Indeed, there is much wonder at
his frequenting it, and 'tis said he does so against the Duke's wishes."
The
name of Pontesordo had set Odo's memories humming like a hive of bees, and
without heeding his companion's allusions he asked—"And did you see the
Momola?"
The
other looked his perplexity.
"She's
an Innocent too," Odo hastened to explain. "She is Filomena's servant
at the farm."
The abate at this, standing still in the road, screwed up
his eyelids and protruded a relishing lip. "Eh, eh," said he,
"the girl from the farm, you say?" And he gave a chuckle.
"You've an eye, cavaliere, you've an eye," he cried, his soft body
shaking with enjoyment; but before Odo could make a guess at his meaning their
conversation was interrupted by a sharp call from the litter. The abate at once disappeared in the crowd, and a moment
later the litter had debouched on the grassy quadrangle before the outer gates
of the monastery. This space was set in beech-woods, amid which gleamed the
white-pillared chapels of the Way of the Cross; and the devouter pilgrims,
dispersed beneath the trees, were ascending from one chapel to another,
preparatory to entering the church.
The
quadrangle itself was crowded with people, and the sellers of votive offerings,
in their booths roofed with acacia-boughs, were driving a noisy trade in
scapulars and Agnus Deis, images of the Black Virgin of Oropa, silver hearts
and crosses, and phials of Jordan water warranted to effect
the immediate conversion of Jews and heretics. In one corner a Carmelite
missionary had set up his portable pulpit, and, crucifix in hand, was exhorting
the crowd; in another, an improvisatore intoned canticles to the miraculous
Virgin; a barefoot friar sat selling indulgences at the monastery gate, and
pedlars with trays of rosaries and religious prints pushed their way among the
pilgrims. Young women of less pious aspect solicited the attention of the
better-dressed travellers, and jugglers, mountebanks and quacks of every
description hung on the outskirts of the square. The sight speedily turned
Odo's thought from his late companion, and the litter coming to a halt he was
leaning forward to observe the antics of a tumbler who had spread his carpet
beneath the trees, when the abate's face suddenly rose to the surface of the
throng and his hand thrust a crumpled paper between the curtains of the litter.
Odo was quick-witted enough to capture this missive without attracting the
notice of his grand-aunts, and stealing a glance at it, he read—"Cavaliere,
I starve. When the illustrious ladies descend, for Christ's sake beg a scudo of
them for the unhappy Cantapresto."
By
this the litter had disengaged itself and was moving toward the outer gates.
Odo, aware of the disfavour with which the theatre was viewed at Donnaz, and
unable to guess how far the soprano's present habit would be held to palliate
the scandal of his former connection, was perplexed how to communicate his
petition to the canonesses. A moment later, however, the question solved
itself; for as the aunts descended at the door of the rector's lodging, the
porter, running to meet them, stumbled on a black mass under the arcade, and
raised the cry that here was a man dropped dead. A crowd gathering, some one
called out that it was an ecclesiastic had fallen; whereat the great-aunts were
hurrying forward when Odo whispered the eldest, Donna Livia, that the sick man
was indeed an abate from Pianura. Donna Livia immediately bid her servants lift
him into the porter's lodge, where, with the administering of spirits, the poor
soprano presently revived and cast a drowning glance about the chamber.
"Eight
years ago, illustrious ladies," he gurgled, "I had nearly died one
night of a surfeit of ortolans; and now it is of a surfeit of emptiness that I
am perishing."
The
ladies at this, with exclamations of pity, called on the lay-brothers for broth
and cordials, and bidding the porter enquire more particularly into the history
of the unhappy ecclesiastic, hastened away with Odo to the rector's parlour.
Next
morning betimes all were afoot for the procession, which the canonesses were to
witness from the monastery windows. The apothecary had brought word that the
abate, whose seizure was indeed the result of hunger, was still too weak to
rise; and Donna Livia, eager to open her devotions with an act of pity, pressed
a sequin in the man's hand, and bid him spare no care for the sufferer's
comfort.
