Men, like Alexander and other
conquerors, have indulged the hope of subduing the world, and
spreading by their triumphs refinement into its barbarous recesses.
Guinigi hoped, how futilely! to lay a foundation-stone for the
temple of peace among the Euganean hills. He had an overflowing
affection of soul, that could not confine itself to the person of
his son, or the aggrandizement of his country, or be spiritualized
into a metaphysical adoration of ideal beauty. It bestowed itself
on his fellow-creatures; and to see them happy, warmed his heart
with a pleasure experienced by few. This man, his imaginative
flights, his glowing benevolence and his humble occupations, were
an enigma that Castruccio could never solve. But, while he neither
sympathized with nor understood him, he quickly loved him with the
warmest affection.
Castruccio wished to speak to him of his future destination;
Guinigi said, "Your father has recommended you to my counsels,
and you must allow me to become acquainted with you, before I can
give you advice. You are very young; and we need not hurry. Grant
me six months; we will not be idle. We will ramble about the
country: winter is the peasant's leisure time, so I am quite at
your service. We shall be much together, and will discuss many
subjects; and by degrees I shall understand the foundations on
which you are to build your future life."
They travelled to Padua, to lovely Venice, raising its head from
the waves of ocean; they rambled about the coast for days together,
having no other end than to enjoy the beauties of nature. Then,
coming nearer home, they climbed the Euganean hills, and penetrated
their recesses. Guinigi had an ultimate object in view; he wished
to impress on the mind of his pupil a love of peace, and a taste
for rural pleasures. One day they were on the summit of Monte
Selice, a conical hill between Este and Padua, and Guinigi pointed
to the country around.-- "What a Paradise is this!" he
said. "Now it is bare; but in the summer, when the corn waves
among the trees, and ripening grapes shade the roads; when on every
side you see happy peasants leading the beautiful oxen to their
light work, and the sun, and the air, and the earth are each
labouring to produce for man all that is necessary for his support,
and the ground is covered with vegetation, and the air quickened
into life, it is a spot, on which the Creator of the world might
pause, and be pleased with his work. How different was this some
years ago! You have heard of Ezzelino the tyrant of Padua, under
whose auspices the rivers ran blood, and the unfortunate peasant
found his harvests reaped by the sword of the invading soldier!
Look at those peasants on yonder road, conducting their cattle
crowned with flowers: habited in their holiday best, and moving in
solemn procession; their oxen are going to be blessed by St.
Antonio, to ward from them the evils of the ensuing seasons. A few
years ago, instead of peasants, soldiers marched along that road:
their close ranks shewed their excellent discipline; their
instruments filled the air with triumphant sounds; the knights
pricked their steeds forward, who arching their proud necks, seemed
to exult in their destination. What were they about to do? to burn
a town, to murder the old, and the helpless, the women, and the
children; to destroy the dwellings of peace; so that, when they
left their cruel work, the miserable wretches who survived had
nothing to shelter them but the bare, black walls, where before
their neat cottages had stood."
Castruccio listened impatiently, and cried:--"Yet who would
not rather be a knight, than one of those peasants, whose minds are
as grovelling as their occupations?"
"That would not I," replied Guinigi fervently;
"how must the human mind be distorted, which can delight in
that which is ill, in preference to the cultivation of the earth,
and the contemplation of its loveliness! What a strange mistake is
it, that a peasant's life is incompatible with intellectual
improvement! Alas! poor wretches; they are too hard-worked now to
learn much, and their toil, uncheered by the applause of their
fellow-creatures, appears a degradation; yet, when I would picture
happiness upon earth, my imagination conjures up the family of a
dweller among the fields, whose property is secure, and whose time
is passed between labour and intellectual pleasures. Such now is my
fate. The evening of my life steals gently on; and I have no
regrets for the past, no wish for the future, but to continue as I
am."
"Yes," cried Castruccio, "You have passed through
life, and know what it is; but I would rather, while alive, enter
my tomb, than live unknown and unheard of. Is it not fame that
makes men gods? Do not urge me to pass my days in indolence; I must
act, to be happy,--to be any thing. My father did not wish me to
become a farmer and a vinedresser; but to tread in his steps, and
go beyond them, and that is my purpose, which I would die to
attain."
A year passed while Castruccio still lived under the low roof of
Guinigi. He found that it was no vain boast, that this noble ate
the bread that he had sown: for he saw him hold the plough, trim
his vines, and enter into all the labours of the husbandman. There
is something picturesque in the toil of an Italian peasant. It is
not, as in more northern climates, where cold, and wet, and care
are endured, to be scantily repaid; and their unceasing anxiety is
often terminated by the destruction of their crops through the
severity of their climate. Guinigi and his fellow-labourers rose
with the sun, which, ascending from the ocean, illumined the wide
plain with its slant beams. The most beautiful vegetation
luxuriated around them: the strips of land were planted with Indian
corn, wheat and beans; they were divided, in some places by rows of
olives, in others by elms or Lombardy poplars, to which the vines
clung. The hedges were of myrtle, whose aromatic perfume weighed
upon the sluggish air of noon, as the labourers reposed, sleeping
under the trees, lulled by the rippling of the brooks that watered
their grounds. In the evening they ate their meal under the open
sky; the birds were asleep, but the ground was alive with
innumerable glow-worms, and the air with the lightning-like
fire-flies, small, humming crickets, and heavy beetles: the west
had quickly lost its splendour, but in the fading beams of sunset
sailed the boat-like moon, while Venus, as another satellite to
earth, beamed just above the crescent hardly brighter than itself,
and the outline of the rugged Apennines was marked darkly
below.
Their harvests were plenteous and frequent. The moving of the
grass was quickly followed in June by the reaping, and the
well-trodden threshing floor, such as Virgil describes it, received
the grain; then came the harvest of the Indian corn; and last the
glorious vintage, when the beautiful dove-coloured oxen of Lombardy
could hardly drag the creaking wains laden with the fruit.
Castruccio attended Guinigi in his labours; and Guinigi, resting
on his spade, would moralize on all around him, and win the ardent
imagination of the youth to follow his flights. All in the country
bore for him the immediate stamp of divine and eternal beauty; he
knew every flower of the field, and could describe their various
habits, and what insects best loved to suck their nectar. He knew
the form and the life of every little being of that peopled region,
where the sun seems to quicken every atom into life; and that which
was insignificant to common eyes, appeared to him to be invested
with strange attributes and uncommon loveliness.
Again Guinigi sat, Castruccio beside him, at the door of his
cot, watching the evening work of the labourers, as the wine was
drawn off from the last vat.
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