قراءة كتاب A Jay of Italy
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his hair a golden fleece, cut square at the neck, and its ends brittle as if they had been singed in fire. His doublet and hose were of palest pink; his bonnet, shoes, and mantlet of cypress-green velvet. Rose-coloured ribbons, knotted into silver buckles, adorned his feet; and over his shoulder, pendent from a strand of the same hue, was slung a fair lute. He could not have passed, by his looks, his sixteenth summer.
Lanti pushed rudely forward.
'A moment, saint troubadour, a moment!' he cried. 'It will please us, hearing of your mission, to have a taste of your quality.'
The youth, looking at him a little, swung his lute forward and smiled.
'What would you have, gracious sir?' he said.
'What? Why, prophesy us our case in parable.'
'I know not your name nor calling.'
'A pretty prophet, forsooth. But I will enlighten thee. I am Carlo Lanti, gentleman of the Duke, and this fair lady the wife of him we call the Count of Casa Caprona.'
The boy frowned a little, then nodded and touched the strings. And all in a moment he was improvising the strangest ditty, a sort of cantefable between prose and song:—
'A lord of little else possessed a jewel,Of his small state incomparably the crown.But he, going on a journey once,To his wife committed it, saying,"This trust with you I pledge till my return;See, by your love, that I redeem my trust."But she, when he was gone, thinking "he will not know,"Procured its exact fellow in green glass,And sold her lord's gem to one who bid her fair;Then, conscience-haunted, wasted all those gainsSecretly, without enjoyment, lest he should hear and wonder.But he returning, she gave him the bauble,And, deceived, he commended her; and, shortly after, dying,Left her that precious jewel for all dower,Bequeathing elsewhere the residue of his estate.Now, was not this lady very well served,Inheriting the whole value, as she had appraised it,Of her lord's dearest possession?Gentles, Dishonour is a poor estate.'
Half-chaunting, half-talking, to an accompaniment of soft-touched chords, he ended with a little shrug of abandonment, and dropped the lute from his fingers. His voice had been small and low, but pure; the sweet thrum of the strings had lifted it to rhapsody. Messer Lanti scratched his head.
'Well, if that is a parable!' he puzzled. 'But supposing it aims at our case, why—Casa Caprona is neither poor nor dead; and as to a jewel——'
He looked at Madam Beatrice, who was frowning and biting her lip.
'Why heed the peevish stuff?' she said. 'Will you come? I am sick to be moving.'
Carlo was suddenly illuminated.
'O, to be sure, of course!' he ejaculated—'the jewel——'
'Hold your tongue!' cried the lady sharply.
The honest blockhead went into a roar of laughter.
'He has touched thee, he has touched thee! And these are his means to convert the Duke! By Saint Ambrose, 'twill be a game to watch! I swear he shall go with us.'
'Not with my consent,' cried madam.
Carlo, chuckling tormentingly, looked at her, then doffed his cap mockingly to the boy.
'Sweet Messer Bembo,' he said, 'I take your lesson much to heart, and pray you gratefully—as we are both for Milan, I understand—to give us the honour of your company thither. I am in good standing with the Duke, I say, and you would lose nothing by having a friend at court. Those half-boots'—he glanced at the pretty pumps—'could as ill afford the penalties of the road as your innocence its dangers.'
'I have no more fear than my divine Master,' said the boy boldly, 'in carrying His gospel of love.'
'Well for you,' said Carlo, with a grin of approval for his spirit; 'but a gospel that goes in silken doublet and lovelocks is like to be struck dumb before it is uttered.'
'As to my condition, sir,' said the boy, 'I dress as for a feast, our Master having prepared the board. Are we not redeemed and invited? We walk in joy since the Resurrection, and Limbo is emptied of its gloom. The kingdom of man shall be love, and the government thereof. Preach heresy in rags. 'Twas the Lord Abbot equipped me thus, my own stout heart prevailing. "Well, they will encounter an angel walking by the road," quoth he, "and, if they doubt, show 'em thy white shoulder-knobs, little Bernardino, and they will see the wings sprouting underneath like the teeth in a baby's gums."'
He was evidently, if sage or lunatic, an amazing child. The rough libertine was quite captivated by him.
'Well, you will come with us, Bernardino?' said he; 'for with a cracked skull it might go hard with you to prove your shoulder-blades.'
'I will come, lord, to reap the harvest where I have sowed the grain.'
He looked with a serene severity at the countess.
'Shalt take thee pillion, Beatrice,' shouted Lanti. 'Up, pretty troubadour, and recount her more parables by the way.'
'May I die but he shall not,' cried the girl.
'He shall, I say.'
'I will bite, and rake him with my nails.'
'The more fool you, to spoil a saint! Reproofs come not often in such a guise as this. Up, Bernardino, and parable her into submission!'
She made a show of resisting, in the midst of which Bembo won to his place deftly on the fore-saddle. At the moment of his success, the fool Cicada sprang from the tavern door, and, lurching with wild, glazed eyes, leapt, hooting, upon the crupper of the beast, almost bringing it upon its haunches. With an oath Lanti brought down his whip with such fury that the fool rolled in the dust.
'Drunken dog!' he roared, and would have ridden over the writhing body, had not Bembo backed the white palfrey to prevent him.
'Thou strik'st the livery, not the man!' he cried. 'Hast never thyself been drunk, and without the excuse of this poor fool to make a trade of folly?'
Messer Lanti glared, then in a moment laughed. The battered grasshopper took advantage of the diversion to rise and slink to the rear. The next moment the whole cavalcade was in motion.
CHAPTER II
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