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<h2> CHAPTER XI </h2>
<p>My Short But Rather Too Gay Visit To Ancona—Cecilia,<br/>
Marina, Bellino—the Greek Slave of the Lazzaretto—Bellino<br/>
Discovers Himself<br/></p>
<p>I arrived in Ancona on the 25th of February, 1744, and put up at the best
inn. Pleased with my room, I told mine host to prepare for me a good meat
dinner; but he answered that during Lent all good Catholics eat nothing
but fish.</p>
<p>"The Holy Father has granted me permission to eat meat."</p>
<p>"Let me see your permission."</p>
<p>"He gave it to me by word of mouth."</p>
<p>"Reverend sir, I am not obliged to believe you."</p>
<p>"You are a fool."</p>
<p>"I am master in my own house, and I beg you will go to some other inn."</p>
<p>Such an answer, coupled to a most unexpected notice to quit, threw me into
a violent passion. I was swearing, raving, screaming, when suddenly a
grave-looking individual made his appearance in my room, and said to me:</p>
<p>"Sir, you are wrong in calling for meat, when in Ancona fish is much
better; you are wrong in expecting the landlord to believe you on your
bare word; and if you have obtained the permission from the Pope, you have
been wrong in soliciting it at your age; you have been wrong in not asking
for such permission in writing; you are wrong in calling the host a fool,
because it is a compliment that no man is likely to accept in his own
house; and, finally, you are wrong in making such an uproar."</p>
<p>Far from increasing my bad temper, this individual, who had entered my
room only to treat me to a sermon, made me laugh.</p>
<p>"I willingly plead guilty, sir," I answered, "to all the counts which you
allege against me; but it is raining, it is getting late, I am tired and
hungry, and therefore you will easily understand that I do not feel
disposed to change my quarters. Will you give me some supper, as the
landlord refuses to do so?"</p>
<p>"No," he replied, with great composure, "because I am a good Catholic and
fast. But I will undertake to make it all right for you with the landlord,
who will give you a good supper."</p>
<p>Thereupon he went downstairs, and I, comparing my hastiness to his calm,
acknowledged the man worthy of teaching me some lessons. He soon came up
again, informed me that peace was signed, and that I would be served
immediately.</p>
<p>"Will you not take supper with me?"</p>
<p>"No, but I will keep you company."</p>
<p>I accepted his offer, and to learn who he was, I told him my name, giving
myself the title of secretary to Cardinal Acquaviva.</p>
<p>"My name is Sancio Pico," he said; "I am a Castilian, and the
'proveditore' of the army of H. C. M., which is commanded by Count de
Gages under the orders of the generalissimo, the Duke of Modem."</p>
<p>My excellent appetite astonished him, and he enquired whether I had dined.
"No," said I; and I saw his countenance assume an air of satisfaction.</p>
<p>"Are you not afraid such a supper will hurt you?" he said.</p>
<p>"On the contrary, I hope it will do me a great deal of good."</p>
<p>"Then you have deceived the Pope?"</p>
<p>"No, for I did not tell him that I had no appetite, but only that I liked
meat better than fish."</p>
<p>"If you feel disposed to hear some good music," he said a moment after,
"follow me to the next room; the prima donna of Ancona lives there."</p>
<p>The words prima donna interested me at once, and I followed him. I saw,
sitting before a table, a woman already somewhat advanced in age, with two
young girls and two boys, but I looked in vain for the actress, whom Don
Sancio Pico at last presented to me in the shape of one of the two boys,
who was remarkably handsome and might have been seventeen. I thought he
was a 'castrato' who, as is the custom in Rome, performed all the parts of
a prima donna. The mother presented to, me her other son, likewise very
good-looking, but more manly than the 'castrato', although younger. His
name was Petronio, and, keeping up the transformations of the family, he
was the first female dancer at the opera. The eldest girl, who was also
introduced to me, was named Cecilia, and studied music; she was twelve
years old; the youngest, called Marina, was only eleven, and like her
brother Petronio was consecrated to the worship of Terpsichore. Both the
girls were very pretty.</p>
<p>The family came from Bologna and lived upon the talent of its members;
cheerfulness and amiability replaced wealth with them. Bellino, such was
the name of the castrato, yielding to the entreaties of Don Sancio, rose
from the table, went to the harpiscord, and sang with the voice of an
angel and with delightful grace. The Castilian listened with his eyes
