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<h2> IX </h2>
<p>I left Venice the next morning, as soon as I learned that the old lady had
not succumbed, as I feared at the moment, to the shock I had given her—the
shock I may also say she had given me. How in the world could I have
supposed her capable of getting out of bed by herself? I failed to see
Miss Tita before going; I only saw the donna, whom I entrusted with a note
for her younger mistress. In this note I mentioned that I should be absent
but for a few days. I went to Treviso, to Bassano, to Castelfranco; I took
walks and drives and looked at musty old churches with ill-lighted
pictures and spent hours seated smoking at the doors of cafes, where there
were flies and yellow curtains, on the shady side of sleepy little
squares. In spite of these pastimes, which were mechanical and
perfunctory, I scantily enjoyed my journey: there was too strong a taste
of the disagreeable in my life. I had been devilish awkward, as the young
men say, to be found by Miss Bordereau in the dead of night examining the
attachment of her bureau; and it had not been less so to have to believe
for a good many hours afterward that it was highly probable I had killed
her. In writing to Miss Tita I attempted to minimize these irregularities;
but as she gave me no word of answer I could not know what impression I
made upon her. It rankled in my mind that I had been called a publishing
scoundrel, for certainly I did publish and certainly I had not been very
delicate. There was a moment when I stood convinced that the only way to
make up for this latter fault was to take myself away altogether on the
instant; to sacrifice my hopes and relieve the two poor women forever of
the oppression of my intercourse. Then I reflected that I had better try a
short absence first, for I must already have had a sense (unexpressed and
dim) that in disappearing completely it would not be merely my own hopes
that I should condemn to extinction. It would perhaps be sufficient if I
stayed away long enough to give the elder lady time to think she was rid
of me. That she would wish to be rid of me after this (if I was not rid of
her) was now not to be doubted: that nocturnal scene would have cured her
of the disposition to put up with my company for the sake of my dollars. I
said to myself that after all I could not abandon Miss Tita, and I
continued to say this even while I observed that she quite failed to
comply with my earnest request (I had given her two or three addresses, at
little towns, post restante) that she would let me know how she was
getting on. I would have made my servant write to me but that he was
unable to manage a pen. It struck me there was a kind of scorn in Miss
Tita's silence (little disdainful as she had ever been), so that I was
uncomfortable and sore. I had scruples about going back and yet I had
others about not doing so, for I wanted to put myself on a better footing.
The end of it was that I did return to Venice on the twelfth day; and as
my gondola gently bumped against Miss Bordereau's steps a certain
palpitation of suspense told me that I had done myself a violence in
holding off so long.</p>
<p>I had faced about so abruptly that I had not telegraphed to my servant. He
was therefore not at the station to meet me, but he poked out his head
from an upper window when I reached the house. "They have put her into the
earth, la vecchia," he said to me in the lower hall, while he shouldered
my valise; and he grinned and almost winked, as if he knew I should be
pleased at the news.</p>
<p>"She's dead!" I exclaimed, giving him a very different look.</p>
<p>"So it appears, since they have buried her."</p>
<p>"It's all over? When was the funeral?"</p>
<p>"The other yesterday. But a funeral you could scarcely call it, signore;
it was a dull little passeggio of two gondolas. Poveretta!" the man
continued, referring apparently to Miss Tita. His conception of funerals
was apparently that they were mainly to amuse the living.</p>
<p>I wanted to know about Miss Tita—how she was and where she was—but
I asked him no more questions till we had got upstairs. Now that the fact
had met me I took a bad view of it, especially of the idea that poor Miss
Tita had had to manage by herself after the end. What did she know about
arrangements, about the steps to take in such a case? Poveretta indeed! I
could only hope that the doctor had given her assistance and that she had
not been neglected by the old friends of whom she had told me, the little
band of the faithful whose fidelity consisted in coming to the house once
a year. I elicited from my servant that two old ladies and an old
gentleman had in fact rallied round Miss Tita and had supported her (they
had come for her in a gondola of their own) during the journey to the
cemetery, the little red-walled island of tombs which lies to the north of
the town, on the way to Murano. It appeared from these circumstances that
the Misses Bordereau were Catholics, a discovery I had never made, as the
old woman could not go to church and her niece, so far as I perceived,
