<h3><SPAN name="linkC2HCH0036" id="linkC2HCH0036"></SPAN> Chapter 36. The Carnival at Rome</h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hen Franz recovered his
senses, he saw Albert drinking a glass of water, of which, to judge from his
pallor, he stood in great need; and the count, who was assuming his masquerade
costume. He glanced mechanically towards the piazza—the scene was wholly
changed; scaffold, executioners, victims, all had disappeared; only the people
remained, full of noise and excitement. The bell of Monte Citorio, which only
sounds on the pope’s decease and the opening of the Carnival, was ringing
a joyous peal.</p>
<p>“Well,” asked he of the count, “what has, then,
happened?”</p>
<p>“Nothing,” replied the count; “only, as you see, the Carnival
has commenced. Make haste and dress yourself.”</p>
<p>“In fact,” said Franz, “this horrible scene has passed away
like a dream.”</p>
<p>“It is but a dream, a nightmare, that has disturbed you.”</p>
<p>“Yes, that I have suffered; but the culprit?”</p>
<p>“That is a dream also; only he has remained asleep, while you have
awakened; and who knows which of you is the most fortunate?”</p>
<p>“But Peppino—what has become of him?”</p>
<p>“Peppino is a lad of sense, who, unlike most men, who are happy in
proportion as they are noticed, was delighted to see that the general attention
was directed towards his companion. He profited by this distraction to slip
away among the crowd, without even thanking the worthy priests who accompanied
him. Decidedly man is an ungrateful and egotistical animal. But dress yourself;
see, M. de Morcerf sets you the example.”</p>
<p>Albert was drawing on the satin pantaloon over his black trousers and varnished
boots.</p>
<p>“Well, Albert,” said Franz, “do you feel much inclined to
join the revels? Come, answer frankly.”</p>
<p>“<i>Ma foi</i>, no,” returned Albert. “But I am really glad
to have seen such a sight; and I understand what the count said—that when
you have once habituated yourself to a similar spectacle, it is the only one
that causes you any emotion.”</p>
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<p>“Without reflecting that this is the only moment in which you can study
character,” said the count; “on the steps of the scaffold death
tears off the mask that has been worn through life, and the real visage is
disclosed. It must be allowed that Andrea was not very handsome, the hideous
scoundrel! Come, dress yourselves, gentlemen, dress yourselves.”</p>
<p>Franz felt it would be ridiculous not to follow his two companions’
example. He assumed his costume, and fastened on the mask that scarcely
equalled the pallor of his own face. Their toilet finished, they descended; the
carriage awaited them at the door, filled with sweetmeats and bouquets. They
fell into the line of carriages.</p>
<p>It is difficult to form an idea of the perfect change that had taken place.
Instead of the spectacle of gloomy and silent death, the Piazza del Popolo
presented a spectacle of gay and noisy mirth and revelry. A crowd of masks
flowed in from all sides, emerging from the doors, descending from the windows.
From every street and every corner drove carriages filled with clowns,
harlequins, dominoes, mummers, pantomimists, Transteverins, knights, and
peasants, screaming, fighting, gesticulating, throwing eggs filled with flour,
confetti, nosegays, attacking, with their sarcasms and their missiles, friends
and foes, companions and strangers, indiscriminately, and no one took offence,
or did anything but laugh.</p>
<p>Franz and Albert were like men who, to drive away a violent sorrow, have
recourse to wine, and who, as they drink and become intoxicated, feel a thick
veil drawn between the past and the present. They saw, or rather continued to
see, the image of what they had witnessed; but little by little the general
vertigo seized them, and they felt themselves obliged to take part in the noise
and confusion.</p>
<p>A handful of confetti that came from a neighboring carriage, and which, while
it covered Morcerf and his two companions with dust, pricked his neck and that
portion of his face uncovered by his mask like a hundred pins, incited him to
join in the general combat, in which all the masks around him were engaged. He
rose in his turn, and seizing handfuls of confetti and sweetmeats, with which
the carriage was filled, cast them with all the force and skill he was master
of.</p>
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<p>The strife had fairly begun, and the recollection of what they had seen half an
hour before was gradually effaced from the young men’s minds, so much
were they occupied by the gay and glittering procession they now beheld.</p>
