University of Virginia Library

2. II.

It was toward midnight when the Mangia-foco entered
the Adige, and keeping its steady way between
the low banks of the river, made for the grass-grown
and flowery canal which connects its waters with the
Po. Most of the passengers had yielded to the drowsy
influence of the night air, and, of the aristocratic party
on the larboard side, the young Marchesa, alone was
waking; her friends had made couches of their cloaks
and baggage, and were reclining at her feet, while the
artists, all except the Signor Basil, were stretched fairly
on the deck, their portfolios beneath their heads,
and their large hats covering their faces from the powerful
rays of the moon.

“Miladi does justice to the beauty of the night,”
said the waking artist, in a low and respectful tone,
as he rose from her with a cluster of tuberoses she
had let fall from her hand.

“It is indeed lovely, Signor pittore,” responded the
Marchesa, glancing at his portfolio, and receiving the


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flowers with a gracious inclination; “have you touched
Venice from the lagoon to-night?”

The Signor Basil opened his portfolio, and replied
to the indirect request of the lady by showing her a
very indifferent sketch of Venice from the island of St.
Lazzaro. As if to escape from the necessity of praising
what had evidently disappointed her, she turned the
cartoon hastily, and exposed, on the sheet beneath, the
spirited and admirable outline of her own matchless
features.

A slight start alone betrayed the surmise of the high-born
lady, and raising the cartoon to examine it more
closely, she said with a smile, “You may easier tread
on Titian's heels than Canaletti's. Bezzuoli has painted
me, and not so well. I will awake the Marquis,
and he shall purchase it of you.”

“Not for the wealth of the Medici, Madam!” said
the young man, clasping his portfolio hastily, “pray do
not disturb Monsignore! The picture is dear to me!”

The Marchesa looking into his face, and with a
glance around, which the aceomplished courtier before
her read better than she dreamed, she drew her shawl
over her blanched shoulders, and settled herself to listen
to the conversation of her new acquaintance.

“You would be less gracious if you were observed,
proud beauty,” thought Basil: “but while you think
the poor painter may while away the tediousness of a
vigil, he may feed his eye on your beauty as well.”

The Mangia-foco turned into the canal, threaded
its lily-paved waters for a mile or two, and then, putting
forth upon the broad bosom of the Po, went on
her course against the stream, and, with retarded pace,
penetrated toward the sun-beloved heart of Italy. And
while the later hours performed their procession with
the stars, the Marchesa del Marmore leaned sleepless
and unfatigued against the railing, listening with mingled
curiosity and scorn to the passionate love-murmur


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of the enamored painter. His hat was thrown aside,
his fair and curling locks were flowing in the night air,
his form was bent earnestly but respectfully towards
her, and on its lip, with all its submissive tenderness,
there sat a shadow of something she could not define,
but which rebuked ever and anon, as with the fierce
regard of a noble, the condescension she felt towards
him as an artist.