登陆注册
18889100000021

第21章

Baffo went to consult with my grandmother, who could not write, and in a letter which he addressed to me he informed me that I would soon find myself in a happier situation. And, truly, within a week the excellent old woman, who loved me until her death, made her appearance as I was sitting down to my dinner. She came in with the mistress of the house, and the moment I saw her I threw my arms around her neck, crying bitterly, in which luxury the old lady soon joined me. She sat down and took me on her knees; my courage rose again. In the presence of the Sclavonian woman I enumerated all my grievances, and after calling her attention to the food, fit only for beggars, which I was compelled to swallow, I took her upstairs to shew her my bed. I begged her to take me out and give me a good dinner after six months of such starvation. The boarding-house keeper boldly asserted that she could not afford better for the amount she had received, and there was truth in that, but she had no business to keep house and to become the tormentor of poor children who were thrown on her hands by stinginess, and who required to be properly fed.

My grandmother very quietly intimated her intention to take me away forthwith, and asked her to put all my things in my trunk. I cannot express my joy during these preparations. For the first time I felt that kind of happiness which makes forgiveness compulsory upon the being who enjoys it, and causes him to forget all previous unpleasantness. My grandmother took me to the inn, and dinner was served, but she could hardly eat anything in her astonishment at the voracity with which I was swallowing my food. In the meantime Doctor Gozzi, to whom she had sent notice of her arrival, came in, and his appearance soon prepossessed her in his favour. He was then a fine-

looking priest, twenty-six years of age, chubby, modest, and respectful. In less than a quarter of an hour everything was satisfactorily arranged between them. The good old lady counted out twenty-four sequins for one year of my schooling, and took a receipt for the same, but she kept me with her for three days in order to have me clothed like a priest, and to get me a wig, as the filthy state of my hair made it necessary to have it all cut off.

At the end of the three days she took me to the doctor's house, so as to see herself to my installation and to recommend me to the doctor's mother, who desired her to send or to buy in Padua a bedstead and bedding; but the doctor having remarked that, his own bed being very wide, I might sleep with him, my grandmother expressed her gratitude for all his kindness, and we accompanied her as far as the burchiello she had engaged to return to Venice.

The family of Doctor Gozzi was composed of his mother, who had great reverence for him, because, a peasant by birth, she did not think herself worthy of having a son who was a priest, and still more a doctor in divinity; she was plain, old, and cross; and of his father, a shoemaker by trade, working all day long and never addressing a word to anyone, not even during the meals. He only became a sociable being on holidays, on which occasions he would spend his time with his friends in some tavern, coming home at midnight as drunk as a lord and singing verses from Tasso. When in this blissful state the good man could not make up his mind to go to bed, and became violent if anyone attempted to compel him to lie down. Wine alone gave him sense and spirit, for when sober he was incapable of attending to the simplest family matter, and his wife often said that he never would have married her had not his friends taken care to give him a good breakfast before he went to the church.

But Doctor Gozzi had also a sister, called Bettina, who at the age of thirteen was pretty, lively, and a great reader of romances. Her father and mother scolded her constantly because she was too often looking out of the window, and the doctor did the same on account of her love for reading. This girl took at once my fancy without my knowing why, and little by little she kindled in my heart the first spark of a passion which, afterwards became in me the ruling one.

Six months after I had been an inmate in the house, the doctor found himself without scholars; they all went away because I had become the sole object of his affection. He then determined to establish a college, and to receive young boys as boarders; but two years passed before he met with any success. During that period he taught me everything he knew; true, it was not much; yet it was enough to open to me the high road to all sciences. He likewise taught me the violin, an accomplishment which proved very useful to me in a peculiar circumstance, the particulars of which I will give in good time. The excellent doctor, who was in no way a philosopher, made me study the logic of the Peripatetics, and the cosmography of the ancient system of Ptolemy, at which I would laugh, teasing the poor doctor with theorems to which he could find no answer. His habits, moreover, were irreproachable, and in all things connected with religion, although no bigot, he was of the greatest strictness, and, admitting everything as an article of faith, nothing appeared difficult to his conception. He believed the deluge to have been universal, and he thought that, before that great cataclysm, men lived a thousand years and conversed with God, that Noah took one hundred years to build the ark, and that the earth, suspended in the air, is firmly held in the very centre of the universe which God had created from nothing. When I would say and prove that it was absurd to believe in the existence of nothingness, he would stop me short and call me a fool.

He could enjoy a good bed, a glass of wine, and cheerfulness at home.