<p>As for the Count of Monte Cristo, he had never for an instant shown any
appearance of having been moved. Imagine the large and splendid Corso, bordered
from one end to the other with lofty palaces, with their balconies hung with
carpets, and their windows with flags. At these balconies are three hundred
thousand spectators—Romans, Italians, strangers from all parts of the
world, the united aristocracy of birth, wealth, and genius. Lovely women,
yielding to the influence of the scene, bend over their balconies, or lean from
their windows, and shower down confetti, which are returned by bouquets; the
air seems darkened with the falling confetti and flying flowers. In the streets
the lively crowd is dressed in the most fantastic costumes—gigantic
cabbages walk gravely about, buffaloes’ heads bellow from men’s
shoulders, dogs walk on their hind legs; in the midst of all this a mask is
lifted, and, as in Callot’s Temptation of St. Anthony, a lovely face is
exhibited, which we would fain follow, but from which we are separated by
troops of fiends. This will give a faint idea of the Carnival at Rome.</p>
<p>At the second turn, the count stopped the carriage, and requested permission to
withdraw, leaving the vehicle at their disposal. Franz looked up—they
were opposite the Rospoli Palace. At the centre window, the one hung with white
damask with a red cross, was a blue domino, beneath which Franz’s
imagination easily pictured the beautiful Greek of the Argentina.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen,” said the count, springing out, “when you are
tired of being actors, and wish to become spectators of this scene, you know
you have places at my windows. In the meantime, dispose of my coachman, my
carriage, and my servants.”</p>
<p>We have forgotten to mention, that the count’s coachman was attired in a
bear-skin, exactly resembling Odry’s in <i>The Bear and the Pasha</i>;
and the two footmen behind were dressed up as green monkeys, with spring masks,
with which they made grimaces at everyone who passed.</p>
<p>Franz thanked the count for his attention. As for Albert, he was busily
occupied throwing bouquets at a carriage full of Roman peasants that was
passing near him. Unfortunately for him, the line of carriages moved on again,
and while he descended the Piazza del Popolo, the other ascended towards the
Palazzo di Venezia.</p>
<p>“Ah, my dear fellow,” said he to Franz; “you did not
see?”</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>“There,—that calash filled with Roman peasants.”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Well, I am convinced they are all charming women.”</p>
<p>“How unfortunate that you were masked, Albert,” said Franz;
“here was an opportunity of making up for past disappointments.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” replied he, half laughing, half serious; “I hope the
Carnival will not pass without some amends in one shape or the other.”</p>
<p>But, in spite of Albert’s hope, the day passed unmarked by any incident,
excepting two or three encounters with the carriage full of Roman peasants. At
one of these encounters, accidentally or purposely, Albert’s mask fell
off. He instantly rose and cast the remainder of the bouquets into the
carriage. Doubtless one of the charming females Albert had detected beneath
their coquettish disguise was touched by his gallantry; for, as the carriage of
the two friends passed her, she threw a bunch of violets. Albert seized it, and
as Franz had no reason to suppose it was meant for him, he suffered Albert to
retain it. Albert placed it in his button-hole, and the carriage went
triumphantly on.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Franz to him; “there is the beginning of an
adventure.”</p>
<p>“Laugh if you please—I really think so. So I will not abandon this
bouquet.”</p>
<p>“<i>Pardieu</i>,” returned Franz, laughing, “in token of your
ingratitude.”</p>
<p>The jest, however, soon appeared to become earnest; for when Albert and Franz
again encountered the carriage with the <i>contadini</i>, the one who had
thrown the violets to Albert, clapped her hands when she beheld them in his
button-hole.</p>
<p>“Bravo, bravo,” said Franz; “things go wonderfully. Shall I
leave you? Perhaps you would prefer being alone?”</p>
<p>“No,” replied he; “I will not be caught like a fool at a
first disclosure by a rendezvous under the clock, as they say at the
opera-balls. If the fair peasant wishes to carry matters any further, we shall
find her, or rather, she will find us tomorrow; then she will give me some sign
or other, and I shall know what I have to do.”</p>
<p>“On my word,” said Franz, “you are as wise as Nestor and
