.- { "L I E, RAR.Y OF THE UN IVERSITY Of ILLINOIS SX3 U99r I83S j: f. vf'^^^. *,„,^ ;^,^!— sv- R I E N Z I THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. BY THE AUTHOR OF EUGENE ARAM," " LAST DAYS OF POiMPtll," C\ C. CVC. Then turn we to her latest Tribune's name, From her ten thousand tyrants turn to thee. Redeemer of dark centuries of shame — The friend of Petrarch — hope of Italy, Rienzi, last of Romans ! While the tree Of Freedom's wither'd trunk puts forth a leaf Even for thy tomb a garland let it be — The Forum's champion and the People's chief — Her new-born Numa thon ! Child£ Harold, cant. iv. stanza 114. Amidst the indulgence of enthusiasm and eloquence, Petrarch, Italy, and Europe, were astonished by a revolution, which realized for a moment his most splendid visions, — Gibbon, chap. Ixx. IN THREE VOLUMES. VOL. I. LONDON SAUNDERS AND OTLEY, CONDUIT STREET. 1835. Savill, Printer, {late Harjette and Savill,) 107, Si. Martin's Lane. ^53 TO ALESSANDRO MANZONI, AS TO THE GENIUS OF THE PLACE, ARE DEDICATED THESE FRUITS, <^ GATHERED ON 1 THE SOIL OF ITALIAN FICTION. London, Dec. 1, 1835. I i PREFACE. I BEGAN this tale two years ago at Rome. On removing to Naples, I threw it aside for " The Last Days of Pompeii," which required more than " Rienzi" the advantage of residence within reach of the scenes described. The fate of the Roman Tribune continued, however, to haunt and impress me, and, sometime after " Pompeii" was published, I renewed my earlier undertaking. I regarded the completion of these volumes, indeed, as a kind of duty; — for having had occasion to read the original authorities from which modem historians have drawn their accounts of the hfe of Rienzi, Vlll PREFACE. I was led to believe that a very remarkable man had been superficially judged, and a very important period crudely examined. And this belief v^^as sufficiently strong to induce me at first to meditate a more serious work upon the life and times of Rienzi. Various rea- sons concurred against this project — and I re- nounced the Biography to commence the Fic- tion. I have still, however, adhered with a greater fidelity than is customary in Romance, to all the leading events of the public life of the Roman Tribune ; and the Reader will perhaps find in these pages a more full and detailed ac- count of the rise and fall of Rienzi, than in any English work of which I am aware. I have, it is true, taken a view of his character different in some respects from that of Gibbon or Sis- mondi. Such is the indisputable prerogative of Romance. But it is a view, in all its main fea- tures, which I beheve, (and think I could prove,) myself to be warranted in taking, not less by the facts of History than the laws of Fiction. In the meanwhile, as I have given the acts from which I have drawn my interpre- PREFACE. IX tation of the principal agent, the reader has sufficient data for his own judgment. Preserving generally the real chronology of Rienzi's life, the Plot of this work extends over a space of some years, and embraces the variety of characters necessary to a true dehneation of events. The story, therefore, cannot have pre- cisely that order of interest found in fictions strictly and genuinely dramatic, in which (to my judgment at least) the time ought to be as limited as possible, and the characters as few; — no new character of importance to the denoue- ment being admissible towards the end of the work. If I may use the word Epic in its most modest and unassuming acceptation, this Fiction, in short, though indulging in dramatic situa- tions, belongs, as a whole, rather to the Epic than the Dramatic school. A work which takes for its subject the crimes and errors of a nation, which ventures, however unsuccessfully, to seek the Actual and the Real in the highest stage of passion or action, can, I think, rarely adopt with advantage the melo-dramatic effects pro- X PREFACE. duced by a vulgar mystery, or that stage-effect humour, which, arising from small peculiarities of character, draws the attention of the reader from greatness or from crime, to a weakness or a folly. Nor does a Fiction, dealing in such subjects, admit very frequently, or with minute detail, superfluous descriptions of Costume and Manners. — Of costume and manners I have had indeed a less ambitious and less disputable motive for brevity in dehneation ; (though what there be, is, I trust, sufficiently faithful,) — I \mte of a feudal century, and I have no desire to write more than is necessary of feudal manners, after the inimitable and everlasting portraitures of Sir Walter Scott. I say thus much in order to prepare the mind of the reader as to what he is to expect in the fol- lowing volumes — a duty I think incum- bent upon every Author of discretion and bene- volence, and a precaution which, if sometimes preventing mortification to himself — prevents, no less frequently, disappointment to the reader. — I must allow this prelude seems somewhat omi- PREFACE. XI nous ! — little of Costume, less of Mystery,* no- thing of Humour ! What is there then left to interest or amuse? Alas ! in Passion, Character, and Action, there remain enough mate^'ials, if the poor workman can but weave them pro- perly ! In the picture of the Roman Populace, as in that of the Roman Nobles of the fourteenth cen- tury, I follow literally the descriptions left to us ; they are not flattering, but they are faithful, like- nesses. In much of my work those who think that the Many — no matter in what age, no matter in what land, are always right, will pos- sibly detect (what indeed I could scarcely be suspected of by others) a conservative moral. But it must be by very ingenious minds indeed that these volumes can be perverted to the party purposes of the day, — nothing at least is farther from my own wish, — my own intention. The fiction composed from history, like history itself, may deal with the calm and acknow- * What mystery there be, is intentionally left under a very thin veil. Terror is sometimes made the greater when traced afar off. XU PREFACE. ledged lessons of the Past, but it deserts its dignity if it warp inappropriate analogies to the heated and equivocal contests of the Pre- sent. I cannot conclude without rendering the tri- bute of my humble praise and homage, to the versatile and gifted Author of the beautiful Tragedy of Rienzi. Considering that our hero be the same — considering that we had the same materials from which to choose our several stories — I trust I shall be found to have little, if at all, trespassed upon ground previously, occupied. With the single exception of a love-intrigue between a relative of Rienzi, and one of the antagonist part}', which makes the plot of Miss Mitford's Tragedy, and is little more than an episode in my Romance, having slight effect on the conduct and none on the fate of the hero, I am not aware of any resem- blance between the two works ; and even this coincidence I could easily have jtremoved, had I deemed it the least advisable : — but it would be almost discreditable if I had nothing that re- sembled a performance possessing so much it were an honour to imitate. PREFACE. XIU 111 fact, the prodigal materials of tne story — the rich and exuberant complexities of Rienzi's character — ^joined to the advantage possessed by the Novehst of embracing all that the Dramatist must reject* — are sufficient to prevent Dramatist and Novelist from interfering with each other. If I diifer from Gibbon in his view of Rienzi's character, I differ also in many respects from Miss Mitford,— I differ yet more from her in the moral to be drawn fi'om his fate ; but of the two, I own that I think Miss Mitford is more just than Gibbon. Of men v/ho become great by enthusiasm, (which is a poetry of tempera- ment,) poets are often the most profound histo- rians. * Thus the slender space permitted to the Dramatist does not allow Miss Mitford to be very faithful to facts — to distinguish between Rienzi's earlier and his later pe- riod of power; or to detail the true, but somewhat intricate causes of his rise, his splendour, and his fall. London, December 1^ 183o. VOL. R I E N Z I, THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. BOOK I. THE TIME, THE PLACE. AND THE MEN. " Fu da sua gioventudine nutricato di latte di eloquenza ; buono grammatico, megliore rettorico, autorista buono . . . Oh, come spesso diceva, ' Dove sono questi buoni Romani ? Dov'e loro summa giustizia ? Poterommi trovare in tempo che questi fioris- cano ?' Era bell 'orao . . . Accadde che uno suo frate fu ucciso, e non ne fu fatta vendetta di sua morte : non lo poteo aiutare ; pensa lungo mano vendicare '1 sangue di suo frate ; pensa lunga mano dirizzare la cittate di Roma male guidaia." — ( Vita di Cola di Rienzi. Ed. 1828. Forli.) VOL. I. BOOK I. CHAP. I. THE BROTHERS. The name which these volumes bear will suffi- ciently apprise the reader that it is in the earlier half of the fourteenth centm-y that my story opens. It was on a summer evening that two youths might be seen walking beside the banks of the Tiber, not far from that part of its winding course which sweeps by the base of mount Aventine. The path they had selected was remote and tranquil. It was only at a distance that were seen the scattered and squa- lid houses that bordered the river, from amidst which rose, dark and frequent, the high roof and b2 4 RIENZI, enormous towers which marked the fortified man- sion of some Roman baron. On the one side the river, behind the cottages of the fishermen, rose Mount Janiculum, dark with massive fohage, from which gleamed, at frequent intervals, the grey walls of many a castellated palace, and the spires and co- lumns of a hundred churches ; on the other side, the deserted Aventine rose abrupt and steep, covered with thick brushw^ood ; while, on the height, from concealed but numerous convents, rolled, not unmusically, along the quiet land- scape and the rippling waves, the sound of the holy bell. Of the young men introduced in this scene, the elder, v/ho might have somewhat passed his twen- tieth year, was of a tall and even commanding sta- ture, and there was that in his presence remarkable and almost noble, despite the homeliness of his garb, which consisted of the long, loose gown and the plain tunic, both of dark-grey serge, which dis- tinguished, at that time, the dress of the humbler scholars who frequented the monasteries for such rude knowledge as then yielded a scanty return for intense toil. His countenance was handsome. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 5 and would have been rather gay than thoughtful in its expression, but for that vague and abstracted dreaminess of eye which so usually denotes a pro- pensity to reverie and contemplation, and betrays that the past or future is more congenial to the mind within than the enjoyment and action of the present hour. The younger, who was yet a boy, had nothing striking in his appearance or countenance, unless an expression of great sweetness and gentleness could be so called ; and there was something almost femi- nine in the tender deference with which he appeared to listen to his companion. His dress was that usually worn by the humbler classes, though some- what neater, perhaps, and newer; and the fond vanity of a mother might be detected in the care with which the long and silky ringlets had been smoothed and parted as they escaped from his cap and flowed mid- way down his shoulders. As they thus sauntered on, beside the whispering reeds of the river, each with his arm round the form of his comrade, not only in their manner and gait, but in their youth and evident affection, there was a grace and sentiment about the brothers — for such 6 RIENZI, their connection — which elevated the lowliness of their apparent condition. " Dear brother," said the elder, " I cannot ex- press to thee how I enjoy these evening hours. To you alone I feel as if 1 were not a mere visionary and idler when I talk of the uncertain future, and build up my palaces of the air. Our parents listen to me as if I were uttering fine things out of a book : and my dear mother. Heaven bless her, wipes her eyes, and says, ' Hark, what a scholar he is !' As for the monks, if I ever dare look from my Livy, and cry, « Thus should Rome be again ! ' they stare, and gape, and frown, as though I had broached an heresy. But you, sweet brother, though you share not my studies, sympathize so kindly with all their results — you seem so to approve my wild schemes, and to encourage my ambitious hopes — that some- times I forget our birth, our fortunes, and think and dare as if no blood, save that of the Teuton Emperor, flowed through our veins. " Methinks, dear Cola," said the younger brother, " that Nature played us an unfau* trick — to you she transmitted the royal soul, derived, though obscurely, from our father's parentage; THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 7 and to me only the quiet and lowly spirit of my mother's humble lineage." " Nay," answered Cola, quickly, " you would then have the brighter share, — for I should have but the Barbarian origin, and you the Roman. Time was, when to be a simple Roman was to be nobler than a northern king. — Well, well, we may live to see great changes !" " I shall live to see thee a great man, and that will content me," said the younger, smiling affec- tionately ; " a great scholar all confess you to be already : our mother predicts your fortunes every time she hears of your welcome visits to the Colonna." '^ The Colonna !" said Cola, with a bitter smile; " the Colonna — the pedants ! — They affect, dull souls, the knowledge of the past, play the patron, and misquote Latin over their cups ! They are pleased to welcome me at their board, because the Roman doctors call me learned, and because nature gave me a wild wit, which to them is pleasanter than the stale jests of a hired buffoon. Yes, they would advance my fortunes — but how ? by some place in the public offices, which would 8 RIENZT, fill a dishonoured coffer, by wringing, yet more sternly, the hard-earned coins from om' famishing citizens ! If there be a vile thing in the world, it is a plebeian, advanced by patricians, not for the purpose of righting his own order, but for playing the pander to the worst interests of theirs. He who is of the people but makes himself a traitor to his birth, if he becomes a puppet for these tyrant hypocrites to lift up their hands and cry — ' See what liberty exists in Rome, when ice, the patricians, thus elevate a plebeian !' Did they ever elevate a plebeian if he sympathized with plebeians ? No, brother ; should I be lifted above our condition, I will be raised by the arms of my countrymen, and not upon their necks." " All I hope, is, Cola, that you will not, in your zeal for your fellow-citizens, forget how dear you are to us. No greatness could ever reconcile me to the thought that it brought you danger." " And / could laugh at all danger, if it led to greatness. But greatness — greatness ! Vain dream ! Let us keep it for our night sleep. Enough of my plans; now, dearest brother, of yours." *' THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 9 And, with the sanguine and cheerful elasticity which belonged to him, the young Cola, dismissing all wilder thoughts, bent his mind to listen, and to enter into, the humbler projects of his brother. The new boat, and the holiday-dress, and the cot re- moved to a quarter more secure from the oppres- sion of the barons, and such distant pictures of love as a dark eye and a merry lip conjure up to the vague sentiment of a boy. To schemes and aspira- tions of which such objects ma^e the limit, did the scholar listen, with a relaxed brow and a tender smile ; and often, in later life, did that conversation recur to him, when he shrank from asking his own heart w^hich ambition was the wuser. " And then," continued the younger brother, «' by degrees I might save enough to purchase such a vessel as that which we now see, laden, doubtless, with corn and merchandise, bringing — oh, such a good return, — that I could fill your room with books, and never hear you complain that you were not rich enough to purchase some crumbling old monkish manuscript. Ah, that would make me so happy ! " Cola smiled as he pressed his brother closer to his breast. " Dear boy," said he, " may it rather be mine b3 10 RIENZI, to provide for your wishes ! — yet methinks the masters of yon vessel have no enviable possession ; see how anxiously the men look round, and behind, and before ; peaceful traders though they be, they fear, it seems, even in this city, (once the empo- rium of the civilized world,) some pirate in pursuit; and ere the voyage be over, they may find that pirate in a Roman noble. Alas, to what are we reduced!" The vessel thus referred to, was speeding rapidly down the river, and some three or four armed men on deck were indeed intently surveying the quiet banks on either side, as if anticipative of a foe. The bark soon, however, glided out of sight, and the brothers fell back upon those themes, which require only the Future for a text, to be so attractive to the young. At length, as the evening darkened, they remem- bered that it was past the usual hour in which they returned home, and they began to retrace their steps. " Stay," said Cola, abruptly, " how our talk has beguiled me ! Father Uberto promised me a rare manuscript, which the good friar confesses hath puzzled the whole convent. I was to seek his cell THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. H for it this evening. TaiTy here a few minutes, it is but half-way up the Aventine. I shall soon return." " Can I not accompany you ?" " Nay," returned Cola, with considerate kind- ness, " you have borne toil all the day, and must be weai'ied; my labours, of the body, at least, have been light enough. You are delicate, too, and seem fatigued already; the rest will refresh you. I shall not be long." The boy acquiesced, though he rather wished to accompany his brother ; but he was of a meek and yielding temper, and seldom resisted the lightest command of those he loved. He sat him down on a little bank by the river-side, and the firm step and towering form of his brother were soon hid from his gaze by the thick and melancholy foliage. At first he sat very quietly, enjoying the cool air, and thinking over all the stories of ancient Rome that his brother had told him in their walk. At length he recollected that his little sister, Irene, had begged him to bring her home some flowers; and, gathering such as he could find at hand, (and 12 RIENZI, wild and clustering grew many a flower over that desolate spot,) he again seated himself, and began weaving them into one of those garlands for which the southern peasantry still retain their ancient affection, and something of their classic skill. While the boy was thus engaged, the tramp of horses and the loud shouting of men were heard at a distance. They came near, and nearer. " Some baron's procession, perhaps, returning from a feast," thought the boy; "it vnW be a pretty sight — their w^hite plumes and scarlet mantles — I love to see such sights, but I will just move out of their way." So, still mechanically platting his garland, but with eyes turned towards the quarter of the ex- pected procession, the young Roman moved yet nearer towards the river. Presently the train came in view, — a gallant com- pany, in truth ; — horsemen in front, riding two abreast, where the path permitted, their steeds caparissoned superbly — their plumes waving gaily, and the gleam of their corselets glittering through the shades of the dusky twilight. A large and mis- cellaneous crowd, all armed — some with pikes and THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 13 mail, others with less warlike or worse fashioned weapons, followed the cavaliers, and high above plume and pike, floated the blood-red banner of the Orsini, with the motto and device (in which was ostentatiously displayed the Guelfic badge of the keys of St. Peter,) v/rought in burnished gold. A momentary fear crossed the boy's mind, for at that time, and in that city, a nobleman begirt with his swordmen was more dreaded than a wild beast by the plebeians, but it was already too late to fly — the train were upon him. " Ho, boy !" cried the leader of the horsemen, Martino di Porto, one of the great house of the Orsini ; " hast thou seen a boat pass up the river ? — but thou must have seen it — how long since ?" " I saw a large boat, about half an hour ago," answered the boy, terrified by the rough voice and imperious bearing of the cavalier. " Sailing right a-head, with a green flag at the stern ?" " The same, noble Sir." " On, then ! we will stop her course ere the moon rise," said the Baron. '« On ! — let the boy go with us, lest he prove traitor, and alarm the Colonna." 14 RIENZT, '' An Orsini, an Orsini !" shouted the multitude, " on, on !" and, despite the prayers and remon- strances of the boy, he was placed in the thickest of the crowd, and borne, or rather dragged along with the rest — frightened, breathless, almost weeping, with his poor little garland still hanging on his arm, while a sling was thrust into his unwilling hand. Still he felt, through all his alarm, a kind of childish curiosity to see the result of the pur- suit. By the loud and eager conversation of those about him, he learnt that the vessel he had seen contained a supply of corn destined to a fortress up the river held by the Colonna, then at deadly feud with the Orsini; and it was the object of the expedition in which the boy had been thus luck- lessly entrained, to intercept the provisions, and divert it to the garrison of Martino di Porto. This news somewhat encreased his consternation, for the boy belonged to a family that claimed the patronage of the Colonna. Anxiously and tearfully he looked with every moment up the steep ascent of the Aventine ; but his guardian, his protector, still delayed his ap- pearance. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 15 They had now proceeded some way, when a wind- ing in the road brought suddenly before them the object of their pursuit, as, seen by the hght of the earhest stars, it scudded rapidly down the stream. " Now, the Saints be blest," quoth the chief, " she is ours !" "Hold!" said a captain, (a German,) riding next to Martino, in a half whisper ; " I hear sounds which I like not, by yonder trees — hark ! the neigh of a horse ! — by my faith, too, there is the gleam of a corselet." " Push on, my masters," cried Martino, " the heron shall not balk the eagle — push on ! " With renewed shouts those on foot pushed for- ward, till, as they had nearly gained the copse re- ferred to by the German, a small compact body of horsemen, armed cap-a-pie, dashed from amidst the trees, and, with spears in their rests, charged into the ranks of the pursuers. " A Colonna ! a Colonna !" " An Orsini ! an Orsini !" were shouts loudly and fiercely inter- changed. Martino di Porto, a man of great bulk and ferocity, and his cavaliers, who were chiefly 16 RlENZr, German mercenaries, met the encounter unshaken. " Beware the bear's hug," cried the Orsini, as down went his antagonist, rider and steed, before his lance. The contest was short and fierce ; the complete armour of the horsemen protected them on either side from wounds, — not so unscathed fared the half- armed foot followers of the Orsini, as they pressed, each pushed on by the other, against the Colonna. After a shower of stones and darts, which fell but as hailstones against the thick mail of the horse- men, they closed in, and, by their number, ob- structed the movements of the steeds, while the spear, sword, and battle-axe of their opponents made ruthless havoc amongst their undisciplined ranks. And Martino, who cared little how many of his mere mob were butchered, seeing that his foe were for the moment embarrassed by the wild rush and gathering circle of his foot train, (for the place of conflict, though wider than the previous road, was confined and narrow,) made a sign to some of his horsemen, and was about to ride for- ward towards the boat now nearly out of sight, when a bugle at some distance was answered by THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 17 one of his enemy at hand ; and the shout of " Co- lonna to the rescue !" was echoed afar off. A few moments brought in view a numerous train of horse at full speed, with the banners of the Co- lonna waving gallantly in the front. " A plague on the wizards ! who would have imagined they had divined us so craftily !" mut- tered Martino ; " we must not abide these odds ;" and the hand he had first raised for advance, now gave the signal of retreat. Serried breast to breast and in complete order, the horsemen of Martino turned to fly; the foot rabble who had come for spoil remained but for slaughter. They endeavoured to imitate their leaders, but how could they all hope to elude the rushing charger and sharp lance of their antago- nists, whose blood was heated by the affray, and who regarded the lives at their mercy as a boy regards the wasps' nest he destroys. The crowd dispersing in all directions; — some, indeed, es- caped up the hills, where the footing was imprac- ticable to the horses — some plunged into the river and swam across to the opposite bank — those less cool or experienced, who fled right onwards, served. 18 RIENZI, by clogging the way of their enemy, to facilitate the flight of their leaders, but fell themselves, corpse upon corpse, butchered in the unrelenting and un- resisted pursuit. " No quarter to the ruffians — every Orsini slain is a robber the less — strike for God, the Emperor, and the Colonna !" such were the shouts which rung the knell of the dismayed and falling fugitives. Among those w^ho fled onward, in the very path most accessible to the cavalry, was the young brother of Cola, so innocently mixed with the afli'ay. Fast he fled, dizzy with terror — poor boy, scarce before ever parted from his parents' or his brother's side ! — the trees glided past him — the banks receded: — on he sped, and fast behind came the tramp of the hoofs — the shouts — the curses — the fierce laughter of the foe as they bounded over the dead and the dying in their path. He was now at the spot in which his brother had left him ; hastily he looked behind, and sa^v the couched lance and horrent crest of the horseman close at his rear ; despair- ingly he looked up, and, behold ! his brother bursting through the tangled brakes that clothed the mountain, and bounding to his succour. