mulled wine. The Capuchin's tales, told in the Piedmontese
jargon, and seasoned with strange allusions and boisterous laughter, were of
little interest to Odo, who would creep into the ingle beside Bruno and beg for
some story of his ancestors. The old man was never weary of rehearsing the feats
and gestures of the lords of Donnaz, and Odo heard again and again how they had
fought the savage Switzers north of the Alps and the Dauphin's men in the west; how they
had marched with Savoy against Montferrat and with France against the Republic of Genoa. Better still he liked to hear of the
Marquess Gualberto, who had been the Duke of Milan's ally and had brought home
the great Milanese painter to adorn his banqueting-room at Donnaz. The lords of
Donnaz had never been noted for learning, and Odo's grandfather was fond of
declaring that a nobleman need not be a scholar; but the great Marquess
Gualberto, if himself unlettered, had been the patron of poets and painters and
had kept learned clerks to write down the annals of his house on parchment
painted by the monks. These annals were locked in the archives, under Don
Gervaso's care; but Odo learned from the old servant that some of the great
Marquess's books had lain for years on an upper shelf in the vestry off the
chapel; and here one day, with Bruno's aid, the little boy dislodged from a
corner behind the missals and altar-books certain sheepskin volumes clasped in
blackened silver. The comeliest of these, which bore on their title-page a
dolphin curled about an anchor, were printed in unknown characters; but on
opening the smaller volumes Odo felt the same joyous catching of the breath as
when he had stepped out on the garden-terrace at Pianura. For here indeed were
gates leading to a land of delectation: the country of the giant Morgante, the
enchanted island
of Avillion, the court of the Soldan and the King's
palace at Camelot.
In
this region Odo spent many blissful hours. His fancy ranged in the wake of
heroes and adventurers who, for all he knew, might still be feasting and
fighting north of the Alps, or might any day with a blast of their magic horns
summon the porter to the gates of Donnaz. Foremost among them, a figure
towering above even Rinaldo, Arthur and the Emperor Frederic, was that Conrad,
father of Conradin, whose sayings are set down in the old story-book of the
Cento Novelle, "the flower of gentle speech." There was one tale of
King Conrad that the boy never forgot: how the King, in his youth, had always
about him a company of twelve lads of his own age; how when Conrad did wrong,
his governors, instead of punishing him, beat his twelve companions; and how,
on the young King's asking what the lads were being punished for, the
pedagogues replied:
"For your Majesty's offences."
"And
why do you punish my companions instead of me?"
"Because
you are our lord and master," he was told.
At
this the King fell to thinking, and thereafter, it is said, in pity for those
who must suffer in his stead he set close watch on himself, lest his sinning
should work harm to others. This was the story of King Conrad; and much as Odo
loved the clash of arms and joyous feats of paladins rescuing fair maids in
battle, yet Conrad's seemed to him, even then, a braver deed than these.
In
March of the second year the old Marquess, returning from Turin, was accompanied, to the surprise of all,
by the fantastical figure of an elderly gentleman in the richest travelling
dress, with one of the new French toupets, a thin wrinkled painted face, and
emitting with every movement a prodigious odour of millefleurs. This visitor,
who was attended by his French barber and two or three liveried servants, the
Marquess introduced as the lord of Valdu, a neighbouring seigneurie of no great
account.
1 comment