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<h2> THE MEMOIRS OF JACQUES CASANOVA </h2>
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<h2> VENETIAN YEARS </h2>
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<h2> EPISODE 1 — CHILDHOOD </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I </h2>
<p>My Family Pedigree—My Childhood<br/></p>
<p>Don Jacob Casanova, the illegitimate son of Don Francisco Casanova, was a
native of Saragosa, the capital of Aragon, and in the year of 1428 he
carried off Dona Anna Palofax from her convent, on the day after she had
taken the veil. He was secretary to King Alfonso. He ran away with her to
Rome, where, after one year of imprisonment, the pope, Martin III.,
released Anna from her vows, and gave them the nuptial blessing at the
instance of Don Juan Casanova, majordomo of the Vatican, and uncle of Don
Jacob. All the children born from that marriage died in their infancy,
with the exception of Don Juan, who, in 1475, married Donna Eleonora
Albini, by whom he had a son, Marco Antonio.</p>
<p>In 1481, Don Juan, having killed an officer of the king of Naples, was
compelled to leave Rome, and escaped to Como with his wife and his son;
but having left that city to seek his fortune, he died while traveling
with Christopher Columbus in the year 1493.</p>
<p>Marco Antonio became a noted poet of the school of Martial, and was
secretary to Cardinal Pompeo Colonna.</p>
<p>The satire against Giulio de Medicis, which we find in his works, having
made it necessary for him to leave Rome, he returned to Como, where he
married Abondia Rezzonica. The same Giulio de Medicis, having become pope
under the name of Clement VII, pardoned him and called him back to Rome
with his wife. The city having been taken and ransacked by the
Imperialists in 1526, Marco Antonio died there from an attack of the
plague; otherwise he would have died of misery, the soldiers of Charles V.
having taken all he possessed. Pierre Valerien speaks of him in his work
'de infelicitate litteratorum'.</p>
<p>Three months after his death, his wife gave birth to Jacques Casanova, who
died in France at a great age, colonel in the army commanded by Farnese
against Henri, king of Navarre, afterwards king of France. He had left in
the city of Parma a son who married Theresa Conti, from whom he had
Jacques, who, in the year 1681, married Anna Roli. Jacques had two sons,
Jean-Baptiste and Gaetan-Joseph-Jacques. The eldest left Parma in 1712,
and was never heard of; the other also went away in 1715, being only
nineteen years old.</p>
<p>This is all I have found in my father's diary: from my mother's lips I
have heard the following particulars:</p>
<p>Gaetan-Joseph-Jacques left his family, madly in love with an actress named
Fragoletta, who performed the chambermaids. In his poverty, he determined
to earn a living by making the most of his own person. At first he gave
himself up to dancing, and five years afterwards became an actor, making
himself conspicuous by his conduct still more than by his talent.</p>
<p>Whether from fickleness or from jealousy, he abandoned the Fragoletta, and
joined in Venice a troop of comedians then giving performances at the
Saint-Samuel Theatre. Opposite the house in which he had taken his lodging
resided a shoemaker, by name Jerome Farusi, with his wife Marzia, and
Zanetta, their only daughter—a perfect beauty sixteen years of age.
The young actor fell in love with this girl, succeeded in gaining her
affection, and in obtaining her consent to a runaway match. It was the
only way to win her, for, being an actor, he never could have had Marzia's
consent, still less Jerome's, as in their eyes a player was a most awful
individual. The young lovers, provided with the necessary certificates and
accompanied by two witnesses, presented themselves before the Patriarch of
Venice, who performed over them the marriage ceremony. Marzia, Zanetta's
mother, indulged in a good deal of exclamation, and the father died
broken-hearted.</p>
<p>I was born nine months afterwards, on the 2nd of April, 1725.</p>
<p>The following April my mother left me under the care of her own mother,
who had forgiven her as soon as she had heard that my father had promised
never to compel her to appear on the stage. This is a promise which all
actors make to the young girls they marry, and which they never fulfil,
simply because their wives never care much about claiming from them the
performance of it. Moreover, it turned out a very fortunate thing for my
mother that she had studied for the stage, for nine years later, having
been left a widow with six children, she could not have brought them up if
it had not been for the resources she found in that profession.</p>
<p>I was only one year old when my father left me to go to London, where he
had an engagement. It was in that great city that my mother made her first
appearance on the stage, and in that city likewise that she gave birth to
my brother Francois, a celebrated painter of battles, now residing in
Vienna, where he has followed his profession since 1783.</p>
<p>Towards the end of the year 1728 my mother returned to Venice with her
husband, and as she had become an actress she continued her artistic life.
