登陆注册
19683200000016

第16章 MASSIMILLA DONI(15)

Cataneo looked round to see if there was anybody he knew, recognized Vendramin and greeted him, bowed to his banker, a rich patrician, and finally to the man who happened to be speaking,--a celebrated musical fanatic, a friend of the Comtesse Albrizzi. Like some others who frequented Florian's, his mode of life was absolutely unknown, so carefully did he conceal it. Nothing was known about him but what he chose to tell.

This was Capraja, the nobleman whom the Duchess had mentioned to the French doctor. This Venetian was one of a class of dreamers whose powerful minds divine everything. He was an eccentric theorist, and cared no more for celebrity than for a broken pipe.

His life was in accordance with his ideas. Capraja made his appearance at about ten every morning under the /Procuratie/, without anyone knowing whence he came. He lounged about Venice, smoking cigars. He regularly went to the Fenice, sitting in the pit-stalls, and between the acts went round to Florian's, where he took three or four cups of coffee a day; and he ended the evening at the cafe, never leaving it till about two in the morning. Twelve hundred francs a year paid all his expenses; he ate but one meal a day at an eating-house in the Merceria, where the cook had his dinner ready for him at a fixed hour, on a little table at the back of the shop; the pastry-cook's daughter herself prepared his stuffed oysters, provided him with cigars, and took care of his money. By his advice, this girl, though she was very handsome, would never countenance a lover, lived very steadily, and still wore the old Venetian costume. This purely-bred Venetian girl was twelve years old when Capraja first took an interest in her, and six-and-twenty when he died. She was very fond of him, though he had never even kissed her hand or her brow, and she knew nothing whatever of the poor old nobleman's intentions with regard to her. The girl had at last as complete control of the old gentleman as a mother has of her child; she would tell him when he wanted clean linen; next day he would come without a shirt, and she would give him a clean one to put on in the morning.

He never looked at a woman either in the theatre or out walking.

Though he was the descendant of an old patrician family he never thought his rank worth mentioning. But at night, after twelve, he awoke from his apathy, talked, and showed that he had seen and heard everything. This peaceful Diogenes, quite incapable of explaining his tenets, half a Turk, half a Venetian, was thick-set, short, and fat; he had a Doge's sharp nose, an inquisitive, satirical eye, and a discreet though smiling mouth.

When he died, it became known that he had lived in a little den near San Benedetto. He had two million francs invested in the funds of various countries of Europe, and had left the interest untouched ever since he had first bought the securities in 1814, so the sum was now enormous, alike from the increased value of the capital and the accumulated interest. All this money was left to the pastry-cook's daughter.

"Genovese," he was saying, "will do wonders. Whether he really understands the great end of music, or acts only on instinct, I know not; but he is the first singer who ever satisfied me. I shall not die without hearing a /cadenza/ executed as I have heard them in my dreams, waking with a feeling as though the sounds were floating in the air. The clear /cadenza/ is the highest achievement of art; it is the arabesque, decorating the finest room in the house; a shade too little and it is nothing, a touch too much and all is confusion. Its task is to awake in the soul a thousand dormant ideas; it flies up and sweeps through space, scattering seeds in the air to be taken in by our ears and blossom in our heart. Believe me, in painting his Saint-

Cecilia, Raphael gave the preference to music over poetry. And he was right; music appeals to the heart, whereas writing is addressed to the intellect; it communicates ideas directly, like a perfume. The singer's voice impinges not on the mind, not on the memory of happiness, but on the first principle of thought; it stirs the elements of sensation.

"It is a grievous thing that the populace should have compelled musicians to adapt their expression to words, to factitious emotions; but then they were not otherwise intelligible to the vulgar. Thus the /cadenza/ is the only thing left to the lovers of pure music, the devotees of unfettered art. To-night, as I listened to that last /cavatina/, I felt as if I were beckoned by a fair creature whose look alone had made me young again. The enchantress placed a crown on my brow, and led me to the ivory door through which we pass to the mysterious land of day-dreams. I owe it to Genovese that I escaped for a few minutes from this old husk--minutes, short no doubt by the clock, but very long by the record of sensation. For a brief spring-time, scented with roses, I was young again--and beloved!"

"But you are mistaken, /caro/ Capraja," said the Duke. "There is in music an effect yet more magical than that of the /cadenza/."

"What is that?" asked Capraja.

"The unison of two voices, or of a voice and a violin,--the instrument which has tones most nearly resembling those of the human voice," replied Cataneo. "This perfect concord bears us on to the very heart of life, on the tide of elements which can resuscitate rapture and carry man up to the centre of the luminous sphere where his mind can command the whole universe. You still need a /thema/, Capraja, but the pure element is enough for me. You need that the current should flow through the myriad canals of the machine to fall in dazzling cascades, while I am content with the pure tranquil pool. My eye gazes across a lake without a ripple. I can embrace the infinite."

