The summer advancing would soon give the signal for
separation. On one of these days, one of the last before their
parting, Euthanasia related to Castruccio the few events of her
peaceful life which had occurred since their separation ten years
before. The tale was short, but it was one that deeply interested
the listener.
CHAPTER X
"IT is strange for one to speak, who never before has
uttered the sentiments of her heart. With my eyes I have spoken to
the starry skies and the green earth; and with smiles that could
not express my emotion I have conversed with the soft airs of
summer, the murmur of streams, and the chequered shades of our
divine woods: but never before have I awakened sympathy in a human
countenance with words that unlock the treasure of my heart.
"I have lived a solitary hermitess, and have become an
enthusiast for all beauty. Being alone, I have not feared to give
the reins to my feelings; I have lived happily within the universe
of my own mind, and have often given reality to that which others
call a dream. I have had few hopes, and few fears; but every
passing sentiment has been an event; and I have marked the birth of
a new idea with the joy that others derive from what they call
change and fortune. What is the world, except that which we feel?
Love, and hope, and delight, or sorrow and tears; these are our
lives, our realities, to which we give the names of power,
possession, misfortune, and death.
"You smile at my strange words. I now feel livelier
emotions arise; and, as is my custom, I try to define and
understand them. Love, when nurtured by sympathy, is a stronger
feeling, than those breathless emotions which arise from the
contemplation of what is commonly called inanimate nature, and of
the wondrous and eternal changes of the universe; and, feeling as I
do, that if I give it place in my heart, it must bear my whole
being away with it, as the tempest bears the rack along the sky,
wonder not, dear friend, that I have paused, and even shuddered,
when I thought that an unknown power was about to dwell in my soul,
which might make it blind to its former delights, and deaf to the
deep voice of that nature, whose child and nursling I call myself.
But now I doubt no more; I am yours, Castruccio; be my fortune
tearful or smiling, it shall be one that will bring with it human
sympathy, and I resign that savage liberty of which I was ere while
jealous.
"You have asked me to relate the events of my life; I may
say that it is a blank, if you would not hear the history of many a
strange idea, many an exalted feeling, and reverie of wondrous
change. You left me at Florence the favourite daughter of a father
I adored: I was ever near him reading and conversing with him; and
if I have put order in my day dreams, and culled the fruit of
virtue and some slight wisdom from my meditations, it is to his
lessons that I owe this good. It is he who taught me to fathom my
sensations, and discipline my mind; to understand what my feelings
were, and whether they arose from a good or evil source. He taught
me to look on my own faults fearlessly; humbly as a weak being--yet
not with mock humility, but with a modest, yet firm courage, that
led me to know what indeed I might become. He explained to me the
lessons of our divine master; which our priests corrupt to satisfy
the most grovelling desires; and he taught me to seek in
self-approbation, and in a repentance, which was that of virtuous
action, and not of weeping, for the absolution of which they make a
revenue.
"Do I speak with vanity? I hope that you do not so far
mistake me. I have been a solitary being; and, conversing with my
own heart, I have been so accustomed to use the frank language of a
knowledge drawn from fixed principles, and to weigh my actions and
thoughts in those scales which my reason and my religion afforded
me, that my words may sound vain, when they are only true. I do not
think then that I could speak with vanity; for I was enumerating
the benefits that I received from my father. I read with him the
literature of ancient Rome; and my whole soul was filled with the
beauty of action, and the poetic sentiment of these writers. At
first I complained that no men lived now, who bore affinity to
these far shining beacons of the earth: but my father convinced me,
that the world was shaking off her barbaric lethargy, and that
Florence, in her struggle for freedom, had awakened the noblest
energies of the human mind. Once, when we attended a court in
Lombardy, a minstrel sang some of the Cantos of Dante's Divina
Comedia, and I can never forget the enthusiastic joy I experienced,
in finding that I was the contemporary of its illustrious
author.
"I endeavour to mark in this little history of myself the
use of the various feelings that rule all my actions; and I must
date my enthusiasm for the liberties of my country, and the
political welfare of Italy, from the repetition of these Cantos of
Dante's poem. The Romans, whose writings I adored, were free; a
Greek who once visited us, had related to us what treasures of
poetry and wisdom existed in his language, and these were the
productions of freemen: the mental history of the rest of the world
who are slaves, was a blank, and thus I was irresistibly forced to
connect wisdom and liberty together; and, as I worshipped wisdom as
the pure emanation of the Deity, the divine light of the world, so
did I adore liberty as its parent, its sister, the half of its
being. Florence was free, and Dante was a Florentine; none but a
freeman could have poured forth the poetry and eloquence to which I
listened: what though he were banished from his native city, and
had espoused a party that seemed to support tyranny; the essence of
freedom is that clash and struggle which awaken the energies of our
nature, and that operation of the elements of our mind, which as it
were gives us the force and power that hinder us from degenerating,
as they say all things earthly do when not regenerated by
change.
"What is man without wisdom? And what would not this world
become, if every man might learn from its institutions the true
principles of life, and become as the few which have as yet shone
as stars amidst the night of ages? If time had not shaken the light
of poetry and of genius from his wings, all the past would be dark
and trackless: now we have a track--the glorious foot-marks of the
children of liberty; let us imitate them, and like them we may
serve as marks in the desert, to attract future passengers to the
fountains of life. Already we have begun to do so; and Dante is the
pledge of a glorious race, which tells us that, in clinging to the
freedom which gave birth to his genius, we may awake the fallen
hopes of the world. These sentiments, nurtured and directed by my
father, have caused the growth of an enthusiasm in my soul, which
can only die when I die.
"I was at this time but sixteen; and at that age, unless I
had been guided by the lessons of my father, my meditations would
have been sufficiently fruitless. But he, whether he taught me to
consider the world and the community of man, or to study the little
universe of my own mind, was wisdom's self, pouring out accents
that commanded attention and obedience. At first I believed, that
my heart was good, and that by following its dictates I should not
do wrong; I was proud, and loved not to constrain my will, though I
myself were the mistress; but he told me, that either my judgement
or passions must rule me, and that my future happiness and
usefulness depended on the choice I made between these two laws. I
learned from him to look upon events as being of consequence only
through the feelings which they excited, and to believe that
content of mind, love, and benevolent feeling ought to be the
elements of our existence; while those accidents of fortune or
fame, which to the majority make up the sum of their existence,
were as the dust of the balance.
"Well; these were the lessons of my father, a honey of
wisdom on which I fed until I attained my eighteenth year; and then
he died. What I felt, my grief and despair, I will not relate; few
sorrows surpass that of a child, who loses a beloved parent before
she has formed new ties which have weakened the first and the most
religious.
"Do you remember my mother? She was a lady with a kind
heart, and a humanity and equanimity of temper few could surpass.
She was a Guelph, a violent partizan, and, heart and soul, was
taken up with treaties of peace, acquisitions in war, the conduct
of allies, and the fortune of her enemies: while she talked to you,
you would have thought that the whole globe of the earth was merely
an appendage to the county of Valperga. She was acquainted with all
the magistrates of Florence, the probabilities of elections, the
state of the troops, the receipt of imposts, and every circumstance
of the republic. She was interested in the most lively manner in
the fall of Corso Donati, the war with Pistoia, the taking of that
town, and the deaths and elections of the various Popes. She was
present at every court held by the Guelph lords of Lombardy; and
her poor subjects were sometimes rather hardly taxed, that we might
appear with suitable dignity on these occasions.
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