Part 19 (1/2)
”'But what are we to do with the body?' asked several of the senators.
”'With the body?' repeated the old man; 'nothing is easier.' And drawing forth his dagger, he commenced cutting the corpse in pieces. When this dissection was finished, he said, 'Let each of you take one of these pieces, hide it under your robe, and then go and throw it into the Tiber. It is evening now, and by to-morrow morning the sea-monsters will have given a decent burial to the founder of Rome.'
”Now, Cencio, don't you think that, as regards your own end, and not being king of Rome, or son of a G.o.d, such a death would be very honorable to you who are nothing more than a miserable traitor?”
”For G.o.d's sake,” screamed the terrified agent, trembling like a child, ”I will do whatever you demand of me; but, for the love you bear your friends, your wives, your mothers, do not put me to such a cruel death.”
”Do you talk of a cruel death? Can there be a death too cruel for a spy--a traitor?” asked Muzio. ”Have you already forgotten,” he continued, ”vile reptile, selling the Roman youths to the priests at the Baths of Caracalla; and that they narrowly escaped being slaughtered by your infamy?”
Tears continued to roll from the coward's eyes, as Muzio continued: ”What about your arrival in Venice? What does it mean? Who sent you?
What did you come here for, dog?”
”I will tell all,” was the wretched man's reply-
”You had better tell all,” repeated Muzio, ”or we shall see with edge of knife whether you have concealed any thing in that malicious and treacherous carca.s.s of yours.”
”All, all!” cried Cencio like a maniac; and, as if forgetful of what he had to relate or overpowered by great fright, he appeared not to know how or where to begin.
”You are doubtless more prompt in your narration to the Holy Office, stammerer,” grumbled Gasparo.
”Begin!” shouted Orazio; and Attilio, in a stem voice, also cried ”Begin!” not having spoken until then.
A moment of death-like silence followed before Cencio commenced thus:-
”If the life of Prince T------is dear to you--”
”Prince T------, the brother of Irene,” exclaimed Orazio, clearing the table at one bound, and grasping the traitor by the throat.
Had Cencio been clutched in the claws of a tiger, he would not have felt more helpless than he did now, held by the fingers of the ”Prince of the Roman campagna.”
Attilio said gently, ”Brother, have patience--let him speak; if you choke him we shall gain no information.”
The suggestion made by the chief of the Three Hundred seemed reasonable to Orazio, and he withdrew his impatient grip from Cencio's throat.
”If the life of Prince T------ is dear to you,” again recommenced the knave, ”let us go all together in search of him, and inform him that eight emissaries of the Holy Office are lurking about the Hotel Victoria, where he is lodging, in order to a.s.sa.s.sinate him.”
CHAPTER LV. DEATH TO THE PRIESTS
”Death to the priests!” shouted the people.
”_Death to no one!_” replied the General to the crowd from the balcony, in answer to their cry.
”_Death to no one!_ Yet none are worthier of death than this villainous sect, which for private ends, disguised as religious, has made Italy 'the land of the dead,' a burial-ground of greatness! Beccaria! thy doctrines are true and right. The shedding of blood is impious. But I know not if Italy will ever be able to free herself from those who tyrannize over her soul and body without annihilating them with the sword for pruning-hook, even to the last branch!”
These reflections pa.s.sed through the mind of the man of the people, although he rebuked the populace. Meanwhile, those of them who had not wholly heard the words uttered by Garibaldi from the balcony, but only the cry of ”death!” which thousands of excited voices had re-echoed--those of the people, we repeat, who were farthest off from the General and near the palace of the Patriarch, advanced like the flood of a torrent precipitating itself from a mountain, and attacked the prelate's abode, overturning all obstacles opposed to their fury.
In a few minutes every saloon, every room in this fine building was invaded, and through the windows all those religious idols with which the priests so unblus.h.i.+ngly deceive the people were seen flying in all directions.
Many artists and lovers of the beautiful would have lamented and cried, ”Scandal! sacrilege!” at the destruction of such works of art. And truly, many very rare and precious master-pieces, under the form of saint or Madonna or Bambino, were broken to pieces and utterly ruined in this work of destruction.