In 1730 she was delivered of my brother Jean, who became Director of the
Academy of painting at Dresden, and died there in 1795; and during the
three following years she became the mother of two daughters, one of whom
died at an early age, while the other married in Dresden, where she still
lived in 1798. I had also a posthumous brother, who became a priest; he
died in Rome fifteen years ago.</p>
<p>Let us now come to the dawn of my existence in the character of a thinking
being.</p>
<p>The organ of memory began to develop itself in me at the beginning of
August, 1733. I had at that time reached the age of eight years and four
months. Of what may have happened to me before that period I have not the
faintest recollection. This is the circumstance.</p>
<p>I was standing in the corner of a room bending towards the wall,
supporting my head, and my eyes fixed upon a stream of blood flowing from
my nose to the ground. My grandmother, Marzia, whose pet I was, came to
me, bathed my face with cold water, and, unknown to everyone in the house,
took me with her in a gondola as far as Muran, a thickly-populated island
only half a league distant from Venice.</p>
<p>Alighting from the gondola, we enter a wretched hole, where we find an old
woman sitting on a rickety bed, holding a black cat in her arms, with five
or six more purring around her. The two old cronies held together a long
discourse of which, most likely, I was the subject. At the end of the
dialogue, which was carried on in the patois of Forli, the witch having
received a silver ducat from my grandmother, opened a box, took me in her
arms, placed me in the box and locked me in it, telling me not to be
frightened—a piece of advice which would certainly have had the
contrary effect, if I had had any wits about me, but I was stupefied. I
kept myself quiet in a corner of the box, holding a handkerchief to my
nose because it was still bleeding, and otherwise very indifferent to the
uproar going on outside. I could hear in turn, laughter, weeping, singing,
screams, shrieks, and knocking against the box, but for all that I cared
nought. At last I am taken out of the box; the blood stops flowing. The
wonderful old witch, after lavishing caresses upon me, takes off my
clothes, lays me on the bed, burns some drugs, gathers the smoke in a
sheet which she wraps around me, pronounces incantations, takes the sheet
off me, and gives me five sugar-plums of a very agreeable taste. Then she
immediately rubs my temples and the nape of my neck with an ointment
exhaling a delightful perfume, and puts my clothes on me again. She told
me that my haemorrhage would little by little leave me, provided I should
never disclose to any one what she had done to cure me, and she threatened
me, on the other hand, with the loss of all my blood and with death,
should I ever breathe a word concerning those mysteries. After having thus
taught me my lesson, she informed me that a beautiful lady would pay me a
visit during the following night, and that she would make me happy, on
condition that I should have sufficient control over myself never to
mention to anyone my having received such a visit. Upon this we left and
returned home.</p>
<p>I fell asleep almost as soon as I was in bed, without giving a thought to
the beautiful visitor I was to receive; but, waking up a few hours
afterwards, I saw, or fancied I saw, coming down the chimney, a dazzling
woman, with immense hoops, splendidly attired, and wearing on her head a
crown set with precious stones, which seemed to me sparkling with fire.
With slow steps, but with a majestic and sweet countenance, she came
forward and sat on my bed; then taking several small boxes from her
pocket, she emptied their contents over my head, softly whispering a few
words, and after giving utterance to a long speech, not a single word of
which I understood, she kissed me and disappeared the same way she had
come. I soon went again to sleep.</p>
<p>The next morning, my grandmother came to dress me, and the moment she was
near my bed, she cautioned me to be silent, threatening me with death if I
dared to say anything respecting my night's adventures. This command, laid
upon me by the only woman who had complete authority over me, and whose
orders I was accustomed to obey blindly, caused me to remember the vision,
and to store it, with the seal of secrecy, in the inmost corner of my
dawning memory. I had not, however, the slightest inclination to mention
the circumstances to anyone; in the first place, because I did not suppose
it would interest anybody, and in the second because I would not have
known whom to make a confidant of. My disease had rendered me dull and
retired; everybody pitied me and left me to myself; my life was considered
likely to be but a short one, and as to my parents, they never spoke to
me.</p>
<p>After the journey to Muran, and the nocturnal visit of the fairy, I
continued to have bleeding at the nose, but less from day to day, and my
memory slowly developed itself. I learned to read in less than a month.</p>
<p>It would be ridiculous, of course, to attribute this cure to such follies,
but at the same time I think it would be wrong to assert that they did not
in any way contribute to it. As far as the apparition of the beautiful
queen is concerned, I have always deemed it to be a dream, unless it
should have been some masquerade got up for the occasion, but it is not
always in the druggist's shop that are found the best remedies for severe
diseases. Our ignorance is every day proved by some wonderful phenomenon,
and I believe this to be the reason why it is so difficult to meet with a
learned man entirely untainted with superstition. We know, as a matter of
course, that there never have been any sorcerers in this world, yet it is
true that their power has always existed in the estimation of those to