prudent as Ulysses, and your fair Circe must be very skilful or very powerful
if she succeed in changing you into a beast of any kind.”</p>
<p>Albert was right; the fair unknown had resolved, doubtless, to carry the
intrigue no farther; for although the young men made several more turns, they
did not again see the calash, which had turned up one of the neighboring
streets. Then they returned to the Rospoli Palace; but the count and the blue
domino had also disappeared; the two windows, hung with yellow damask, were
still occupied by the persons whom the count had invited.</p>
<p>At this moment the same bell that had proclaimed the beginning of the
mascherata sounded the retreat. The file on the Corso broke the line, and in a
second all the carriages had disappeared. Franz and Albert were opposite the
Via delle Muratte; the coachman, without saying a word, drove up it, passed
along the Piazza di Spagna and the Rospoli Palace and stopped at the door of
the hotel. Signor Pastrini came to the door to receive his guests.</p>
<p>Franz hastened to inquire after the count, and to express regret that he had
not returned in sufficient time; but Pastrini reassured him by saying that the
Count of Monte Cristo had ordered a second carriage for himself, and that it
had gone at four o’clock to fetch him from the Rospoli Palace.</p>
<p>The count had, moreover, charged him to offer the two friends the key of his
box at the Argentina. Franz questioned Albert as to his intentions; but Albert
had great projects to put into execution before going to the theatre; and
instead of making any answer, he inquired if Signor Pastrini could procure him
a tailor.</p>
<p>“A tailor,” said the host; “and for what?”</p>
<p>“To make us between now and tomorrow two Roman peasant costumes,”
returned Albert.</p>
<p>The host shook his head.</p>
<p>“To make you two costumes between now and tomorrow? I ask your
excellencies’ pardon, but this is quite a French demand; for the next
week you will not find a single tailor who would consent to sew six buttons on
a waistcoat if you paid him a crown a piece for each button.”</p>
<p>“Then I must give up the idea?”</p>
<p>“No; we have them ready-made. Leave all to me; and tomorrow, when you
awake, you shall find a collection of costumes with which you will be
satisfied.”</p>
<p>“My dear Albert,” said Franz, “leave all to our host; he has
already proved himself full of resources; let us dine quietly, and afterwards
go and see <i>l’Italienne à Alger!</i></p>
<p>“Agreed,” returned Albert; “but remember, Signor Pastrini,
that both my friend and myself attach the greatest importance to having
tomorrow the costumes we have asked for.”</p>
<p>The host again assured them they might rely on him, and that their wishes
should be attended to; upon which Franz and Albert mounted to their apartments,
and proceeded to disencumber themselves of their costumes. Albert, as he took
off his dress, carefully preserved the bunch of violets; it was his token
reserved for the morrow.</p>
<p>The two friends sat down to table; but they could not refrain from remarking
the difference between the Count of Monte Cristo’s table and that of
Signor Pastrini. Truth compelled Franz, in spite of the dislike he seemed to
have taken to the count, to confess that the advantage was not on
Pastrini’s side. During dessert, the servant inquired at what time they
wished for the carriage. Albert and Franz looked at each other, fearing really
to abuse the count’s kindness. The servant understood them.</p>
<p>“His excellency the Count of Monte Cristo had,” he said,
“given positive orders that the carriage was to remain at their
lordships’ orders all day, and they could therefore dispose of it without
fear of indiscretion.”</p>
<p>They resolved to profit by the count’s courtesy, and ordered the horses
to be harnessed, while they substituted evening dress for that which they had
on, and which was somewhat the worse for the numerous combats they had
sustained.</p>
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<p>This precaution taken, they went to the theatre, and installed themselves in
the count’s box. During the first act, the Countess G——
entered. Her first look was at the box where she had seen the count the
previous evening, so that she perceived Franz and Albert in the place of the
very person concerning whom she had expressed so strange an opinion to Franz.
Her opera-glass was so fixedly directed towards them, that Franz saw it would
be cruel not to satisfy her curiosity; and, availing himself of one of the
privileges of the spectators of the Italian theatres, who use their boxes to
hold receptions, the two friends went to pay their respects to the countess.