either did not or went only to early mass in the parish, before I was
stirring. Certainly even the priests respected their seclusion; I had
never caught the whisk of the curato's skirt. That evening, an hour later,
I sent my servant down with five words written on a card, to ask Miss Tita
if she would see me for a few moments. She was not in the house, where he
had sought her, he told me when he came back, but in the garden walking
about to refresh herself and gathering flowers. He had found her there and
she would be very happy to see me.</p>
<p>I went down and passed half an hour with poor Miss Tita. She had always
had a look of musty mourning (as if she were wearing out old robes of
sorrow that would not come to an end), and in this respect there was no
appreciable change in her appearance. But she evidently had been crying,
crying a great deal—simply, satisfyingly, refreshingly, with a sort
of primitive, retarded sense of loneliness and violence. But she had none
of the formalism or the self-consciousness of grief, and I was almost
surprised to see her standing there in the first dusk with her hands full
of flowers, smiling at me with her reddened eyes. Her white face, in the
frame of her mantilla, looked longer, leaner than usual. I had had an idea
that she would be a good deal disgusted with me—would consider that
I ought to have been on the spot to advise her, to help her; and, though I
was sure there was no rancor in her composition and no great conviction of
the importance of her affairs, I had prepared myself for a difference in
her manner, for some little injured look, half-familiar, half-estranged,
which should say to my conscience, "Well, you are a nice person to have
professed things!" But historic truth compels me to declare that Tita
Bordereau's countenance expressed unqualified pleasure in seeing her late
aunt's lodger. That touched him extremely, and he thought it simplified
his situation until he found it did not. I was as kind to her that evening
as I knew how to be, and I walked about the garden with her for half an
hour. There was no explanation of any sort between us; I did not ask her
why she had not answered my letter. Still less did I repeat what I had
said to her in that communication; if she chose to let me suppose that she
had forgotten the position in which Miss Bordereau surprised me that night
and the effect of the discovery on the old woman I was quite willing to
take it that way: I was grateful to her for not treating me as if I had
killed her aunt.</p>
<p>We strolled and strolled and really not much passed between us save the
recognition of her bereavement, conveyed in my manner and in a visible air
that she had of depending on me now, since I let her see that I took an
interest in her. Miss Tita had none of the pride that makes a person wish
to preserve the look of independence; she did not in the least pretend
that she knew at present what would become of her. I forebore to touch
particularly on that, however, for I certainly was not prepared to say
that I would take charge of her. I was cautious; not ignobly, I think, for
I felt that her knowledge of life was so small that in her unsophisticated
vision there would be no reason why—since I seemed to pity her—I
should not look after her. She told me how her aunt had died, very
peacefully at the last, and how everything had been done afterward by the
care of her good friends (fortunately, thanks to me, she said, smiling,
there was money in the house; and she repeated that when once the Italians
like you they are your friends for life); and when we had gone into this
she asked me about my giro, my impressions, the places I had seen. I told
her what I could, making it up partly, I am afraid, as in my depression I
had not seen much; and after she had heard me she exclaimed, quite as if
she had forgotten her aunt and her sorrow, "Dear, dear, how much I should
like to do such things—to take a little journey!" It came over me
for the moment that I ought to propose some tour, say I would take her
anywhere she liked; and I remarked at any rate that some excursion—to
give her a change—might be managed: we would think of it, talk it
over. I said never a word to her about the Aspern documents; asked no
questions as to what she had ascertained or what had otherwise happened
with regard to them before Miss Bordereau's death. It was not that I was
not on pins and needles to know, but that I thought it more decent not to
betray my anxiety so soon after the catastrophe. I hoped she herself would
say something, but she never glanced that way, and I thought this natural
at the time. Later however, that night, it occurred to me that her silence
was somewhat strange; for if she had talked of my movements, of anything
so detached as the Giorgione at Castelfranco, she might have alluded to
what she could easily remember was in my mind. It was not to be supposed
that the emotion produced by her aunt's death had blotted out the
recollection that I was interested in that lady's relics, and I fidgeted
afterward as it came to me that her reticence might very possibly mean
simply that nothing had been found. We separated in the garden (it was she
