登陆注册
37892100000007

第7章

If I should be asked on bended knees, if I should be reminded that every intelligent and sympathetic creature brings a pair of fresh eyes to the study of the beautiful, if it should be affirmed that the new note is as likely to be struck by the 'prentice as by the master hand, if I should be assured that my diary would never be read, I should still refuse to write my first impressions of Venice. My best successes in life have been achieved by knowing what not to do, and I consider it the finest common sense to step modestly along in beaten paths, not stirring up, even there, any more dust than is necessary. If my friends and acquaintances ever go to Venice, let them read their Ruskin, their Goethe, their Byron, Shelley, and Wordsworth, their Rogers, Gautier, Michelet, their Symonds and Howells, not forgetting old "Coryat's Crudities," and be thankful I spared them mine.

It was the eve of Ascension Day, and a yellow May moon was hanging in the blue. I wished with all my heart that it were a little matter of seven or eight hundred years earlier in the world's history, for then the people would have been keeping vigil and ****** ready for that nuptial ceremony of Ascension-tide when the Doge married Venice to the sea. Why can we not make pictures nowadays, as well as paint them? We are banishing colour as fast as we can, clothing our buildings, our ships, ourselves, in black and white and sober hues, and if it were not for dear, gaudy Mother Nature, who never puts her palette away, but goes on painting her reds and greens and blues and yellows with the same lavish hand, we should have a sad and discreet universe indeed.

But so long as we have more or less stopped ****** pictures, is it not fortunate that the great ones of the olden time have been eternally fixed on the pages of the world's history, there to glow and charm and burn for ever and a day? To be able to recall those scenes of marvellous beauty so vividly that one lives through them again in fancy, and reflect, that since we have stopped being picturesque and fascinating, we have learned, on the whole, to behave much better, is as delightful a trend of thought as I can imagine, and it was mine as I floated toward the Piazza of San Marco in my gondola.

I could see the Doge descend the Giant's Stairs, and issue from the gate of the Ducal Palace. I could picture the great Bucentaur as it reached the open beyond the line of the tide. I could see the white-mitred Patriarch walking from his convent on the now deserted isle of Sant' Elena to the shore where his barge lay waiting to join the glittering procession.

And then there floated before my entranced vision the princely figure of the Doge taking the Pope-blessed ring, and, advancing to the little gallery behind his throne on the Bucentaur, raising it high, and dropping it into the sea. I could almost hear the faint splash as it sank in the golden waves, and hear, too, the sonorous words of the old wedding ceremony: "Desponsamus te, Mare, in signum veri perpetuique dominii!"

Then when the shouts of mirth and music had died away and the Bucentaur and its train had drifted back into the lagoon, the blue sea, new-wedded, slept through the night with the May moon on her breast and the silent stars for sentinels.

II

LA GIUDECCA, May 15, CASA ROSA.

Not for a moment have we regretted leaving our crowded, conventional hotel in Venice proper, for these rooms in a house on the Giudecca. The very vision of Miss Celia Van Tyck sitting on a balcony surrounded by a group of friends from the various Boston suburbs, the vision of Miss Celia Van Tyck melting into delicious distance with every movement of our gondola, even this was sufficient for Salemina's happiness and mine, had it been accompanied by no more tangible joys.

This island, hardly ten minutes by gondola from the Piazza of San Marco, was the summer resort of the Doges, you will remember, and there they built their pleasure-houses, with charming gardens at the back--gardens the confines of which stretched to the Laguna Viva. Our Casa Rosa is one of the few old palazzi left, for many of them have been turned into granaries.

We should never have found this romantic dwelling by ourselves; the Little Genius brought us here. The Little Genius is Miss Ecks, who draws, and paints, and carves, and models in clay, preaching and practising the brotherhood of man and the sisterhood of woman in the intervals; Miss Ecks, who is the custodian of all the talents and most of the virtues, and the invincible foe of sordid common sense and financial prosperity. Miss Ecks met us by chance in the Piazza and breathlessly explained that she was searching for paying guests to be domiciled under the roof of Numero Sessanta, Giudecca.

She thought we should enjoy living there, or at least she did very much, and she had tried it for two years; but our enjoyment was not the special point in question. The real reason and desire for our immediate removal was that the padrona might pay off a vexatious and encumbering mortgage which gave great anxiety to everybody concerned, besides interfering seriously with her own creative work.