closed in an ecstasy of enjoyment, but I, far from closing my eyes, gazed
into Bellino's, which seemed to dart amorous lightnings upon me. I could
discover in him some of the features of Lucrezia and the graceful manner
of the marchioness, and everything betrayed a beautiful woman, for his
dress concealed but imperfectly the most splendid bosom. The consequence
was that, in spite of his having been introduced as a man, I fancied that
the so-called Bellino was a disguised beauty, and, my imagination taking
at once the highest flight, I became thoroughly enamoured.</p>
<p>We spent two very pleasant hours, and I returned to my room accompanied by
the Castilian. "I intend to leave very early to-morrow morning," he said,
"for Sinigaglia, with the Abbe Vilmarcati, but I expect to return for
supper the day after to-morrow." I wished him a happy journey, saying that
we would most 'likely meet on the road, as I should probably leave Ancona
myself on the same day, after paying a visit to my banker.</p>
<p>I went to bed thinking of Bellino and of the impression he had made upon
me; I was sorry to go away without having proved to him that I was not the
dupe of his disguise. Accordingly, I was well pleased to see him enter my
room in the morning as soon as I had opened my door. He came to offer me
the services of his young brother Petronio during my stay in Ancona,
instead of my engaging a valet de place. I willingly agreed to the
proposal, and sent Petronio to get coffee for all the family.</p>
<p>I asked Bellino to sit on my bed with the intention of making love to him,
and of treating him like a girl, but the two young sisters ran into my
room and disturbed my plans. Yet the trio formed before me a very pleasing
sight; they represented natural beauty and artless cheerfulness of three
different kinds; unobtrusive familiarity, theatrical wit, pleasing
playfulness, and pretty Bolognese manners which I witnessed for the first
time; all this would have sufficed to cheer me if I had been downcast.
Cecilia and Marina were two sweet rosebuds, which, to bloom in all their
beauty, required only the inspiration of love, and they would certainly
have had the preference over Bellino if I had seen in him only the
miserable outcast of mankind, or rather the pitiful victim of sacerdotal
cruelty, for, in spite of their youth, the two amiable girls offered on
their dawning bosom the precious image of womanhood.</p>
<p>Petronio came with the coffee which he poured out, and I sent some to the
mother, who never left her room. Petronio was a true male harlot by taste
and by profession. The species is not scare in Italy, where the offence is
not regarded with the wild and ferocious intolerance of England and Spain.
I had given him one sequin to pay for the coffee, and told him to keep the
change, and, to chew me his gratitude, he gave me a voluptuous kiss with
half-open lips, supposing in me a taste which I was very far from
entertaining. I disabused him, but he did not seem the least ashamed. I
told him to order dinner for six persons, but he remarked that he would
order it only for four, as he had to keep his dear mother company; she
always took her dinner in bed. Everyone to his taste, I thought, and I let
him do as he pleased.</p>
<p>Two minutes after he had gone, the landlord came to my room and said,
"Reverend sir, the persons you have invited here have each the appetite of
two men at least; I give you notice of it, because I must charge
accordingly." "All right," I replied, "but let us have a good dinner."</p>
<p>When I was dressed, I thought I ought to pay my compliments to the
compliant mother. I went to her room, and congratulated her upon her
children. She thanked me for the present I had given to Petronio, and
began to make me the confidant of her distress. "The manager of the
theatre," she said, "is a miser who has given us only fifty Roman crowns
for the whole carnival. We have spent them for our living, and, to return
to Bologna, we shall have to walk and beg our way." Her confidence moved
my pity, so I took a gold quadruple from my purse and offered it to her;
she wept for joy and gratitude.</p>
<p>"I promise you another gold quadruple, madam," I said, "if you will
confide in me entirely. Confess that Bellino is a pretty woman in
disguise."</p>
<p>"I can assure you it is not so, although he has the appearance of a
woman."</p>
<p>"Not only the appearance, madam, but the tone, the manners; I am a good
judge."</p>
<p>"Nevertheless, he is a boy, for he has had to be examined before he could
sing on the stage here."</p>
<p>"And who examined him?"</p>
<p>"My lord bishop's chaplain."</p>
<p>"A chaplain?"</p>
<p>"Yes, and you may satisfy yourself by enquiring from him."</p>