who said she must go in); now that she was alone in the rooms I felt that
(judged, at any rate, by Venetian ideas) I was on rather a different
footing in regard to visiting her there. As I shook hands with her for
goodnight I asked her if she had any general plan—had thought over
what she had better do. "Oh, yes, oh, yes, but I haven't settled anything
yet," she replied quite cheerfully. Was her cheerfulness explained by the
impression that I would settle for her?</p>
<p>I was glad the next morning that we had neglected practical questions, for
this gave me a pretext for seeing her again immediately. There was a very
practical question to be touched upon. I owed it to her to let her know
formally that of course I did not expect her to keep me on as a lodger,
and also to show some interest in her own tenure, what she might have on
her hands in the way of a lease. But I was not destined, as it happened,
to converse with her for more than an instant on either of these points. I
sent her no message; I simply went down to the sala and walked to and fro
there. I knew she would come out; she would very soon discover I was
there. Somehow I preferred not to be shut up with her; gardens and big
halls seemed better places to talk. It was a splendid morning, with
something in the air that told of the waning of the long Venetian summer;
a freshness from the sea which stirred the flowers in the garden and made
a pleasant draught in the house, less shuttered and darkened now than when
the old woman was alive. It was the beginning of autumn, of the end of the
golden months. With this it was the end of my experiment—or would be
in the course of half an hour, when I should really have learned that the
papers had been reduced to ashes. After that there would be nothing left
for me but to go to the station; for seriously (and as it struck me in the
morning light) I could not linger there to act as guardian to a piece of
middle-aged female helplessness. If she had not saved the papers wherein
should I be indebted to her? I think I winced a little as I asked myself
how much, if she HAD saved them, I should have to recognize and, as it
were, to reward such a courtesy. Might not that circumstance after all
saddle me with a guardianship? If this idea did not make me more
uncomfortable as I walked up and down it was because I was convinced I had
nothing to look to. If the old woman had not destroyed everything before
she pounced upon me in the parlor she had done so afterward.</p>
<p>It took Miss Tita rather longer than I had expected to guess that I was
there; but when at last she came out she looked at me without surprise. I
said to her that I had been waiting for her, and she asked why I had not
let her know. I was glad the next day that I had checked myself before
remarking that I had wished to see if a friendly intuition would not tell
her: it became a satisfaction to me that I had not indulged in that rather
tender joke. What I did say was virtually the truth—that I was too
nervous, since I expected her now to settle my fate.</p>
<p>"Your fate?" said Miss Tita, giving me a queer look; and as she spoke I
noticed a rare change in her. She was different from what she had been the
evening before—less natural, less quiet. She had been crying the day
before and she was not crying now, and yet she struck me as less
confident. It was as if something had happened to her during the night, or
at least as if she had thought of something that troubled her—something
in particular that affected her relations with me, made them more
embarrassing and complicated. Had she simply perceived that her aunt's not
being there now altered my position?</p>
<p>"I mean about our papers. ARE there any? You must know now."</p>
<p>"Yes, there are a great many; more than I supposed." I was struck with the
way her voice trembled as she told me this.</p>
<p>"Do you mean that you have got them in there—and that I may see
them?"</p>
<p>"I don't think you can see them," said Miss Tita with an extraordinary
expression of entreaty in her eyes, as if the dearest hope she had in the
world now was that I would not take them from her. But how could she
expect me to make such a sacrifice as that after all that had passed
between us? What had I come back to Venice for but to see them, to take
them? My delight in learning they were still in existence was such that if
the poor woman had gone down on her knees to beseech me never to mention
them again I would have treated the proceeding as a bad joke. "I have got
them but I can't show them," she added.</p>
<p>"Not even to me? Ah, Miss Tita!" I groaned, with a voice of infinite
remonstrance and reproach.</p>
<p>She colored, and the tears came back to her eyes; I saw that it cost her a
kind of anguish to take such a stand but that a dreadful sense of duty had
descended upon her. It made me quite sick to find myself confronted with
that particular obstacle; all the more that it appeared to me I had been
extremely encouraged to leave it out of account. I almost considered that
Miss Tita had assured me that if she had no greater hindrance than that—!