"You must come this very day," exclaimed Miss Ecks. "The Madonna knows that we do not desire boarders, but you are amiable and considerate, as well as financially sound and kind, and will do admirably. Padrona Angela is very unhappy, and I cannot model satisfactorily until the house is on a good paying basis and she is putting money in the bank toward the payment of the mortgage. You can order your own meals, entertain as you like, and live precisely as if you were in your own home."

The Little Genius is small, but powerful, with a style of oratory somewhat illogical, but always convincing at the moment. There were a good many trifling objections to our leaving Miss Van Tyck and the hotel, but we scarcely remembered them until we and our luggage were skimming across the space of water that divides Venice from our own island.

同类推荐
  • 佛说过去世佛分卫经

    佛说过去世佛分卫经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 方便心论

    方便心论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 汉武帝外传

    汉武帝外传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 梵网经忏悔行法

    梵网经忏悔行法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 北山酒经

    北山酒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 何惧忧伤

    何惧忧伤

    自幼林一和弟弟林羽便没有了母亲,一直是父亲拉扯大。直到搬家上了全市最好高中,却不想这是另一个噩梦的开始…
  • 星光落在窗前

    星光落在窗前

    青春的大雨,我们义无反顾的去淋,刻骨铭心却难以忘怀,因为,一辈子只有一次,疯狂、热情,努力绽放!年少轻狂,无知少女,叛逆爱情后悔吗?
  • 似槿辰光

    似槿辰光

    本文走小清新风,轻松,无小三,无误会~婚前,林槿和白辰大神的相处方式是这样的:“白辰,我累了~”“我去洗碗,你把桌上那道题算了。”“别啊,你不能那么对我!我去洗,我洗还不行吗?”“不行。”“(T……T)”婚后,林槿和白辰大神的相处方式是这样的“白辰,我累了~”“那就不洗碗了,回屋睡觉吧。”“别啊,白辰,你不能这么对我!”“嗯?”“(T……T)”
  • 小耕读记(第1辑):母亲河

    小耕读记(第1辑):母亲河

    本书适合10-16岁青少年读者阅读,“小耕读记”是一个“孩子”的读书秘籍,这个“孩子”是众多编辑、学者和教育家的化身。本书按照“母亲河”为主题,搜罗该主题下获得全国大奖作家的经典短篇小说或散文,6个作家6个作品:莫言《粮食》、郝月梅《王闹出走》、谢倩霓《双声道事件》、张玉清《地下室里的猫》、毕淑敏《额头与额头相贴》、李娟《全世界的人都知道我丢了》。全书按主题编排的方式,以“小耕私储备”“我打赌你不知道”“煮酒论”“小耕搜罗记”“时光果实”等多种方式“精读”每一篇文章,让小读者轻松深入了解作家和作品,让“作家”和“经典”不再神秘,同时可以指导小读者如何进行主题写作。
  • 收个神仙做徒弟

    收个神仙做徒弟

    呼吸唤醒了记忆,有的人,是关不住的,因为他属于天空……
  • 拽后乖乖从了朕

    拽后乖乖从了朕

    逃婚的野蛮公主,无意中成了土匪头,自封为无赖美女山大王,可惜却遇上了比她更邪恶的皇上,连她那百试不爽的无敌色诱大法都失效了。“做朕的皇后!”“我不愿意!”“为什么?”“我只是一个贼,当你的皇后,我岂不是要陪你睡觉?”“你不答应也得答应,这是一个交易,签了,你才能得到你想要的。”“哇靠,你好邪恶啊,逼我签卖身契,上面竟然还有我的画像。”“嘿嘿,你到底签还是不签?”……
  • 你的魔法

    你的魔法

    分享了一下我和我暗恋的人的故事如果有人看的话我可能会更更多
  • 青春一定疯狂

    青春一定疯狂

    夏启翰在国内受到学习压力而父母给启翰增加压力,启翰渴望去国外学习,最后,出国的事。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 簪花少年郎

    簪花少年郎

    传说中,人离世之后会自行前往轮回处,俗称过路人。但偶尔也会有不自知之的,逝世之后还徘徊于世间,这时候,忘川引路人便会来将他们带走。