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 19 " Save me ! save me, brother !" he shrieked aloud, and die shriek reached Cola's ear; — the snort of the fiery charger breathed hot upon him ; — a moment more, and with one wild shrill cry of " Mercy, mercy!" he fell to the ground — a corpse: the lance of the pursuer passing through and through him, from back to breast, and nailing him on the very sod where he had sate, full of young life and careless hope, not an hour ago. The horseman plucked forth his spear, and passed on in pursuit of new victims ; his comrades following. Cola had descended, — was on the spot, — kneeling by his murdered brother. Presently, to the sound of horn and trumpet, came by a nobler com- pany than most of those hitherto engaged ; who had been, indeed, but the advanced-guard of the Colonna. x\t their head rode a man in years, whose long white hair escaped from his plumed cap and mingled with his venerable beard. " How is this ?" said the chief, reining in his steed, " young Rienzi !" The youth looked up, as he heard that voice, and then flung himself before the steed of the old noble, and, clasping his hands, cried out in a scarce articu- late tone, " It is my brother, noble Stephen, a boy. 20 RIENZI, a mere child ! — the best — the mildest ! See how his blood dabbles the grass ; — back, back — your horse's hoofs are in the stream ! Justice, my Lord, justice ! — you are a great man." " \Vho slew him ? an Orsini, doubtless ; you shall have justice." " Thanks, thanks," murmured Rienzi, as he tottered once more to his brother's side, turned the boy's face from the grass, and strove wildly to feel the pulse of his heart ; he drew back his hand hastily, for it was crimsoned with blood, and, lifting that hand on high, shrieked out again, " Justice ! jus- tice !" The group round the old Stephen Colonna, hardened as they were in such scenes, were affected by the sight. A handsome boy, whose tears ran fast down his cheeks, and who rode his palfrey close by the side of the Colonna, drew forth his sword. " My Lord," said he, half sobbing, " an Orsini only could have butchered a harmless lad like this ; let us lose not a moment, — let us on after the ruffians." " No, Adrian, no !" cried Stephen, laying his hand on the bq^^'s shoulder ; " your zeal is to be THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 21 lauded, but we must beware an ambush. Our men have ventured too far — what ho, there ! — sound a return." The bugles, in a few minutes, brought back the pui'suers, — among them, the horseman whose spear had been so fatally misused. He was the leader of those engaged in the conflict with Martino di Porto, and the gold wrought into his armour, with the gor- geous trappings of his charger, betokened his rank. " Thanks, my son, thanks," said the old Co- lonna to this cavalier, " you have done well and bravely. But tell me, knowest thou, for thou hast an eagle eye, which of the Orsini slew this poor lx)y ? — a foul deed ; his family, too, our clients ! " Who? yon lad?" replied the horseman, lifting the helmet from his head, and wiping his heated brow; "say you so! how came he, then, with Martino's rascals? I fear me the mistake hath cost him dear. I could but suppose him of the Orsini rabble, and so — and so — " " You slew him !" cried Rienzi, in a voice of thunder, starting from the ground. " Justice ! then, my Lord Stephen, justice ! you promised me jus- tice, and I will have it !" 22 RIENZI, " My poor youth," said the old man, compas- sionately, " you should have had justice against the Orsini, but see you not this has been an error ? I do not wonder you are too grieved to listen to reason now. We must make this up to you." " And let this pay for masses for the boy's soul ; I grieve me much for the accident," said the younger Colonna, flinging down a purse of gold. " Ay, see us at the palace next week, young Cola — next week. My father, we had best return towards the boat ; its safeguard may require us yet." " Right, Gianni ; stay, some two of you, and see to the poor lad's corpse ; — a grievous accident ! how could it chance ?" The company passed back the way they came, two of the common soldiers alone remaining, except the boy Adrian, who lingered behind a few mo- ments, striving to console Rienzi, who, as one bereft of sense, remained motionless, gazing on the proud array as it swept along, and muttering to himself, " Justice, justice ! I will have it yet." The loud voice of the elder Colonna summoned Adrian, reluctantly and weeping, away. " Let me be your brother," said the gallant boy, affection- THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 23 ately pressing the scholar's hand to his heart, " I want a brother like you." Rienzi made no reply ; he did not heed or hear him — dark and stern thoughts, thoughts in which were the germ of a mighty revolution, were at his heart. He woke from them with a start, as the soldiers were now arranging their bucklers so as to make a kind of bier for the corpse, and then burst into tears as he fiercely motioned them away, and clasped the clay to his breast till he was literally soaked with the oozing blood. The poor child's garland had not dropped from his arm even when he fell, and, entangled by his dress, it still clunoj around him. It was a siojht that recalled to Cola all the gentleness, the kind heart, and winning graces of his only brother — his only friend ! It was a sight that seemed to make yet more inhuman the untimely and unmerited fate of tliat innocent boy. " My brother ! my brother !" groaned the survivor ; " how shall I meet our mother ? — how shall I meet even night and soli- tude again ? — so young, so harmless ! See ye, sirs, he was but too gentle. And they will not give us justice, because his murderer was a noble and a 24 RiENzr, Colonna. And this gold, too — gold for a brother's blood ! Will they not" — and the young man's eyes glared like fire — " will they not give us justice ! Time shall shew !" So saying, he bent his head over the corpse ; his lips muttered, as with some prayer or invocation, and then rising, his face was as pale as the dead beside him, — but it was no longer pale with grief! From that bloody clay, and that inward prayer, Cola di Rienzi rose a new being. With his young brother died his own youth. But for that event, the future liberator of Rome might have been but a dreamer, a scholar, a poet, — the peaceful rival of Petrarch, a man of thoughts, not deeds. But from that time, all his faculties, energies, fancies, genius, became concentrated to a single point : And patriotism, before a vision, leapt into the life and vigour of a passion, lastingly kindled, stubbornly hardened, and awfully consecrated, — by revenge ! THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 25 CHAP. 11. AN HISTORICAL SURVEY NOT TO BE SKIPPED, EXCEPT BY THOSE WHO DISLIKE TO UNDERSTAND WHAT THEY READ. Years had passed away, and the death of the Roman boy, amidst more noble and less excusable slaughter, was soon forgotten, — forgotten almost by the parents of the slain, in the growing fame and fortunes of their elder son, — forgotten and forgiven never by that son himself. But, between that prologue of blood, and the political drama which ensues, — betw^een the fading interest (as it were) of a dream, and the more busy, actual, and con- tinuous excitements of sterner life, — this may be the most fitting time to place before the reader a short and rapid outline of the state and cir- cumstances of that City in which the principal VOL. I. c 26 RIENZI, scenes of this story are laid ; — an outline neces- sary, perhaps, to many, for a full comprehension of the motives of the actors, and the vicissitudes of the plot. Despite the miscellaneous and mongrel tribes which had forced their settlements in the City of the Caesars, the Roman population retained an inordi- nate notion of their own supremacy over the rest of the world, and, degenerated from the iron virtues of the Republic, possessed all the insolent and unruly turbulence which characterized the Plehs of the ancient Forum. Amongst a ferocious, yet not a brave populace, the nobles supported themselves less as sagacious tyrants than as relentless banditti. The popes had struggled in vain against these stubborn and stern patricians. Their state derided, their command defied, their persons publicly out- raged, the pontiff-sovereigns of the rest of Europe resided, at the Vatican, as prisoners under terror of execution. When, thirty -eight years before the date of the events we are about to witness, a Frenchman, under the name of Clement V., had ascended the chair of St. Peter, the new pope had, with more prudence than valour, deserted Rome THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES, 27 for the tranquil retreat of Avignon ; and the luxu- rious town of a foreign provmce became the court of tlie Roman pontiff, and the throne of the Chris- tian Church. Thus deprived of even the nominal check of the papal presence, the power of the nobles might be said to have no limits, save their own caprice, or their mutual jealousies and feuds. Though arro- gating through fabulous genealogies their descent from the ancient Romans, they w^ere, in reality, for the most part, the sons of the bolder barbarians of the north ; and, contaminated by the craft of Italy, rather than embued with its national affec- tions, they retained the disdain of their foreign ancestors for a conquered soil and a degenerate people. ^Vhile the rest of Italy, especially in Florence, in Venice, and in Milan, was fast and far advancing beyond the other states of Europe in civilization and in art, the Romans appeared rather to recede than to progress ; — unblest by "taws, unvisited by art, strangers at once to the chivalry of a warlike, to the graces of a peace- ful, people. But they still possessed the sense and desire of liberty, and, by ferocious paroxysms c2 28 RiENZr, and desperate struggles, sought to vindicate for their city the title it still assumed of < the Me- tropolis of the World.' For the last two centuries they had known various revolutions, — brief, often bloody, and always unsuccessful. Still, there was the empty pageant of a popular form of govern- ment. The thirteen quarters of the city named each a chief; and the assembly of these magistrates, called Caporioni, by theory possessed an authority they had neither the power nor the courage to exert. Still there was the proud name of Senator ; but, at the present time, the office was confined to one or to two pei^ons, sometimes elected by the pope, sometimes by the nobles. The authority at- tached to the nam.e seems to have had no definite limit ; it was that of a stern dictator, or an impotent puppet, according as he who held it had the power to enforce the dignity he assumed. It was never conceded but to nobles, and it was by the nobles that all the outrages were committed. Private enmity alone was gratified whenever public justice was invoked : and the vindication of order was but the execution of revenge. Holding their palaces as the castles and fortresses THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 29 of princes, each asserting his own independency of all authority and law, and planting fortifications, and claiming principalities in the patrimonial territories of the Church, the barons of Rome made their state still more secure, and still more odious, by the maintenance of troops of foreign (chiefly of German) mercenaries, at once braver in disposi- tion, more disciplined in service, and more skilful in arms, than even the freest Italians of that time. Thus, they united the judicial and the military force, not for the protection, but for the ruin of Rome. Of these barons, the most powerful were the Orsini and Colonna ; their feuds were heredi- tary and incessant, and every day witnessed the fruits of their lawless warfare, in bloodshed, in rape, and in conflagration. The flattery or the friendship of Petrarch, too credulously believed by modern historians, has invested the Colonna, especially of the date now entered upon, with an elegance and a dignity not their own. Outrage, fraud, and assas- sination, — a sordid avarice in securing lucrative of- fices to themselves, — an insolent oppression of their citizens, and the most dastardly cringing to power superior to their own, (with but few exceptions) 3a RIENZI, mark the character of the first family of Rome. But, wealthier than the rest of the barons, they were, therefore, more luxurious, and, perhaps, more in- tellectual ; and their pride was flattered in being patrons of the arts, of which they could but clumsily become the professors. From these multiplied op- pressors the Roman citizens turned with fond and impatient regi'et to their ignorant and dark notions of departed Hberty and greatness. They con- founded together the times of the Empu'e with those of the Republic, and often looked to the Teutonic king, who obtained his election from beyond the Alps, but his title of emperor from the Romans, as the deserter of his legitimate trust and proper home ; vainly imagining that, if both the Emperor and the Pontiff fixed their residence in Rome, liberty and law would again seek their natural shelter beneath the resuscitated majesty of the Roman people. The absence of the pope and the papal court served greatly to impoverish the citizens ; and they had suffered yet more visibly by the depredations of hordes of robbers, numerous and unsparing, who infested Romagna, obstructing all the public ways. THE LAST aF THE TRIBUNES. 31 and were, sometimes secretly, sometimes openly, protected by the barons, who often recruited their banditti garrisons by banditti soldiers. But besides the lesser and ignobler robbers, there had risen, in Italy, a far more formidable descrip- tion of freebooters. A German, who assumed the lofty title of the Duke Werner, had, a few years prior to the period we approach, enlisted and or- ganized a considerable force, styled " The Great Company," with w^hich he besieged cities and in- vaded states, without any object less shameless than that of pillage. His example was soon imitated: numerous « Companies,' similarly constituted, cle- vastated the distracted and divided land. They appeared, suddenly raised, as if by magic, before the v/alls of a city, and demanded immense sums^s the purchase of peace. Neither tyrant nor common- wealth maintained a force sufficient to resist them ; and if other northern mercenaries were engaged to oppose them, it was only to recruit the standards of the freebooters with deserters. Mercenary fought not mercenary — nor Gennan, German: and greater pay, and more unbridled rapine, made the tents of the ' Companies' far more attractive than the regu- lated stipends of a city, or the dull fortress and im- 32 RIENZI, poverished coffers of a chief. Werner, the most implacable and ferocious of all these adventurers, and who had so openly gloried in his enormities as to wear upon his breast a silver plate, engraved with the words "Enemy to God, to Pity, and to Mercy," had not long since ravaged Romagna with fire and sword. But, ultimately, induced by money, or un- able to control the fierce spirits he had raised, he afterwards led the bulk of his company back to Germany. Small detachments, however, remained, scattered throughout the land, waiting only an able leader once more to re-unite them : amongst those who appeared most fitted for that destiny was Walter de Montreal, a Knight of St. John, and gentleman of Provence, whose valour and military genius had already, though yet young, raised his name into dreaded celebrity ; and whose ambition, experience, and sagacity, relieved by certain chivalric and noble qualities, were fitted to enterprises far greater and more important than the violent depredations of the atrocious Werner. From these scourges, no state had suffered more grievously than Rome. The patrimonial ter- ritories of the pope, — in part wi'ested from him by petty tyrants, in part laid waste by these foreign THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 33 robbers, —yielded but a scanty supply to the neces- sities of Clement VI., the most accomplished gentleman, and the most graceful voluptuary of his time : and the good father had devised a plan, whereby to enrich at once the Romans and their pontiff. Nearly fifty years before the time we enter upon, in order both to replenish the papal coffers and pa- cify the starving Romans, Boniface VIII. ha^l insti- tuted the Festival of the Jubilee, or Holy Year ; in fact, a revival of a Pagan ceremonial. A plenary indulgence was promised to every Catholic who, in that year, and in the first year of every succeeding century, should visit the churches of St. Peter and St. Paul. An immense concourse of pilgrims, from every part of Christendom, had attested the wisdom of the invention, '* and two priests stood night and day, with rakes in their hands, to collect without counting, the heaps of gold and silver that were poured on the altar of St. Paul."=* It is not to be wondered at that this most lucra- tive festival should, ere the next century was half • Gibbon, vol. xii. c. 59. c3 34 RIENZI, expired, appear to a discreet pontiff to be too long postponed. And both pope and city agreed in thinkinfy it mio;ht well bear a less distant renewal. Accordingly, Clement VI., had proclaimed, under the name of the Mosaic Jubilee, a second Holy Year for 1350, viz., three years distant from the present date. This circumstance had a great effect in whetting the popular indignation against the barons, and preparing the events I shall nar- rate ; for the roads were, as I before said, infested by the banditti, — the creatures and allies of the barons. And if the roads were not cleared, the pilgrims might not attend. It was the object of the pope's vicar, Raimond, Bishop of Orvietto, (bad politician and good canonist,) to seek, by every means, to remove all impediment between the offerings of devotion and the treasury of St. Peter. Such, in brief, was the state of Rome at the period of the events I am about to relate. Her ancient mantle of renown, still, in the eyes of Italy and of Europe, cloaked her ruins. In name, at least, she was still the queen of the earth, and from her hands came the crown of the emperor of the north, and the keys of the father of the church. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 35 Her situation was precisely that which presented a vast and glittering triumph to bold ambition, — an inspiring, if mournful, spectacle to determined pa- triotism — and a fitting stage for that more august tragedy which seeks its incidents, selects its actors, and shapes its moral, amidst the vicissitudes and crimes of nations. 36 RIENZI, CHAP. III. THE BRAWL. On an evening in April, 1347, and in one of those wide spaces in which Modern and Ancient Rome seemed blent together — equally desolate and equally in ruins — a miscellaneous and indignant populace were assembled. That morning the house of a Roman jeweller had been forcibly entered and pillaged by the soldiers of Martino di PortQ, with a daring effrontery which surpassed even the ordinary licence of the barons. The sympathy and sensation throughout the city were deep and ominous. '' Never will I submit to this tyranny ! " « Nor I ! " " Nor I ! " " Nor, by die bones of St. Peter, will I ! " THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 37 " And what, my friends, is this tyranny, to which you will not submit," said a young nobleman, ad- dressing himself to the crowd of citizens who, heated, angry, half-armed, and with the vehement gestures of Italian passion, were now sweeping down the long and narrow street that led to the gloomy quarter occupied by the Orsini. " Ah, my Lord !" cried two or three of the citizens in a breath, " you will right us — you will see justice done to us — you are a Colonna." " Ha, ha, ha !" laughed, scornfully, one man, of gigantic frame, and wielding on high a huge ham- mer, indicative of his trade. " Justice and Colonna ! body of God ! those names are not often found together." " Down with him ! down with him ! he is an Orsinist, — down with him ! " cried at least ten of the throng — but no hand was raised against the giant. " He speaks the truth," said a second voice, firmly. " Ay, that doth he," said a third, knitting his brows, and unsheathing his knife, " and we will abide by it. The Orsini are tyrants — and the Co- lonnas are, at the best, as bad." "Thou liest in thy teeth, ruffian !" cried the young 38 RIENZI, noble, advancing into the press and confronting the last asperser of the Colonna. Before the flashing eye and menacing gesture of the cavalier, the worthy brawler retreated some steps, so as to leave an open space between the towering form of the smith and the small, slender, but vigorous frame of the young noble. Taught from their birth to despise the courage of the plebeians, even while careless of much repu- tation as to their own, the patricians of Rome were not unaccustomed to the rude fellowship of these brawls ; nor was it unoften that the mere presence of a noble sufficed to scatter whole crowds, that had, the moment before, been breathing vengeance against his order and his house. Waving his hand, therefore, to the smith, and utterly unheeding either his brandished weapon or his vast stature, the young Adrian di Castello, a distant kinsman of the Colonna, bade him, impe- riously, give way. ^' To your homes, friends ! and know," said he, with some dignity, " that ye wrong us much, if ye imagine we share the evil-doings of the Orsini, or are pandering solely to our own passions in the feud THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 39 between their house and ours. May the Holy Mother so judge me," added he, devoutly lifting up his eyes, '• as I now with truth declare, that it is for your wTongs, and for the wrongs of Rome, that I have drawn this sword against the Orsini." " So say all the tyrants," rejoined the smith, hardily, as he leant his hammer against a fragment of stone — some remnant of ancient Rome — " they never fight against each odier, but it is for our good. One Colonna cuts me the throat of Orsini's baker — it is for our good ! another Colonna seizes on the daughter of Orsini's tailor — it is for our good ! our good — yes, for tlie good of the people ! — the good of the bakers and tailors, eh?" ** Fellow," said the young nobleman, gravely, " if a Colonna did thus, he did \\Tong ; but the holiest cause may have bad supporters." " Yes, the holy Church itself is propped on very indifferent columns," answered the smith, in a rude witticism on the affection of the pope for the Colonna. " He blasphemes ! the smith blasphemes !" cried the partisans of that powerful house. "A Colonna, a Colonna !" 40 RIENZI, " An Orsini, an Orsini !" was no less promptly the counter cry. " The People !" shouted the smith, wavinix his formidable weapon far above the heads of the group. In an instant, the w^hole throng, who had at first united against the aggression of one man, were divided by the hereditary wrath of faction. At the cry of Orsini, several new partizans hurried to the spot ; the friends of the Colonna drew themselves on one side — the defenders of the Orsini on the other — and the few w^ho agreed with the smith that both factions were equally odious, and the people was the sole legitimate cry in a popular commo- tion, would have withdrawn themselves from the approaching melee, if the smith himself, who was looked upon by them as an authority of great in- fluence, had not — whether from resentment at the haughty bearing of the young Colonna, or from that appetite of contest not uncommon in men of a bulk and force which assures them in all personal affrays the lofty pleasure of superiority — if, I say, the smith himself had not, after a pause of indeci- sion, retired among the Orsini, and entrained, by THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 41 his example, the alliance of his friends with the favourers of that faction. In popular commotions, each man is whirled along with the herd, often half against his own approbation or assent. The few words of peace by which Adrian di Castello commenced an address to his friends were drowned amidst their shouts. Proud to find in their ranks one of the most be- loved, and one of tlie noblest of that name, the partisans of the Colonna placed him in their front, and charged impetuously on their foes. Adrian, however, who had acquired from circumstances something of that chivalrous code which he cer- tainly could not have owed to his Roman birth, disdained at first to assault men, among whom he recognised no equal, either in rank or the practice of arms. He contented himself with putting aside the few strokes that were aimed at him in the gathering confusion of the conflict ; few — for those who recognised him, even amidst the bitterest par- tisans of the Orsini, were not willing to expose themselves to the danger and odium of spilling the blood of a man who, in addition to his great birth and the terrible power of his connections, added 42 RIENZI, the sanction of a personal popularity, which he owed rather to a comparison with the vices of his relatives than to any remarkable virtues hitherto displayed by himself. The smith alone, who had as yet taken no active part in the fray, seemed to gather himself up in determined opposition as the cavalier now advanced within a few steps of him. " Did we not tell thee," quoth the giant, frown- ing, " that the Colonna were equally foes to the people as the Orsini ? Look at thy followers and clients : are they not cutting the throats of humble men by way of vengeance for the crime of a great one ? But that is the way one patrician always scourges the insolence of another. He lays the rod on the backs of the people, and then cries, ' See how just I am !' " " I do not answer thee now," answered Adrian ; " but if thou regrettest with me this waste of blood, join with me in attempting to prevent it." " I — not I ! let the blood of the slaves flow to- day ; the time is fast coming when it shall be washed away by the blood of the lords." " Away, ruffian !" said Adrian, seeking no further parley, and touching the smith with the flat side THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 43 of his sword. In an instant the hammer of the smitli swung in the air, and, but for the active spring of the young noble, would infallibly have crushed him to the earth. Ere the smith could gain time for a second blow, Adrian's sword passed twice through liis right arm, and the weapon fell heavily to the ground. " Slay him, slay him !" cried several of the clients of the Colonna, now pressing, dastard- like, round the disarmed and disabled smith. " Ay, slay him !" said, in tolerable Italian, but with a barbarous accent, one man, half-clad in armour, who had but just joined the group, and who was one of those wild German bandits whom the Colonna held in their pay ; "he belongs to a horrible gang of miscreants, sworn against all order and peace. He is one of Rienzi's fol- lowers, and, bless the Three Kings ! raves about the people." " Thou say est right, barbarian," said the sturdy smith, in a loud voice, and tearing aside the vest from his breast with his left hand ; " come all — Colonna and Orsini — dig to this heart with your sharp blades, and when you have reached the 44 RIENZl, centre, you will find there the object of your com- mon hatred — ' Rienzi and the People!' " As he uttered these words, in language that would have seemed above his station, (if a certain glow and exaggeration of phrase and sentiment were not common when excited to all the Romans,) the loudness of his voice rose above the noise im- mediately round him, and stilled, for an instant, the general din ; and when, at last, the words '' Rienzi and the People" rang forth, they penetrated midway through the increasing crowd, and were answered as by an echo, with a hundred voices — " Rienzi and the People !" But whatever impression the words of the me- chanic made on others, it was equally visible in the young Colonna, At the name of Rienzi the glow of excitement vanished from his cheek ; he started back, muttered to himself, and for a moment seemed, even in the midst of that stirring commo- tion, to be lost in an abstract and distant reverie. He recovered, as the shout died away ; and, saying to the smith, in a low tone, " Friend, I am sorry for thy wound ; but seek me on the morrow, and thou shalt find thou hast wronojed me ; " he THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 45 beckoned to the German to follow him ; and thread- ed his way through the crowd, which generally save back as he advanced. For the bitterest hatred lo the order of the nobles was at that time in Rome mingled with a servile respect for their persons, and a mysterious awe of their uncontrollable power. As Adrian passed through that part of the crowd in which the fray had not yet commenced, the murmurs that followed him were not those which many of his race could have heard. " A Colonna," said one. *' Yet no ravisher," said another, laughing wildly. " Nor murtherer," muttered a third, pressing his hand to his breast. " 'Tis not against him that my father's blood cries aloud." " Bless him," said a fourth, " for as yet no man curses him !" " Ah, God help us !" said an old man, with a long grey beard, leaning on his staff; " the serpent's young yet ; the teeth will shew by and by." " For shame, father ! he is a comely youth, and not proud in the least. What a smile he hath ! " quoth a fair matron, who kept on the outskirt of the melee. 