Scarcely had they entered, when she motioned to Franz to assume the seat of
honor. Albert, in his turn, sat behind.</p>
<p>“Well,” said she, hardly giving Franz time to sit down, “it
seems you have nothing better to do than to make the acquaintance of this new
Lord Ruthven, and you are already the best friends in the world.”</p>
<p>“Without being so far advanced as that, my dear countess,” returned
Franz, “I cannot deny that we have abused his good nature all day.”</p>
<p>“All day?”</p>
<p>“Yes; this morning we breakfasted with him; we rode in his carriage all
day, and now we have taken possession of his box.”</p>
<p>“You know him, then?”</p>
<p>“Yes, and no.”</p>
<p>“How so?”</p>
<p>“It is a long story.”</p>
<p>“Tell it to me.”</p>
<p>“It would frighten you too much.”</p>
<p>“So much the more reason.”</p>
<p>“At least wait until the story has a conclusion.”</p>
<p>“Very well; I prefer complete histories; but tell me how you made his
acquaintance? Did anyone introduce you to him?”</p>
<p>“No; it was he who introduced himself to us.”</p>
<p>“When?”</p>
<p>“Last night, after we left you.”</p>
<p>“Through what medium?”</p>
<p>“The very prosaic one of our landlord.”</p>
<p>“He is staying, then, at the Hôtel de Londres with you?”</p>
<p>“Not only in the same hotel, but on the same floor.”</p>
<p>“What is his name; for, of course, you know?”</p>
<p>“The Count of Monte Cristo.”</p>
<p>“That is not a family name?”</p>
<p>“No, it is the name of the island he has purchased.”</p>
<p>“And he is a count?”</p>
<p>“A Tuscan count.”</p>
<p>“Well, we must put up with that,” said the countess, who was
herself from one of the oldest Venetian families. “What sort of a man is
he?”</p>
<p>“Ask the Vicomte de Morcerf.”</p>
<p>“You hear, M. de Morcerf, I am referred to you,” said the countess.</p>
<p>“We should be very hard to please, madam,” returned Albert,
“did we not think him delightful. A friend of ten years’ standing
could not have done more for us, or with a more perfect courtesy.”</p>
<p>“Come,” observed the countess, smiling, “I see my vampire is
only some millionaire, who has taken the appearance of Lara in order to avoid
being confounded with M. de Rothschild; and you have seen her?”</p>
<p>“Her?”</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/20183m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="20183m " /><br/></div>
<p>“The beautiful Greek of yesterday.”</p>
<p>“No; we heard, I think, the sound of her <i>guzla</i>, but she remained
perfectly invisible.”</p>
<p>“When you say invisible,” interrupted Albert, “it is only to
keep up the mystery; for whom do you take the blue domino at the window with
the white curtains?”</p>
<p>“Where was this window with white hangings?” asked the countess.</p>
<p>“At the Rospoli Palace.”</p>
<p>“The count had three windows at the Rospoli Palace?”</p>
<p>“Yes. Did you pass through the Corso?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Well, did you notice two windows hung with yellow damask, and one with
white damask with a red cross? Those were the count’s windows.”</p>
<p>“Why, he must be a nabob. Do you know what those three windows were
worth?”</p>
<p>“Two or three hundred Roman crowns?”</p>
<p>“Two or three thousand.”</p>
<p>“The deuce!”</p>
<p>“Does his island produce him such a revenue?”</p>
<p>“It does not bring him a bajocco.”</p>
<p>“Then why did he purchase it?”</p>
<p>“For a whim.”</p>
<p>“He is an original, then?”</p>
<p>“In reality,” observed Albert, “he seemed to me somewhat
eccentric; were he at Paris, and a frequenter of the theatres, I should say he
was a poor devil literally mad. This morning he made two or three exits worthy
of Didier or Anthony.”</p>
<p>At this moment a fresh visitor entered, and, according to custom, Franz gave up
his seat to him. This circumstance had, moreover, the effect of changing the
conversation; an hour afterwards the two friends returned to their hotel.</p>
<p>Signor Pastrini had already set about procuring their disguises for the morrow;
and he assured them that they would be perfectly satisfied. The next morning,
at nine o’clock, he entered Franz’s room, followed by a tailor, who
had eight or ten Roman peasant costumes on his arm; they selected two exactly
alike, and charged the tailor to sew on each of their hats about twenty yards
of ribbon, and to procure them two of the long silk sashes of different colors
with which the lower orders decorate themselves on fête days.</p>
<p>Albert was impatient to see how he looked in his new dress—a jacket and
breeches of blue velvet, silk stockings with clocks, shoes with buckles, and a
silk waistcoat. This picturesque attire set him off to great advantage; and
when he had bound the scarf around his waist, and when his hat, placed
coquettishly on one side, let fall on his shoulder a stream of ribbons, Franz