whom crafty knaves have passed themselves off as such. 'Somnio nocturnos
lemures portentaque Thessalia vides'.</p>
<p>Many things become real which, at first, had no existence but in our
imagination, and, as a natural consequence, many facts which have been
attributed to Faith may not always have been miraculous, although they are
true miracles for those who lend to Faith a boundless power.</p>
<p>The next circumstance of any importance to myself which I recollect
happened three months after my trip to Muran, and six weeks before my
father's death. I give it to my readers only to convey some idea of the
manner in which my nature was expanding.</p>
<p>One day, about the middle of November, I was with my brother Francois, two
years younger than I, in my father's room, watching him attentively as he
was working at optics. A large lump of crystal, round and cut into facets,
attracted my attention. I took it up, and having brought it near my eyes I
was delighted to see that it multiplied objects. The wish to possess
myself of it at once got hold of me, and seeing myself unobserved I took
my opportunity and hid it in my pocket.</p>
<p>A few minutes after this my father looked about for his crystal, and
unable to find it, he concluded that one of us must have taken it. My
brother asserted that he had not touched it, and I, although guilty, said
the same; but my father, satisfied that he could not be mistaken,
threatened to search us and to thrash the one who had told him a story. I
pretended to look for the crystal in every corner of the room, and,
watching my opportunity I slyly slipped it in the pocket of my brother's
jacket. At first I was sorry for what I had done, for I might as well have
feigned to find the crystal somewhere about the room; but the evil deed
was past recall. My father, seeing that we were looking in vain, lost
patience, searched us, found the unlucky ball of crystal in the pocket of
the innocent boy, and inflicted upon him the promised thrashing. Three or
four years later I was foolish enough to boast before my brother of the
trick I had then played on him; he never forgave me, and has never failed
to take his revenge whenever the opportunity offered.</p>
<p>However, having at a later period gone to confession, and accused myself
to the priest of the sin with every circumstance surrounding it, I gained
some knowledge which afforded me great satisfaction. My confessor, who was
a Jesuit, told me that by that deed I had verified the meaning of my first
name, Jacques, which, he said, meant, in Hebrew, "supplanter," and that
God had changed for that reason the name of the ancient patriarch into
that of Israel, which meant "knowing." He had deceived his brother Esau.</p>
<p>Six weeks after the above adventure my father was attacked with an abscess
in the head which carried him off in a week. Dr. Zambelli first gave him
oppilative remedies, and, seeing his mistake, he tried to mend it by
administering castoreum, which sent his patient into convulsions and
killed him. The abscess broke out through the ear one minute after his
death, taking its leave after killing him, as if it had no longer any
business with him. My father departed this life in the very prime of his
manhood. He was only thirty-six years of age, but he was followed to his
grave by the regrets of the public, and more particularly of all the
patricians amongst whom he was held as above his profession, not less on
account of his gentlemanly behaviour than on account of his extensive
knowledge in mechanics.</p>
<p>Two days before his death, feeling that his end was at hand, my father
expressed a wish to see us all around his bed, in the presence of his wife
and of the Messieurs Grimani, three Venetian noblemen whose protection he
wished to entreat in our favour. After giving us his blessing, he
requested our mother, who was drowned in tears, to give her sacred promise
that she would not educate any of us for the stage, on which he never
would have appeared himself had he not been led to it by an unfortunate
attachment. My mother gave her promise, and the three noblemen said that
they would see to its being faithfully kept. Circumstances helped our
mother to fulfill her word.</p>
<p>At that time my mother had been pregnant for six months, and she was
allowed to remain away from the stage until after Easter. Beautiful and
young as she was, she declined all the offers of marriage which were made
to her, and, placing her trust in Providence, she courageously devoted
herself to the task of bringing up her young family.</p>
<p>She considered it a duty to think of me before the others, not so much
from a feeling of preference as in consequence of my disease, which had
such an effect upon me that it was difficult to know what to do with me. I
was very weak, without any appetite, unable to apply myself to anything,
and I had all the appearance of an idiot. Physicians disagreed as to the
cause of the disease. He loses, they would say, two pounds of blood every
week; yet there cannot be more than sixteen or eighteen pounds in his
body. What, then, can cause so abundant a bleeding? One asserted that in
me all the chyle turned into blood; another was of opinion that the air I
was breathing must, at each inhalation, increase the quantity of blood in
my lungs, and contended that this was the reason for which I always kept
my mouth open. I heard of it all six years afterward from M. Baffo, a
great friend of my late father.</p>
<p>This M. Baffo consulted the celebrated Doctor Macop, of Padua, who sent
him his opinion by writing. This consultation, which I have still in my
possession, says that our blood is an elastic fluid which is liable to
diminish or to increase in thickness, but never in quantity, and that my
haemorrhage could only proceed from the thickness of the mass of my blood,
which relieved itself in a natural way in order to facilitate circulation.