<p>"The only way to clear my doubts would be to examine him myself."</p>
<p>"You may, if he has no objection, but truly I cannot interfere, as I do
not know what your intentions are."</p>
<p>"They are quite natural."</p>
<p>I returned to my room and sent Petronio for a bottle of Cyprus wine. He
brought the wine and seven sequins, the change for the doubloon I had
given him. I divided them between Bellino, Cecilia and Marina, and begged
the two young girls to leave me alone with their brother.</p>
<p>"Bellino, I am certain that your natural conformation is different from
mine; my dear, you are a girl."</p>
<p>"I am a man, but a castrato; I have been examined."</p>
<p>"Allow me to examine you likewise, and I will give you a doubloon."</p>
<p>"I cannot, for it is evident that you love me, and such love is condemned
by religion."</p>
<p>"You did not raise these objections with the bishop's chaplain."</p>
<p>"He was an elderly priest, and besides, he only just glanced at me."</p>
<p>"I will know the truth," said I, extending my hand boldly.</p>
<p>But he repulsed me and rose from his chair. His obstinacy vexed me, for I
had already spent fifteen or sixteen sequins to satisfy my curiosity.</p>
<p>I began my dinner with a very bad humour, but the excellent appetite of my
pretty guests brought me round, and I soon thought that, after all,
cheerfulness was better than sulking, and I resolved to make up for my
disappointment with the two charming sisters, who seemed well disposed to
enjoy a frolic.</p>
<p>I began by distributing a few innocent kisses right and left, as I sat
between them near a good fire, eating chestnuts which we wetted with
Cyprus wine. But very soon my greedy hands touched every part which my
lips could not kiss, and Cecilia, as well as Marina, delighted in the
game. Seeing that Bellino was smiling, I kissed him likewise, and his
half-open ruffle attracting my hand, I ventured and went in without
resistance. The chisel of Praxiteles had never carved a finer bosom!</p>
<p>"Oh! this is enough," I exclaimed; "I can no longer doubt that you are a
beautifully-formed woman!"</p>
<p>"It is," he replied, "the defect of all castrati."</p>
<p>"No, it is the perfection of all handsome women. Bellino, believe me, I am
enough of a good judge to distinguish between the deformed breast of a
castrato, and that of a beautiful woman; and your alabaster bosom belongs
to a young beauty of seventeen summers."</p>
<p>Who does not know that love, inflamed by all that can excite it, never
stops in young people until it is satisfied, and that one favour granted
kindles the wish for a greater one? I had begun well, I tried to go
further and to smother with burning kisses that which my hand was pressing
so ardently, but the false Bellino, as if he had only just been aware of
the illicit pleasure I was enjoying, rose and ran away. Anger increased in
me the ardour of love, and feeling the necessity of calming myself either
by satisfying my ardent desires or by evaporating them, I begged Cecilia,
Bellino's pupil, to sing a few Neapolitan airs.</p>
<p>I then went out to call upon the banker, from whom I took a letter of
exchange at sight upon Bologna, for the amount I had to receive from him,
and on my return, after a light supper with the two young sisters, I
prepared to go to bed, having previously instructed Petronio to order a
carriage for the morning.</p>
<p>I was just locking my door when Cecilia, half undressed, came in to say
that Bellino begged me to take him to Rimini, where he was engaged to sing
in an opera to be performed after Easter.</p>
<p>"Go and tell him, my dear little seraph, that I am ready to do what he
wishes, if he will only grant me in your presence what I desire; I want to
know for a certainty whether he is a man or a woman."</p>
<p>She left me and returned soon, saying that Bellino had gone to bed, but
that if I would postpone my departure for one day only he promised to
satisfy me on the morrow.</p>
<p>"Tell me the truth, Cecilia, and I will give you six sequins."</p>
<p>"I cannot earn them, for I have never seen him naked, and I cannot swear
to his being a girl. But he must be a man, otherwise he would not have
been allowed to perform here."</p>
<p>"Well, I will remain until the day after to-morrow, provided you keep me
company tonight."</p>
<p>"Do you love me very much?"</p>
<p>"Very much indeed, if you shew yourself very kind."</p>
<p>"I will be very kind, for I love you dearly likewise. I will go and tell
my mother."</p>
<p>"Of course you have a lover?"</p>
<p>"I never had one."</p>
<p>She left my room, and in a short time came back full of joy, saying that
her mother believed me an honest man; she of course meant a generous one.