"You don't mean to say you made her a deathbed promise? It was precisely
against your doing anything of that sort that I thought I was safe. Oh, I
would rather she had burned the papers outright than that!"</p>
<p>"No, it isn't a promise," said Miss Tita.</p>
<p>"Pray what is it then?"</p>
<p>She hesitated and then she said, "She tried to burn them, but I prevented
it. She had hid them in her bed."</p>
<p>"In her bed?"</p>
<p>"Between the mattresses. That's where she put them when she took them out
of the trunk. I can't understand how she did it, because Olimpia didn't
help her. She tells me so, and I believe her. My aunt only told her
afterward, so that she shouldn't touch the bed—anything but the
sheets. So it was badly made," added Miss Tita simply.</p>
<p>"I should think so! And how did she try to burn them?"</p>
<p>"She didn't try much; she was too weak, those last days. But she told me—she
charged me. Oh, it was terrible! She couldn't speak after that night; she
could only make signs."</p>
<p>"And what did you do?"</p>
<p>"I took them away. I locked them up."</p>
<p>"In the secretary?"</p>
<p>"Yes, in the secretary," said Miss Tita, reddening again.</p>
<p>"Did you tell her you would burn them?"</p>
<p>"No, I didn't—on purpose."</p>
<p>"On purpose to gratify me?"</p>
<p>"Yes, only for that."</p>
<p>"And what good will you have done me if after all you won't show them?"</p>
<p>"Oh, none; I know that—I know that."</p>
<p>"And did she believe you had destroyed them?"</p>
<p>"I don't know what she believed at the last. I couldn't tell—she was
too far gone."</p>
<p>"Then if there was no promise and no assurance I can't see what ties you."</p>
<p>"Oh, she hated it so—she hated it so! She was so jealous. But here's
the portrait—you may have that," Miss Tita announced, taking the
little picture, wrapped up in the same manner in which her aunt had
wrapped it, out of her pocket.</p>
<p>"I may have it—do you mean you give it to me?" I questioned,
staring, as it passed into my hand.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes."</p>
<p>"But it's worth money—a large sum."</p>
<p>"Well!" said Miss Tita, still with her strange look.</p>
<p>I did not know what to make of it, for it could scarcely mean that she
wanted to bargain like her aunt. She spoke as if she wished to make me a
present. "I can't take it from you as a gift," I said, "and yet I can't
afford to pay you for it according to the ideas Miss Bordereau had of its
value. She rated it at a thousand pounds."</p>
<p>"Couldn't we sell it?" asked Miss Tita.</p>
<p>"God forbid! I prefer the picture to the money."</p>
<p>"Well then keep it."</p>
<p>"You are very generous."</p>
<p>"So are you."</p>
<p>"I don't know why you should think so," I replied; and this was a truthful
speech, for the singular creature appeared to have some very fine
reference in her mind, which I did not in the least seize.</p>
<p>"Well, you have made a great difference for me," said Miss Tita.</p>
<p>I looked at Jeffrey Aspern's face in the little picture, partly in order
not to look at that of my interlocutress, which had begun to trouble me,
even to frighten me a little—it was so self-conscious, so unnatural.