was forced to confess that costume has much to do with the physical superiority
we accord to certain nations. The Turks used to be so picturesque with their
long and flowing robes, but are they not now hideous with their blue frocks
buttoned up to the chin, and their red caps, which make them look like a bottle
of wine with a red seal? Franz complimented Albert, who looked at himself in
the glass with an unequivocal smile of satisfaction. They were thus engaged
when the Count of Monte Cristo entered.</p>
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<p>“Gentlemen,” said he, “although a companion is agreeable,
perfect freedom is sometimes still more agreeable. I come to say that today,
and for the remainder of the Carnival, I leave the carriage entirely at your
disposal. The host will tell you I have three or four more, so that you will
not inconvenience me in any way. Make use of it, I pray you, for your pleasure
or your business.”</p>
<p>The young men wished to decline, but they could find no good reason for
refusing an offer which was so agreeable to them. The Count of Monte Cristo
remained a quarter of an hour with them, conversing on all subjects with the
greatest ease. He was, as we have already said, perfectly well acquainted with
the literature of all countries. A glance at the walls of his salon proved to
Franz and Albert that he was a connoisseur of pictures. A few words he let fall
showed them that he was no stranger to the sciences, and he seemed much
occupied with chemistry. The two friends did not venture to return the count
the breakfast he had given them; it would have been too absurd to offer him in
exchange for his excellent table the very inferior one of Signor Pastrini. They
told him so frankly, and he received their excuses with the air of a man who
appreciated their delicacy. Albert was charmed with the count’s manners,
and he was only prevented from recognizing him for a perfect gentleman by
reason of his varied knowledge.</p>
<p>The permission to do what he liked with the carriage pleased him above all, for
the fair peasants had appeared in a most elegant carriage the preceding
evening, and Albert was not sorry to be upon an equal footing with them. At
half-past one they descended, the coachman and footman had put on their livery
over their disguises, which gave them a more ridiculous appearance than ever,
and which gained them the applause of Franz and Albert. Albert had fastened the
faded bunch of violets to his button-hole. At the first sound of the bell they
hastened into the Corso by the Via Vittoria.</p>
<p>At the second turn, a bunch of fresh violets, thrown from a carriage filled
with harlequins, indicated to Albert that, like himself and his friend, the
peasants had changed their costume also; and whether it was the result of
chance, or whether a similar feeling had possessed them both, while he had
donned their costume, they had assumed his.</p>
<p>Albert placed the fresh bouquet in his button-hole, but he kept the faded one
in his hand; and when he again met the calash, he raised it to his lips, an
action which seemed greatly to amuse not only the fair lady who had thrown it,
but her joyous companions also. The day was as gay as the preceding one,
perhaps even more animated and noisy; the count appeared for an instant at his
window, but when they again passed he had disappeared. It is almost needless to
say that the flirtation between Albert and the fair peasant continued all day.</p>
<p>In the evening, on his return, Franz found a letter from the embassy, informing
him that he would have the honor of being received by his holiness the next
day. At each previous visit he had made to Rome, he had solicited and obtained
the same favor; and incited as much by a religious feeling as by gratitude, he
was unwilling to quit the capital of the Christian world without laying his
respectful homage at the feet of one of St. Peter’s successors who has
set the rare example of all the virtues. He did not then think of the Carnival,
for in spite of his condescension and touching kindness, one cannot incline
one’s self without awe before the venerable and noble old man called
Gregory XVI.</p>
<p>On his return from the Vatican, Franz carefully avoided the Corso; he brought
away with him a treasure of pious thoughts, to which the mad gayety of the
maskers would have been profanation.</p>
<p>At ten minutes past five Albert entered overjoyed. The harlequin had reassumed
her peasant’s costume, and as she passed she raised her mask. She was
charming. Franz congratulated Albert, who received his congratulations with the
air of a man conscious that they are merited. He had recognized by certain
unmistakable signs, that his fair <i>incognita</i> belonged to the aristocracy.