Cecilia locked the door, and throwing herself in my arms covered me with
kisses. She was pretty, charming, but I was not in love with her, and I
was not able to say to her as to Lucrezia: "You have made me so happy!"
But she said it herself, and I did not feel much flattered, although I
pretended to believe her. When I woke up in the morning I gave her a
tender salutation, and presenting her with three doubloons, which must
have particularly delighted the mother, I sent her away without losing my
time in promising everlasting constancy—a promise as absurd as it is
trifling, and which the most virtuous man ought never to make even to the
most beautiful of women.</p>
<p>After breakfast I sent for mine host and ordered an excellent supper for
five persons, feeling certain that Don Sancio, whom I expected in the
evening, would not refuse to honour me by accepting my invitation, and
with that idea I made up my mind to go without my dinner. The Bolognese
family did not require to imitate my diet to insure a good appetite for
the evening.</p>
<p>I then summoned Bellino to my room, and claimed the performance of his
promise but he laughed, remarked that the day was not passed yet, and said
that he was certain of traveling with me.</p>
<p>"I fairly warn you that you cannot accompany me unless I am fully
satisfied."</p>
<p>"Well, I will satisfy you."</p>
<p>"Shall we go and take a walk together?"</p>
<p>"Willingly; I will dress myself."</p>
<p>While I was waiting for him, Marina came in with a dejected countenance,
enquiring how she had deserved my contempt.</p>
<p>"Cecilia has passed the night with you, Bellino will go with you
to-morrow, I am the most unfortunate of us all."</p>
<p>"Do you want money?"</p>
<p>"No, for I love you."</p>
<p>"But, Marinetta, you are too young."</p>
<p>"I am much stronger than my sister."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you have a lover."</p>
<p>"Oh! no."</p>
<p>"Very well, we can try this evening."</p>
<p>"Good! Then I will tell mother to prepare clean sheets for to-morrow
morning; otherwise everybody here would know that I slept with you."</p>
<p>I could not help admiring the fruits of a theatrical education, and was
much amused.</p>
<p>Bellino came back, we went out together, and we took our walk towards the
harbour. There were several vessels at anchor, and amongst them a Venetian
ship and a Turkish tartan. We went on board the first which we visited
with interest, but not seeing anyone of my acquaintance, we rowed towards
the Turkish tartan, where the most romantic surprise awaited me. The first
person I met on board was the beautiful Greek woman I had left in Ancona,
seven months before, when I went away from the lazzaretto. She was seated
near the old captain, of whom I enquired, without appearing to notice his
handsome slave, whether he had any fine goods to sell. He took us to his
cabin, but as I cast a glance towards the charming Greek, she expressed by
her looks all her delight at such an unexpected meeting.</p>
<p>I pretended not to be pleased with the goods shewn by the Turk, and under
the impulse of inspiration I told him that I would willingly buy something
pretty which would take the fancy of his better-half. He smiled, and the
Greek slave-having whispered a few words to him, he left the cabin. The
moment he was out of sight, this new Aspasia threw herself in my arms,
saying, "Now is your time!" I would not be found wanting in courage, and
taking the most convenient position in such a place, I did to her in one
instant that which her old master had not done in five years. I had not
yet reached the goal of my wishes, when the unfortunate girl, hearing her
master, tore herself from my arms with a deep sigh, and placing herself
cunningly in front of me, gave me time to repair the disorder of my dress,
which might have cost me my life, or at least all I possessed to
compromise the affair. In that curious situation, I was highly amused at
the surprise of Bellino, who stood there trembling like an aspen leaf.</p>
<p>The trifles chosen by the handsome slave cost me only thirty sequins.
'Spolaitis', she said to me in her own language, and the Turk telling her
that she ought to kiss me, she covered her face with her hands, and ran
away. I left the ship more sad than pleased, for I regretted that, in
spite of her courage, she should have enjoyed only an incomplete pleasure.
