The cellars were broken open; and,
after inebriating themselves with the choice wines of Italy, the
unruly, but armed bands were in a better mood for oppressing the
defenceless people. Some of these poor wretches fled to the open
country; others locked themselves up in their houses, and, throwing
what they possessed from the windows, strove to save their persons
from the brutality of their conquerors. Many of the noble females
took refuge in the meanest cottages, and disguised themselves in
poor clothing, till, frightened by the eager glances, or brutal
address of the soldiers, they escaped to the country, and remained
exposed to hunger and cold among the woods that surrounded the
town. Others, with their hair dishevelled, their dresses in
disorder, careless of the eyes which gazed on them, followed their
husbands and fathers to their frightful prisons, some in mute
despair, many wringing their hands, and crying aloud for mercy. As
night came on, the soldiery, tired of rapine, went to rest in the
beds from which the proprietors were remorselessly banished:
silence prevailed; a dreadful silence, broken sometimes by the
shriek of an injured female, or the brutal shouts of some of the
men, who passed the night in going from palace to palace, calling
up the inhabitants, demanding food and wine, and on the slightest
shew of resistance hurrying their victims to prison, or binding
them in their own houses with every aggravation of insult.
Castruccio divided his little band, and sent his men to the
protection of several of the palaces, while he and Arrigo rode all
night about the town; and, having the watchword of the emperor,
they succeeded in rescuing some poor wretches from the brutality of
the insolent soldiers. Several days followed, bringing with them a
repetition of the same scenes; and the hardest heart might have
been struck with compassion, to see the misery painted on the faces
of many, whose former lives had been a continual dream of pleasure;
young mothers weeping over their unfortunate offspring, whose
fathers lay rotting or starving in prison; children crying for
bread, sitting on the steps of their paternal palaces, within which
the military rioted in plenty; childless parents, mourning their
murdered babes; orphans, helpless, dying, whose parents could no
longer soothe or relieve them. Castruccio, though a soldier, wept;
but Arrigo, who had never before witnessed the miseries of war,
became almost frenzied with the excess of his compassion and
indignation; he poured forth curses loud and bitter, while his eyes
streamed tears, and his voice, broken and sharp, was insufficient
to convey his passionate abhorrence. Castruccio was at length
obliged to use violence to draw him from this scene of misery; and,
after soothing him by every argument he could use, and by the most
powerful of all, that Henry would be soon obliged to withdraw his
soldiers from Cremona to serve him at the siege of Brescia, he
dispatched the youth with a letter to Galeazzo Visconti.
Returning to the town, Castruccio saw a figure pass along at the
end of the street, which reminded him of one whom he had almost
forgotten--Benedetto Pepi. "Alas! poor fellow," said
Castruccio to himself, "you will find the pillage of the
Germans a tremendous evil. Well; as I restored your life once, I
will now try, if I am not too late, to save the remnant of your
property."
He enquired of a passenger for the house of Benedetto Pepi.
"If you mean Benedetto the Rich, if any can now be called rich
in this miserable city," replied the man, "I will conduct
you to his house."
"My Pepi ought rather, I think, to be called the poor; lead
me however to Benedetto the Rich; and if he be a tall, gaunt figure
with a wrinkled, leathern face, he is the man for whom I
enquire."
Castruccio was conducted to a palace in the highest and most
commanding part of the town, built of large blocks of stone, and
apparently firm and solid enough to bear a siege. The windows were
few, small, grated and sunk deep in the wall; it had a high tower,
whose port-holes shewed that it was of uncommon strength and
thickness; a parapet built with turrets surrounded it at the top,
and in every respect the mansion resembled more a castle, than a
palace. The entrance was dark; and, by the number of grooves, it
appeared as if there had been many doors; but they were all
removed, and the entrance free. Castruccio advanced: there were two
large halls on the ground--floor, on each side of the
entrance-court; both were filled with German soldiers; they were
high, dark, bare rooms, more like the apartments of a prison than a
palace. In one of them a number of beds were laid on the paved
floor; in the other there was a large fire in the middle, at which
various persons were employed in the offices of cookery, and near
this, a table was spread out with immense quantities of food,
haunches of boiled beef, and black bread; two boys stood at either
end of the table, each holding a large flaring torch; and the
soldiers with riotous exclamations were choosing their seats on the
benches that were placed around. Castruccio paused, unable to
discern whether Pepi were among this strange company. At length he
observed him standing in one corner filling large jugs from a
barrel of wine: he accosted him with a voice of condolence; and
Pepi looked up with his little bright eyes, and a face rather
expressive of joy than sorrow. After he had recognized his guest,
he left his wine barrel, and invited him into another room, for
they could hardly distinguish each other's voices amidst the
shouts and tumult of the rude feasters. They ascended the steep
narrow stairs; and, Castruccio complaining of want of light, Pepi
said: "Let us go to the top of my tower; the sun has been set
about ten minutes, and, although dark every where else, it will be
light there. If you will wait a short time I will get the
key."