He had made up his mind to write to her the next day.</p>
<p>Franz remarked, while he gave these details, that Albert seemed to have
something to ask of him, but that he was unwilling to ask it. He insisted upon
it, declaring beforehand that he was willing to make any sacrifice the other
wished.</p>
<p>Albert let himself be pressed just as long as friendship required, and then
avowed to Franz that he would do him a great favor by allowing him to occupy
the carriage alone the next day. Albert attributed to Franz’s absence the
extreme kindness of the fair peasant in raising her mask. Franz was not
sufficiently egotistical to stop Albert in the middle of an adventure that
promised to prove so agreeable to his curiosity and so flattering to his
vanity. He felt assured that the perfect indiscretion of his friend would duly
inform him of all that happened; and as, during three years that he had
travelled all over Italy, a similar piece of good fortune had never fallen to
his share, Franz was by no means sorry to learn how to act on such an occasion.
He therefore promised Albert that he would content himself the morrow with
witnessing the Carnival from the windows of the Rospoli Palace.</p>
<p>The next morning he saw Albert pass and repass, holding an enormous bouquet,
which he doubtless meant to make the bearer of his amorous epistle. This belief
was changed into certainty when Franz saw the bouquet (conspicuous by a circle
of white camellias) in the hand of a charming harlequin dressed in rose-colored
satin.</p>
<p>The evening was no longer joy, but delirium. Albert nothing doubted but that
the fair unknown would reply in the same manner. Franz anticipated his wishes
by saying that the noise fatigued him, and that he should pass the next day in
writing and looking over his journal. Albert was not deceived, for the next
evening Franz saw him enter triumphantly shaking a folded paper which he held
by one corner.</p>
<p>“Well,” said he, “was I mistaken?”</p>
<p>“She has answered you!” cried Franz.</p>
<p>“Read.”</p>
<p>This word was pronounced in a manner impossible to describe. Franz took the
letter, and read:</p>
<p>“Tuesday evening, at seven o’clock, descend from your carriage
opposite the Via dei Pontefici, and follow the Roman peasant who snatches your
torch from you. When you arrive at the first step of the church of San Giacomo,
be sure to fasten a knot of rose-colored ribbons to the shoulder of your
harlequin costume, in order that you may be recognized. Until then you will not
see me. —Constancy and Discretion.”</p>
<p>“Well,” asked he, when Franz had finished, “what do you think
of that?”</p>
<p>“I think that the adventure is assuming a very agreeable
appearance.”</p>
<p>“I think so, also,” replied Albert; “and I very much fear you
will go alone to the Duke of Bracciano’s ball.”</p>
<p>Franz and Albert had received that morning an invitation from the celebrated
Roman banker.</p>
<p>“Take care, Albert,” said Franz. “All the nobility of Rome
will be present, and if your fair <i>incognita</i> belong to the higher class
of society, she must go there.”</p>
<p>“Whether she goes there or not, my opinion is still the same,”
returned Albert. “You have read the letter?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“You know how imperfectly the women of the <i>mezzo cito</i> are educated
in Italy?” (This is the name of the lower class.)</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Well, read the letter again. Look at the writing, and find if you can,
any blemish in the language or orthography.” The writing was, in reality,
charming, and the orthography irreproachable.</p>
<p>“You are born to good fortune,” said Franz, as he returned the
letter.</p>
<p>“Laugh as much as you will,” replied Albert, “I am in
love.”</p>
<p>“You alarm me,” cried Franz. “I see that I shall not only go
alone to the Duke of Bracciano’s, but also return to Florence
alone.”</p>
<p>“If my unknown be as amiable as she is beautiful,” said Albert,
“I shall fix myself at Rome for six weeks, at least. I adore Rome, and I
have always had a great taste for archæology.”</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/20189m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="20189m " /><br/></div>
<p>“Come, two or three more such adventures, and I do not despair of seeing
you a member of the Academy.”</p>
<p>Doubtless Albert was about to discuss seriously his right to the academic chair
when they were informed that dinner was ready. Albert’s love had not
taken away his appetite. He hastened with Franz to seat himself, free to
recommence the discussion after dinner. After dinner, the Count of Monte Cristo
was announced. They had not seen him for two days. Signor Pastrini informed
them that business had called him to Civita Vecchia. He had started the
previous evening, and had only returned an hour since. He was charming. Whether
he kept a watch over himself, or whether by accident he did not sound the
acrimonious chords that in other circumstances had been touched, he was tonight
like everybody else.</p>
<p>The man was an enigma to Franz. The count must feel sure that Franz recognized
him; and yet he had not let fall a single word indicating any previous
acquaintance between them. On his side, however great Franz’s desire was
to allude to their former interview, the fear of being disagreeable to the man
who had loaded him and his friend with kindness prevented him from mentioning
it.</p>
<p>The count had learned that the two friends had sent to secure a box at the
Argentina Theatre, and were told they were all let. In consequence, he brought
them the key of his own—at least such was the apparent motive of his
visit. Franz and Albert made some difficulty, alleging their fear of depriving
him of it; but the count replied that, as he was going to the Palli Theatre,
the box at the Argentina Theatre would be lost if they did not profit by it.