The doctor added that I would have died long before, had not nature, in
its wish for life, assisted itself, and he concluded by stating that the
cause of the thickness of my blood could only be ascribed to the air I was
breathing and that consequently I must have a change of air, or every hope
of cure be abandoned. He thought likewise, that the stupidity so apparent
on my countenance was caused by nothing else but the thickness of my
blood.</p>
<p>M. Baffo, a man of sublime genius, a most lascivious, yet a great and
original poet, was therefore instrumental in bringing about the decision
which was then taken to send me to Padua, and to him I am indebted for my
life. He died twenty years after, the last of his ancient patrician
family, but his poems, although obscene, will give everlasting fame to his
name. The state-inquisitors of Venice have contributed to his celebrity by
their mistaken strictness. Their persecutions caused his manuscript works
to become precious. They ought to have been aware that despised things are
forgotten.</p>
<p>As soon as the verdict given by Professor Macop had been approved of, the
Abbe Grimani undertook to find a good boarding-house in Padua for me,
through a chemist of his acquaintance who resided in that city. His name
was Ottaviani, and he was also an antiquarian of some repute. In a few
days the boarding-house was found, and on the 2nd day of April, 1734, on
the very day I had accomplished my ninth year, I was taken to Padua in a
'burchiello', along the Brenta Canal. We embarked at ten o'clock in the
evening, immediately after supper.</p>
<p>The 'burchiello' may be considered a small floating house. There is a
large saloon with a smaller cabin at each end, and rooms for servants fore
and aft. It is a long square with a roof, and cut on each side by glazed
windows with shutters. The voyage takes eight hours. M. Grimani, M. Baffo,
and my mother accompanied me. I slept with her in the saloon, and the two
friends passed the night in one of the cabins. My mother rose at day
break, opened one of the windows facing the bed, and the rays of the
rising sun, falling on my eyes, caused me to open them. The bed was too
low for me to see the land; I could see through the window only the tops
of the trees along the river. The boat was sailing with such an even
movement that I could not realize the fact of our moving, so that the
trees, which, one after the other, were rapidly disappearing from my
sight, caused me an extreme surprise. "Ah, dear mother!" I exclaimed,
"what is this? the trees are walking!" At that very moment the two
noblemen came in, and reading astonishment on my countenance, they asked
me what my thoughts were so busy about. "How is it," I answered, "that the
trees are walking."</p>
<p>They all laughed, but my mother, heaving a great sigh, told me, in a tone
of deep pity, "The boat is moving, the trees are not. Now dress yourself."</p>
<p>I understood at once the reason of the phenomenon. "Then it may be," said
I, "that the sun does not move, and that we, on the contrary, are
revolving from west to east." At these words my good mother fairly
screamed. M. Grimani pitied my foolishness, and I remained dismayed,
grieved, and ready to cry. M. Baffo brought me life again. He rushed to
me, embraced me tenderly, and said, "Thou are right, my child. The sun
does not move; take courage, give heed to your reasoning powers and let
others laugh."</p>
<p>My mother, greatly surprised, asked him whether he had taken leave of his
senses to give me such lessons; but the philosopher, not even
condescending to answer her, went on sketching a theory in harmony with my
young and simple intelligence. This was the first real pleasure I enjoyed
in my life. Had it not been for M. Baffo, this circumstance might have
been enough to degrade my understanding; the weakness of credulity would
have become part of my mind. The ignorance of the two others would
certainly have blunted in me the edge of a faculty which, perhaps, has not
carried me very far in my after life, but to which alone I feel that I am
indebted for every particle of happiness I enjoy when I look into myself.</p>
<p>We reached Padua at an early hour and went to Ottaviani's house; his wife
loaded me with caresses. I found there five or six children, amongst them
a girl of eight years, named Marie, and another of seven, Rose, beautiful
as a seraph. Ten years later Marie became the wife of the broker Colonda,
and Rose, a few years afterwards, married a nobleman, Pierre Marcello, and
had one son and two daughters, one of whom was wedded to M. Pierre
Moncenigo, and the other to a nobleman of the Carrero family. This last
marriage was afterwards nullified. I shall have, in the course of events,
to speak of all these persons, and that is my reason for mentioning their
names here.</p>
<p>Ottaviani took us at once to the house where I was to board. It was only a
few yards from his own residence, at Sainte-Marie d'Advance, in the parish
of Saint-Michel, in the house of an old Sclavonian woman, who let the
first floor to Signora Mida, wife of a Sclavonian colonel. My small trunk
was laid open before the old woman, to whom was handed an inventory of all
its contents, together with six sequins for six months paid in advance.
For this small sum she undertook to feed me, to keep me clean, and to send
me to a day-school. Protesting that it was not enough, she accepted these
terms. I was kissed and strongly commanded to be always obedient and
docile, and I was left with her.</p>
<p>In this way did my family get rid of me.</p>
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