4t> RIEXZI, " Farewell to a man's honour when a noble smiles on his wife !" was the answer. " Nay," said Luigi, a jolly butcher, with a roguish eye, " what a man can win fairly from maid or wife, that let him do, whether plebeian or noble — that's my morality ; but w^hen an ugly old patrician finds fair words will not win fair looks, and carries me off a dame on the back of a German boar, with a stab in the side for comfort to the spouse, — then, I say, he is a wicked man, and an adulterer." While such were the comments and the murmurs that followed the noble, very different were the looks and words that attended the German soldier. Equally, nay, wdth even greater promptitude, did the crowed make w^ay at his armed and heavy tread ; but not with looks of reverence ; — the eye glared as he approached ; but the cheek paled — the head bowed — the lip quivered — each man felt a shudder of hate and fear, as recognising a dread and mortal foe. And well and wrathfully did the fierce mercenary note the signs of the general aversion. He pushed rudely on — half-smiling in contempt, half-frowning in revenge, as he looked THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 47 from side to side — and his long, matted, light hair, tawny-coloured moustache, and brawny front, con- trasted strongly with the dark eyes, raven locks, and slender frames of the Italians. " May Lucifer double damn those German cut- throats !" muttered, between his grinded teeth, one of the citizens. "Amen !" answered, heartily, another. " Hush !" said a third, timorously looking round, " if one of them hear thee, thou art a lost man." " Oh, Rome ! Rome ! to what art thou fallen !" said, bitterly, one citizen, clothed in black, and of a higher seeming then the rest, '' when thou shud- derest in thy streets at the tread of a hired bar- barian !" " Hark to one of our learned men, and rich citizens ! " said the butcher, reverently. "'Tis a friend of Rienzi's," quoth another of the group, lifting his cap. With downcast eyes, and a face in which grief, shame, and wrath, were visibly expressed, Pan- dulfo di Guido, a citizen of birth and repute, swept slowly through the crowd, and disappeared. Meanwhile, Adrian, having gained a street 48 RiENzr, which, though in the neighbourhood of the crowd, was empty and desolate, turned to his fierce comrade. " Rodolf," said he, " mark ! — no vio- lence to the citizens. Return to the crowd, collect the friends of our house, withdraw them from the scene ; let not the Colonna be blamed for this day's violence; and assure our followers, in my name, that I swear, by the knighthood I received at the Emperor's hands, that by my sword shall Martino di Porto be punished for his outrage. Fain would I, in person, allay the tumult, but my presence only seems to sanction it. Go — thou hast weight with them all." " Ay, Signor, the weight of blows! "answered the grim soldier. " But the command is hard ; I would fain let their puddle-blood flow an hour or two longer. Yet, pardon me, in obeying thy orders, do I obey those of my master, thy kinsman ? It is old Stephen Colonna, — who seldom spares blood or treasure, God bless him — (save his own !) — whose money I hold, and to whose bests I am sworn." " Diavolo!" muttered the cavalier, and the angry spot was on his cheek ; but, with the habitual self-» THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 49 control of the Italian nobles, he smothered his rising choler, and said, aloud, with calmness, but dignity,— " Do as I bid thee ; check this tumult, — make ics the forbearing party. Let all be still within one hour hence, and call on me to-morrow for thy re- ward; be this purse thy present earnest of my future thanks. As for my kinsman, whom I com- mand thee to name more reverently, 'tis in his name I speak. Hark ! the din increases — the contest swells — go — lose not another moment." Somewhat awed by the quiet firmness of the patrician, Rodolf nodded, without answer, slid the money into his bosom, and strode rapidly away into the thickest of the throng. But, even ere he arrived, a sudden re-action had taken place. The young cavalier, left alone in that spot, fol- lowed with his eyes the receding form of the mer- cenary, as the sun, now setting, shone slant upon his glittering casque, and said bitterly to himself — " Unfortunate city, fountain of all mighty memo- ries — fallen queen of a thousand nations — how art thou decrowned and spoiled by thy recreant and apostate children. Thy nobles divided against VOL. I. D 50 RIENZT, themselves — thy people cursing thy nobles — thy priests, who should sow peace, planting discord — the father of thy church deserting thy stately walls, his home a refuge, his mitre a fief, his court a Gallic village — and we ! we, of the haughtiest blood of Rome — we, the sons of Caesars, and of the lineage of demigods, guarding an insolent and abhorred state by the swords of hirelings, who mock our cowardice while they receive our pay, — who keep our citizens slaves, and lord it over their very masters in return. Oh ! that we, the hereditary cliiefs of Rome, could but feel — oh, that we could but find, our only legitimate safeguard in the grateful hearts of our country- men !" So deeply did the young Adrian feel the galling truth of all he uttered, that the indignant tears rolled down his cheeks as he spoke. He felt no shame as he dashed them away, for that weakness which weeps for a fallen race is the tenderness not of women but of angels. As he turned slowly to quit the spot, his steps were suddenly arrested by a loud shout, " Rienzi ! Rienzi !" smote the air. From the walls of the THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 51 Capitol, to tlie bed of the glittering Tiber, that name echoed far and wide ; and, as the shout died away, it was swallowed up in a silence so profound, so universal, so breathless, that you might have imagined that death itself had fallen over the city. And now, at the extreme end of the crowd, and elevated above their level, on vast fragments of stone which had been dragged fi'om the ruins of Rome in one of the late frequent tumults between contending factions, to serve as a barricade for citizens against citizens, — on these silent memo- rials of the past grandeur, the present misery, of Rome, stood that extraordinary man, who, above all his race, wiis the most penetrated with the glories of the one time, with the degradations of the other. From the distance at which he stood from the scene, Adrian could only distinguish the dark outline of his form ; he could only hear the faint sound of his mighty voice; he could only perceive in the sulxlued, yet waving sea of human beings that spread around, their heads bared in the last rays of the sun, the unutterable effect which an elo- quence, described by cotemporaries almost as mi- d2 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 52 RIENZI, raculous, — but in reality less so fi'om the genius of the man than the sympathy of the audience, — cre- ated upon all, who drank into their hearts and souls the stream of its burning thoughts. It was but for a short time that that form was visible to the earnest eye, that that voice at in- tervals reached the straining ear, of Adrian di Castello; but that time sufficed to produce all the effect which Adrian himself had desired. Another shout, more earnest — more prolonged than the first — a shout, in w^hich spoke the release of swelling thoughts — of intense excitement — betokened the close of the harangue; and then you might see, after a minute's pause, the crowd breaking in all directions, and pouring down the avenues in various knots and groups, each testi- fying the strong and lasting impression made upon the multitude by that address. Every cheek was flushed — every tongue spoke : the animation of the orator had passed, like a living spirit, into the breasts of the audience. He had thundered against the disorders of the patricians, yet, by a word, he had disarmed the anger of the plebeians — he had preached freedom, yet he had opposed licence. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 53 He had calmed the present, by a promise of the future. He had chid their quarrels, yet had sup- ported their cause. He had mastered the revenge of to-day, by a solemn assurance that there should come justice for the morrow. So great may be the power, so mighty the eloquence, so formid- able the genius of one man, — without arms, without rank, without sword or ermine, who addi'esses himself to a people that is oppressed ! 54 RIENZIj CHAP. IV. AN ADVENTURE. Avoiding the broken streams of the dispersed crowd, Adrian Colonna strode rapidly down one of the narrow streets leading to his palace, which was situated at no inconsiderable distance from the place in which the late contest had occm-red. The education of his life made him feel a profound interest, not only in the divisions and disputes of his country, but also in the scene he had just witnessed, and the authority exercised by Rienzi. An orphan of a younger, but opulent branch of the Colonna, Adrian had been brought up under the care and guardianship of his kinsman, that astute, yet valiant, Stephen Colonna, who, of all the nobles of Rome, was the most powerful, alike from the favour of the pope, and the number of THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 55 armed hirelings -whom his weahh enabled him to maintain. Adrian had early manifested what in that age was considered an extraordinary dispo- sition towards intellectual pm'suits, and had ac- quired much of the little that was then known of the ancient language and the ancient history of his country. Though Adrian was but a boy at the time in which first, presented to the reader, he witnessed the emotions of Rienzi at the death of his brother, his kind heart had been penetrated with sympathy for Cola's affliction, and shame for the apathy of his kinsmen at the result of their own feuds. He had earnestly sought the friendship of Rienzi, and, despite his years, became aware of the power and enei'gy of his character. But though Rienzi, after a short time, had appeared to think no more of his brother's death — though he again entered the halls of the Colonna, and mixed at their feasts, he preserved a certain distance and reserve of manner, which even Adrian could only partially overcome. He rejected every offer of service, favour, or promotion; and any unwonted proof of kindness from Adrian seemed, instead of making 56 RIENZT, him more familiar, to offend him into colder dis- tance. The easy humour and conversational viva- city which had first rendered him a welcome guest with those who passed their lives between fighting and ennui, had changed into a vein ironical, cynical, and severe. But the dull barons were equally amused at his wit, and Adrian was almost the only one who detected the serpent couched be- neath the smile. Often Rienzi sat at the feast, silent, but observ- ing, as if watching every look, weighing every word, taking guage and measurement of the intel- lect, policy, temperament of every guest ; and when he had seemed to satisfy himself, his spirits would rise, his words flow, and while his dazzling, but bitter, wit lit up the revel, none saw that the un- mirthful flash was the token of the coming storm. But all the while, he neglected no occasion to mix with the humbler citizens, to stir up their minds, to inflame their imaginations, to kindle their emula- tion with pictures of the present, and widi legends of the past. He grew in popularity and repute, and was yet more in power with the herd, because in honour with the nobles. Perhaps it was for THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 57 that reason that he had continued the guest of the Colonna. ^^llen5 six years before the present date, the Capitol of the Caesars witnessed the triumpli of Petrarch, the scholastic fame of the young Rienzi had attracted the friendship of the poet, — a friend- ship that continued, with slight interruption, to the last, through careers so widely different ; and after- wards, one among the Roman Deputies to Avig- non, he had been conjoined with Petrarch* to sup- plicate Clement VI. to remove the Holy See from Avignon to Rome. It was in this mission that, for the first time, he evinced his extraordinary powers of eloquence and persuasion. The pontiff, indeed, more desirous of ease than glory, was not convinced by the arguments, but he was enchanted with the pleader ; and Rienzi returned to Rome, loaded w^th honours, and clothed with the dignity of high and responsible office. No longer the in- active scholar, the gay companion, he rose at once to * According to the modern historians; but it seems more pro- bable that Rienzi's mission to Avignon was posterior to that of Petrarch. However this be, it was at Avignon that Petrarch and Rienzi became most intimate, as Petrarch himself observes in one of his letters. d3 58 RIENZI, pre-eminence above all his fellow- citizens. Never before had authority been borne v^^ith so austere an integrity, so uncorrupt a zeal. He had sought to impregnate his colleagues with the same loftiness of principle — he had failed. Now secure in his footing, he had begun openly to appeal to the people ; and already a new spirit seemed to animate the populace of Rome. While these were the fortunes of liienzi, Adrian had been long separated from him, and absent from Rome. The Colonna were staunch supporters of the im- perial party, and Adrian di Castello had received, and obeyed, an invitation to the Emperor's court. Under that monarch, he had initiated himself in arms, and, among the knights of Germany, he had learned to temper the natural Italian shrewdness with the chivalry of northern valour. In leaving Bavaria, he had sojourned a short time in the solitude of one of his estates by the fairest lake of northern Italy ; and thence, with a mind improved alike by action and study, had visited many of the free Italian states, imbibed sentiments less prejudiced than those of his order, and acquired an early reputation for himself while THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 59 inly marking the characters and deeds of others. In him, the best qualities of the Italian noble were united. Passionately addicted to the cultivation of letters, subtle and profound in policy, gentle and bland of manner, dignifying a love of pleasure with a certain elevation of taste, he yet possessed a gal- lantly of conduct, a pui'ity of honour, and an aversion from cruelty, which were then very rarely found in the Italian temperament, and which even the Chivalry of the North, while maintaining among themselves, usually abandoned the moment they came into contact with the systematic craft and dis- dain of honesty, which made the character of the ferocious, yet wily. South. With these qualities he combined, indeed, the softer passions of his coun- trymen, — he adored Beauty, and he made a deity of Love. He had but a few weeks returned to his native cit}', whither his reputation had already preceded him, and where his early affection for letters and gentleness of bearing were still remembered. He returned to find the position of Rienzi far more altered than his own. Adrian had not yet sought the scholar. He wished first to judge with his own 60 RIENZI, eyes, and at a distance, of the motives and object of his conduct ; for partly he caught the suspicions which his own order entertained of Rienzi, and partly he shared in the trustful enthusiasm of the people. " Certainly," said he now to himself, as he walked musingly onward, " certainly, no man has it more in his power to reform our diseased state, to heal our divisions, to awaken our citizens to the recollections of ancestral virtue. But that very power, how dangerous is it ! Have I not seen, in the free states of Italy, men, called into authority for the sake of preserving the people, honest them- selves at first, and then, drunk with the sudden rank, betraying the very cause which had exalted them. True, those men were chiefs and nobles, but are plebeians less human? Howbeit, I have heard and seen enough from afar, — I will now ap- proach, and examine the man himself." While thus soliloquizing, Adrian but little noted the various passengers who, more and more rarely as the evening waned, hastened homeward. Among these were two females, who now alone shared with Adrian the long and gloomy street into THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 61 which he had entered. The moon was ah'eady bright in the heavens, and, as the women passed the cavaHer with a hght and quick step, the younger one turned back and regarded him by the clear hght with an eager, yet timid, glance. " Why dost thou tremble, my pretty one ?" said lier companion, who might have told some five- and-forty years, and whose garb and voice bespoke her of inferior rank to the younger female. '' The streets seem quiet enough now, and, the Virgin be praised ! we are not so far from home either." " Oh ! J3enedetta, it is he ! it is the young signor — it is Adrian !" *' That is fortunate," said the nurse, for such was her condition, " since they say he is as bold as a Northman ; and, as the Palazzo Colonna is not very far from hence, we shall be within reach of his aid should we want it ; that is to say, sweet one, if you will walk a little slower than you have yet done." The young lady slackened her pace, and sighed. " He is certainly very handsome," quoth the nurse ; " but thou must not think more of him; he is too far above thee for marriage, and, for aught 62 RIENZI, else, thou art too honest, and thy brotlier too proud" — " And thou, Benedetta, art too quick with thy tongue. How canst thou talk thus, when thou knowest he hath never, since, at least, I was a mere child, even addressed me ; nay, he scarce knows of my very existence. He, the Lord Adrian di Castello, dream of the poor Irene ! the mere thought is madness !" " Then why," said the nurse, briskly, " dost thou dream of him ?" Her companion sighed again, more deeply than at first. " Holy St. Catherine ! " continued Benedetta, if there were but one man in the world, I would die single ere I would think of him, until, at least, he had kissed my hand twice, and left it my own fault if it were not my lips instead." The young lady still replied not. "But how didst thou contrive to love him?" asked the nurse. " Thou canst not have seen him very often : it is but some four or five weeks since his return to Rome." " Oh, how dull art thoai " answered the fair THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 63 Irene. " Have I not told thee, again and again, tliat I loved him six years ago ? " " When thou hadst told but thy tenth year, and ff doll would have been thy most suitable lover ! As I am a Christian, Signora, thou hast made good use of thy time." " And during his absence," continued the girl, fondly, yet sadly, " did I not hear him spoken of, and was not the mere sound of his name like a love- gift that bade me remember ? and when they praised him, have I not rejoiced ? and when they blamed him, have I not resented ? and when they said that his lance was victorious in the tournay, did I not weep with pride ? and when they whispered that his vows were welcome in the bower, wept I not as fervently with grief? Have not the six years of his absence been a dream, and was not his return a waking into light — a morning of glory and the sun ? And I see him now in the church, when he v/ots not of me ; and on his happy steed, as he passes by my lattice : and is not that enough of happiness for love ? " ''- But if he loves not thee ?" " Fool ! I ask not that j — nay, I know not if I 64 RIENZI, wish it. Perhaps I would rather dream of him, such as I would have him, than know him for wkat he is. He might be unkind, or ungenerous, or love me but little ; rather would I not be loved at all, than loved coldly, and eat away my heart by comparing it with his. I can love him now, as something abstract, unreal, and divine : but what would be my shame, my grief, if I were to find him less than I have imagined ! Then, indeed, my life would have been wasted; then, indeed, the beauty of the earth would be gone ! " The good nurse was not very capable of sympa- thizing with sentiments like these. Even had their characters been more alike, their age would have rendered such sympathy impossible. What but youth can echo back the soul of youth — all the music of its wild vanities and romantic follies ? The good nurse did not sympathize with the sentiments of her young lady, but she sympathized with the deep earnestness with which they were expressed. She thought it wondrous silly, but wondrous mov- ing ; slie wiped her eyes with the corner of her veil, and hoped in her secret heart that her young charge would soon get a real husband to put such unsub- th£ last of the tribunes. 65 Rtantial phantasies out of her head. There was a short pause in their conversation, when, just where two streets crossed one another, there was heard a loud noise of laughing voices and trampling feet. Torches were seen on high, affronting the pale light of the moon ; and, at a very short distance from the two females, in the cross street, advanced a company of seven or eight men, bearing, as seen by the red light of the torches, the formidable badge of the Orsini. Amidst the other disorders of the time, it was no unfrequent custom for the younger or more dissolute of the nobles, in small and armed com- panies, to parade the streets at night, seeking occa- sion for a licentious gallantry among the cowering citizens, or a skirmish at arms with some rival stragglers of their own order. Such a band had Irene and her companion now chanced to en- counter. " Holy Mother ! " cried Benedetta, turning pale, and half running, " What curse has befallen us? How could we have been so foolish as to tarry so late at the lady Nina's ! Run, Signora ; run, or we shall fall into their hands ! " 66 RIENZI, But the advice of Benedetta came too late, — the fluttering garments of the women had been already descried : in a moment more they were surrounded by the marauders. A rude hand tore aside Bene- detta's veil, and, at sight of features which, if time had not spared, it could never very materially in- jure, the rough aggressor cast the poor nurse against the wall with a curse, which was echoed by a loud laugh from his comrades. " Thou hast a fine fortune in faces, Giuseppe !" " Yes ; it was but the other day that he seized on a girl of sixty." " And then, by way of improving her beauty, cut her across the face with his dagger, because she was not sixteen !" " Hush, fellows ! whom have we here?" said the chief of the party, a man richly dressed, and who, though bordering upon middle age, had only the more accustomed himself to the excesses of youth; as he spoke, he snatched the trembling Irene from the grasp of his followers. " Ho, there ! the torches ! Oh, che hella carnarjione f what blushes — what eyes — nay, look not down, pretty one; thou needst not be shamed to win THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 67 the love of an Orsini — yes ; know the triumph thou hast achieved, it is Martino di Porto who bids thee smile upon him !" '' For the blest Mother's sake, release me ! nay, Sir, this must not be — I am not unfriended — this insult shall not pass !" *' Hark to her silver chiding, — it is better than my best hound's bay ! This adventure is worth a month's watching. What! will you not come? — res- tive — shrieks, too! — Francesco, Pietro, ye are the gentlest of the band. Wrap her veil around her, — muffle this music; — so ! bear her before me to the palace, and to-morrow, sweet one, thou shalt go home with a basket of florins, which thou mayest say thou hast bought at market." But Irene's shrieks, Irene's struggles had al- ready brought succour to her side, and, as Adrian approached the spot, the nurse flung herself on her knees before him. " Oh, sweet Signor, for Christ's grace save us I deliver my young mistress — her friends love you well ! — We are all for the Colonna, my Lord; yes, indeed, all for the Colonna ! Save the kin of your own clients, gracious Signor !" 