This assurance determined the two friends to accept it.</p>
<p>Franz had by degrees become accustomed to the count’s pallor, which had
so forcibly struck him at their first meeting. He could not refrain from
admiring the severe beauty of his features, the only defect, or rather the
principal quality of which was the pallor. Truly, a Byronic hero! Franz could
not, we will not say see him, but even think of him without imagining his stern
head upon Manfred’s shoulders, or beneath Lara’s helmet. His
forehead was marked with the line that indicates the constant presence of
bitter thoughts; he had the fiery eyes that seem to penetrate to the very soul,
and the haughty and disdainful upper lip that gives to the words it utters a
peculiar character that impresses them on the minds of those to whom they are
addressed.</p>
<p>The count was no longer young. He was at least forty; and yet it was easy to
understand that he was formed to rule the young men with whom he associated at
present. And, to complete his resemblance with the fantastic heroes of the
English poet, the count seemed to have the power of fascination. Albert was
constantly expatiating on their good fortune in meeting such a man. Franz was
less enthusiastic; but the count exercised over him also the ascendency a
strong mind always acquires over a mind less domineering. He thought several
times of the project the count had of visiting Paris; and he had no doubt but
that, with his eccentric character, his characteristic face, and his colossal
fortune, he would produce a great effect there. And yet he did not wish to be
at Paris when the count was there.</p>
<p>The evening passed as evenings mostly pass at Italian theatres; that is, not in
listening to the music, but in paying visits and conversing. The Countess
G—— wished to revive the subject of the count, but Franz announced
he had something far newer to tell her, and, in spite of Albert’s
demonstrations of false modesty, he informed the countess of the great event
which had preoccupied them for the last three days. As similar intrigues are
not uncommon in Italy, if we may credit travellers, the comtess did not
manifest the least incredulity, but congratulated Albert on his success. They
promised, upon separating, to meet at the Duke of Bracciano’s ball, to
which all Rome was invited.</p>
<p>The heroine of the bouquet kept her word; she gave Albert no sign of her
existence the morrow or the day after.</p>
<p>At length Tuesday came, the last and most tumultuous day of the Carnival. On
Tuesday, the theatres open at ten o’clock in the morning, as Lent begins
after eight at night. On Tuesday, all those who through want of money, time, or
enthusiasm, have not been to see the Carnival before, mingle in the gayety, and
contribute to the noise and excitement. From two o’clock till five Franz
and Albert followed in the <i>fête</i>, exchanging handfuls of <i>confetti</i>
with the other carriages and the pedestrians, who crowded amongst the
horses’ feet and the carriage wheels without a single accident, a single
dispute, or a single fight.</p>
<p>The <i>fêtes</i> are veritable pleasure days to the Italians. The author of
this history, who has resided five or six years in Italy, does not recollect to
have ever seen a ceremony interrupted by one of those events so common in other
countries. Albert was triumphant in his harlequin costume. A knot of
rose-colored ribbons fell from his shoulder almost to the ground. In order that
there might be no confusion, Franz wore his peasant’s costume.</p>
<p>As the day advanced, the tumult became greater. There was not on the pavement,
in the carriages, at the windows, a single tongue that was silent, a single arm
that did not move. It was a human storm, made up of a thunder of cries, and a
hail of sweetmeats, flowers, eggs, oranges, and nosegays.</p>
<p>At three o’clock the sound of fireworks, let off on the Piazza del Popolo
and the Piazza di Venezia (heard with difficulty amid the din and confusion)
announced that the races were about to begin.</p>
<p>The races, like the <i>moccoli</i>, are one of the episodes peculiar to the
last days of the Carnival. At the sound of the fireworks the carriages
instantly broke ranks, and retired by the adjacent streets. All these
evolutions are executed with an inconceivable address and marvellous rapidity,
without the police interfering in the matter. The pedestrians ranged themselves
against the walls; then the trampling of horses and the clashing of steel were