As soon as we were in our row boat, Bellino, who had recovered from his
fright, told me that I had just made him acquainted with a phenomenon, the
reality of which he could not admit, and which gave him a very strange
idea of my nature; that, as far as the Greek girl was concerned, he could
not make her out, unless I should assure him that every woman in her
country was like her. "How unhappy they must be!" he added.</p>
<p>"Do you think," I asked, "that coquettes are happier?"</p>
<p>"No, but I think that when a woman yields to love, she should not be
conquered before she has fought with her own desires; she should not give
way to the first impulse of a lustful desire and abandon herself to the
first man who takes her fancy, like an animal—the slave of sense.
You must confess that the Greek woman has given you an evident proof that
you had taken her fancy, but that she has at the same time given you a
proof not less certain of her beastly lust, and of an effrontery which
exposed her to the shame of being repulsed, for she could not possibly
know whether you would feel as well disposed for her as she felt for you.
She is very handsome, and it all turned out well, but the adventure has
thrown me into a whirlpool of agitation which I cannot yet control."</p>
<p>I might easily have put a stop to Bellino's perplexity, and rectified the
mistake he was labouring under; but such a confession would not have
ministered to my self-love, and I held my peace, for, if Bellino happened
to be a girl, as I suspected, I wanted her to be convinced that I
attached, after all, but very little importance to the great affair, and
that it was not worth while employing cunning expedients to obtain it.</p>
<p>We returned to the inn, and, towards evening, hearing Don Sancio's
travelling carriage roll into the yard, I hastened to meet him, and told
him that I hoped he would excuse me if I had felt certain that he would
not refuse me the honour of his company to supper with Bellino. He thanked
me politely for the pleasure I was so delicately offering him, and
accepted my invitation.</p>
<p>The most exquisite dishes, the most delicious wines of Spain, and, more
than everything else, the cheerfulness and the charming voices of Bellino
and of Cecilia, gave the Castilian five delightful hours. He left me at
midnight, saying that he could not declare himself thoroughly pleased
unless I promised to sup with him the next evening with the same guests.
It would compel me to postpone my departure for another day, but I
accepted.</p>
<p>As soon as Don Sancio had gone, I called upon Bellino to fulfil his
promise, but he answered that Marinetta was waiting for me, and that, as I
was not going away the next day, he would find an opportunity of
satisfying my doubts; and wishing me a good night, he left the room.</p>
<p>Marinetta, as cheerful as a lark, ran to lock the door and came back to
me, her eyes beaming with ardour. She was more formed than Cecilia,
although one year younger, and seemed anxious to convince me of her
superiority, but, thinking that the fatigue of the preceding night might
have exhausted my strength, she unfolded all the amorous ideas of her
mind, explained at length all she knew of the great mystery she was going
to enact with me, and of all the contrivances she had had recourse to in
order to acquire her imperfect knowledge, the whole interlarded with the
foolish talk natural to her age. I made out that she was afraid of my not
finding her a maiden, and of my reproaching her about it. Her anxiety
pleased me, and I gave her a new confidence by telling her that nature had
refused to many young girls what is called maidenhood, and that only a
fool could be angry with a girl for such a reason.</p>
<p>My science gave her courage and confidence, and I was compelled to
acknowledge that she was very superior to her sister.</p>
<p>"I am delighted you find me so," she said; "we must not sleep at all
throughout the night."</p>
<p>"Sleep, my darling, will prove our friend, and our strength renewed by
repose will reward you in the morning for what you may suppose lost time."</p>
<p>And truly, after a quiet sleep, the morning was for her a succession of
fresh triumphs, and I crowned her happiness by sending her away with three
doubloons, which she took to her mother, and which gave the good woman an
insatiable desire to contract new obligations towards Providence.</p>
<p>I went out to get some money from the banker, as I did not know what might
happen during my journey. I had enjoyed myself, but I had spent too much:
yet there was Bellino who, if a girl, was not to find me less generous
than I had been with the two young sisters. It was to be decided during
the day, and I fancied that I was sure of the result.</p>
<p>There are some persons who pretend that life is only a succession of
misfortunes, which is as much as to say that life itself is a misfortune;
but if life is a misfortune, death must be exactly the reverse and
therefore death must be happiness, since death is the very reverse of
life. That deduction may appear too finely drawn. But those who say that
life is a succession of misfortunes are certainly either ill or poor; for,
if they enjoyed good health, if they had cheerfulness in their heart and
money in their purse, if they had for their enjoyment a Cecilia, a
Marinetta, and even a more lovely beauty in perspective, they would soon
entertain a very different opinion of life! I hold them to be a race of
pessimists, recruited amongst beggarly philosophers and knavish,
atrabilious theologians. If pleasure does exist, and if life is necessary
to enjoy pleasure, then life is happiness. There are misfortunes, as I
know by experience; but the very existence of such misfortunes proves that
the sum-total of happiness is greater. Because a few thorns are to be
found in a basket full of roses, is the existence of those beautiful
flowers to be denied? No; it is a slander to deny that life is happiness.