68 RIENZI, " It is enough that she is a woman," answered Adrian, and adding, between his teeth, " that an Orsini is her assailant." He strode haughtily into the thickest of the group ; the servitors laid hands on their swords, but gave way before him as they recognised his person ; he reached the two men who had already seized Irene, in one moment he struck the foremost to the ground; in another, he had passed his left arm round the light and slender form of the maiden, and stood confronting the Orsini with his drawn blade, which, however, he pointed to the ground. " For shame! my Lord, for shame !" said he, in- dignantly. " Will you force Rome to rise, to a man, against our order ! Vex not too far the lion, chained though he be ; war against us, if ye will ! draw your blades upon men, though they be of your own race and speak your own tongue : but if ye would sleep at nights, and not dread the Avenger's gripe, — if ye would walk the market- place secure — wrong not a Roman woman ! Yes, the very walls around us preach to you the punishment of such a deed : for that offence fell the Tarquins, — for that offence were swept THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 69 away the Decemvirs, — for that offence, if ye rush upon it, the blood of your whole house may flow like water. Cease, then, my Lord, from this mad attempt, so unworthy your great name ; cease, and thank even a Colonna, that he has come be- tween you and a moment's frenzy !" So noble, so lofty were the air and gesture of Adrian, as he thus spoke, that even the rude ser- vitors felt a thrill of approbation and remorse — not so Martino di Porto. He had been struck with the beauty of the prey thus suddenly snatched from him ; he had been accustomed to long out- rage and to long impunity; the very sight, the very voice of a Colonna, was a blight to his eye and a discord to his ear; what, then, when a Colonna interfered with his lusts, and rebuked his vices ? " Pedant !" he cried, with quivering lips, " prate not to me of thy vain legends and gossip's tales ! think not to snatch from me my possession in another, when thine own life is in my hands. Un- hand the rnaiden ! throw down thy sword ! return home without further parley, or, by my faith, and the blades of my followers — (look at them well !) — thou diest !" 70 RIENZI, " Signor," said Adrian, calmly, yet while he spoke he retreated gradually with his fair burthen towards the neighbouring wall, so as at least to leave only his front exposed to those fearful odds — " Thou wilt not so misuse the present chances, and wrong thyself in men's mouths, as to attack, with eight swords, even thy hereditary foe, thus cum- bered, too, as he is. But, — nay, hold ! — if thou art so purposed, bethink thee well, one cry of my voice would soon turn the odds against thee. Thou art now in the quarter of my tribe ; thou art surrounded by the habitations of the Colonna ; yon palace swarms with men who sleep not, save with harness on their backs — men whom my voice can reach even now, but from whom, if they once taste of blood, it could not save thee !" " He speaks true, noble Lord," said one of the band ; " we have wandered too far out of oui' beat ; we are in their very den : the palace of old Stephen Colonna is within call, and, to my knowledge," added he, in a whisper, " eighteen fresh men- of- arms — aye, and Northmen too — marched through its gates this day." " Were there eight hundi'ed men at arm's THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 71 length," answered Martino, furiously, " I would not be thus bearded by a solitary foe, amidst mine own train. Away with yon woman ! To the attack ! to the attack ! " Thus saying, he made a desperate lunge at Adrian, who, having kept his eye cautiously on the move- ments of his enemy, was not unprepared for the as- sault. As he put aside the blade with his own, he shouted, with a loud voice — " Colonna ! to the rescue, Colonna ! " Nor had it been without an ulterior object that the deep and self- controlling mind of Adrian had hitherto sought to prolong the parley. Even as he first addressed Orsini, he had perceived, by the moonlight, the glitter of armour upon two men advancing from the far end of the street, and judged at once, by the neighbourhood, that they must be among the mercenaries of the Colonna. Gently he suffered the form of Irene, which now, for she had swooned with the terror, pressed too heavily upon him, to slide from his left arm, and standing over her form, while sheltered from behind by the wall which he had so warily gained, he contented himself with parrying the blows hastily aimed at him, without attempting to retaliate. 72 RIENZI, Few of the Romans, however used to such desultory warfare, were then well and dexterously practised in the use of arms, and the science Adrian had acquired among the chivalry of the north, befriended him now even against such odds. It is true, indeed, that the followers of Orsini did not share the fury of their lord; partly afraid of the consequence to themselves should the blood of so high-born a signor be spilt at their hands, partly embarrassed with the appre- hension that they should see themselves suddenly beset with the ruthless hirelings so close within hearing, they struck but aimless and random blows, looking every moment behind and aside, and rather prepared for flight than slaughter. Echoing the cry of "Colonna," poor Benedetta fled at the first clash of swords. She ran down the dreary street, still shrieking that cry, and passed the very portals of Stephen's palace, (where some grim forms yet loitered,) without arresting her steps there, so great was her confusion and terror. Meanwhile, the two armed men, whom Adrian had descried, proceeded leisurely up the street. The one was of a rude and common mould, his arms and his complexion testified his calling and race ; and by the great respect he paid to his com- THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 73 panion, you might be sure that that companion was no native of Italy. For the brigands of the north, while they served the vices of the southern, scarce affected to disguise their contempt for his cowardice. The companion of the brigand was a man of a martial, yet easy air. He wore no helmet, but a cap of crimson velvet, from which a snow-white plume waved over his brow; on his mantle, or surcoat, which was of scarlet, was wrought a broad white cross, both at back and breast; and so brilliant was the polish of his corselet, that, as from time to time the mantle waved aside and ex- posed it to the moonbeams, it glittered like light itself. " Nay, Rodolf," said he, " if thou hast so good a lot of it here with that hoary schemer. Heaven forbid that I should wish to draw thee back again to our merry band. But tell me — this Rienzi — thinkest thou he has any solid and formidable power ?" " Pshaw ! noble chieftain, not a whit of it. He pleases the mob, but as for the nobles, they laugh at him; and, as for the soldiers, he has no money !" " He pleases the mob, then ?" VOL. I. E 74 RIENZI, " Ay, that doth he ; and when he speaks aloud to them, all the roar of Rome is hushed." " Humph ! — when nobles are hated, and sol- diers are bought, a mob may, in any hour, become the master. An honest people and a weak mob, — a corrupt people and a strong mob," said the other, rather to himself than to his comrade, and scarce, perhaps, conscious of the eternal truth of his aphorism. " He is no mere brawler, this Rienzi, I suspect — I must see to it. Hark ! what noise is that ? By the Holy Sepulchre, it is the ring of our own metal !" " And that cry — ' a Colonna !' " exclaimed Ro- dolf. " Pardon me, master, — I must away to the rescue !" " Ay, it is the duty of thy hire ; run ! — Yet stay, I will accompany thee gratis, for once, and for pure passion for mischief By this hand, there is no music like clashing steel !" Still Adrian continued gallantly and un wounded to defend himself, though his arm now grew tired, his breath well nigh spent, and his eyes began to wink and reel beneath the glare of the tossing torches. Orsini himself, exhausted by his furj^, had THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 75 paused for an instant, fronting his foe with a heav- ing breast and savage looks, when, suddenly, his followers exclaimed, " Fly ! fly ! — the bandits ap- proach — we are surrounded !" — and two of the servitors, without further parley, took fairly to their heels. The other five remained irresolute, and waiting but the command of their master, when he of the white plume, whom we have just left, thrust himself into the melee. " What ! gentles," said he, " have ye finished al- ready? Nay, let us not mar the sport; begin again, I beseech you. What are the odds ? Ho ! six to one ! — nay, no wonder that ye have waited for fairer play. See, we two will take the weaker side. Now then, let us begin again." " Insolent !" cried the Orsini — " Knowest thou whom thou addresses! thus arrogantly? — I am Martino di Porto. Who art thou ?" " Walter de Montreal, gentleman of Provence, and Knight of St. John !" answered the other, carelessly. At that redoubted name — the name of one of the boldest warriors, and of the most accomplished freebooter of his time — even Martino's cheek grew pale, and his followers uttered a cry of terror. e2 76 RIENZI, " And this, my comrade," continued the Knight, " for we may as well complete the introduction, is probably better known to you than I am, gentles of Rome, and you doubtless recognise in him Rodolf, of Saxony, a brave man and a true where he is properly paid for his services." " Signor," said Adrian to his enemy, who, aghast and dumb, remained staring vacantly at the two new-comers, " you are now in my power. See, our own people, too, are approaching." And, indeed, from the palace of Stephen Co- onna, torches began now to blaze, and armed men were seen rapidly advancing to the spot. " Go home in peace, and if, to-morrow, or any day more suitable to thee, thou wilt meet me alone, and lance to lance, as is the wont of the knights of the empire ; or with band to band, and man for man, as is rather the Roman custom, I will not fail thee — there is my gage." " Nobly spoken," said Montreal, "and, if ye choose the latter, by your leave, I will be one of the party." Martino answered not ; he took up the glove, thrust it in his bosom, and strode hastily away; only, when he had got some paces down the street, he turned back, and, shaking his clenched hand at THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 77 Adrian, exclaimed, in a voice trembling with im- potent rage — " Faithful to death !" The words made one of the mottoes of the Orsini, and, whatever its earlier signification, had long passed into a current proverb, to signify their hatred to the Colonna. Adrian, now engaged in raising, and attempting to revive, Irene, who was still insensible, disdain- fully left it to Montreal to reply. " I should never have thought, Signor," said the latter, coolly, " that thou couldst be faithful to anything, but I knew well, at least, that it was to nothing living ! " " Pardon me, gentle Knight," said Adrian, look- ing up from his charge, "if I do not yet give myself wholly to gratitude. I have learnt enough of knighthood to feel thou wilt acknowledge that my first duty is here — " " Oh, what ! a lady, then, was the cause of the quarrel ! and I need not ask who was in the right, when a man brings to the rivalry such odds as yon caitiff." " Thou mistakest a little. Sir Knight, — it is but a lamb I have rescued from the wolf." 78 RIEXZI, " For thy own table ! Be it so !" returned the Knight, gaily. Adrian smiled gravely, and shook his head in denial. In truth, he was somewhat embarrassed by his situation. Though habitually gallant, he was not wiUing to expose to misconstmction the disinterestedness of his late conduct, and (for it was his policy to conciliate popularity) to sully the credit which his bravery w^ould give him among the citizens, by conveying Irene, (whose beauty, too, as yet he had scarcely noted,) to his owti dwelling ; — and yet, in her present situation, there- w^as no alternative. She evinced no sign of life. He knew not her home, nor parentage. Benedetta had vanished. He could not leave her in the streets ; he could not resign her to the care of another; and, as she lay now upon his breast, he felt her already endeared to him, by that sense of pro- tection which is so grateful to the human heart. He briefly, therefore, explained, to those now gathered round hini, his present situation, and the cause of the past conflict, and bade the torch- bearers precede him to his home. " You, Sir Knight," added he, turning to THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. /9 Montreal, *' if not already more pleasantly lodged, will, I trust, deign to be my guest." " Thanks, Signor," answered Montreal, mali- ciously, " but I, also, perhaps, have my own affairs to watch over. Adieu ! I shall seek you at the earliest occasion. Fair night, and gentle dreams ! ' Robers Bertrams qui estoit tors Mais a ceval estoit mult fors Cil avoit o lui grans efFors Mult i ot 'homes per lui mors.' " And, muttering this rugged chant from the old " Roman de Rou," the Provencal, followed by Rodolf, pursued his way. The vast extent of Rome, and the thinness of its population, left many of the streets utterly deserted. The principal nobles were thus enabled to possess themselves of a wide range of buildings, which they fortified, partly against each other, partly against the people ; their numerous relatives and clients lived around them, forming, as it were, petty courts and cities in themselves. Almost opposite to the principal palace of the Colonna (occupied by his powerful kinsman, Stephen) was the mansion of Adrian. Heavily 80 RIENZI, swung back the massive gates at his approach ; he ascended the broad staircase, and bore his charge into an apartment which his tastes had decorated in a fashion not as yet common in that age. An- cient statues and busts were arranged around ; the pictured arras of Lombardy decorated the walls and covered the massive seats. " What ho ! Lights here, and wine !" cried the Seneschal. '' Leave us alone," said Adrian, gazing passion- ately on the pale cheek of Irene, as he now, by the clear light, beheld all its beauty ; and a sweet yet burning hope crept into his heart. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 81 CHAP. V. THE DESCRIPTION OF A CONSPIRATOR, AND THE DAWN OF THE CONSPIRACY. Alone, by a table covered with various papers, sat a man in the prime of Ufe. The chamber was low and long; many antique and disfigured bas-reliefs and torsos were placed around the wall, interspersed, here and there, with the short sword and close casque, time-worn relics of the prowess of ancient Rome. Right above the table at which he sate, the moonlight streamed through a high and narrow casement, deep sunk in the massy wall. In a niche to the right of this window, guarded by a sliding door, which was now partially drawn aside — but which, by its solid substance, and the sheet of iron with which it was plated, testified how valuable in the eyes of the owner was the e3 82 RIENZI, treasure it protected — were ranged some thirty or forty volumes, then deemed no inconsiderable library ; and being, for the most part, the laborious copies in manuscript by the hand of the owner, from immortal originals. Leaning his cheek on his hand, his brow somewhat knit, his lip slightly compressed, that personage indulged in meditations far other than the indolent dreams of scholars. As the high and still moonlight shone upon his countenance, it gave an additional and solemn dignity to features which had only to repose in order to assume a grave and majestic cast. Thick and auburn hair, the colour of which, not common to the Romans, was ascribed to his descent fi'om the Teuton emperor, clustered in large curls above a high and expansive forehead ; and even the present thoughtful compression of the brow could not mar the aspect of latent power, which it derived from that great breadth between the eyes, in which the Grecian sculptors of old so admirably conveyed the expression of authority, and the silent energy of command. But his features were not cast in the Grecian, still less in the Teuton mould. The iron jaw, the aquiline nose, the somewhat sunken THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 83 cheek, strikingly recalled the character of the hard Roman race, and might not inaptly have sug- gested to a painter a model for the younger Brutus. The marked outline of the face, and the short firm upper lip, were not concealed by the beard and moustachios usually then worn ; and, in the faded and antique portrait of the person now described, and still extant at Rome, may be traced a certain resemblance tx) the popular pictures of Napoleon, not indeed in the features, which are more stern and prominent in the portrait of the Roman, but in that peculiar expression of concen- trated and tranquil power which so nearly realizes the ideal of intellectual majesty. Though still young, the personal advantages most peculiar to youth, — the bloom and glow, the rounded cheek in which care has not yet ploughed its lines, the full unsunken eye, and the slender delicacy of frame ; — these were not the characteristics of that solitary student. And, though considered by his cotemporaries as eminently handsome, the judg- ment was probably formed less from the more vulgar claims to such distinction, than from the height of the stature, at that time more highly 84 RIENZI, esteemed than at present, and that nobler order of beauty which cultivated genius and commanding character usually stamp upon even homely features ; — the more rare in an age so rugged. The character of Rienzi (for the youth presented to the reader in the first chapter of this history is now again before him, in maturer years,) had acquired greater hardness and energy with each stepping-stone to power. There was a circum- stance attendant on his birth which had, probably, exercised great and early influence on his ambition. Though his parents w^ere in humble circumstances, and of lowly calling, his father was the natural son of the Emperor, Henry VII. ; and it was the pride of the parents that probably gave to Rienzi the unwonted advantages of education. This pride transmitted to himself — the descent from royalty, dinned into his ear, infused into his thoughts, from his cradle, — made him, even in his earliest youth, deem himself the equal of the Roman signors, and dimly aspire to be their superior. But, as the litera- ture of Rome was unfolded to his eager eye and am- bitious heart, he became embued with that pride of country, which is nobler than the pride of birth, — THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 85 and, save when stung by allusions to his origin, he unaffectedly valued himself more on being a Roman plebeian, than the descendant of a Teuton king. His brother's death, and the vicissitudes he himself had already undergone, deepened the earnest and solemn qualities of his character ; and, at length, all the faculties of a very uncommon intellect were concentrated to one object — which borrow^ed from a mind strongly and mystically reli- gious, as well as patriotic, a sacred aspect, and grew at once a duty and a passion. " Yes," said Rienzi, breaking suddenly from his reverie, " yes, the day is at hand when Rome shall rise again from her ashes ; Justice shall dethrone Oppression ; men shall walk safe in their ancient Forum. We will rouse from his forgotten tomb the indomitable soul of Cato ! There shall be a people once more in Rome ! And I — I shall be the instru- ment of that triumph — the restorer of my race — mine shall be the first voice to swell the battle cry of freedom — mine the first hand to rear her banner — yes, from the height of my own soul as from a mountain, I see already rising the liberties and the grandeur of the New Rome, and on the corner- 86 RIENZI, Stone Df the mighty fabric posterity shall read my name." Uttering these lofty boasts, the whole person of the speaker seemed instinct with his ambition. He strode the gloomy chamber with light and rapid steps, as if on air ; his breast heaved — his eyes glowed. He felt that love itself can scarcely bestow a rapture equal to that which is felt, in his first virgin enthusiasm, by a patriot who knows himself sincere ! There was a slight knock at the door, and a servitor, in the rich liveries worn by the pope's officials,* presented himself. " Signor," said he, " my Lord, the Bishop of Orvietto, is without." " Ha ! that is fortunate. Lights there ! — My Lord, this is an honour which I can estimate better than express." " Tut, tut ! my good friend," said the Bishop, entering, and seating himself familiarly, "no cere- monies between the servants of the Church; and never, I w^een well, had she greater need of true * Not the present hideous habiliments, which are said to have been the invention of Michael Angelo. THE LAST OF THE TTxIBUNES. 87 friends than now. These unholy tumults, these licen- tious contentions, in the very shrines and city of St. Peter, are sufficient to scandalize all Christendom." " And so will it be," said Rienzi, " until his Holiness himself shall be graciously persuaded to fix his residence in the seat of his predecessors, and curb with a strong arm the excesses of th€ nobles." " Alas, man !" said the Bishop, " thou knowest that these words are but as wind ; for were the pope to fulfil thy wishes, and remove from Avignon to Rome, by the blood of St. Peter ! he would not curb the nobles, but the nobles would curb him. Thou knowest well that until his blessed predecessor, of pious memory, conceived the wise design of escaping to Avignon, the Father of the Christian world was but like many other fathers in their old age, controlled and guarded by his rebellious children. Recollectest thou not how the noble Boniface him.- self, a man of great heart, and nerves of iron, was kept in thraldom by the ancestors of the Orsini — his entrances and exits made but at their will — so that, like a caged eagle, he beat himself against his bars and died ? Verily, thou talkest of the memories 88 RIENZI, of Rome — these are not the memories that are very attractive to popes." " Well," said Rienzi, laughing gently, and draw- ing his seat nearer to the Bishop's, " my Lord has certainly the best of the argument at present, and I must own, that strong, licentious, and unhallowed as the nobility was then, it is yet more so now." " Even I," rejoined Raimond, colouring as he spoke, "though Vicar of the Pope, and representative of his spiritual authority, was, but three days ago, subjected to a coarse affront from that very Stephen Colonna, who has ever received such favour and tenderness from the Holy See. His servitors jostled mine in the open streets, and I myself — I, the delegate of the sire of kings — was forced to draw aside to the wall, and wait until the hoary inso- lent swept by. Nor were blaspheming words wanting to complete the insult. ' Pardon, Lord Bishop,' said he, as he passed me ; ' but this world, thou knowest, must necessarily take precedence of the other." ' " Dared he so high ?" said Rienzi, shading his face with his hand, as a very peculiar smile — scarcely itself joyous, though it made others gay, THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 89 and which completely changed the character of his face, naturally grave even to sternness — played round his lips. " Then is it time for thee, holy father, as for us, to — " "To what?" interrupted the Bishop, quickly. "Can we effect aught? Dismiss thy enthusiastic dreamings — descend to the real earth — look soberly round us. Against men so powerful, what canwe do?" " My Lord," answered Rienzi, gravely, " it is the misfortune of signors of your rank never to know the people, or the accurate signs of the time. As those who pass over the heights of mountains see the clouds sweep below, veiling the plains and valleys from their gaze, while they, only a little above the level, survey the movements and the homes of men ; even so from your lofty eminence ye behold but the indistinct and sullen vapours — while from my humbler station I see the prepa- rations of the shepherds to shelter themselves and herds from the storm which those clouds betoken. Despau- not, my Lord ; endurance goes but to a certain limit — to that limit it is already stretched — Rome waits but the occasion, (it will come soon, but not suddenly,) to rise simultaneously against her oppressors." 90 RIENZI, The great secret of eloquence is to be in earnest — the great secret of Rienzi's eloquence was in the mightiness of his enthusiasm. He never spoke as one who doubted of success. Perhaps, like most men who undertake high and great actions, he himself was never thoroughly aware of the ob- stacles in his way. He saw the end, bright and clear, and overleaped, in the vision of his soul, the crosses and the length of the path ; thus the deep convictions of his own mind stamped themselves irresistibly upon others. He seemed less to promise than to prophesy. The Bishop of Orvietto, not over wise, yet a man of cool temperament and much worldly experience, was forcibly impressed by the energy of his com- panion ; perhaps, indeed, the more so, in that his own pride and his own passions were enlisted also against the arrogance and licence of the nobles. He paused ere he replied to Rienzi. " But is it," he asked, at length, " only the plebeians who will rise ? Thou knowest how they are caitiff and uncertain." " My Lord," answered Rienzi, "judge, by one fact, how strongly I am surrounded by friends of no common class : thou knowest how loudly I speak THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 91 against the nobles — I cite them by their name — I beard the SaveUi, the Orsini, the Colonna in their very hearing. Thinkest thou that they forgive me ? thinkest thou that, were only the plebeians my safe- guard and my favourers, they would not seize me by open force, — that I had not long ere this found a gag in their dungeons or been swallowed up in the eternal dumbness of the grave? Observe," continued he, as, reading the Vicar's counte- nance, he perceived the impression he had made — " Observe, that, throughout the whole world, a great revolution has begnin. The barbaric darkness of centuries has been broken ; the knowledge which ma<:le men as demigods in the past time has been called from her urn ; a power, subtler than brute force, and mightier than armed men, is at work ; we have begun once more to do homage to the Royalty of Mind. Yes, that same Power which, a few years ago, crowned Petrarch in the Capitol, when it witnessed, after the silence of twelve cen- turies, the glories of a triumph, — which heaped upon a man of obscure birth, and unknown in arms, the same honours given of old to emperors and the vanquishers of kings — which united in one 92 RIENZI, act of homage even the rival houses of Colonna and Orsini — which made the haughtiest patricians emulous to bear the train, to touch but the pur- ple robe, of the son of the Florentine Plebeian — which still draws the eyes of Europe to the lowly cottage of Vaucluse — which gives to the humble student the all-acknowledged licence to admonish tyrants, and approach, with haughty prayers, even the Father of the Church ; yes, that same Power, which, working silently throughout Italy, mur- murs under the solid base of the Venetian oli- garchy,* which, beyond the Alps, has woke into visible and sudden life in Spain, in Germany, in Flanders, and which, even in that barbarous Isle, conquered by the Norman sword, ruled by the bravest of living kings, f has roused a spirit Nor- man cannot break — kings to rule over must rule * It was about eight years afterwards that the long-smothered hate of the Venetian people to that wisest and most vigilant of all oligarchies, the Sparta of Italy, broke out in the conspiracy under Marino Faliero. t Edward III., in whose reign opinions far more popular than those of the following century began to work. The civil wars threw back the action into the blood. It was indeed an age throughout the world which put forth abundant blossoms, but crude and un- ripened fruit j — a singular leap, followed by as singular a pause. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 93 by — yes, that same Power is everywhere abroad ; it speaks, it conquers in the voice even of him who is before you ; it unites in his cause all on whom but one glimmering of light has burst, all in whom one generous desire can be awakened ! Know, Lord Vicar, that there is not a man in Rome, save our oppressors themselves — not a man who has learnt one syllable of our ancient tonjjue — whose heai't and sword are not with me. The peaceful cultivators of letters, — the proud no- bles of the second order — the rising race, wiser than their slothful sires ; above all, my Lord, the humbler ministers of religion, priests and monks, whom luxury hath not blinded, pomp hath not deafened, to the monstrous outrage to Christianity daily and nightly perpetrated in the Christian Capital ; these, — all these, — are linked with the merchant and the artizan in one indissoluble bond, waiting but the signal, to fall or to conquer, to live free, or to die immortally, with Rienzi and their country !" ** Sayest thou so in truth?" said the Bishop, startled, and half rising. " Prove but thy words, and thou shalt not find the ministers of God are 94 RIENZI, less eager than their lay brethren for the happiness of men." " What I say," rejoined Rienzi, in a cooler tone, " that can I shew ; but I may only prove it to those who will be with us." " Fear me not," answered Raimond; " I know well the secret mind of his Holiness, whose dele- gate and representative I am ; and could he see })ut the legitimate and natural limit set to the power of the patricians, who, in their arrogance, have set at nought the authority of the church it- self, be sure that he would smile on the hand that drew the line. Nay, so certain of this am I, that if ye succeed, I, his responsible but unworthy vicar, will myself sanction the success. But beware of crude attempts ; the Church must not be weakened by linking itself to failure." " Right, my Lord," answered Rienzi ; " and in this, the policy of religion is that of freedom. Judge of my prudence by my long delay. He who can see all around him impatient — himself not less so — and yet suppress the signal, and bide the hour, is not likely to lose himself by rashness." " More, then, of this anon," said the Bishop, THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 95 resettling himself in his seat. " As thy plans mature, fear not to communicate with me. Believe that Rome has no firmer friend than he who, ordained to preserve order, finds himself im- potent against aggression. Meanwhile, to the ob- ject of my present visit, which links itself, in some measure, perhaps, with the topics on which we have conversed. . . . Thou knowest that when his Holi- ness entrusted thee with thy present office, he bade thee also announce his beneficent intention of granting a general Jubilee at Rome for the year 1350 — a most admirable design for two reasons, sufficiently apparent to thyself: first, that every Cliristian soul that may undertake the pilgrimage to Rome on that occasion, may thus obtain a gene- ral remission of sins; and secondly, because, to speak carnally, the concourse of pilgrims so as- sembled, usually, by the donations and offerings theii' piety suggests, very materially add to the revenues of the Holy See ; at this time, by the way, in no very flourishing condition. This thou knowest, dear Rienzi." Rienzi bowed his head in assent, and the prelate continued — 96 RIENZI, " Well, it is with the greatest grief that his Holiness perceives that his pious intentions are likely to be frustrated, for so fierce and numerous are now the brigands in the public approaches to Rome, that, verily, the boldest pilgrim may tremble a little to undertake the journey ; and those who do so venture will, probably, be composed of the poorest of the Christian community, men who, bringing with them neither gold nor silver, nor precious offerings, will have little to fear from the rapacity of the brigands. Hence arise two consequences : on the one hand, the rich — whom, Heaven knows, and the Gospel has, indeed, ex- pressly declared, have the most need of a remission of sins — will be deprived of this glorious occasion for absolution ; and on the other hand, the coffers of the See will be impiously defrauded of that wealth which it would otherwise doubtless obtain from the zeal of her children." " Nothing can be more logically manifest, my Lord," said Rienzi. The Vicar continued, — "Now, in letters received five days since from his Holiness, he bade me expose these fearful consequences to Christianity to the THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 97 various patricians who are legitimately fiefs of the Church, and command their resolute combination against the marauders of the road. With these have 1 conferred, and vainly." "« For by the aid, and from the troops, of those very brigands, these patricians have fortified their palaces against each other," added Rienzi, " Exactly for that reason," rejoined the Bishop. " Nay, Stephen Colonna himself had the audacity to confess it. Utterly unmoved by the loss to so many precious souls, and, I may add, to the papal treasury, which ought to be little less dear to right- discerning men, they refuse to advance a step against the bandits. Now, then, hearken the second mandate of his Holiness: — 'Failing the nobles,' saith he, in his prophetic sagacity ; ' confer with Cola di Rienzi. He is a bold man, and a pious, and, thou tellest me, of great weight with the people, and say to him, that if his wit can devise the method for extirpating these sons of Belial, and rendering a safe passage along the public wajs, largely, indeed, w ill he merit at our hands, — lasting will be the gratitude we shall owe him ; and what- VOL. I. F 98 RIENZI, ever succour thou, and the servants of our See, can render to him, let it not be stinted.' " " Said his Hohness thus !" exclaimed Rienzi, " I ask no more — the gratitude is mine that he hath thought thus of his servant, and entrusted me with this charge ; at once I accept it — at once I pledge myself to success. Let us, my Lord, let us, then, clearly understand the limits ordained to my discretion. To curb the brigands without the walls, I must have authority over those within. If I undertake, at peril of my life, to clear all the avenues to Rome of the robbers that now infest it, shall I have full licence for conduct bold, peremp- tory, and severe ?" " Such conduct the very nature of the charge demands," replied Raimond. " Ay — even though it be exercised against the arch offenders — against the supporters of the brigands — against the haughtiest of the nobles themselves ?'* The Bishop paused, and looked hard in the face of the speaker. " I repeat," said he, at length, sinkino: his voice, and with a significant tone, " in THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 99 these bold attempts, success is the sole sanction. Succeed, and we will excuse thee all — even to the" " Death of a Colonna or an Orsini, should justice demand it, and provided it be according to the law, and only incurred by the violation of the law !" added Rienzi, firmly. The Bishop did not reply in words, but a slight motion of his head was sufficient answer to Rienzi. " My Lord," said he, " from this time, then, all is well; I date the revolution — the restoration of order, of the state, from this hour, this very con- ference. Till now, knowing that justice must never wink upon great offenders, I had hesitated, through fear, lest thou and his Holiness might deem it severity, and blame him who replaces the law, because he smites the violators of law. Now I judge ye more rightly. Your hand, my Lord." The Bishop extended his hand ; Rienzi grasped it firmly, and then raised it respectfully to his lips. Both felt that the compact was sealed. This conference, so long in recital, was short in the reality; but its object was already finished, and the Bishop rose to depart. The outer portal of the f2 100 RIENZI, house was opened, the numerous servitors of the Bishop held on high their torches, and he had just turned from Rienzi, who had attended him throus^h the court, when a female passed hastily through the Prelate's train, and starling, as she beheld Rienzi, flung herself at his feet. " Oh, hasten. Sir ! hasten, for the love of God, hasten ! or the young Signora is lost for ever !" " The Signora ! — Heaven and earth, Benedetta, of whom do you speak ? — of my sister — of Irene ? is she not within ?" " Oh, Sir— the Orsini— the Orsini !" " What of them ? — speak, woman !" Here, breathlessly, and in many a break, Bene- detta recounted to Rienzi, in whom the reader has already recognised the brother of Irene, so far of the adventure with Martino di Porto as she had witnessed : of the termination and result of the contest she knew nought. Rienzi listened in silence, but the deadly pale- ness of his countenance, and the writhing of the nether lip, testified the emotions to which he gave no audible vent. " You hear, my Lord Bishop, you hear," said THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 101 he, when Benedetta had concluded, and turning to the Bishop, whose departure the narrative had delayed; "you hear to what outrage the citizens of Rome are subjected. My hat and sword ! in- stantly! My Lord, forgive my abruptness." " ^^^lither art thou bent, then ?" asked Raimond. " Wliither — whither ! — Ay, I forgot, my Lord, you have no sister. Perhaps, too, you had no brother ? — No, no ; one victim, at least, I will live to save. Whither, you ask me ? — to the palace of Martino di Porto." " To an Orsini, alone^ and for justice !" " Alone, and for justice! — No !" shouted Rienzi, in a loud voice, as he seized his sword, now brought to him by one of his servants, and rushed from the house ; " but one man is sufficient for revenue /" The Bishop paused for a moment's deliberation. " He must not be lost," muttered he, " as he well m^y be, if exposed thus solitary to the wolfs rage. What, ho !" he cried, aloud ; " advance the torches ! — quick, quick ! We ourself — we, the Vicar of the Pope — will see to this. Calm your- selves, good people ; your young Signora shall be restored. On ! to the palace of Martino di Porto!" 402 RIENZT, CHAP. VI. IREXE IN THE PALACE OF ADRIAN DI CASTELLO. As the C}^rian gazed on the image in which he had embodied a youth of dreams, v.'hat time the living hues flushed slowly beneath the marble, — so gazed the young and passionate Adrian upon the form reclined before him, re-awakening gradually to life. And, if the beauty of that face were not of the loftiest, or the most dazzling order, if its soft and quiet character might be outshone by many of loveliness, less really perfect, yet never was there a countenance that, to some eyes, would have seemed more charming, and never one in which more eloquently was wrought that ineffable and virgin expression which Italian art seeks for in its models, — in which the modesty is the outward, and the tenderness the latent, expression; the bloom THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 103 of youth, both of form and heart, ere the first frail and delicate freshness of either is brushed away : and, when even love itself, the only unquiet visitant that should be known at such an age, is but a sentiment, and not a passion ! " Benedetta!" murmured Irene, at length, open- ing her eyes, unconsciously, upon him who knelt beside her, — eyes of that uncertain, that most liquid hue, on which you might gaze for years, and never learn the secret of the colour, so changed it with the dilating pupil, — darkening in the shade, and brightening into azure in the light : " Benedetta," said Irene, " where art thou ? Oh, Benedetta ! I have had such a dream." " And I, too, such a vision !" thought Adrian. " Where am I?" cried Irene, rising from the couch. " This room — these hangings — Holy Virgin ! do I dream still ! — and you ! Heavens ! it is the Lord Adrian di Castello !" " Is that a name thou hast been taught to fear ?" said Adrian, " if so, I will forswear it." If Irene now blushed deeply, it was not in that wild delight with which her romantic heart might have foretold that she would listen to the first 104 RIENZI, words of homage fi'om Adrian di Castello. Be- wildered and confused, — terrified at the strange- ness of the place, and shrinking even from the thought of finding herself alone with one who, for years, had been present to her fancies, — alarm and distress were the emotions she felt the most, and, which most were impressed upon her speak- ing countenance ; and as Adrian now drew nearer to her, despite the gentleness of his voice, and the respect of his looks, her fears, not the less strong that they were vague, increased upon her ; she retreated to the farther end of the room, looked wildly round her, and then, covering her face with her hands, biu'st into a paroxysm of tears. Moved himself by these tears, and divining her thoughts, Adrian forgot for a moment all the more darinff wishes he had formed. " Fear not, sweet lady," said he^ earnestly ; '' re- collect thyself, I beseech thee, — no peril, no evil can reach thee here ; — it was this hand that saved thee from the outrage of the Orsini — this roof is but the shelter of a friend ! Tell me, then, fair wonder, thy name and residence, and I will summon my servitors, and guard thee to thy home at once." THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 105 Perhaps the relief of tears, even more than Adrian's words, restored Irene to herself, and enabled her to comprehend her novel situation ; and, as her senses thus cleared, told her what she owed to him whom her dreams had so long- imaoed as the ideal of all excellence, she recovered her self-possession, and uttered her thanks with a grace not the less winning, if it still partook of embarrassment. " Thank me not," answered Adrian, passion- ately ; " I have touched thy hand, I am repaid. Repaid ! — nay, all gratitude — all homage is for me to render !" Blushing again, but with far different emotions than before, Irene, after a momentary pause, re- plied, " Yet, my Lord, I must consider it a debt not the less weighty that you speak of it so lightly. And now complete the obligation ; — I see not my companion — suffer her to accompany me home; it is but a short way from hence." " Blessed, then, is the air that I have breathed so unconsciously!" said Adrian. " But thy com* panion, dear Lady, is not here. She fled, I imagine, in the confusion of. the conflict; and not knowing f3 106 RIENZI, thy name, nor being able, in thy then state, to learn it from thy lips, it was my happy necessity to convey thee hither;— but I will be thy companion. Nay, why that timid glance? — my people, also, shall attend us." " My thanks, noble Lord, are of little worth ; my brother, who is not unknown to thee, will thank thee more fittingly. May I depart?" and Irene, as she spoke, was already at the door. " Art thou so eager to leave me?" answered Adrian, sadly. " Alas I when thou hast departed from my eyes, it will seem as if the moon had left the night ! — but it is happiness to obey thy wishes, even though they tear thee from me." A slight smile parted Irene's lips, and Adrian's heart beat audibly to himself, as he drew from that smile, and those downcast eyes, no unfavourable omen. Reluctantly and slowly he turned towards the door, and summoned his attendants. *' But," said he, as they now stood on the lofty staircase, " thou sayest, sweet lady, that thy brother's name is not unknown to me. Heaven grant that he be, in- deed, a friend of the Colonna !" THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 107 " His boast," answered Irene, evasively ; " the boast of Cola di Rienzi is, to be a friend to the friends of Rome." " Holy Virgin of Ara Coeli ! — is thy brother that extraordinary man ?" exclaimed Adrian, as he fore- saw, at the mention of that name, a barrier to his sudden passion. " Alas ! in a Colonna, in a noble, he will see no merit ; even though thy fortunate de- liverer, sweet maiden, sought to be his early friend !" " Thou wrongest him much, my Lord," returned Irene, warmly ; " he is a man above all others to sympathize with thy generous valour, even had it been exerted in defence of the humblest woman in Rome, — how much more, then, when in protec- tion of his sister !" '• The times are, indeed, diseased," answered Adrian, thoughtfully, as they now found them- selves in the open street, '' when men who alike mourn for the woes of their country are yet sus- picious of each other, — when to be a patrician is to be regarded as an enemy to the people, — when to be termed the friend of the people is to be con- sidered a foe to the patricians : but come what may, oh ! let me hope, dear Lady, that no doubts, no 108 RIENZI, divisions, shall banish from thy breast one gentle memory of me !" *' Ah ! little, little do you know me !" began Irene, and stopped suddenly short. " Speak ! speak again ! — of what music has this envious silence deprived my soul ! Thou wilt not, then, forget me ? And," continued Adrian, ^' we shall meet again ? It is to Rienzi's house we are bound now ; to-morrow I shall visit my old com- panion, — to-morrow I shall see thee — will it not be so?" In Irene's silence w^as her answer. " And as thou hast told me thy brother's name, make it sweet to my ear, and add to it thine own." " They call me Irene." " Irene, Irene ! — let me repeat it. It is a soft name, and dwells upon the lips as if loath to leave them — a fitting name for one like thee." Thus making his w^elcome court to Irene, in that flowered and glowing language which, if more peculiar to that age and to the gallantry of the south, is also the language in which the poetry of youthful passion would, in all times and lands, utter its rich extravagance, could heart speak to heart. THE LAST Q¥ THE TRIBUNES. 109 Adrian conveyed homeward his beautiful charge, taking, however, the most circuitous and lengthened route ; an artifice which Irene either perceived not, or silently forgave. They were now withm sight of the street in which Rienzi dwelt, when a party of men, bearing torches, came unexpectedly upon them. It was the train of the Bishop of Or- vietto, returning from the palace of Martino di Porto, and, in their way, (accompanied by Rienzi,) to that of Adrian. They had learnt at the former, without an interview with the Orsini, from the retainers in the court below, the fortune of the conflict, and the name of Irene's champion ; and, despite of Adrian's general reputation for gallantry, Rienzi knew enough of his character, and the nobleness of his temper, to feel assured that Irene was safe in his protection. Alas ! in that very safety to the person is often the most danger to the heart. Woman never so dangerously loves, as when he who loves her, for her sake, subdues him- self. Clasped to her brother's breast, Irene bade him thank her deliverer ; and Rienzi, with that fasci- nating frankness which sits so well on those usually 110 RIENZI, reserved, and which all who would rule the hearts of their fellow-men must at times command, advanced to the young Colonna, and poured forth his gratitude and praise. " We have been severed too long, — we must know each other again ;" replied Adrian, " I shall seek thee, ere long, be assured." Turning to take his leave of Irene, he conveyed her hand to his lips, and pressing it, as it dropped from his clasp, was he deceived in thinking that those delicate fingers lightly, involuntarily, re- turned the pressure ? THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. Ill CHAP. VII. UPON LOVE AND LOVERS. If, in adopting the legendary love-tale of Romeo and Juliet, Shakspeare had changed the scene in which it is cast, for a more northern clime, I doubt whether the art of Shakspeare himself could have reconciled us at once to the suddenness and the strength of Juliet's passion. And even as it is, I be- Heve there are few of our rational and sober-minded islanders who would not honestly confess, if fairly questioned, that they deemed the romance and fervour of those ill-stan-ed lovers of Verona, exag- gerated and overdrawn. Yet, in Italy, the picture of that affection born of a night — but ' strong as death' — is one to which the veriest common- places of life would afford parallels without num- ber. As in different ages, so in different climes — 112 RIENZI, love varies wonderfully in the shapes it takes. And even at this day, beneath Italian skies, many a simple girl would feel as Juliet, and many a homely gallant would rival the extravagance of Romeo. Long suits in that sunny land, wherein, as whereof, I now write, are imknown. In no other land, perhaps, is there found so commonly the love at first sight, — which in France is a jest, and in England a doubt ; in no other land, too, is love, . though so suddenly conceived, more faithfully pre- served. That which is ripened in fancy, comes at once to passion — yet is embalmed through all time by sentiment. And this must be my and their excuse — if the love of Adrian seem too prematurely formed, and that of Irene too romantically con- ceived ; — it is the excuse which they take from the air and sun — from the customs of their ancestors — > from the soft contagion of example. But while they yielded to the dictates of their hearts, it was with a certain, though secret sadness — a presentiment that had, perhaps, its charm, though it was of cross and evil. Born of so proud a race, Adrian could scarcely dream of marriage with the sister of a plebeian ; and Irene, unconscious of the future gloiy of her THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 113 brother, could hardly have cherished any hope, save that of beins loved. Yet these adverse circum- stances, which, in the harder, the more prudent, the more self-denying, perhaps the more virtuous, minds, that are formed beneath the Northern skies, would have been an inducement to wrestle against love so placed, — only contributed to feed and to strengthen theirs by an opposition which has ever its attraction for romance. They found frequent, diough short, opportunities of meeting — not quite alone, but only in the conniving presence of Bene- detta — sometimes in the public gardens — sometimes amidst the vast and deserted ruins by which the house of Rienzi was surrounded. They surrendered themselves, without much question of the futui'e, to the excitement — the elysium — of the hour : they lived but from day to day; their future was the next time they should meet — beyond that epoch, the very mists of their youthful love closed in obscurity and shadow which they sought not to penetrate : and as yet they had not arrived at that period of affection when there was an immediate dan- ger of their fall, — their love had not passed the golden portal where Heaven ceases and 114 RIENZI, Earth begins. Everything for them was the poetry, the vagueness, the refinement, — not the power, the concentration, the mortality, — of desire ! — the look — the whisper — the brief pressure of the hand, — at most the first kisses of love, rare and few — these marked the human hmits of that sentiment which filled them with a new life, — which elevated them as with a new soul. The roving tendencies of Adrian were at once fixed and centered; the dreams of his tender mistress had wakened to a life dreaming still, but " rounded with a trutliP All that earnestness, and energy, and fervour of emotion, which, in her brother, broke forth in the schemes of patriotism and the aspirations of power, were, in Irene, softened down into one object of existence, one concentra- tion of soul, — and that was love. Yet, in this range of thought and action, so apparently limited, there was, in reality, no less boundless a sphere than in the wide space of her brother's many-pathed ambi- tion. Not the less had she the power and scope for all the loftiest capacities granted to our clay. Equal was her enthusiasm for her idol — equal, had she been equally tried, would have been her THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 115 generosity, her devotion : — greater be sure, her courage, more inalienable her worship, — more unsullied by selfish purposes and sordid views. Time, change, misfortune, ingratitude, would have left her the same ! What state could fall, what liberty decay, if the zeal of man's noisy patriotism were as pure as the silent loyalty of a woman's love ? In them, every thing was young ! — the heart unchilled, unblighted, — that fullness and luxuriance of life's life which has in it something of divine. At that age, when it seems as if we could never die, how deathless, how flushed and mighty as with the youngness of a god, are all that our hearts create ! Our own youth is like that of the earth itself, when it peopled the woods and waters with divinities, — when life ran riot, and yet only gave birth to beauty, — all its shapes, of poetry, — all its airs, the melodies of Arcady and Olympus, — all earth itself, even in its wildest lairs, another, nay, a happier, heaven, prodigal of the same glories, and haunted by the same forms ! The Golden Age never leaves the world : it exists still, and shall exist, 116 RIENZI, till love, health, poetry, are no more, — but only for the young ! If I now dwell, though but for a moment, on this interlude in a drama calling forth more masculine passions than that of love, it is because I foresee that the occasion will but rarely recur. If I linger on the description of Irene and her hidden affection, rather than wait for circumstances to pourti'ay them better than can the author's words, it is because I foresee that that loving and lovely image must continue, to the last, rather a shadow than a por- trait, — thrown in the back ground, as is the real destiny of such natures, by bolder figures, and more gorgeous colours — a something whose presence is rather felt than seen, and whose very harmony with the whole consists in its retiring and subdued repose. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 117 CHAP. VIII. THE ENTHUSIASTIC MAN JUDGED BY THE DISCREET MAN. " Thou wrongest me," said Rienzi, warmly, to Adrian, as they sat alone, towards the close of a long conference, "I do not play the part of a mere demagogue ; I wish not to stir the great deeps in order that my lees of fortune may rise to the surface. So long have I brooded over the past, that it seems to me as if I had become a part of it — as if I had no separate existence. I have coined mxy whole soul into one master passion, and that is — for the restoration of Rome." " But by what means ?" " My Lord ! my Lord ! there is but one way to restore the greatness of a people — it is an appeal to the people themselves. It is not in the power of princes and barons to make a state permanently 118 RIEXZI, glorious ; they raise themselves, but they raise not the people along with them. All great regene- rations are the universal movement of the mass." " Nay," answered Adrian, " then have we read history differently. To me, all great regenerations seem to have been the work of the few, and tacitly accepted by the multitude. But let us not dispute after the manner of the schools. Thou sayest loudly that a vast crisis is at hand ; that the good state (buono stato) shall be established. How ? where are your arms ? — your soldiers ? Are the nobles less strong than heretofore ? — is the mob more bold — more constant? Heaven knows that I speak not with the prejudices of my order ; I weep for the debasement of my country. I am a Roman, and in that name I forget that I am a noble. But I tremble at the storm you would raise so hazardously. If your insurrection succeed, it will be violent — it will be purchased by blood — by the blood of all the loftiest names of Rome. You will aim at a second expulsion of the Tar- quins ; but it will be more like a second proscrip- tion of Sylla. Massacres and disorders never pave the way to peace ; if, on the other hand, you fail, the THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 119 chains of Rome are rivetted for ever : an ineffectual struggle to escape, is but an excuse for additional tortures to the slave." " And what, then, would the Lord Adrian have us do ?" said Rienzi, with that peculiar and sarcastic smile which I have before noted. " Shall we wait till the Colonna and Orsini quarrel no more ? shall we ask the Colonna for liberty, and the Oi'sini for justice ? My Lord, we cannot appeal to the nobles against the nobles. We must not ask them to mo- derate their power ; we must restore to ourselves that power : there may be danger in the attempt — but we attempt it amongst the monuments of the Forum ; and if we fall — we shall perish worthy of our sires ! Ye have high descent, and sounding- titles, and wide lands, and you talk of your an- cestral honours ! We, too, — we plebeians of Rome — we have ours ! Our fathers were freemen ! where is our heritage ? not sold — not given away — but stolen from us, now by fraud, now by force — filched from us in our sleep ; or wrung from us with fierce hands, amidst our cries and struggles, ^ly Lord, we but ask that lawful heritage to be restored to us ; to us, nay, to you it is the same — 120 RIENZI, your liberty, alike, is gone. Can you dwell in your father's house, without towers and fortresses, and the bought swords of bravos? can you walk in the streets at dark without arms and followers ? True, you^ a noble, may retaliate — though we dare not. You, in your turn, may terrify and outrage others ; but does licence compensate for liberty ? they have given you pomp and power — but the safety of equal laws were a better gift. Oh, were I you — were I Stephen Colonna himself, I should pant, ay, thirstily as I do now, for that free air which comes not through bars and bulwarks against my fellow citizens, but in the open space of Heaven — safe, because protected by the silent Pro- vidence of Law, and not by the lean fears and hollow-eyed suspicions which are the comrades of a hated power. The tyrant thinks he is free, because he commands slaves — the meanest peasant, in a free state, is more free than he is. Oh, my Lord, that you — the brave, the generous, the enlightened — you, almost alone amidst your order, in the knowledge that we liad a country, — oh, would that you who can sympathize with our sufferings, would strike with us for their redress ! " THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 121 " Thou wilt war against Stephen Colonna, my kinsman, and though I have seen him but little, nor, truth to say, esteem him much, yet he is the boast of our house, how can I join thee ? " " His life will be safe — his possessions safe — his rank safe. What do we war against ? His power to do wrong to others." " Should he discover that thou hast force beyond words, he would be less merciful to tlieeJ^ " And has he not discovered that ? Do not the shouts of the people tell him that I am a man whom he should fear ? Does he — the cautious, the wily, the profound — does he build fortresses, and erect towers, and not see from his battlements the mighty fabric that I, too, have erected ?" " You ! where, Rienzi ? '* " In the hearts of Rome ! Does he not see ? " continued Rienzi. " No, no ; he — all, all his tribe are blind. Is it not so ?" " Of a certainty, my kinsman has no belief in your power, else he would have crushed you long ere this. Nay, it was but three days ago that he said, gravely? he would rather you addressed the popu- lace than the best priest in Christendom, for that VOL. I. G 122 RIENZI, Other orators inflamed the crowd, and no man so stilled and dispersed them as you did." " And they call him profound ! Does not Heaven hush the air most when most it prepares the storm ? Aye, my Lord, I understand. Ste- phen G^lonna despises me. I have been" — (here, as he continued, a deep blush mantled over his cheek) — " you remember it — at his palace in my younger days, and pleased him with witty tales and light apothegms. Nay — ha ! ha ! — he would call me, I think, sometimes, in gay compliment, his jester— his buffoon ! I have brooked his insult; I have even bowed to his applause. I would undergo the same penance, stoop to the same shame, for the same motive, and in the same cause. What did I desire to effect? Can you tell me? No ! I will whisper it, then, to you : it was — the contempt of Stephen Colonna. Under that contempt I was protected, till protection became no longer neces- sary. I desired not to be thought formidable by the patricians, in order that, quietly and unsuspected, I might make my way amongst the people. I have done so ; I now throw aside the veil. Face to face with Stephen Colonna, I could tell him, this very THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 123 hour, that I brave his anger — that I laugh at his dungeons and armed men. But if he tliink me the same Rienzi as of old, let him ; I can wait my hour." " Yet," said Adrien, waiving an answer to the haughty language of his companion, " tell me, what dost thou ask for the people, in order to avoid an appeal to their passions ? — ignorant and capri- cious as they are, thou canst not appeal to their reason.'" " I ask full justice and safety for all men. I will be contented with no less a compromise. I ask the nobles to dismantle their fortresses, — to disband their armed retainers, — to acknowledge no impu- nity for crime in high lineage, — to claim no pro- tection save in the courts of the common law." " Vain desire !" said Adrien. " Ask what may yet be granted." " Ha — ha !" replied Rienzi, laughing bitterly, " did I not tell you it was a vain dream to ask for law and justice at the hands of the great? Can you blame me, then, that I ask it elsewhere ?" Then suddenly changing his tone and manner, he added, with great solemnity — " Waking life hath g2 124 RIENZI. false and vain dreams. But Sleep is sometimes a mighty prophet. By sleep it is that Heaven mysteri- ously communes with its creatures, and guides and sustains its earthly agents in the path to which its providence leads them on." Adrien made no reply. This was not the first time he had noted that Rienzi's strong intellect was strangely conjoined with a deep and mystical superstition. And this yet more inclined the 3'oung noble, who, though sufficiently devout, gave but little to the wilder credulities of the time, to doubt the success of the schemer's projects. In this he erred greatly, though his error was that of the worldly wise. For nothing ever so inspires human daring, as the fond belief that it is the agent of a Diviner Wisdom. Revenge and patriotism, united in one man of genius and ambition — such are the Archimedian levers that find in fanaticism the spot out of the world by which to move the world. The prudent man may direct a state ; but it is the enthusiast who regenerates it, or ruins. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 12.' CHAP. X. " WHEN THE PEOPLE SAW THIS PICTURE, EVERY ONE MARVELLED." The Cotemporaneous Bio- grapher of Cola di Rienzi. Before the market-place, and at the foot of the Capitol, an immense crowd was assembled. Each man sought to push before his neighbour; each struggled to gain access to one particular spot, round which the crowd was wedged thick and dense. " Corpo di Dio!" said a man of huge stature, pressing onward, like some bulky ship casting the noisy waves right and left from its stern, " this is hot work; but for what, in the Holy Mother's name, do ye crowd so ? see you not, Sir Ribald, that my right arm is disabled, swathed, and bandaged, so that I cannot help myself better than 126 RIENZI, a baby ? and yet you push against me as if I were an old wall !" " Ah, Cecco del Vecchio ! what, man ! we must make way for you — you are too small and tender to bustle through a crowd ! Come, I will protect you ! " said a dwarf of some four feet high, glancing up at the giant. '* Faith," said the grim smith, looking round on the mob, who laughed loud at the dwarf's proffer, " we all do want protection, big and small. What do you laugh for, ye apes ? — ay, you don't under- stand parables." " And yet it is a parable we are come to gaze upon," said one of the mob, with a slight sneer. '' Pleasant day to you, Signor Baroncelli," an- swered Cecco del Vecchio, ** you are a good man, and love the people ; it makes one's heart smile to see you. What's all this pother for ?" '* Why the Pope's Notary hath set up a great picture in the market-place, and the gapers say it relates to Rome ; so they are melting their brains out, this hot day, to guess at the riddle." " Ho, ho ! " said the smith, pushing on so vigorously that he left the speaker suddenly in THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 127 the rear, " if Cola di Rienzi hath aught in the matter, I would break through stone rocks to get to it." " Much good will a dead daub do us," said Baroncelli, sourly, and turning to his neighbours ; but no man listened to him, and he, a would-be demagogue, gnawed his lip in envy. Amidst half-awed groans and curses from the men whom he jostled aside, and open objurga- tions and shrill cries from the women, to whose robes and head-gear he shewed as little respect, the sturdy smith won his way to a space fenced round by chains, in the centre of which was placed a huge picture. " How came it hither ? " cried one, " I was first at the market." " We found it here at day-break," said a ven- der of fruit : " no one was by." " But why do you fancy Rienzi had a hand in it ?" " Why, who else could ? " answered twenty voices. " True ! Wha else ? " echoed the gaunt smith. " I dare be sworn the good man spent the whole night in painting it himself. Blood of St. Peter ! but it is mighty fine ! What is it about ? " 128 RIENZI, " That's the riddle," said a meditative fish- woman ; " if I could make it out I should die happy." " It is something about liberty and taxes no doubt," said Luigi, the butcher, leaning over the chains. " Ah, if Rienzi were minded, every poor man would have his bit of meat in his pot." " And as much bread as he could eat," added a pale baker. " Chut ! bread and meat — every body has that now ! — but, what wine the poor folks drink ! One has no encouragement to take pains with one's vineyard," said a vine-dresser. " Ho, hallo ! — long life to Pandulfo di Guido ! make way for master Pandulfo ; he is a learned man; he is a friend of the great Notary's; he will tell us all about the picture ; make way, there — make way !" Slowly and modestly, Pandulfo di Guido, a quiet, wealthy, and honest man of letters, whom nought save the violence of the times could have roused from his tranquil home, or his studious closet, passed to the chains. He looked long and hard at the picture, which was bright with new, and yet moist colours, and exhibited somewhat of THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES, 1*29 the reviving art wliich, tliough hard and harsh in its features, was about that time visible, and, carried to a far higher degree, we yet gaze upon in the paintings of Perugino, who flourished during the succeeding generation. The people prest round the learned man, with open mouths — now turning their eyes to the picture, now to Pandulfo. " Know you not," at length said Pandulfo, " the easy and palpable meaning of this design ? Behold how the painter has presented to you a vast and stormy sea — mark how its waves" — " Speak louder — louder !" shouted the impatient crowd. " Hush I" cried those in the immediate vicinity of Pandulfo, "the worthy Signor is perfectly audible !" Meanwhile, some of the more witty, pushing towards a stall in the market-place, bore from it a rough table, from which they besought Pandulfo to address the people. The pale citizen, with some pain and shame, for he was no practised spokesman, was obliged to assent ; but when he cast his eyes over the vast and breathless crowd, his own deep sympathy with their cause inspired and g3 130 ' RIENZI emboldened him. A light broke from his eyes; his voice swelled into power ; and his head, usually buried in his breast, became erect and commanding in its air. " You see before you, in the picture, (he began again,) a mighty and tempestuous sea ; upon its waves you behold five ships; four of them are already wrecks, — their masts are broken — the waves are dashing through the rent planks — they are past all aid and hope : on each of these ships lies the corpse of a woman. See you not, in the wan face and livid limbs, how faithfully the limner hath painted the hues and loathsomeness of death ? Below each of these ships is a word that applies the metaphor to truth. Yonder, you see the name of Carthage ; the other three are Troy, Jerusalem, and Babylon. To these four is one com- mon inscription. ' To exhaustion were we brought by injustice !' Turn now your eyes to the middle of the sea, — there you behold the fifth ship, tossed amidst the waves, her mast broken — her rudder gone, her sails shivered, but not yet a wreck like the rest, though she soon may be. On her deck kneels a female, clothed in mourning; mark the THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 131 woe upon her countenance, — how cunningly the artist has conveyed its depth and desolation! she stretches out her arms in prayer — she implores your and Heaven's assistance. Mark now the su- perscription — 'This is Rome!' — Yes, it is your country that addresses you in this emblem !" The crowd waved to and fro, and a deep murmur crept gathering over the silence which they had hitherto kept. " Now," continued Pandulfo, " turn your gaze to the right of the picture, and you will behold the cause of the tempest, — you will see why the fiftii vessel is thus periled, and her sisters are thus wrecked. Mark, four different kinds of animals, who, from their hon'id jaws, send forth the winds and storms which torture and rack the sea. The first are the lions, the wolves, the bears. These, the inscription tells you, are the lawless and savage signors of the state. The next are the dogs and swine, — these are the evil counsellors and parasites. Thirdly, you behold the dragons and the foxes, — and these are false judges and notaries, and they who sell justice. Fourthly, in the hares, the goats, the apes, that assist in creating the storm, you perceive, by the inscrip- 132 RIENZI, tion, the emblems of the popular thieves and homicides, adulterers and spoliators. Are ye be- wildered still, oh, Romans ! or have ye mastered the xiddle of the picture?" Far in their massive palaces the Savelli and Orsini heard the echo of the shouts that answ^ered the question of Pandulfo. " Are ye, then, without hope ?" resumed the scholar, as the shout ceased, and hushing, with the first sound of his voice, the ejaculations and speeches which each man had turned to utter to his neigh- bour. " Are ye without hope ? Doth the picture, which shews your tribulation, promise you no redemption ? Behold, above that angry sea, the heavens open, and the majesty of God descends gloriously, as to judgment: and, from the rays that surround the Spirit of God, extend two flaming swords, and on those swords stand, in wrath, but in deliverance, the two patron saints — the two mighty guardians of your city ! People of Rome, farewell ! the parable is finished."* * M. Sismondi attributes to Rienzi a fine oration at the shewing of the picture, in which he thundered against the vices of the patri- cians. The cotemporary biographer of Rienzi says nothing of this liarangue, and I imagine that, for historical convenience, Sismondi confounds two occasions. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 133 CHAP, XL A ROUGH SPIRIT RAISED, WHICH MAY HERE- AFTER REND THE WIZARD. While thus animated was the scene around the Capitol, within one of the apartments of the palace sat the agent and prime cause of that excitement. In the company of his quiet scribes, Rienzi ap- peared absorbed in the patient details of his avoca- tion. ^Vllile the murmur and the hum, the shout and the tramp of multitudes, rolled to his chamber, he seemed not to heed them, nor to rouse himself a moment from his task. With the unbroken regularity of an automaton, he continued to enter in his large book, and with the clear and beautiful characters of the period, those damning figures which taught him, better than declamations, the frauds practised on the people, and armed him with 134 RIENZI, that weapon of plain fact which it is so difficuh for abuse to parry. " Page 2, Vol. B.," said he, in the tranquil voice of business, to the clerks ; " see there, the profits of the salt duty ; department No. 3 — very well. Page 9, Vol. D — what is the account rendered by Vescobaldi, the collector ? What ! twelve thousand florins ? — no more ? — unconscion- able rascal ! (Here was a loud shout without of ' Pandulfo ! — long live Pandulfo !') Pastrucci, my friend, your head wanders ; you are listening to the noise without — please to amuse yourself with the calculation I entrusted to you. Santi, what is the enti'y given in by Antonio Tralli ?" A slight tap was heard at the door, and Pandulfo entered. The clerks continued their labour, though they looked up hastily at the pale and respectable visitor, whose name, to their great astonishment, had thus become a popular cry. " Ah, my friend," said Rienzi, calmly enough in voice, but his hands trembled with ill-suppressed emotion, ** you would speak to me alone, eh ? well, well, — this way." Thus saying, he led the citizen into a small cabinet in the rear of the room THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 135 of office, carefully shut the door, and Uien, giving himself up to the natural impatience of his cha- racter, seized Pandulfo by the hand — " Speak V cried he; "do they take the interpretation? — have you made it plain and palpable enough?— has it sunk deep into their souLs?" " Oh, by St. Peter ! yes !" returned tlie citizen, whose spirits were elevated by his recent discovery that he, too, was an orator — a great and luxurious pleasure for a shy man. " They swallowed every word of the interpretation ; they are moved to the marrow — you might lead them this very hour to battle, and find them heroes. As for the sturdy smith" — " What, Cecco del Vecchio?" interrupted Rienzi ; " ah, his heart is ^vrought in bronze — what did he?" " Why, he caught me by the hem of my robe as I descended my rostrum, (oh ! would you could have seen me \—perfede I had caught your mantle ! — I was a second you I) and said, weeping like a child, ' Ah, Signor, I am but a poor man, and of little worth, but if every drop of blood in this body was a life, I would give it for my country !' " 136 RIENZI, "Brave soul!" said Rienzi, with emotion; " would Rome had but fifty such ! No man hath done us more good among his own class than Cecco del Vecchio." " They feel a protection in his very size," said Pandulfo. "It is something to hear such big words from such a big fellow." " Were there any voices lifted in disapprobation of the picture and its sentiment ?" " None." " The time is nearly ripe, then — a few suns more, and the fruit must be gathered. The Aven- tine, — the Lateran, — and then the solitary trum- pet ! " Thus saying, Rienzi, with folded arms and downcast eyes, seemed sunk into a reverie. " By the way," said Pandulfo, " I had almost forgot to tell thee, that the crowd would have poured themselves hither, so impatient were they to see thee ; but I bade Cecco del Vecchio mount the rostrum, and tell them, in his blunt way, that it would be unseemly at the present time, when thou wert engaged in the Capitol on civil and holy affairs, to rush in so great a body into thy presence. Did I not right ?" THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 137 " Most right, my Pandulfo." " But Cecco del Vecchio says he must come and kiss thy hand ; and thou mayst expect him here the moment he can escape unobserved from the crowd." " He is welcome !" said Rienzi, half mechani- cally, for he was still absorbed in thought. " And, lo ! here he is," — as one of the scribes announced the visit of the smith. " Let him be admitted !" said Rienzi, seating himself composedly. When the huge smith found himself in the pre- sence of Rienzi, it amused Pandulfo to perceive the wonderful influences of mind over matter. That fierce and sturdy giant, who, in all popular commotions, towered above his tribe, with thews of stone, and nerves of iron, the rallying point and bulwark of the rest, — stood now colouring and trembling before the intellect, which (so had the eloquent spirit of Rienzi waked and fanned the spark which, till then, had lain dormant in that rough bosom,) might almost be said to have cre- ated his own. And he, indeed, who first arouses in the bondsman the sense and soul of freedom comes as near as is permitted to man, nearer than the philosopher, nearer even than the poet, to the 138 RIENZI, crreat creative attribute of God ! — But, if the breast be uneducated, the gift may curse the giver, and he who passes at once from the slave to the free- man, may pass as rapidly from the freeman to the ruffian. " Approach, my friend," said Rienzi, after a moment's pause; " I know all that thou hast done, and would do for Rome ! Thou art worthy of her best days, and thou art born to share in their re- turn." , The smith dropped at the feet of Rienzi, who held out his hand to raise him, which Cecco del Vecchio seized, and reverentially kissed. " This kiss does not betray," said Rienzi, smiling ; " but rise, my friend, — this posture is only due to God and his saints !" " He is a saint who helps us at need !" said the smith, bluntly ; " and that no man has done as thou hast. But when," he added, sinking his voice, and fixing his eyes hard on Rienzi, as one may do who waits a signal to strike a blow, " when ! when shall we make the great effort ?" " Thou hast spoken to all the brave men in tliy neighbourhood, — are they well prepared ?" <« To live or die, as Rienzi bids them !" THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 139 " I must have the list — the number — names — houses and callings, this night." " Thou shalt." " Each man must sign his name or mark with his own hand." " It shall be done." '• Then, harkye ! attend Pandulfo di Guido at his house this evening, at sunset. He shall instruct thee where to meet this night some brave hearts; — thou art worthy to be ranked amongst them. Thou wilt not fail !" '' By the holy Stairs ! I will count every minute till then," said the smith, his swarthy face lighted with pride at the confidence shewn him. " Meanwhile, watch all your neighbours ; let no man flag or grow fainthearted, — none of thy friends must be branded as a traitor !" " I will cut his throat, were he my own mother's son, if I find one pledged man flinch !" said the fierce smith. " Ha, ha !" rejoined Rienzi, with that strange laugh which belonged to him ; " a miracle ! a mi- racle ! The picture speaks now !" It was already nearly dusk when Rienzi left the 140 RIENZI, Capitol. The broad space before its walls was empty and deserted, and wrapping his mantle closely round him, he walked musingly on. " I have almost climbed the height," thought he, " and now the precipice yawns before me. If I fail, what a fall ! The last hope of my country falls with me. Never will a noble rise against the nobles. Never will another plebeian have the opportunities and the power that I have ! Rome is bound up with me — with a single life. The liberties of all time are fixed to a reed that a wind may uproot. But oh. Providence ! hast thou not reserved and marked me for great deeds ? How, step by step, have I been led on to this solemn enterprise ! How has each hour pre- pared its successor ! And yet what danger ! if the inconstant people, made cowardly by long thral- dom, do but waver in the crisis, I am swept away !" As he spoke, he raised his eyes, and lo, before him, the first star of twilight shone calmly down upon the crumbling remnants of theTarpeian Rock. It was no favouring omen, and Rienzi's heart beat quicker as that dark and ruined mass firowned thus suddenly on his gaze. "Dread monument," thought he, '* of what dark THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 141 catastrophes, to what unknown schemes hast thou been the witness ! To how many enterprises, on wliich history is dumb, hast thou set the seal ! How know we whether they were criminal or just? How know we whether he, thus doomed as a traitor, would not, if successful, have been immortalized as a deliverer ? If I fall, who will write my chronicle ? — one of the people ? Alas ! blinded and ignorant, they furnish forth no minds that can appeal to posterity. One of the patricians? — in what colours then shall I be painted ! No tomb will rise for me amidst the wrecks — no hand scatter flowers upon my grave — • all my visions of past honour and fame will reap but the damnation of eternal obloquy !" Thus meditating on the verge of that mighty enterprise to which he had bound himself, Rienzi pursued his way. He gained the Tiber, and paused for a few moments beside its legendary stream, over w^hich the purple and star-lit heaven shone deeply do\^^l. He crossed the bridge which leads to the quarter of the Trastevere, whose haughty inhabitants yet boast themselves the sole and true descendants of the ancient Romans. Here his 142 RIENZI, Step grew quicker and more light ; brighter, if less solemn, thoughts crowded upon his breast; and ambition, lulled for a moment, left his strained and over-laboured mind to the reign of a softer passion. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 143 CHAP. XII. NINA DI RASELLI. " I TELL you, Lucia, I do not love those stuffs ; they do not l>ecome me. Saw you ever so poor a dye ? — this purple, indeed ! — that crimson ! Why did you let the man leave them? — let him take them elsewhere to-morrow. They may suit the signoras on the other side of the Tiber, who imagine every thing Venetian must be perfect ; but I, Lucia, I see with my own eyes, and judge from my own mind." " Ah, dear Lady, said the serving maid, " if you were, as you doubtless will be, some time or other, a grand signora, how worthily you would wear the honours ! Santa Cecilia ! no other dame in Rome would l^e looked at while the Lady Nina were by ! " 144 RIENZI, " Would we not teach them what pomp was ?" answered Nina. " Oh ! what festivals would we hold ! Saw you not from the gallery the revels given last week by the Lady Giulia Savelli ?" " Aye J, Signora ; and when you walked up the hall in your silver and pearl tissue, there ran such a murmur through the gallery : every one cried, the Savelli have entertained an angel !" " Pish ! Lucia ; no flattery, girl." " It is naked truth, Lady. But that icas a revel, was it not ? There was grandeur ! — fifty servitors in scarlet and gold ! and the music playing all the while. The minstrels were sent for from Bergamo. Did not that festival please you ? Ah, I warrant many were the fine speeches made to you that day !" " Heigho ! — no, there was one voice wanting, and all the music was marred. But, girl, were / the Lady Giulia, I would not have been contented with so poor a revel." " How, poor ! — why all the nobles say it outdid the proudest marriage feast of the Colonna. Nay, a Neapolitan who sat next me, and who had served under the young Queen Jane, at her mai'riage, says, that even Naples was outshone." THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 145 " That may be. I know nought of Naples ; but I know what nuj court should have been, were I what — what I am not, and may never be ! The banquet vessels should have been of gold — the cups jeweled to the brim — not an inch of the rude pave- ment should have been visible — all should have glowed with cloth of gold. The fountain in the court should have showered up the perfumes of the East — my pages should not have been rough youths, blushing at their own uncouthness, but fair boys, who had not told their twelfth year, culled from the daintiest palaces of Rome ; and, as for the music, oh, Lucia ! — each musician should have worn a chaplet, and deserved it ; and he who played best should have had a reward, to inspire all the rest — a rose from me. Saw you, too, the Lady Giulia's robe ? What colours ! — they might have put out the sun at noonday ! — -yellow and blue and orange and scarlet ! Oh ! sweet Saints ! — but my eyes ached all the next day \" " Doubtless, the Lady Giulia lacks your skill in the mixture of colours," said the complaisant w^aiting woman. " And then, too, what a mien— no royalty in it ! VOL. I. H 146 RIENZI, She moved along the hall, so that her train well nigh tript her every moment ; and then she said, with a foolish laugh, ' These holiday robes are but troublesome luxuries.' Troth, for the great there should be no hohday robes ; 'tis for myself, not for others, that I would attire ! Every day should have its new robe, more gorgeous than the last ; — every day should be a holiday !" " Methought," said Lucia, " that the Lord Giovanni Orsini seemed verj^ devoted to my Lady." " He ! the bear !" " Bear, he may be! but he has a costly skin. His riches are untold." '^ And the fool knows not how to spend them." " Was not that the young Lord Adrian who spoke to you just by the columns, where the music played r " It might be,— I forget." " Yet, I hear that few ladies forget when Lord Adrian di Castello woos them." " There was but one man whose company seemed to me worth the recollection," answered Nina, unheeding the insinuation of the artful hand- maid. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 147 " And who was he ?" asked Lucia. " The old scholar from Avignon !" " What ! he with the grey beard ? Oh, Sig- nora !" '• Yes," said Nina, with a grave and sad voice; *' when he spoke, the whole scene vanished from my eyes, — for he spoke to me of Him !" As. she said this, the Signora sighed deeply, and the tears gathered to her eyes. The waiting woman raised her lip in disdain, and her looks in wonder; but she did not dare to venture a reply. '' Open the lattice," said Nina, after a pause, " and give me yon paper. Not that, girl — but the verses sent me yesterday. What ! art thou Italian, and dost thou not know, by instinct, that 1 spoke of the rhyme of Petrarch ?" Seated by the open casement, through which the moonlight stole soft and sheen, with one lamp be- side her, from which she seemed to shade her eyes, though in reality she sought to hide her counte- nance from Lucia, the young Signora appeared absorbed in one of those tender sonnets w^hich then h2 148 RIENZI, turned the brains and inflamed the hearts of Italy.* Born of an impoverished house, which, though boasting its descent from a consular race of Rome, scarcely at that day maintained a rank amongst the inferior order of nobility, Nina di Raselli was the spoiled child — the idol and the tyrant — of her pa- rents. The energetic and self-willed character of her mind made her rule where she should have obeyed ; and as in all ages dispositions can conquer custom, she had, though in a clime and land where the young and unmarried of her sex are usually chained and fettered, assumed, and by assuming, won, the prerogative of independence. She had, it is true, more learning and more genius than gene- rally fell to the share of women in that day, and enough of both to be deemed a miracle by her parents. She had, also, what they valued more, a * Although it is true that the love sonnets of Petrarch were not then, as now, the most esteemed of his works, yet it has been a great, though a common error, to represent them as little known, and coldly admired. Their effect was, in reality, prodigious and uni- versal. Every ballad-singer sung them in the streets, and (says Filippo Villani) " gravissimi nesciebant abstinere" — ' Even the gravest could not abstain from them.' THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 149 sui-passing beauty, and, what they feared more, an indomitable haughtiness, — a haughtiness mixed with a tliousand soft and endearing quahties where she loved, and which, indeed, where she loved, seemed to vanish. At once vain, yet high-minded — resolute, yet empassioned, there was a gorgeous magnificence in her very vanity and splendour, an ideality in her waywardness : her defects made a part of her brilliancy; without them she would have seemed less woman, and, knowing her, you would have compared all women by her standai'd. Softer qualities beside her seemed not more charming, but more insipid. She had no vulgar ambition, for she had obstinately refused many alliances which the daughter of Raselli could scarcely have hoped to form. The untutored minds and savage power of the Roman nobles seemed to her imagi- nation, which was full of the jjoetry of rank, (its luxury and its graces,) as something barbarous and revolting, at once to be dreaded and despised. She had, therefore, passed her twentieth year unmar- ried, but not, perhaps, without love. The faults themselves of her character, elevated that ideal of love which she had formed. She required some 150 RIENZI, being round whom all her vainer qualities could rally; she felt that where she loved she must adore ; she demanded no common idol before which to humble so sti'ong and imperious a mind. Unlike women of a gentler mould, who desire for a short period to exercise the caprices of sweet emph'e, when she loved, she must cease to com- mand, and pride, at once, be humbled to devo- tion. So rare were the qualities that could attract her, — so imperiously did her haughtiness require that those qualities should be above her own, yet of the same order, that her love elevated its ob- ject like a god. Accustomed to despise, she felt all the luxury it is to venerate ! And if it were her lot to be united with one thus loved, her nature was that which might become elevated by that it gazed on. For her beauty, reader, shouldst thou ever go to Rome, thou v/ilt see in the Capitol the picture of the Cumsean Sybil, which, often copied, no copy can even faintly represent ; why this is so called, I know not, — save that it has something strange and unearthly in the dark beauty of the eyes. I beseech thee, mistake not this sybil for another, for the Roman galleries abound in THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 151 sybils.* The sibyl I speak of is dark, and the face has an eastern cast ; the robe and turban, gorgeous though they be, grow dim before the rich, but transparent roses of the cheek ; the hair would be black, save for that golden glow which mellows it to a hue and lustre never seen but in the south, and even in the south most rare ; the features, not Grecian, are yet faultless ; the mouth, the brow, the ripe and exquisite contour, all are human and voluptuous ; the expression, the aspect, is something more ; the form is perhaps too full for the ideal of loveliness, for the proportions of sculpture, for the delicacy of Athenian models; but the luxuriant fault has a majesty. Gaze long upon that picture: it charms, yet commands the eye. While you gaze, you call back five centuries. You see before you the breathing image of Nina di Raselli. But it was not those ingenious and elaborate conceits, in which Petrarch, great poet though he * The sybil referred to is the well-known one by Domenichino. As a mere work of art, that by Guercino, called the Persian sybil, in the same collection, is perhaps superior; but in beauty, in cha- racter, there is no comparison. 15-2 RIEXZI, be, has so often mistaken pedantry for passion, that absorbed at that moment the attention of the beautiful Nina. Her eyes i-ested not on the page, but on the garden that stretched below the casement. Over the old fruit trees, and hanging vines, fell the moonhght ; and in the centre of the green, but half- neglected sward, a small and circular fountain, whose perfect proportions spoke of days long past, cast up its playful waters to the kisses of the stars. The scene was still and beautiful ; but neither of its still- ness nor its beauty thought Nina : towards one, the gloomiest and most rugged, spot in the whole garden, turned her gaze ; there the trees stood densely massed together, and shut from view the lowj but heav-y wall which encircled the mansion of Raselli. The boughs on those trees stirred gently, but Nina saw them wave ; and now from the copse emerged, slow and cautiously, a solitary figure, whose shadow threw itself, long and dark, over the sward. It approached the window, and a low voice breathed Nina's name. " Quick ! Lucia," cried she, breathlessly, turn- ing to her handmaid ; " quick ! the rope-ladder ! it is he ! he is come ! How slow you are I — haste, THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 153 girl — he may be discovered ! there, — it is attached now. My love ! my hero ! my Rienzi ! " " It is you !" said Rienzi, as, now entering the chamber, he wound his arms around her half- averted form, " and what is night to others is day to me ! " The first sweet moments of welcome, of gratu- lation were over ; and Rienzi was seated at the feet of his mistress ; his head rested on her knees — his face looking up to hers — their hands clasped each in each. " And for me thou bravest these dangers !" said the lover ; "the shame of discovery — the wrath of thy parents ! " " But what are my perils to thine ? Oh, Hea- ven ! if my father found thee here thou wouldst die ! " " He would think it then so great a humiliation, that thou, beautiful Nina, who mightst match with the haughtiest names of Rome, should waste thy love on a plebeian — even though the grandson of an emperor ! " The proud heart of Nina could sympathize well with the wounded pride of her lover : she detected h3 154 RIENZI, the soreness which lurked beneath his answer, carelessly as it was uttered. " Hast thou not told me," she said, " of that great Marius, who was no noble, but from whom the loftiest Colonna would rejoice to claim his descent ? and do I not know in thee one who shall yet eclipse the power of Marius, unsullied by his vices ? " " Delicious flattery ! sweet prophet ! " said Rienzi, with a melancholy smile ; " never were thy supporting promises of the future more wel- come to me than now ; for to thee I will say what I would utter to none else — my soul half sinks beneath the mighty burthen I have heaped upon it. I want new courage as the dread hour ap- proaches ; and from thy words and looks I drink it." " Oh ! " answered Nina, blushing as she spoke, " glorious is indeed the lot which I have bought by my love for thee : glorious to share thy schemes — to cheer thee in doubt — to whisper hope to thee in danger." " And give grace to me in triumph ! " added Rienzi, passionately. «^ Ah ! should the future ever place upon these brows the laurel-wreath due THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 155 to one who has saved his country, what joy, what recompence, to lay it at thy feet ! Perhaps, in those long and soHtary hours of coolness and exhaustion which fill up the interstices of time, — the dull space for sober thought between the epochs of exciting action, — perhaps I should have failed and flagged, and renounced even my dreams for Rome, had they not been linked also with my dreams for thee ! — liad I not pictured to myself the hour when my fate had elevated me beyond my birth — when thy sire would deem it no disgrace to give thee to my arms — when thou, too, shouldst stand amidst the dames of Rome, more honoured, as more beautiful, than all — and when I should see that pomp, which my own soul disdains,* made dear and grateful to me, because associated with thee ! Yes, it is these thoughts that have inspired me when sterner ones have shrunk back appalled from the spectres that surround their goal. And oh ! my Nina, sacred, strong, enduring must be, indeed, the love which * " Quern semper abhorrui sicut cenum" is the expression used by Rienzi, in his letter to his friend at Avignon, and which was probably sincere. Men rarely act according to the bias of their own tastes. 15G ' IlIENZI, lives in the same pure and elevated air as that wliich sustains my dreams of patriotism, of Hberty, of fame!'' This was the language which, more even than the vows of fidelity and the dear adulation which springs from the heart's exuberance, had bowed the proud and vain soul of Nina to the chains that it so willingly wore. Perhaps, indeed, in the absence of Rienzi, her weaker nature pictured to herself the triumph of humbling the highborn signoras, and eclipsing the barbarous magnificence of the chiefs of Rome; but in his presence, and listening to his more elevated and generous am- bition, as yet all unsullied by one private feeling — save the hope of her, a selfishness too easily over- looked — her higher sympathies were enlisted with his schemes, her mind aspired to raise itself to the height of his, and she thought less of her own rise than of his glory. It was sweet to her pride to be the sole confidante of his most secret thoughts, as of his most hardy undertakings— to see bared before her that intricate and plotting spirit — to be ad- mitted even to the knowledge of its doubts and weakness, as of its heroism and power. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 157 Nothing could be more contrasted than the loves of Rienzi and Nina, and those of Adrian and Irene; in the latter, all were the dreams, the ptiantasies, the extravagance of youth : they never talked of the future ; they mingled no other aspi- rations with those of love. Ambition, glory, the world's high objects, were nothing to them when together ; their love had swallowed up the world, and left nothing visible beneath the sun, save itself. But the passion of Nina and her lover was that of more complicated natures and more mature years ; it was made up of a thousand feelings, each naturally severed from each, but compelled into one focus by the mighty concentration of love : their talk was of the world ; it was from the world that they drew the aliment which sustained it ; it was of the future they spoke and thought ; of its dreams and imagined glories they made themselves a home and altar ; their love had in it more of the Intellec- tual, than that of Adrian and Irene ; it was more fitted for this hard earth ; it had in it, also, more of the leaven of the later and iron days, and less of poetry and the first golden age. " And must thou leave me now ?" said Nina, 158 RIENZI, her cheek no more averted from his lips, nor her form from his parting embrace. " The moon is high yet ; it is but a little hour thou hast given me." " An hour ! Ala5 ! " said Rienzi, " it is near upon midnight — our friends await me." "Go, then, my soul's best half! go ; Nina shall not detain thee one moment from those higher objects which make thee so dear to Nina. When — when shall we meet again ? " " Not," said Rienzi, proudly, and with all his soul upon his brow, " not thus, by stealth ! no ! nor as I thus have met thee — the obscure and con- temned bondsman ! When next thou seest me it shall he at the head of the sons of Rome ! her champion ! her restorer ! or — " said he, sinking his voice. " There is no or ! " interrupted Nina, weaving her arms round him, and catching his enthusiasm ; " thou hast uttered thine own destiny ! " " One kiss more ! farev/ell ! — the tenth day from the morrow shines upon the restoration of Rome !" THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 159 CHAP. XIII. THE STRANGE ADVENTURES THAT BEFEL WALTER DE MONTREAL. It was upon that same evening, and while the earher stars yet shone over the city, that Walter de Montreal, returning, alone, to the convent then associated with the church of Santa Maria del Priorata, (both of which belonged to the Knights of the Hospital, and in the first of which Montreal had taken his lodgment,) paused amidst the niins and desolation which lay around his path. Though little skilled in the classic memories and associations of the spot, he could not but be impressed with the surrounding witnesses of departed empire — the vast skeleton, as it were, of the dead giantess. " Now," thought he, as he gazed around upon the roofless columns and shattered walls, every- 160 RIENZI, where visible, over which the starhght shone, ghastly and ti'ansparent, backed by the frowning and em- battled fortresses of the Frangipani, half hid by the dark foliage which sprung up amidst the very fanes and palaces of old — Nature exulting over the frailei' Art, " now," thought he, " bookmen would be inspu'ed, by this scene, with fantastic and dream- ing \'isions of the past. But to me these monu- ments of high ambition and royal splendour create only images of the future. Rome may yet be, with her seven-hilled diadem, as Rome has been before, the prize of the strongest hand and the boldest warrior, — revived, not by her own degenerate sons, but the infused blood of a new race. William the Bastard could scarce have found the hardy Englishers as easy a conquest as Walter the Well- born may find these sunken Romans. And which conquest were the more glorious, — the bai'barous Isle, or the Metropolis of the World ? Short step from the general to the podesta — shorter step from the podesta to the king !" While thus revolving his wild, yet not altogether chimerical ambition, a quick light step was heard amidst the long herbage, and, looking up, Mon- THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 161 ti'eal perceived the figure of a tall female, descend- ing, from that part of the hill then covered by many convents, towards the base of the Aventine. Slie supported her steps with a long staff, and moved widi such elasticity and erectness, that now, as her face became visible by the starlight, it was sur- prising to perceive that it was the face of one advanced in years, — a harsh, proud countenance, withered, and deeply wrinkled, but not without a certain regularity of outline. " Merciful Virgin !" cried Montreal, starting l)ack as that face gleamed upon him : " is it possible? It is she !— it is — " He sprung forward, and stood right before the old woman, who seemed equally surprised, though more dismayed, at the sight of Montreal. " I have sought thee for years," said the Knight, first breaking the silence, " years, long years, — thy conscience can tell thee why." " Mine, man of blood !" cried the female, tremblinfj with rao;e or fear: "darest thoit talk of conscience ? Thou, the dishonourer — the robber — the professed homicide ! Thou, disgrace to knif^hthood and to birth ! Thou, with the cross of 162 RIENZI, chastity and of peace upon thy breast ! Thou talk of conscience, hj^ocrite ! — thou ?" " Lady — lady !" said Montreal, deprecatingly, and almost quailing beneath the fiery passion of that feeble woman, " I have sinned against thee and thine. But remember all my excuses ! — early love — fatal obstacles — rash vow — irresistible temptation ! Perhaps," — he added, in a more haughty tone — " perhaps, yet, I may have the power to atone my error, and wring, with mailed hand, from the successor of St. Peter, who hath power to loose as to bind " " Perjured and abandoned !" interrupted the female — " dost thou dream that violence can pur- chase absolution, or that thou canst ever atone the past? — a noble name undone — a father's broken heart and dying curse ! Yes, that curse, I hear it now ! — it rings upon me thrillingly, as when I watched the expiring clay ! it cleaves to thee — it pursues thee — it shall pierce thee through thy corselet — it shall smite thee in the meridian of thy power ! Genius wasted — ambition blasted — peni- tence deferred — a hfe of brawls, and a death of shame, — thy destruction the offspring of thy THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 163 crime ! — To this — to this, an old man*s curse hath doomed thee ! — and thou art doomed !" These words, rather shrieked than spoken — the flashing eye — the Hfted hand — ^the dilated form of the speaker — tlie hour — the solitude of the ruins around — all conspired to give to that fearful execra- tion the character of prophecy. The warrior, against whose undaunted breast a hundred spears had shivered in vain, fell appalled and humbled to the ground. He seized the hem of his fierce de- nouncer's robe, and cried, in a choked and hollow voice, " Spare me ! — spare me !" " Spare thee !" said the unrelenting crone ; " hast thou ever spared man in thy hatred, or woman in thy lust ? Ah, grovel in the dust ! — crouch — crouch ! — wild beast as thou art ! — whose sleek skin and beautiful hues have taught the un- wary to be blind to the talons that rend, and the grinders that devour ; — crouch, that the foot of the c^d and impotent may spurn thee !" " Hag !" cried Montreal, in the reaction of sudden fury and maddened pride, springing up to the full height of his stature — " hag ! thou hast passed the limits to which, remembering who thou art, my for- 164 RIENZI, bearance crave thee licence. I liacl well nifj-h forfjot that thou hadst assumed my part — / am the Ac- cuser ! Woman ! — the boy ! — shrink not ! — equi- vocate not ! — lie not ! — thou wert the thief !" " I was. Thou taughtest me the lesson how to steal a — " " Render — restore him !" interrupted Montreal, stamping on the ground with such force that the splinters of the marble fragments on which he stood shivered under his armed heel. The woman little heeded a violence at which the fiercest warrior of Italy might have trembled : but she did not make an immediate answer. The character of her countenance altered from passion into an expression of grave, intent, and melancholy thought. At length she replied to Montreal, whose hand had wandered to his dagger-hilt, with the instinct of long habit, whenever enraged or th waited, rather than from any design of blood; which, stern and vindictive as he was, he would have been incapable of forming against any woman, — much less against the one then before him. " Walter de Montreal," said she, in a voice so calm that it almost sounded like that of compas- THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 165 sion, *' the boy, I think, has never known brother or sister — the only child of a once haughty and lordly race, on both sides, though now on both dis- honoured — nay, why so impatient ? — thou wilt soon learn the worst — the boy is dead !'' " Dead !" repeated Montreal, recoiling and growing pale ; " dead ! — no, no — say not that ! He has a mother, — you know he has ! — a fond, meekhearted, anxious, hoping mother ! — no ! — no, he is not dead !" " Thou canst feel, then, for a mother ?" said the old woman, seemingly touched by the tone of the Provencal. ''Yet ; bethink thee, is it not better that the grave should save him from a life of riot, of bloodshed, and of crime ? Better to sleep with God than to wake with the fiends !" " Dead !" echoed Montreal; 'klead ! — the pretty one ! — so young ! — those eyes — the mother's eyes — closed so soon !" " Hast thou aught else to say ? Thy sight scares my very woriianhood from my soul !