I made no answer to this last declaration; I only privately consulted
Jeffrey Aspern's delightful eyes with my own (they were so young and
brilliant, and yet so wise, so full of vision); I asked him what on earth
was the matter with Miss Tita. He seemed to smile at me with friendly
mockery, as if he were amused at my case. I had got into a pickle for him—as
if he needed it! He was unsatisfactory, for the only moment since I had
known him. Nevertheless, now that I held the little picture in my hand I
felt that it would be a precious possession. "Is this a bribe to make me
give up the papers?" I demanded in a moment, perversely. "Much as I value
it, if I were to be obliged to choose, the papers are what I should
prefer. Ah, but ever so much!"</p>
<p>"How can you choose—how can you choose?" Miss Tita asked, slowly,
lamentably.</p>
<p>"I see! Of course there is nothing to be said, if you regard the
interdiction that rests upon you as quite insurmountable. In this case it
must seem to you that to part with them would be an impiety of the worst
kind, a simple sacrilege!"</p>
<p>Miss Tita shook her head, full of her dolefulness. "You would understand
if you had known her. I'm afraid," she quavered suddenly—"I'm
afraid! She was terrible when she was angry."</p>
<p>"Yes, I saw something of that, that night. She was terrible. Then I saw
her eyes. Lord, they were fine!"</p>
<p>"I see them—they stare at me in the dark!" said Miss Tita.</p>
<p>"You are nervous, with all you have been through."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, very—very!"</p>
<p>"You mustn't mind; that will pass away," I said, kindly. Then I added,
resignedly, for it really seemed to me that I must accept the situation,
"Well, so it is, and it can't be helped. I must renounce." Miss Tita, at
this, looking at me, gave a low, soft moan, and I went on: "I only wish to
heaven she had destroyed them; then there would be nothing more to say.
And I can't understand why, with her ideas, she didn't."</p>
<p>"Oh, she lived on them!" said Miss Tita.</p>
<p>"You can imagine whether that makes me want less to see them," I answered,
smiling. "But don't let me stand here as if I had it in my soul to tempt
you to do anything base. Naturally you will understand if I give up my
rooms. I leave Venice immediately." And I took up my hat, which I had
placed on a chair. We were still there rather awkwardly, on our feet, in
the middle of the sala. She had left the door of the apartments open
behind her but she had not led me that way.</p>
<p>A kind of spasm came into her face as she saw me take my hat. "Immediately—do
you mean today?" The tone of the words was tragical—they were a cry
of desolation.</p>
<p>"Oh, no; not so long as I can be of the least service to you."</p>
<p>"Well, just a day or two more—just two or three days," she panted.
Then controlling herself, she added in another manner, "She wanted to say
something to me—the last day—something very particular, but
she couldn't."</p>
<p>"Something very particular?"</p>
<p>"Something more about the papers."</p>
<p>"And did you guess—have you any idea?"</p>
<p>"No, I have thought—but I don't know. I have thought all kinds of
things."</p>
<p>"And for instance?"</p>
<p>"Well, that if you were a relation it would be different."</p>
<p>"If I were a relation?"</p>
<p>"If you were not a stranger. Then it would be the same for you as for me.
Anything that is mine—would be yours, and you could do what you
like. I couldn't prevent you—and you would have no responsibility."</p>
<p>She brought out this droll explanation with a little nervous rush, as if
she were speaking words she had got by heart. They gave me an impression
of subtlety and at first I failed to follow. But after a moment her face
helped me to see further, and then a light came into my mind. It was
embarrassing, and I bent my head over Jeffrey Aspern's portrait. What an
odd expression was in his face! "Get out of it as you can, my dear
fellow!" I put the picture into the pocket of my coat and said to Miss
Tita, "Yes, I'll sell it for you. I shan't get a thousand pounds by any
means, but I shall get something good."</p>
<p>She looked at me with tears in her eyes, but she seemed to try to smile as
she remarked, "We can divide the money."</p>
<p>"No, no, it shall be all yours." Then I went on, "I think I know what your
poor aunt wanted to say. She wanted to give directions that her papers
should be buried with her."</p>
<p>Miss Tita appeared to consider this suggestion for a moment; after which
she declared, with striking decision, "Oh no, she wouldn't have thought
that safe!"</p>
<p>"It seems to me nothing could be safer."</p>
<p>"She had an idea that when people want to publish they are capable—"
And she paused, blushing.</p>
<p>"Of violating a tomb? Mercy on us, what must she have thought of me!"</p>
<p>"She was not just, she was not generous!" Miss Tita cried with sudden
passion.</p>
<p>The light that had come into my mind a moment before increased. "Ah, don't
say that, for we ARE a dreadful race." Then I pursued, "If she left a
will, that may give you some idea."</p>
<p>"I have found nothing of the sort—she destroyed it. She was very
fond of me," Miss Tita added incongruously. "She wanted me to be happy.