This
sent Odo in a cheerful mood to the red-hung windows, whence, peering between
the folds of his aunts' gala habits, he admired the great court enclosed in
nobly-ordered cloisters and strewn with fresh herbs and flowers. Thence one of
the rector's chaplains conducted them to the church, placing them, in company
with the monastery's other noble guests, in a tribune
constructed above the choir. It was Odo's first sight of a great religious
ceremony, and as he looked down on the church glimmering with votive offerings
and gold-fringed draperies, and seen through rolling incense in which the
altar-candles swam like stars reflected in a river, he felt an almost sensual
thrill of pleasure at the thought that his life was to be passed amid scenes of
such mystic beauty. The sweet singing of the choir raised his spirit to a
higher view of the scene; and the sight of the huddled misery on the floor of
the church revived in him the old longing for the Franciscan cowl.
From
these raptures he was speedily diverted by the sight awaiting him at the
conclusion of the mass. Hardly had the spectators returned to the rector's windows
when, the doors of the church swinging open, a procession headed by the rector
himself descended the steps and began to make the circuit of the court. Odo's
eyes swam with the splendour of this burst of banners, images and jewelled
reliquaries, surmounting the long train of tonsured heads and bathed in a light
almost blinding after the mild penumbra of the church. As the monks advanced,
the pilgrims, pouring after them, filled the court with a dark undulating mass
through which the procession wound like a ray of sunlight down the brown bosom
of a torrent. Branches of oleander swung in the air, devout cries hailed the
approach of the Black Madonna's canopy, and hoarse voices swelled to a roar the
measured litanies of the friars.
The ceremonies over, Odo, with the canonesses, set out to visit the
chapels studding the beech-knoll above the monastic buildings. Passing
out of Juvara's great portico they stood a moment above the grassy common,
which presented a scene in curious contrast to that they had just quitted. Here
refreshment-booths had been set up, musicians were
fiddling, jugglers unrolling their carpets, dentists shouting out the merits of
their panaceas, and light women drinking with the liveried servants of the
nobility. The very cripples who had groaned the loudest in church now rollicked
with the mountebanks and dancers; and no trace remained of the celebration just
concluded but the medals and relics strung about the necks of those engaged in
these gross diversions.
It
was strange to pass from this scene to the solitude of the grove, where, in a
twilight rustling with streams, the chapels lifted their white porches. Peering
through the grated door of each little edifice, Odo beheld within a group of
terra-cotta figures representing some scene of the Passion—here a Last Supper,
with a tigerish Judas and a Saint John resting his yellow curls on his Master's bosom, there an Entombment or
a group of stricken Maries. These figures, though rudely modelled and daubed
with bright colours, yet, by a vivacity of attitude and gesture which the
mystery of their setting enhanced, conveyed a thrilling impression of the
sacred scenes set forth; and Odo was yet at an age when the distinction between
flesh-and-blood and its plastic counterfeits is not clearly defined, or when at
least the sculptured image is still a mysterious half-sentient thing, denizen
of some strange borderland between art and life. It seemed to him, as he gazed
through the chapel gratings, that those long-distant episodes of the divine tragedy
had been here preserved in some miraculous state of suspended animation, and as
he climbed from one shrine to another he had the sense of treading the actual
stones of Gethsemane and Calvary.
As
was usual with him, the impressions of the moment had effaced those preceding
it, and it was almost with surprise that, at the rector's door, he beheld the
primo soprano of Pianura totter forth to the litter and offer his knee as a
step for the canonesses. The charitable ladies cried out on him for this imprudence,
and his pallor still giving evidence of distress, he was bidden to wait on them
after supper with his story. He presented himself promptly in the parlour, and
being questioned as to his condition at once rashly proclaimed his former
connection with the ducal theatre of Pianura. No avowal could have been more
disastrous to his cause. The canonesses crossed themselves with horror, and the abate, seeing his mistake, hastened to repair it by
exclaiming—"What, ladies, would you punish me for following a vocation to
which my frivolous parents condemned me when I was too young to resist their
purpose? And have not my subsequent sufferings, my penances and pilgrimages,
and the state to which they have reduced me, sufficiently effaced the record of
an involuntary error?"
Seeing
the effect of this appeal the abate made haste to
follow up his advantage. "Ah, illustrious ladies," he cried, "am I not a living example of the fate of those who leave all
to follow righteousness? For while I remained on the stage, among the most
dissolute surroundings, fortune showered me with every benefit she heaps on her
favourites.
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