heard. A detachment of carbineers, fifteen abreast, galloped up the Corso in
order to clear it for the <i>barberi</i>. When the detachment arrived at the
Piazza di Venezia, a second volley of fireworks was discharged, to announce
that the street was clear.</p>
<p>Almost instantly, in the midst of a tremendous and general outcry, seven or
eight horses, excited by the shouts of three hundred thousand spectators,
passed by like lightning. Then the Castle of Saint Angelo fired three cannon to
indicate that number three had won.</p>
<p>Immediately, without any other signal, the carriages moved on, flowing on
towards the Corso, down all the streets, like torrents pent up for a while,
which again flow into the parent river; and the immense stream again continued
its course between its two granite banks.</p>
<p>A new source of noise and movement was added to the crowd. The sellers of
<i>moccoletti</i> entered on the scene. The <i>moccoli</i>, or
<i>moccoletti</i>, are candles which vary in size from the pascal taper to the
rushlight, and which give to each actor in the great final scene of the
Carnival two very serious problems to grapple with,—first, how to keep
his own <i>moccoletto</i> alight; and secondly, how to extinguish the
<i>moccoletti</i> of others. The <i>moccoletto</i> is like life: man has found
but one means of transmitting it, and that one comes from God. But he has
discovered a thousand means of taking it away, and the devil has somewhat aided
him. The <i>moccoletto</i> is kindled by approaching it to a light. But who can
describe the thousand means of extinguishing the <i>moccoletto</i>?—the
gigantic bellows, the monstrous extinguishers, the superhuman fans. Everyone
hastened to purchase <i>moccoletti</i>—Franz and Albert among the rest.</p>
<p>The night was rapidly approaching; and already, at the cry of
“<i>Moccoletti</i>!” repeated by the shrill voices of a thousand
vendors, two or three stars began to burn among the crowd. It was a signal. At
the end of ten minutes fifty thousand lights glittered, descending from the
Palazzo di Venezia to the Piazza del Popolo, and mounting from the Piazza del
Popolo to the Palazzo di Venezia. It seemed like the <i>fête</i> of
Jack-o’-lanterns.</p>
<p>It is impossible to form any idea of it without having seen it. Suppose that
all the stars had descended from the sky and mingled in a wild dance on the
face of the earth; the whole accompanied by cries that were never heard in any
other part of the world. The <i>facchino</i> follows the prince, the
Transteverin the citizen, everyone blowing, extinguishing, relighting. Had old
Æolus appeared at this moment, he would have been proclaimed king of the
<i>moccoli</i>, and Aquilo the heir-presumptive to the throne.</p>
<p>This battle of folly and flame continued for two hours; the Corso was light as
day; the features of the spectators on the third and fourth stories were
visible.</p>
<p>Every five minutes Albert took out his watch; at length it pointed to seven.
The two friends were in the Via dei Pontefici. Albert sprang out, bearing his
<i>moccoletto</i> in his hand. Two or three masks strove to knock his
<i>moccoletto</i> out of his hand; but Albert, a first-rate pugilist, sent them
rolling in the street, one after the other, and continued his course towards
the church of San Giacomo.</p>
<p>The steps were crowded with masks, who strove to snatch each other’s
torches. Franz followed Albert with his eyes, and saw him mount the first step.</p>
<p>Instantly a mask, wearing the well-known costume of a peasant woman, snatched
his <i>moccoletto</i> from him without his offering any resistance. Franz was
too far off to hear what they said; but, without doubt, nothing hostile passed,
for he saw Albert disappear arm-in-arm with the peasant girl. He watched them
pass through the crowd for some time, but at length he lost sight of them in
the Via Macello.</p>
<p>Suddenly the bell that gives the signal for the end of the Carnival sounded,
and at the same instant all the <i>moccoletti</i> were extinguished as if by
enchantment. It seemed as though one immense blast of the wind had extinguished
everyone.</p>
<p>Franz found himself in utter darkness. No sound was audible save that of the
carriages that were carrying the maskers home; nothing was visible save a few
lights that burnt behind the windows.</p>
<p>The Carnival was over.</p>
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