And if any person should be kind to me—she wanted to speak of that."</p>
<p>I was almost awestricken at the astuteness with which the good lady found
herself inspired, transparent astuteness as it was and sewn, as the phrase
is, with white thread. "Depend upon it she didn't want to make any
provision that would be agreeable to me."</p>
<p>"No, not to you but to me. She knew I should like it if you could carry
out your idea. Not because she cared for you but because she did think of
me," Miss Tita went on with her unexpected, persuasive volubility. "You
could see them—you could use them." She stopped, seeing that I
perceived the sense of that conditional—stopped long enough for me
to give some sign which I did not give. She must have been conscious,
however, that though my face showed the greatest embarrassment that was
ever painted on a human countenance it was not set as a stone, it was also
full of compassion. It was a comfort to me a long time afterward to
consider that she could not have seen in me the smallest symptom of
disrespect. "I don't know what to do; I'm too tormented, I'm too ashamed!"
she continued with vehemence. Then turning away from me and burying her
face in her hands she burst into a flood of tears. If she did not know
what to do it may be imagined whether I did any better. I stood there
dumb, watching her while her sobs resounded in the great empty hall. In a
moment she was facing me again, with her streaming eyes. "I would give you
everything—and she would understand, where she is—she would
forgive me!"</p>
<p>"Ah, Miss Tita—ah, Miss Tita," I stammered, for all reply. I did not
know what to do, as I say, but at a venture I made a wild, vague movement
in consequence of which I found myself at the door. I remember standing
there and saying, "It wouldn't do—it wouldn't do!" pensively,
awkwardly, grotesquely, while I looked away to the opposite end of the
sala as if there were a beautiful view there. The next thing I remember is
that I was downstairs and out of the house. My gondola was there and my
gondolier, reclining on the cushions, sprang up as soon as he saw me. I
jumped in and to his usual "Dove commanda?" I replied, in a tone that made
him stare, "Anywhere, anywhere; out into the lagoon!"</p>
<p>He rowed me away and I sat there prostrate, groaning softly to myself,
with my hat pulled over my face. What in the name of the preposterous did
she mean if she did not mean to offer me her hand? That was the price—that
was the price! And did she think I wanted it, poor deluded, infatuated,
extravagant lady? My gondolier, behind me, must have seen my ears red as I
wondered, sitting there under the fluttering tenda, with my hidden face,
noticing nothing as we passed—wondered whether her delusion, her
infatuation had been my own reckless work. Did she think I had made love
to her, even to get the papers? I had not, I had not; I repeated that over
to myself for an hour, for two hours, till I was wearied if not convinced.
I don't know where my gondolier took me; we floated aimlessly about in the
lagoon, with slow, rare strokes. At last I became conscious that we were
near the Lido, far up, on the right hand, as you turn your back to Venice,
and I made him put me ashore. I wanted to walk, to move, to shed some of
my bewilderment. I crossed the narrow strip and got to the sea beach—I
took my way toward Malamocco. But presently I flung myself down again on
the warm sand, in the breeze, on the coarse dry grass. It took it out of
me to think I had been so much at fault, that I had unwittingly but
nonetheless deplorably trifled. But I had not given her cause—distinctly
I had not. I had said to Mrs. Prest that I would make love to her; but it
had been a joke without consequences and I had never said it to Tita
Bordereau. I had been as kind as possible, because I really liked her; but
since when had that become a crime where a woman of such an age and such
an appearance was concerned? I am far from remembering clearly the
succession of events and feelings during this long day of confusion, which
I spent entirely in wandering about, without going home, until late at
night; it only comes back to me that there were moments when I pacified my
conscience and others when I lashed it into pain. I did not laugh all day—that
I do recollect; the case, however it might have struck others, seemed to
me so little amusing. It would have been better perhaps for me to feel the
comic side of it. At any rate, whether I had given cause or not it went
without saying that I could not pay the price. I could not accept. I could
not, for a bundle of tattered papers, marry a ridiculous, pathetic,
provincial old woman. It was a proof that she did not think the idea would
come to me, her having determined to suggest it herself in that practical,
argumentative, heroic way, in which the timidity however had been so much
more striking than the boldness that her reasons appeared to come first
and her feelings afterward.</p>