When I am in a dark room, it pleases me greatly to see through a window an
immense horizon before me.</p>
<p>As supper-time was drawing near, I went to Don Sancio, whom I found in
magnificently-furnished apartments. The table was loaded with silver
plate, and his servants were in livery. He was alone, but all his guests
arrived soon after me—Cecilia, Marina, and Bellino, who, either by
caprice or from taste, was dressed as a woman. The two young sisters,
prettily arranged, looked charming, but Bellino, in his female costume, so
completely threw them into the shade, that my last doubt vanished.</p>
<p>"Are you satisfied," I said to Don Sancio, "that Bellino is a woman?"</p>
<p>"Woman or man, what do I care! I think he is a very pretty 'castrato', and
'I have seen many as good-looking as he is."</p>
<p>"But are you sure he is a 'castrato'?"</p>
<p>"'Valgame Dios'!" answered the grave Castilian, "I have not the slightest
wish to ascertain the truth."</p>
<p>Oh, how widely different our thoughts were! I admired in him the wisdom of
which I was so much in need, and did not venture upon any more indiscreet
questions. During the supper, however, my greedy eyes could not leave that
charming being; my vicious nature caused me to feel intense voluptuousness
in believing him to be of that sex to which I wanted him to belong.</p>
<p>Don Sancio's supper was excellent, and, as a matter of course, superior to
mine; otherwise the pride of the Castilian would have felt humbled. As a
general rule, men are not satisfied with what is good; they want the best,
or, to speak more to the point, the most. He gave us white truffles,
several sorts of shell-fish, the best fish of the Adriatic, dry champagne,
peralta, sherry and pedroximenes wines.</p>
<p>After that supper worthy of Lucullus, Bellino sang with a voice of such
beauty that it deprived us of the small amount of reason left in us by the
excellent wine. His movements, the expression of his looks, his gait, his
walk, his countenance, his voice, and, above all, my own instinct, which
told me that I could not possibly feel for a castrato what I felt for
Bellino, confirmed me in my hopes; yet it was necessary that my eyes
should ascertain the truth.</p>
<p>After many compliments and a thousand thanks, we took leave of the grand
Spaniard, and went to my room, where the mystery was at last to be
unravelled. I called upon Bellino to keep his word, or I threatened to
leave him alone the next morning at day-break.</p>
<p>I took him by the hand, and we seated ourselves near the fire. I dismissed
Cecilia and Marina, and I said to him,</p>
<p>"Bellino, everything must have an end; you have promised: it will soon be
over. If you are what you represent yourself to be, I will let you go back
to your own room; if you are what I believe you to be, and if you consent
to remain with me to-night, I will give you one hundred sequins, and we
will start together tomorrow morning."</p>
<p>"You must go alone, and forgive me if I cannot fulfil my promise. I am
what I told you, and I can neither reconcile myself to the idea of
exposing my shame before you, nor lay myself open to the terrible
consequences that might follow the solution of your doubts."</p>
<p>"There can be no consequences, since there will be an end to it at the
moment I have assured myself that you are unfortunate enough to be what
you say, and without ever mentioning the circumstances again, I promise to
take you with me to-morrow and to leave you at Rimini."</p>
<p>"No, my mind is made up; I cannot satisfy your curiosity."</p>
<p>Driven to madness by his words, I was very near using violence, but
subduing my angry feelings, I endeavored to succeed by gentle means and by
going straight to the spot where the mystery could be solved. I was very
near it, when his hand opposed a very strong resistance. I repeated my
efforts, but Bellino, rising suddenly, repulsed me, and I found myself
undone. After a few moments of calm, thinking I should take him by
surprise, I extended my hand, but I drew back terrified, for I fancied
that I had recognized in him a man, and a degraded man, contemptible less
on account of his degradation than for the want of feeling I thought I
could read on his countenance. Disgusted, confused, and almost blushing
for myself, I sent him away.</p>
<p>His sisters came to my room, but I dismissed them, sending word to their
brother that he might go with me, without any fear of further indiscretion
on my part. Yet, in spite of the conviction I thought I had acquired,
Bellino, even such as I believe him to be, filled my thoughts; I could not
make it out.</p>
<p>Early the next morning I left Ancona with him, distracted by the tears of