Pepi descended the stairs; and from a small port-hole Castruccio
saw him cross the court, and then in a few minutes return with
cautious and observant steps. When he came near Castruccio, he
said: "Those German ruffians are now eating and drinking, and
will not mark us; yet let us tread lightly, for I have admitted
none of them to my tower, nor is it my intention to do so. It is a
place of strength; and the little I have in the world is preserved
here, which little in spite of the emperor and his devils I will
preserve."
Although the tower had appeared large without, yet its walls
were so thick that there was only room left within for a small
circular staircase; at the top of this Pepi undrew the bolts,
pushed up a trap- door, and they ascended to the platform on the
outside. The sky was darkening; but the west was tinged with a deep
orange colour, and the wide and dusky plain of Lombardy lay far
extended all around: immediately below was the town of Cremona,
which to them appeared as silent and peaceful as if the inhabitants
were in the enjoyment of perfect security. They continued some
minutes gazing silently, Castruccio on the wide extent of scenery
before him, Pepi on the thick walls of his tower. At length the
former said; "An evil star pursues you, Messer Benedetto, and
I am afraid that you were born in the descent of some evil
constellation."
"Doubtless," replied Pepi: yet there was an
indescribable expression in his countenance and manner, that
startled his companion; his eyes sparkled, and the lines of his
face, as plainly as such things could speak, spoke joy and
exultation. His voice however was drawn out into accents of grief,
and he ended his reply by a groan.
"Your palace is wasted by these ruffians."
"Nay, there is nothing to waste; the walls are too thick to
be hurt, and I removed every thing else before they came."
"They consume your food."
"I have none to consume. I am a poor, lone man, and had no
food in the house for them. They bring their rapine here; I send my
squire for wood, wherever he can collect it; I make a fire, and
they dress their food; and that is all that they get by
me."
"Have you lost no friend or relation in the war?"
"There is no one whom I love; I have met with undutifulness
and ingratitude, but no kindness or friendship; so I should not
have mourned, if my relations had fallen; but they are all
safe."
"Then it would appear, that you have lost nothing by the
havock of these Germans, and that you are still Benedetto the
Rich."
Pepi had answered the previous questions of Castruccio with
vivacity, and an expression of triumph and vanity, which he in vain
strove to conceal; his brows were elevated, a smile lurked in the
corners of his strait lips, and he even rubbed his hands. But, when
Castruccio spoke these last words, his face fell, his mouth was
drawn down, his arms sunk close to his sides, and, glancing at his
mean clothing, he replied: "I am always poor, always
unfortunate; and, Messer Castruccio, you do me great injustice and
injury by supposing that I have any wealth. I have a well built
palace, and a strong tower; but I can neither eat the stones, nor
clothe myself with the plaster; and, God knows, my possessions are
now reduced to fifty small acres; how therefore can I be
rich?"
"At least, if you are poor," replied Castruccio,
"your unfortunate townsmen share your misfortunes. Their
habitations are pillaged; those that escape the ravage of the
emperor, are driven out, starving and miserable, from the only
dwellings, be they palaces or cottages, which they
possess."
The countenance of Pepi again lighted up, his eyes sparkled, and
he said; "Aye, aye, many are fallen; but not so low--not so
low: they have still lands, they are not quite destitute, and the
dead have heirs--"
"Yes, indeed, heirs to famine and indignity; unhappy
orphans! far more miserable than if they had died with those who
gave them birth."
"Nay, I pity them from my soul; but I also have suffered
losses.
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