<p>As the day went on I grew to wish that I had never heard of Aspern's
relics, and I cursed the extravagant curiosity that had put John Cumnor on
the scent of them. We had more than enough material without them, and my
predicament was the just punishment of that most fatal of human follies,
our not having known when to stop. It was very well to say it was no
predicament, that the way out was simple, that I had only to leave Venice
by the first train in the morning, after writing a note to Miss Tita, to
be placed in her hand as soon as I got clear of the house; for it was a
strong sign that I was embarrassed that when I tried to make up the note
in my mind in advance (I would put it on paper as soon as I got home,
before going to bed), I could not think of anything but "How can I thank
you for the rare confidence you have placed in me?" That would never do;
it sounded exactly as if an acceptance were to follow. Of course I might
go away without writing a word, but that would be brutal and my idea was
still to exclude brutal solutions. As my confusion cooled I was lost in
wonder at the importance I had attached to Miss Bordereau's crumpled
scraps; the thought of them became odious to me, and I was as vexed with
the old witch for the superstition that had prevented her from destroying
them as I was with myself for having already spent more money than I could
afford in attempting to control their fate. I forget what I did, where I
went after leaving the Lido and at what hour or with what recovery of
composure I made my way back to my boat. I only know that in the
afternoon, when the air was aglow with the sunset, I was standing before
the church of Saints John and Paul and looking up at the small
square-jawed face of Bartolommeo Colleoni, the terrible condottiere who
sits so sturdily astride of his huge bronze horse, on the high pedestal on
which Venetian gratitude maintains him. The statue is incomparable, the
finest of all mounted figures, unless that of Marcus Aurelius, who rides
benignant before the Roman Capitol, be finer: but I was not thinking of
that; I only found myself staring at the triumphant captain as if he had
an oracle on his lips. The western light shines into all his grimness at
that hour and makes it wonderfully personal. But he continued to look far
over my head, at the red immersion of another day—he had seen so
many go down into the lagoon through the centuries—and if he were
thinking of battles and stratagems they were of a different quality from
any I had to tell him of. He could not direct me what to do, gaze up at
him as I might. Was it before this or after that I wandered about for an
hour in the small canals, to the continued stupefaction of my gondolier,
who had never seen me so restless and yet so void of a purpose and could
extract from me no order but "Go anywhere—everywhere—all over
the place"? He reminded me that I had not lunched and expressed therefore
respectfully the hope that I would dine earlier. He had had long periods
of leisure during the day, when I had left the boat and rambled, so that I
was not obliged to consider him, and I told him that that day, for a
change, I would touch no meat. It was an effect of poor Miss Tita's
proposal, not altogether auspicious, that I had quite lost my appetite. I
don't know why it happened that on this occasion I was more than ever
struck with that queer air of sociability, of cousinship and family life,
which makes up half the expression of Venice. Without streets and
vehicles, the uproar of wheels, the brutality of horses, and with its
little winding ways where people crowd together, where voices sound as in
the corridors of a house, where the human step circulates as if it skirted
the angles of furniture and shoes never wear out, the place has the
character of an immense collective apartment, in which Piazza San Marco is
the most ornamented corner and palaces and churches, for the rest, play
the part of great divans of repose, tables of entertainment, expanses of
decoration. And somehow the splendid common domicile, familiar, domestic,
and resonant, also resembles a theater, with actors clicking over bridges
and, in straggling processions, tripping along fondamentas. As you sit in
your gondola the footways that in certain parts edge the canals assume to
the eye the importance of a stage, meeting it at the same angle, and the
Venetian figures, moving to and fro against the battered scenery of their
little houses of comedy, strike you as members of an endless dramatic
troupe.</p>
<p>I went to bed that night very tired, without being able to compose a
letter to Miss Tita. Was this failure the reason why I became conscious
the next morning as soon as I awoke of a determination to see the poor
lady again the first moment she would receive me? That had something to do
with it, but what had still more was the fact that during my sleep a very
odd revulsion had taken place in my spirit. I found myself aware of this