同类推荐
  • 伤科方书

    伤科方书

    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。
  • 悉昙字记

    悉昙字记

    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。
  • 实相般若波罗蜜经

    实相般若波罗蜜经

    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。
  • 万柳溪边旧话

    万柳溪边旧话

    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。
  • 房中曲

    房中曲

    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。
热门推荐
  • 小学生满分作文分类大全

    小学生满分作文分类大全

    本书精心挑选了三百多篇优秀小学生作文,分为“成长新天地 ”、“人物你我他”等八个大的类别,每一类别前都有对症下药的“写作小提示”,每一类别下又细分为两到三个小的栏目,基本囊括了小学生作文的题材和体裁。每篇作文后面都附有编者精心撰写的点评,为小学生学习满分作文提供了切实的帮助与指引。
  • 封氏闻见记

    封氏闻见记

    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。
  • 千古杀手:痴儿要逆袭

    千古杀手:痴儿要逆袭

    一双妖瞳,迷醉了谁的眼眸?一首佳曲,拨乱了谁的心湖?纷飞的衣袖,又为谁谱写它的繁华?冥界奈何桥边的彼岸,又为谁付出心血,甘愿十世轮回?是他,那个如神邸般的男子?战甲着身,雄风盖世。是他,那个温暖的少年?宠溺的目光,为她绽放。是他,那个杀人不眨眼的恶魔?月光之下,默默的守护。还是他,那个不可一世君王?千百年的守护,证明了那颗炽热的心。爱上了,便放不下,这便是命!
  • 超级中医

    超级中医

    三国名医林峰穿越到了现代成为林家少爷!可悲的是,林家少爷竟然是一个瞎子!谁说瞎子不能指点江山,左拥右抱?!凭借高超的医术,林峰照样玩的风生水起!冰雪女神,完美御姐,火爆辣椒,各色美女统统一网打尽!
  • 闪婚前妻你别跑

    闪婚前妻你别跑

    参加前男友婚礼,失意醉酒后闪婚,结果发现老公劈腿,她愤怒离婚。再次相遇,她成了他的下属。误会?难道我这双眼睛是摆设?等等!怎么又冒出来一个跟前夫一模一样的人?
  • 篮球痞子

    篮球痞子

    一个家庭破碎后自我封闭的少年,因为篮球而重获新生。搞怪,恶作剧,调戏妹子,他是一个无可救药的痞子;突破,大灌篮,终结比赛,球场上请叫他神!谁说痞子就不能与篮坛巨星们一起战斗,争夺NBA总冠军?手握篮球的他只坚信:即使这个世界抛弃了我,我还有篮球。只要终场哨声没有响,我们就要像疯子一样战斗下去!
  • 如意娘

    如意娘

    她是乱世之中李代桃僵的皇家养女萧如意,凭着一颗七窍玲珑心平安无虞地长大。与表哥徐仪订下婚约,二人青梅竹马,心意相通。直到逆贼李斛攻进皇宫,如意才得知自己竟然是李斛之女。她不甘认贼作父,在二皇子萧怀朔的援救下浴血破围。其后二人并肩御敌,力挽狂澜于既倒。逆贼平定,太子遇害,萧怀朔回宫继承大统。战场上的生死不离,使萧怀朔早已对如意弥足深陷。而君子如玉又情深意重的徐仪,乱世中几度离合依然初心不改。如意是选择辅佐天子,母仪天下,还是与青梅竹马长相厮守?
  • 九型人格生存手册

    九型人格生存手册

    当你翻开本书时,你就已经开始了一场奇妙的自我发现之旅。如何认识自我,发现自己的优势,选择适合自己的职业,与他人融洽相处,九型人格可以助你解开所有与性格相关的秘密。
  • 孤君一指

    孤君一指

    一个尚且出生的孩子,莫名就背负了许多难以承受苦难,先为孝,还是义,亦或情?当孝义情同时纠缠,裘三该如何自处?且看裘三一人如何用时间和智慧一指化解这重重难题。
  • 死神来了:弒妖者

    死神来了:弒妖者

    身为普通高中生的小萤,每天为了准备大考而忙碌着,直到某天遭到袭击,有个人救了她,她的生活开始产生转变。隔天,自称救了她的人来找她,并将她带回事发现场,此时,却出现了另一个声明自己才是救她的人!救她的人有两个?哪一个才是她的救命之人。