同类推荐
  • 大威仪请问

    大威仪请问

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 朝鲜纪事

    朝鲜纪事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说木槵经

    佛说木槵经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 黄箓救苦十斋转经仪

    黄箓救苦十斋转经仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • THE AMERICAN

    THE AMERICAN

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 抗日之碧血鹰翔

    抗日之碧血鹰翔

    象鹰一样翱翔在祖国的蓝天,我们是一群英勇无畏的青年!为了这壮丽的山河不让侵略者踏践,我们愿意迎着敌人的炮火,勇往直前!长江万里惊涛起,长城内外烽火绵,哪怕是粉身碎骨,哪怕是碧血长空,也改变不了我们誓死卫国的信念!
  • 我们终将擦肩而过

    我们终将擦肩而过

    学校永远是个纯情的地方,有着很多的幻想。因为年轻,会犯错,因为痴情,会受伤。因为利益,会闹矛盾。在看似唯美和谐的校园里,有着一段段曲折的故事。曾经有过美好的回忆,在岁月的洗礼下,熟悉变成了陌生,人性的自私和善良交织着,背叛和报复的欲望燃烧着。。。曾经的好友,恋人,会经历怎样内心的颠簸和矛盾呢?当明白了什么是值得珍惜了以后,可惜缘分已不再,那熟悉的人被湮灭了。患得患失后,笑中或许还藏着眼泪。。。被黑夜吞噬,而后剩下的是落寞还是。。。
  • 抢个相公同修仙

    抢个相公同修仙

    修真太寂寞,想找个帅小伙当老公双修小伙不能光帅而且还要修为高强还等什么下山去找老公
  • EXO带我长发及腰少年娶我可好

    EXO带我长发及腰少年娶我可好

    “静幽,在明年冬天的第一场雪,你还要吹口琴给我听好不好?”--鹿晗。“小童,我知道你是谁,可是你不要揭穿好不好,我只想要这一会儿你是属于我的。”--吴亦凡。“你小时候说过要嫁给我的,当初的童言无忌你没有忘吧。”--吴世勋……“我只想在抱你一会,别推开我好吗”--朴灿烈。“你是公主,我不会期望是你的王子,我只想做你身边的那一个骑士就好”--边伯贤
  • 古今词话

    古今词话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 前妻太抢手

    前妻太抢手

    谁能想到,年少成名,才华横溢的服装设计师云琪雪,竟然为了一个不爱她的男人毁了自己?她为他未婚生子,忍辱负重,坐牢三年,出狱沦为他家保姆,终究连他一个正眼都无法得到。为了哀悼逝去的初恋感情,他给了她一个女人所能受尽的所有凌辱,终于把她心底最后一丝希望碾成渣滓!“今天我走,永永远远不会再出现。名声我不要了,梦想我不要了,孩子我不要了,你,我也不要了。”她孑然一人,沉默离开,终结一段孽缘,只愿余生安稳静好。他却动用一切力量,拦截了她全世界的去路:“我的爱,你不要也得要!”
  • 无限滑头

    无限滑头

    队友的热血冲击着无限规则,死亡也在弥漫着,是改写还是死亡,一切一起都在无限滑头作品属于无限流,大一刚开始写求支持,写的不好请指点。
  • 千金压顶:相公请勿动

    千金压顶:相公请勿动

    她,一无才貌,二没气质,三无节操,四体不勤,五谷不分,六人不喜,七姑不爱,八种恶习,九分荒唐,十分不好!虽是相府千金,却与大家闺秀八竿子打不着,丞相大人亦因为这个女儿被人诟病,被谏官弹劾,在朝堂上和京城中抬不起头来!只是,打也打了,骂也骂了,这相府千金依旧我行我素,毫无改进,总是自己的亲骨肉,大齐相爷也只能仰天长叹,养不教,父之过啊!自此,小女子与发小打架,与皇子斗殴,绑架神医,调戏黑老大,欺女霸男,纵横天下,任性妄为!更傲娇自得,扑到相公,笑声如铃:相府千金压顶,相公不要乱动哦!
  • 悔婚

    悔婚

    婚礼之前,她被甩了!七夕佳节,她失婚了!这些狗血的情节,不是做梦!当她化悲愤为干劲,准备新的人生时,那个冷漠苛刻的上司、还有一只风流倜傥的大金龟把她的生活搅乱了!!!
  • 凤临天下:哥哥请爱我

    凤临天下:哥哥请爱我

    身为王府庶女,亲母早亡,深受皇恩的兄长对自己如同陌路,本以为终身都将困守在王府之内,成为推动王府更加辉煌的工具,却在接受名门教育时得知自己不同的身份。国家的沦陷,家族的覆灭,亲眼看着最后守护自己的人死亡,让她从此走上了复仇之路。集结同伴,身边却越来越多身份成谜的男子,最终国仇家恨,该怎样抉择?严羽墨:真希望你永远都只是个孩子!陆瑾坤:你是第一个连续打我两次的女人!蓝之白:我必须依附在别人的身上,才能找到我人生的意义!