the two charming sisters and loaded with the blessings of the mother who,
with beads in hand, mumbled her 'paternoster', and repeated her constant
theme: 'Dio provedera'.</p>
<p>The trust placed in Providence by most of those persons who earn their
living by some profession forbidden by religion is neither absurd, nor
false, nor deceitful; it is real and even godly, for it flows from an
excellent source. Whatever may be the ways of Providence, human beings
must always acknowledge it in its action, and those who call upon
Providence independently of all external consideration must, at the
bottom, be worthy, although guilty of transgressing its laws.</p>
<p>'Pulchra Laverna,<br/>
Da mihi fallere; da justo sanctoque videri;<br/>
Noctem peccatis, et fraudibus objice nubem.'<br/></p>
<p>Such was the way in which, in the days of Horace, robbers addressed their
goddess, and I recollect a Jesuit who told me once that Horace would not
have known his own language, if he had said justo sanctoque: but there
were ignorant men even amongst the Jesuits, and robbers most likely have
but little respect for the rules of grammar.</p>
<p>The next morning I started with Bellino, who, believing me to be
undeceived, could suppose that I would not shew any more curiosity about
him, but we had not been a quarter of an hour together when he found out
his mistake, for I could not let my looks fall upon his splendid eyes
without feeling in me a fire which the sight of a man could not have
ignited. I told him that all his features were those of a woman, and that
I wanted the testimony of my eyes before I could feel perfectly satisfied,
because the protuberance I had felt in a certain place might be only a
freak of nature. "Should it be the case," I added, "I should have no
difficulty in passing over a deformity which, in reality, is only
laughable. Bellino, the impression you produce upon me, this sort of
magnetism, your bosom worthy of Venus herself, which you have once
abandoned to my eager hand, the sound of your voice, every movement of
yours, assure me that you do not belong to my sex. Let me see for myself,
and, if my conjectures are right, depend upon my faithful love; if, on the
contrary, I find that I have been mistaken, you can rely upon my
friendship. If you refuse me, I shall be compelled to believe that you are
cruelly enjoying my misery, and that you have learned in the most accursed
school that the best way of preventing a young man from curing himself of
an amorous passion is to excite it constantly; but you must agree with me
that, to put such tyranny in practice, it is necessary to hate the person
it is practised upon, and, if that be so, I ought to call upon my reason
to give me the strength necessary to hate you likewise."</p>
<p>I went on speaking for a long time; Bellino did not answer, but he seemed
deeply moved. At last I told him that, in the fearful state to which I was
reduced by his resistance, I should be compelled to treat him without any
regard for his feelings, and find out the truth by force. He answered with
much warmth and dignity: "Recollect that you are not my master, that I am
in your hands, because I had faith in your promise, and that, if you use
violence, you will be guilty of murder. Order the postillion to stop, I
will get out of the carriage, and you may rely upon my not complaining of
your treatment."</p>
<p>Those few words were followed by a torrent of tears, a sight which I never
could resist. I felt myself moved in the inmost recesses of my soul, and I
almost thought that I had been wrong. I say almost, because, had I been
convinced of it, I would have thrown myself at his feet entreating pardon;
but, not feeling myself competent to stand in judgment in my own cause, I
satisfied myself by remaining dull and silent, and I never uttered one
word until we were only half a mile from Sinigaglia, where I intended to
take supper and to remain for the night. Having fought long enough with my
own feelings, I said to him;</p>
<p>"We might have spent a little time in Rimini like good friends, if you had
felt any friendship for me, for, with a little kind compliance, you could
have easily cured me of my passion."</p>
<p>"It would not cure you," answered Bellino, courageously, but with a
sweetness of tone which surprised me; "no, you would not be cured, whether
you found me to be man or woman, for you are in love with me independently
of my sex, and the certainty you would acquire would make you furious. In
such a state, should you find me inexorable, you would very likely give
way to excesses which would afterwards cause you deep sorrow."</p>
<p>"You expect to make me admit that you are right, but you are completely
mistaken, for I feel that I should remain perfectly calm, and that by
