He had the round
Saxon features, moulded with uncommon delicacy; his light hair
slightly shaded his fair temples, and his slender person denoted
elegance rather than power; his countenance bore the expression of
much thought, of thoughts moulded by an enquiring, yet a gentle
mind. He advanced towards Guinigi; his lips were almost convulsed;
a tear stole into his eye, as he grasped his hand, and said:
"You do not forget me?"
Guinigi replied with trembling emphasis, "Never!"--the
hearts of the friends were full, they took leave of the company,
and descended to the gondola, that without spectators they might
express their remembered affection.
CHAPTER IV
CASTRUCCIO spent several days with his friend at Venice. Guinigi
and Atawel were constantly together, and Castruccio was thrown to a
great degree into the society of the Venetian nobles. Having been
for a year the constant companion of Guinigi, the contrast between
him and these men struck him forcibly. The mind of the
philosophical exile was fraught with a natural wisdom, a freedom
from prejudice, and a boldness of thought, that suited the
enthusiasm, while it corrected the narrow views of Castruccio. But
these nobles were full of party spirit, and a never resting desire,
to aggrandize first themselves, and secondly their native town, in
opposition to the rest of the world. They were to themselves the
centre of the universe, and men and nations rose and set only for
them. As Galileo was persecuted for saying that the earth moved
attendant on the sun, thus demonstrating the relative
insignificance of our globe; so they would have pursued with
excessive hatred any one who should have pointed out to them their
true station in relation to their fellow-creatures. They were in no
danger of hearing such disagreeable truths from Guinigi: he was
content not to be deceived himself by the false shadows thrown from
society; but with that amenity which was his characteristic, he
adapted his counsels to the ideas of others, and allowed those whom
he could not hope to new mould, to sleep in their pleasant
dreams.
Castruccio was presented to the doge, and partook of all the
brilliant amusements of Venice. But at length the time arrived,
when he was to depart with Sir Ethelbert Atawel, and Guinigi to
return to his farm among the hills. It was a sorrowful event for
Atawel and Castruccio to separate from this kind and valued friend.
Before he departed, Guinigi talked long with Castruccio, and
vehemently urged him, when he should arrive in England, that he
would put himself entirely under the guidance of Atawel. "You
will be," he said, "in a strange country, with unknown
manners and customs; so that without a guide you would find it
difficult to steer a right course among them. My dear Castruccio,
God only knows what your future fortunes will be; but your father
intrusted you to my care, and I feel the most earnest anxiety that
you should enter life under good auspices, and enjoy, at least with
untarnished pleasure, the years of youthful hope. Be towards Atawel
as you ever have been to me; the natural ingenuousness of your
character will discover to you the medium, which combines the
graceful submission of youth, with that independence that is the
dearest birthright of man. Atawel is gentle and unassuming; you
must seek his counsels; for his best wisdom will be bestowed upon
you, when you shew a desire to consult it."
They separated: Atawel and Castruccio departed with a few
attendants towards Milan on the road to England.
Castruccio now found himself with a companion, different from
him to whom he had just bade an affectionate farewell. Atawel was
more a man of the world than Guinigi; nor did he possess his genius
and surpassing excellence. Entering into the common road of life,
he was notwithstanding able to regulate his conduct by just
principles, and to recommend himself by a sound judgement and a
steady courage; but he was unable to strike into new paths, and
become an adventurer in life and morals as Guinigi had been. He had
great sensibility and warm affections; and various misfortunes in
life had turned a constitutional gravity into melancholy. Yet he
unveiled his spirit for a while from the clouds that obscured it,
and entered with interest into the views and expectations of
Castruccio.
They conversed together concerning his cousin Alderigo, who was
a rich merchant in London, and who by his respectability and
talents had acquired influence even among the nobles of England.
Alderigo had been known and loved by Edward I: for in those days
kings did not disdain to seek friends among those classes of
society from which ordinary etiquette would have excluded them. The
merchant however had withdrawn from all communication with the
court, since the accession of Edward of Caernarvon; for the
childish amusements of this monarch ill accorded with the
dispositions of one who had been the friend of his manly father.
When the barons of England remonstrated with Edward, and insisted
on the exile of Piers Gavaston, Alderigo had however come forward
to persuade the king to this necessary concession.
Atawel also was an enemy of Gavaston; and, as he sketched the
political state of England to his young companion, he painted with
indignation the change from the spirited counsels of the late
sovereign, to the puerile amusements and weak inaction of his son.
He described Gavaston as a man expert in feats of bodily activity,
but destitute of judgement and manly enterprize. He said that he
was vain- glorious, rapacious, and profuse. Insolent to his
superiors and equals, tyrannical to his inferiors, he deigned to
use the arts of courtesy to the king alone: even the queen failed
in obtaining from him the respect due to her sex and dignity. He
had been raised to rank and wealth by the royal favour; but he
conducted himself with an arrogance, that would not have been
tolerated in the first noble of the land. He was not content to
overcome his adversary in the field of honour; but he endeavoured
to add to his shame by sarcasm and ridicule. The barons exerted
their utmost power for his destruction; Edward yielded to force;
but on the first favourable opportunity he recalled his friend,
who, untaught by adversity, again irritated his rivals to that
hostility in which he was sure to be worsted.
The animated picture which Atawel drew of the discontent and
turbulence of the English barons, although it would have excited
terror in these quiet times, delighted Castruccio, as affording a
hope of having now found a fitting stage on which he might commence
his active career. The loss of Scotland to England, and the
inaction of the king and his favourite, easily induced him to
sympathize in the indignation of Atawel; and he readily believed,
that the insolence of the upstart and unworthy Gavaston demanded
and justified the most rigorous measures to ensure his expulsion
from the kingdom.
Castruccio was now eighteen years of age. His converse with
Guinigi had indued him with a manliness of thought and firmness of
judgement beyond his years; at the same time that the vivacity of
his temper often made him appear rash, and the gaiety of his
disposition led him to seek with ardour the common diversions of
his age. He was bred as a young esquire in all those
accomplishments which were deemed essential to a gentleman, and was
expert in feats of horsemanship and arms, in the dance, and in
other exercises peculiar to his country. His countenance, which was
uncommonly beautiful, expressed frankness, benevolence and
confidence; when animated, his eyes shone with fire; when silent,
there was a deep seriousness in his expression, that commanded
attention, combined at the same time with a modesty and grace which
prepossessed every one in his favour.
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