almost as soon as I opened my eyes; it made me jump out of my bed with the
movement of a man who remembers that he has left the house door ajar or a
candle burning under a shelf. Was I still in time to save my goods? That
question was in my heart; for what had now come to pass was that in the
unconscious cerebration of sleep I had swung back to a passionate
appreciation of Miss Bordereau's papers. They were now more precious than
ever, and a kind of ferocity had come into my desire to possess them. The
condition Miss Tita had attached to the possession of them no longer
appeared an obstacle worth thinking of, and for an hour, that morning, my
repentant imagination brushed it aside. It was absurd that I should be
able to invent nothing; absurd to renounce so easily and turn away
helpless from the idea that the only way to get hold of the papers was to
unite myself to her for life. I would not unite myself and yet I would
have them. I must add that by the time I sent down to ask if she would see
me I had invented no alternative, though to do so I had had all the time
that I was dressing. This failure was humiliating, yet what could the
alternative be? Miss Tita sent back word that I might come; and as I
descended the stairs and crossed the sala to her door—this time she
received me in her aunt's forlorn parlor—I hoped she would not think
my errand was to tell her I accepted her hand. She certainly would have
made the day before the reflection that I declined it.</p>
<p>As soon as I came into the room I saw that she had drawn this inference,
but I also saw something which had not been in my forecast. Poor Miss
Tita's sense of her failure had produced an extraordinary alteration in
her, but I had been too full of my literary concupiscence to think of
that. Now I perceived it; I can scarcely tell how it startled me. She
stood in the middle of the room with a face of mildness bent upon me, and
her look of forgiveness, of absolution, made her angelic. It beautified
her; she was younger; she was not a ridiculous old woman. This optical
trick gave her a sort of phantasmagoric brightness, and while I was still
the victim of it I heard a whisper somewhere in the depths of my
conscience: "Why not, after all—why not?" It seemed to me I was
ready to pay the price. Still more distinctly however than the whisper I
heard Miss Tita's own voice. I was so struck with the different effect she
made upon me that at first I was not clearly aware of what she was saying;
then I perceived she had bade me goodbye—she said something about
hoping I should be very happy.</p>
<p>"Goodbye—goodbye?" I repeated with an inflection interrogative and
probably foolish.</p>
<p>I saw she did not feel the interrogation, she only heard the words; she
had strung herself up to accepting our separation and they fell upon her
ear as a proof. "Are you going today?" she asked. "But it doesn't matter,
for whenever you go I shall not see you again. I don't want to." And she
smiled strangely, with an infinite gentleness. She had never doubted that
I had left her the day before in horror. How could she, since I had not
come back before night to contradict, even as a simple form, such an idea?
And now she had the force of soul—Miss Tita with force of soul was a
new conception—to smile at me in her humiliation.</p>
<p>"What shall you do—where shall you go?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know. I have done the great thing. I have destroyed the
papers."</p>
<p>"Destroyed them?" I faltered.</p>
<p>"Yes; what was I to keep them for? I burned them last night, one by one,
in the kitchen."</p>
<p>"One by one?" I repeated, mechanically.</p>
<p>"It took a long time—there were so many." The room seemed to go
round me as she said this, and a real darkness for a moment descended upon
my eyes. When it passed Miss Tita was there still, but the transfiguration
was over and she had changed back to a plain, dingy, elderly person. It
was in this character she spoke as she said, "I can't stay with you
longer, I can't;" and it was in this character that she turned her back
upon me, as I had turned mine upon her twenty-four hours before, and moved
to the door of her room. Here she did what I had not done when I quitted
her—she paused long enough to give me one look. I have never
forgotten it and I sometimes still suffer from it, though it was not
resentful. No, there was no resentment, nothing hard or vindictive in poor
Miss Tita; for when, later, I sent her in exchange for the portrait of
Jeffrey Aspern a larger sum of money than I had hoped to be able to gather
for her, writing to her that I had sold the picture, she kept it with
thanks; she never sent it back. I wrote to her that I had sold the
picture, but I admitted to Mrs. Prest, at the time (I met her in London,
in the autumn), that it hangs above my writing table. When I look at it my
chagrin at the loss of the letters becomes almost intolerable.</p>
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