complying with my wishes you would gain my friendship."</p>
<p>"I tell you again that you would become furious."</p>
<p>"Bellino, that which has made me furious is the sight of your charms,
either too real or too completely deceiving, the power of which you cannot
affect to ignore. You have not been afraid to ignite my amorous fury, how
can you expect me to believe you now, when you pretend to fear it, and
when I am only asking you to let me touch a thing, which, if it be as you
say, will only disgust me?"</p>
<p>"Ah! disgust you; I am quite certain of the contrary. Listen to me. Were I
a girl, I feel I could not resist loving you, but, being a man, it is my
duty not to grant what you desire, for your passion, now very natural,
would then become monstrous. Your ardent nature would be stronger than
your reason, and your reason itself would easily come to the assistance of
your senses and of your nature. That violent clearing-up of the mystery,
were you to obtain it, would leave you deprived of all control over
yourself. Disappointed in not finding what you had expected, you would
satisfy your passion upon that which you would find, and the result would,
of course, be an abomination. How can you, intelligent as you are, flatter
yourself that, finding me to be a man, you could all at once cease to love
me? Would the charms which you now see in me cease to exist then? Perhaps
their power would, on the contrary, be enhanced, and your passion,
becoming brutal, would lead you to take any means your imagination
suggested to gratify it. You would persuade yourself that you might change
me into a woman, or, what is worse, that you might change yourself into
one. Your passion would invent a thousand sophisms to justify your love,
decorated with the fine appellation of friendship, and you would not fail
to allege hundreds of similarly disgusting cases in order to excuse your
conduct. You would certainly never find me compliant; and how am I to know
that you would not threaten me with death?"</p>
<p>"Nothing of the sort would happen, Bellino," I answered, rather tired of
the length of his argument, "positively nothing, and I am sure you are
exaggerating your fears. Yet I am bound to tell you that, even if all you
say should happen, it seems to me that to allow what can strictly be
considered only as a temporary fit of insanity, would prove a less evil
than to render incurable a disease of the mind which reason would soon cut
short."</p>
<p>Thus does a poor philosopher reason when he takes it into his head to
argue at those periods during which a passion raging in his soul makes all
its faculties wander. To reason well, we must be under the sway neither of
love nor of anger, for those two passions have one thing in common which
is that, in their excess, they lower us to the condition of brutes acting
only under the influence of their predominating instinct, and,
unfortunately, we are never more disposed to argue than when we feel
ourselves under the influence of either of those two powerful human
passions.</p>
<p>We arrived at Sinigaglia late at night, and I went to the best inn, and,
after choosing a comfortable room, ordered supper. As there was but one
bed in the room, I asked Bellino, in as calm a tone as I could assume,
whether he would have a fire lighted in another chamber, and my surprise
may be imagined when he answered quietly that he had no objection to sleep
in the same bed with me. Such an answer, however, unexpected, was
necessary to dispel the angry feelings under which I was labouring. I
guessed that I was near the denouement of the romance, but I was very far
from congratulating myself, for I did not know whether the denouement
would prove agreeable or not. I felt, however, a real satisfaction at
having conquered, and was sure of my self-control, in case the senses, my
natural instinct, led me astray. But if I found myself in the right, I
thought I could expect the most precious favours.</p>
<p>We sat down to supper opposite each other, and during the meal, his words,
his countenance, the expression of his beautiful eyes, his sweet and
voluptuous smile, everything seemed to announce that he had had enough of
playing a part which must have proved as painful to him as to me.</p>
<p>A weight was lifted off my mind, and I managed to shorten the supper as
much as possible. As soon as we had left the table, my amiable companion
called for a night-lamp, undressed himself, and went to bed. I was not
long in following him, and the reader will soon know the nature of a
denouement so long and so ardently desired; in the mean time I beg to wish
him as happy a night as the one which was then awaiting me.</p>
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