Part 72 (1/2)
They keep me informed of all that goes on in Rome, and they have watched Domenico Gherardi for years. We all know much--but we have little chance to speak! If England knew of Rome what France knows, what Spain knows,--what Italy knows, she would pray to be given a second Cromwell! For the time is coming when she will need him!”
x.x.xVII.
A few days later the fas.h.i.+onable world of Europe was startled by the announcement of two things. One was the marriage of Sylvie, Countess Hermenstein, to the ”would-be reformer of the clergy,” Aubrey Leigh, coupled with her renunciation of the Church of her fathers. There was no time for that Church to p.r.o.nounce excommunication, inasmuch as she renounced it herself, of her own free will and choice, and made no secret of having done so. Some of her Hungarian friends were, or appeared to be, scandalized at this action on her part, but the majority of them treated it with considerable leniency, and in some cases with approval, on the ground that a wife's religion ought to be the same as that of her husband. If love is love at all, it surely means complete union; and one cannot imagine a perfect marriage where there is any possibility of wrangling over different forms of creed.
The other piece of news, which created even more sensation than the first, was the purchase of Angela Sovrani's great picture, ”The Coming of Christ,” by the Americans. As soon as this was known, the crowd of visitors to the artist's studio a.s.sumed formidable proportions, and from early morning till late afternoon, the people kept coming and going in hundreds, which gradually swelled to thousands. For by-and-by the history of the picture got about in disjointed morsels of information and gossip which soon formed a consecutive and fairly correct narration. Experts criticized it,--critics ”explained” it--and presently nothing was talked of in the art world but ”The Coming of Christ” and the artist who painted it, Angela Sovrani. A woman!--only a woman! It seemed incredible--impossible! For why should a woman think?
Why should a woman dare to be a genius? It seemed very strange! How much more natural for her to marry some decent man of established position and be content with babies and plain needlework! Here was an abnormal prodigy in the ways of womanhood,--a feminine creature who ventured to give an opinion of her own on something else than dress,--who presumed as it were, to set the world thinking hard on a particular phase of religious history! Then, as one after the other talked and whispered and commented, the story of Angela's own private suffering began to eke out bit by bit,--how she had been brutally stabbed m her own studio in front of her own picture by no other than her own betrothed husband Florian Varillo, who was moved to his murderous act by a sudden impulse of jealousy,--and how that same Varillo had met with his deserts in death by fire in the Trappist monastery on the Campagna. And the excitement over the great picture became more and more intense--especially when it was known that it would soon be taken away from Rome never to be seen there again. Angela herself knew little of her rapidly extending fame,--she was in Paris with the Princesse D'Agramont who had taken her there immediately after Monsignor Gherardi's visit to her father. She was not told of Florian Varillo's death till she had been some days in the French capital, and then it was broken to her as gently as possible. But the result was disastrous. The strength she had slowly regained seemed now to leave her altogether, and she was stricken with a mute despair which was terrible to witness. Hour after hour, she lay on a couch, silent and motionless,--her large eyes fixed on vacancy, her little white hands clasped close together as though in a very extremity of bodily and mental anguish, and the Princesse D'Agramont, who watched her and tended her with the utmost devotion, was often afraid that all her care would be of no avail, and that her patient would slip through her hands into the next world before she had time to even attempt to save her.
And Cyrillon Vergmaud, unhappy and restless, wandered up and down outside the house, where this life, so secretly dear to him, was poised as it were on the verge of death, not daring to enter, or even enquire for news, lest he should hear the worst.
One cold dark afternoon however, as he thus paced to and fro, he saw the Princesse D'Agramont at a window beckoning him, and with a sickening terror at his heart, he obeyed the signal.
”I wish you would come and talk to her!” said the Princesse as she greeted him, with tears in her bright eyes. ”She must be roused from this apathy. I can do nothing with her. But I think YOU might do much if you would!”
”I will do anything--anything in the wide world!” said Cyrillon earnestly. ”Surely you know that!”
”Yes--but you must not be too gentle with her! I do not mean that you should be rough--G.o.d forbid!--but if you would speak to her with authority--if you could tell her that she owes her life and her work to the world--to G.o.d--”
She broke off, not trusting herself to say more. Cyrillon raised her hand to his lips.
”I understand!” he said. ”You know I have hesitated--because--I love her! I cannot tell her not to grieve for her dead betrothed, when I myself am longing to take his place!”
The Princesse smiled through her tears.
”The position is difficult I admit!” she said, with a returning touch of playfulness--”But the very fact of your love for her should give you the force to command her back to life. Come!”
She took him into the darkened room where Angela lay--inert, immovable, with always the same wide-open eyes, blank with misery and desolation, and said gently,
”Angela, will you speak to Gys Grandit?”
Angela turned her wistful looks upon him, and essayed a poor little ghost of a smile. Very gently Cyrillon advanced and sat down beside her,--and with equal gentleness, the Princesse D'Agramont withdrew.
Cyrillon's heart beat fast; if he could have lifted that frail little form of a woman into his arms and kissed away the sorrow consuming it, he would have been happy,--but his mission was that of a friend, not lover, and his own emotions made it hard for him to begin. At last he spoke
”When are you going to make up your mind to get well, dear friend?”
She looked at him piteously.
”Make up my mind to get well? I shall never be well again!”
”You will if you resolve to be,” said Cyrillon. ”It rests with you!”
She was silent.
”Have you heard the latest news from Rome?” he asked after a pause.
She made a faint sign in the negative.
Cyrillon smiled.
”The Church has with all due solemnity anathematized your picture as an inspiration of the Evil One! But it is better that it should be so anathematized than that it should be reported as not your own work.