— let me begone." *' Dead ! — may I believe thee? or dost thou mock me ? Thou hast uttered thy curse, hearken 166 IlIENZI, to my warning — If thou hast Hed in this, thy last hour shall dismay thee, and thy death-bed shall be the death-bed of despair !" '* Tliy lips," replied the female, with a scornful smile, " are better adapted for lewd vows to un- happy maidens, than for the denunciations which sound solemn only when coming from the good. Farewell !" "Stay! inexorable woman ! stay! — where sleeps he ? Masses shall be sung ! — priests shall pray ! — the sins of the father shall not be visited on that young head !" " At Florence !" returned the woman, hastily. " But no stone records the departed one! — The dead boy had no name !" Waiting for no farther questionings, the woman now passed on, — pursued her way ; — and the long- herbage, and the winding descent, soon snatched her ill-omened apparition from the desolate land- scape. Montreal, thus alone, sunk with a deep and heavy sigh upon the ground, covered his face with his hands, and burst into an agony of grief; his chest heaved — his whole frame trembled, — and he THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 167 wept and sobbed aloud, with all the fearful vehe- mence of a man whose passions are strong and fierce, but to whom the violence of grief alone is novel and unfamiliar. He remained thus, prostrate and unmanned, for a considerable tune, growing slowly and gradually more calm as tears relieved his emotion, and, at length, rather indulging a gloomy reverie than a passionate grief. The moon was high, and the hour late, when he arose, and then few traces of the past excitement remained upon his countenance ; for Walter de Montreal vras not of that mould in which woe can force a settlement, or to which any affliction can bring the continued and habitual melancholy that darkens those who feel more en- duringly, though with emotions less stormy. His were the elements of the true Franc character, though carried to excess : his sternest and his deepest qualities were mingled with fickleness and levitj' ; his profound sagacity often frustrated by a whim ; his towering ambition deserted for some frivolous temptation ; and his elastic, sanguine, and high-spirited nature, faithful only to the desire of military glory, to the poetry of a dashing and 168 RIENZI, Stormy life, and to the susceptibilities of that tender passion without whose colourings no portrait of chivalry is complete, and in which he was capable of a sentiment, a tenderness, and a loyal devo- tion, which could hardly have been supposed com- patible with his reckless levity and his undisciplined career. " Well," said he, as he rose slowly, folded his mantle round him, and resumed his way, " it was not for myself I grieved thus. But the pang is past, and the worst is known. Now, then, back to those things that never die — restless projects and daring schemes. That hag's curse keeps my blood cold still, and this solitude has something in it weird and awful. Ha — what sudden light is that ?" The light which caught jNIontreal's eye broke forth almost like a star, scarcely larger, indeed, but more red and intense in its ray. Of itself it was nothing uncommon, and might have broken either from convent or cottage. But it streamed from a part of the Aventine which contained no habitations of the living, but only the empty ruins and shat- tered porticos, of which even the names and memories of the ancient inhabitants were dead. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 169 Awai*e of this, jMontreal felt a slight awe, (as the beam tlirew its steady light over the dreary land- scape,) for he was not without the knightly super- stitions of the age, and it was now the witching hour consecrated to ghost and spmt. But fear, whether of this world or the next, could not long daunt the mind of the hardy freebooter; and, after a short hesitation, he resolved to make a digression from his way, and ascertain the cause of the phenome- non. Unconsciously, the martial tread of the bar- barian passed over the site of the famed, or infamous, Temple of Isis, which had once witnessed those wildest orgies commemorated by Juvenal, and came at last to a thick and dark copse, from an opening in the centre of which, gleamed the mys- terious light. Penetrating the gloomy foliage, the Knight now found himself before a large ruin, grey and roofless, from within which came, indis- tinct and muffled, the sound of voices. Through a rent in the wall, forming a kind of casement, (probably unknowTi to the building in its ancient gloiy,) and about ten feet from the ground, the light now broke over the matted and rank soil, embedded, as it were, in vast masses of shade, and VOL. I. I 170 RIEXZI, streaming through a broken portico hard at hand. The Provengal stood, though he knew it not, on the very place once consecrated by the Temple — the Portico and the Library of Liberty, (the first public library instituted in Rome). The wall of the ruin was covered with innumerable creepers and wild brushwood, and it required but little agility on the part of Montreal, by the help of these, to raise himself to the height of the aperture, and, concealed by the luxuriant foliage, to gaze within. He saw a table, lighted with tapers, in the centre of which was a crucifix; a dagger, un- sheathed ; an open scroll, which the event proved to be of sacred character; and a brazen bowl. About a hundred men, in cloaks, and with black vizards, stood motionless around; and one, taller than the rest, without disguise or mask — whose pale brow and stern features seemed by that light yet paler and yet more stern — appeared to be concluding some address to his companions. " Yes," said he, " in the church of the Lateran I will make the last appeal to the people. Supported by the Vicar of the Pope, myself an officer of the Pontiff, it will be seen that Religion and Liberty — THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 171 the heroes and the martyrs — are united in one cause. After that time, words are idle: action must begin. By this crucifix I pledge my faith — on this blade I devote my life — to the regenera- tion of Rome ! And you, (then no need for mask or mantle !) when the solitary trump is heard — when the solitary horseman is seen, — you^ swear to rally round the standard of the Republic, and resist — with heart and hand, with life and soul, in defiance of death, and in hope of redemption — the arms of the oppressor !" " We swear ! — we swear ! " exclaimed every voice, — and, crowding toward cross and weapon, the tapers were obscured by the intervening throng, and Montreal could not perceive the ceremony, nor hear the muttered formula of the oath : but he could guess that the rite then common to conspira- cies — and which required each conspirator to shed some drops of his own blood, in token that life itself was devoted to the enterprise — had not been omitted, when, the group again receding, the same figure as before had addressed the meeting, hold- ing on high the bowl with both hands, — while firomthe left arm, which was bared, the blood weltered i2 172 RIENZI, slowly, and trickled, drop by drop, upon the ground, — said, in a solemn voice and up-tui'ned eyes — " Amidst the ruins of thy temple, O Liberty ! we, Romans, dedicate to thee this Hbation ! We, befriended and inspired by no imreal and fabled idols, but by the Lord of Hosts, and Him who, descending to earth, appealed not to emperors and to princes, but to the fisherman and the peasant, — giving to the lowly and the poor the mission of Revelation." Then, turning suddenly to his companions, as his features, singularly vary- ing in then* character and expression, brightened, from solemn awe, into a martial and kindling enthusigism, he cried aloud, " Death to the tyran- ny ! Life to the Republic ! " The effect of the transition was startling. Each man, as by an involuntary and irresistible impulse, laid his hand upon his sword, as he echoed the sentiment ; some, indeed, drew forth their blades, as if for instant action, " I have seen enow : they will break up anon," said Montreal to himself; " and I would rather face an army of thousands, than even half a dozen en- thusiasts, so inflamed, and thus detected." And, with THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 173 this thought, he dropped on the ground, and glided away, as, once again, through the still mid- night air, broke upon his ear the muffled shout — " Death to the Tyranny ! — Life to the Re- public !" end of book I. BOOK II. THE REVOLUTION. " Ogni Lascivia, ogni male, nulla giustizia, nuUo freno. Non c'era piu remedia, ogni persona periva. Allora Cola di Rienzi," &c. — ( Vita di Cola di Rienzi. Lib. i., Chap, ii.) BOOK II. CHAP. I. THE KNIGHT OF PROVENCE, AND HIS PROPOSAL. It was nearly noon as Adrian entered the gates of the palace of Stephen Colonna. The palaces of the nobles were not as we see them now — re- ceptacles for the immortal canvass of Italian, and the imperishable sculpture of Grecian, art; but still to this day are retained the massive walls, and barred windows, and spacious courts, in which at that time they protected their rude retainers. High above the gates rose a lofty and solid tower, whose height commanded a wide view of the muti- lated remains of Rome: the gate itself was adorned i3 178 RIENZI, and strengthened on either side by columns of gra- nite, whose Doric capitals betrayed the sacrilege that had torn them from one of the many temples that had formerly crowded the sacred Forum. From the same spoils came, too, the vast fragments of travertine which made the walls of the outer court. So common at that day were these bar- barous appropriations of the most precious monu- ments of art, that the columns and domes of earlier Rome were regarded by all classes but as quarries, from which every man was free to gather the ma- terials, whether for his castle or his cottage, — a wantonness of outrage far greater than the Goths', to whom a later age would fain have attributed all the disgrace, and which, more, perhaps, than even heavier offences, attracted the classical indignation of Petrarch, and made him sympathize with Rienzi in his hopes of Rome. Still may you see the churches of that or even earlier dates, of the most shapeless architecture, built on the site, and from the marbles, consecrating (rather than conse- crated by) the names of Venus, of Jupiter, of Minerva : the palace of the Prince of the Orsini, Duke of Gravina, is yet reared above the grace- THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 179 fill arches (still visible) of the Theatre of Marcel- lus, — then a fortress of the Savelli. As Adrian passed the court, a heavy waggon blocked up the way, laden with huge marbles, dug from the unexhausted mine of the Golden House of Nero : they were intended for an additional tower, by which Stephen Colonna proposed yet more to sti*eno;then the tasteless and formless edifice in which the old noble maintained the dignity of out- raging the law. The friend of Petrarch, and the pupil of Rienzi, sighed deeply as he passed this vehicle of new spoliations, and as a pillar of fluted alabaster, rolling carelessly fi'om the waggon, fell with a loud crash upon the pavement. At the foot of the stairs grouped some dozen of the bandits whom the old Colonna entertained : they were playing at dice, upon an ancient tomb, the clear and deep in- scription on which (so different from the slovenly character of the later empire) bespoke it a memo- rial of the most powerful age of Rome, and which, now empty even of ashes, and upset, served for a table to these foreign savages, and was strewn, even at that early hour, with fragments of 180 RIENZI, meat and flasks of wine. They scarcely stirred — they scarcely looked up — as the young noble passed them ; and their fierce oaths and loud ejaculations, uttered in a northern patois, grated harsh upon his ear, as he mounted, with a slow step, the lofty and unclean stairs. He came into a vast ante-chamber, which was half-filled with the higher class of the patrician's retainers : some five or six pages, chosen from the inferior noblesse, congregated by a narrow and deep-sunk casement, were discussing the grave matters of gallantry and intrigue : thi'ee petty chieftains of the band below, with their corselets donned, and their swords and casques beside them, were sitting, stolid and silent, at a table, in the middle of the room, and might have been taken for automatons, save for the solemn regularity with which they ever and anon lifted to their mous- tachioed lips their several goblets, and then, with a complacent grunt, re-settled to their contempla- tions. Striking was the contrast which their north- ern phlegm presented to a crowd of Italian clients, and petitioners, and parasites, who walked rest- lessly to and fro, talking loudly to each other, with all the vehement gestures and varying physiognomy THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 181 of southern vivacity. There was a general stir and sensation as Adrian broke upon this miscellaneous company. The bandit captains nodded their heads mechanically; the pages bowed, and ad- mired the fashion of liis plume and hose; the clients, and petitioners, and parasites, crowded round him, each with a separate request for inte- rest with his potent kinsman. Great need had Adrian of his wonted urbanity and address, in ex- tricating himself from their grasp ; and painfully did he win, at last, the low and narrow door, at which stood a tall servitor, who admitted or re- jected the applicants, according to his interest or caprice. «' Is the Baron alone ? " asked Adrian. *' Why, scarcely, my Lord : a foreign signor is with him — but to you he is of course visible.*' '' Well, you may admit me. I would inquire of his health." The servitor opened the door — through whose aperture peered many a jealous and wistful eye — and consigned Adrian to the guidance of a page, who, older and of greater esteem than the loiterers in the ante-room, was the especial henchman of the Lord of the Castle. Passing another, but empty, 182 RIENZI, chamber, vast and dreary, Adrian found himself in a small cabinet, and in the presence of his kins- man. Before a table, bearing the implements of writing, sate the old Colonna : a robe of rich furs and velvet hung loose upon his tall and stately frame ; from a round skull-cap, of comforting warmth and crimson hue, a few grey locks descended, and mixed with a long and reverent beard. The countenance of the aged noble, who had long passed his eightieth year, still retained the traces of a comeliness for which in earlier manhood he was remarkable. His eyes, if deep-sunken, were still dark and lively, and sparkled with all the fire of youth ; his mouth, curved up- ward in a pleasant, though half satiric, smile ; and his appearance on the whole was prepossessing and commanding, indicating rather the high blood, the shrewd wit, and the gallant valour of the patri- cian, than his craft, hypocrisy, and habitual, but disdainful, spirit of oppression. Stephen Colonna, without being absolutely a hero, was indeed far braver than most of the Romans, though he held fast to the Italian maxim — never to fight an enemy while it is possible to cheat him. Two faults, however, marred the effect of his saga- THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 183 city : a supreme insolence of disposition, and a pro- found belief in the lights of his experience. He was incapable of analogy. What had never happened in his time, he was perfectly persuaded never could happen. Thus, though generally esteemed an able diplomatist, he had the cunning of the intriguant, and not the providence of a statesman. If, how- ever, pride made hmi arrogant in prosperity, it supported him in misfortune. And in the earlier vicissitudes of a life which had partly been consumed in exile, he had developed many noble qualities of fortitude, endurance, and real greatness of soul, — which shewed that his failings were rather acquired by circumstance than derived from nature. His numerous and highborn race were proud of their chief; and with justice, for he was the ablest and most honoured, not only of the direct branch of the Colonna, but also, perhaps, of all the more powerful barons. Seated at the same table with Stephen Colonna, was a man of noble presence, of about three or four and thirty years of age, in whom Adrian instantly recognized Walter de Montreal. This celebrated knight was scarcely of the personal appearance 184 RIENZI, . which might have corresponded with the terror his name generally excited. His face was handsome, almost to the extreme of womanish delicacy. His fair hair waved long and freely over a white and unwiinkled forehead : the life of a camp and the smis of Italy had but little embrowned his clear and healthful complexion, which retained much of the bloom of youth. His features were aquiline and regular ; his eyes, of a light hazel, were large, bright, and penetrating ; and a short, but curled, beard and moustachio, trimmed with soldier-like precision, and very little darker than the hair, gave indeed a martial expression to his comely countenance, — but rather the expression which might have suited the' hero of courts and tournaments, than the chief of a brigand's camp : And the aspect, manner, and bearing, of the Provencal were those which captivate rather than awe, — blending, as they did, a certain military frank- ness with the easy and graceful dignity of one conscious of gentle birth, and accustomed to mix, on equal terms, with the great and noble. His form happily contrasted and elevated the character of a countenance which required strength and sta- ture to free its uncommon beauty from the charge THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 185 of effeminacy, being of great height and remarkable muscular power, without the least approach to clumsy and unwieldy bulk ; it erred, indeed, rather to the side of leanness than flesh, — at once robust and slender. But the chief personal distinction of this warrior, the most redoubted lance of Italy, was an air and carriage of chivalric and heroic grace, almost approacliing to the ideal, and greatly set off at this time by his splendid dress, which was of brown velvet sown with pearls, over which hung the surcoat worn by the Knights of the Hospital, whereon was wTought, in white, the eight-pointed cross which made the badge of his order. The Knight's attitude was that of earnest conversation, bending shghtly forward towards the Colonna, and resting both his hands — which (according to the usual distinction of the old Norman race,* from whom, though born in Provence, Montreal boasted his descent,) were small and delicate, the fingers • Small hands and feet, however disproportioned to the rest of the person, were at that time deemed no less a distinction of the well-born, than they have been in a more refined age. Many readers will remember the pain occasioned to Petrarch by his tight shoes. This peculiarity still characterizes the true Norman breed, and the notion of its beauty is more derived from the feudal than the classic time. 186 RIENZI, being covered with jewels, as was the fashion of the day — upon the golden hilt of an enormous sword, on the sheath of which was elaborately wrought the silver hlies that made the device of the Provengal Brotherhood of Jerusalem. " Good morrow, fan- kinsman !" said Stephen. " Seat thyself, I pray ; and know in this knightly visitor the celebrated Sieur de Montreal." " Ah, my Lord !'* said Montreal, smiling, as he saluted Adrian, " and how is my lady, at home ? " " You mistake, Sir Knight, "quoth Stephen ; *'my young kinsman is not yet married ; 'faith, as Pope Boniface remarked, when he lay stretched on a sick bed, and his confessor talked to him about Abra- ham's bosom, — ' that is a pleasure the greater for being deferred.' " " The Signor will pardon my mistake," returned Montreal. " But not," said Adrian, " the neglect of Sir Walter in not ascertaining the fact in person. My thanks to him, noble kinsman, are greater than you wot of, and he promised to visit me that he might receive them at leisure." "I assure you, Signor," answered Montreal, "that THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 187 I have not forgotten the invitation ; but so weighty hitherto have been my affairs at Rome, that I have been obliged to parley with my impatience to better our acquaintance." " Oh, ye knew each other before !" said Stephen. " And how ? " " My Lord, there is a damsel in the case ! " replied Montreal. " Excuse my silence." " Ah, Adi'ian, Adrian ! when will you learn my continence ! " said Stephen, solemnly, stroking his grey beard. " What an example I set you ! But a truce to this light conversation, — let us resume our theme. You must know, Adrian, that it is to the brave band of my guest I am indebted for those valiant gentlemen below, who keep Rome so quiet, though my poor habitation so noisy. He has called to proffer more assistance, if need be ; and to advise me on the affairs of Northern Italy. Continue, I pray thee, Sir Knight ; I have no disguises from my kinsman." " Thou seest," said Montreal, fixing his pene- trating eyes on Adrian, " thou seest, doubtless, my Lord, that Italy at this moment presents to us a remarkable spectacle. It is a contest between two 188 RIENZI, Opposing powers, which shall destroy the other. The one power is that of the unruly and turbulent people — a power which they call 'Liberty;' the other power is that of the chiefs and princes — a power which they more appropriately call ' Order.' Between these parties the cities of Italy are divided. In Florence, in Genoa, in Pisa, for instance, is estab- lished a Free State, — a Repubhc, God wot ! and a more riotous unhappy state of government cannot well be imagined." " That is perfectly true," quoth Stephen; " they banished my o\^ti first cousin from Genoa." "A perpetual strife, in short,"continued Montreal, " between the great families, an alternation of prose- cutions, and confiscations, and banishments : to-day the Guelfs proscribe the Ghibellines — to-morrow the Gliibellines drive out the Guelfs. This may be liberty, but it is the liberty of the strong against the weak. In the other cities, as Milan, as Verona, as Bologna, the people are under the rule of one man, — who calls himself a prince, and whom his enemies call a tyrant. Having more force than any other citizen, he preserves a firm government ; having more constant demand on his intellect and energies THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 189 than the other citizens, he also preserves a wise one. These two orders of government are enhsted against each other : whenever the people in the one rebel against then* prince, the people of the other — that is, the free states — send arms and money to their assistance." " You hear, Adrian, how wicked those last are ! " quoth Stephen. " Now it seems to me," continued Montreal, " that this contest must end some time or other. All Italy must become republican or monarchical. It is easy to predict which will be the result." " Yes, Liberty must conquer in the end ! " said Adrian, warmly. " Pardon me, young Lord ; my opinion is entirely the reverse. You perceive that these republics are commercial, — are traders ; they esteem wealth, they despise valour, they cultivate all trades save that of the armourer. Accordingly, how do they maintain themselves in war ? By their own citizens ? Not a whit of it ! Either they send to some foreign chief, and promise, if he grant them his protection, the principality of the city for five or ten years in return, — or else they borrow from some hardy ad- 190 RIENZI, venturer, like myself, as many troops as they can afford to pay for. Is it not so, Lord Adrian ? " Adrian nodded his reluctant assent. " Well, then, it is the fault of the foreign chief if he does not make his power permanent : as has been already done in States once free by the Visconti and the Scala ; or else it is the fault of the cap- tain of the mercenaries if he do not convert his brigands into senators, and himself into a king. These are events so natural, that one day or other they will occur throughout all Italy. And all Italy will then become monarchical. Now it seems to me the interest of all the powerful families — your own, at Rome, as that of the Visconti, at Milan — to expe- dite this epoch, and to check, while you yet may with ease, that rebellious contagion amongst the people which is now rapidly spreading, and which ends in the fever of hcence to them, but in the corruption of death to you. In these free States, the nobles are the first to suffer: first your privi- leges, then your property, are swept away. Nay, in Florence, as ye well know, my Lords, no noble is even capable of holding the meanest office in the state ! " THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 191 " Villains ! " said Colonna, " they violate the first law of nature ! " " At this moment," resumed Montreal, who, engrossed with his subject, little heeded the inter- ruptions he received from the holy indignation of the Baron, — " at this moment, there are many — the wisest, perhaps, in the free States — who desire to renew the old Lombard leagues, in defence of their common freedom everywhere, and against whosoever shall aspire to be prince. Fortunately, the deadly jealousies between these merchant States — the base plebeian jealousies, more of trade than of glory — interpose at present an irresistible obstacle to this design ; and Florence, the most stin'ing and the most esteemed of all, is happily so reduced by reverses of commerce as to be utterly unable to follow out so great an undertaking. Now, then, is the time for us, my Lords, — while these obstacles are so great for our foes, — now is the time for us to form and cement a counter- league between all the princes of Italy. To you, noble Stephen, I have come as your rank demands, — alone, of all the barons of Rome, — to propose to you this honourable union. Observe what advan- 192 RIENZI, tages it proffers to your house. The popes have abandoned Rome for ever; there is no counter- poise to your ambition, — there need be none to your power. You see before you the examples of Visconti and Taddeo di Pepoli. You may found in Rome — the first city of Italy- — a supreme and uncon- trolled principality, subjugate utterly your weaker rivals, — the Savelli, the Malatesta, the Orsini, — and leave to your sons' sons an hereditary kingdom tliat may aspire once more, perhaps, to the empire of the world." Stephen shaded his face with his hand as he answered — " But this, noble Montreal, requires means : — money, and men." " Of the last, you can command from me enow, — my small company, the best disciplined, can, (whenever I please,) swell to the most numerous in Italy : in the first, noble Baron, the rich House of Colonna cannot fail ; and even a mortgage on its vast estates may be well repaid when you have pos- sessed yourselves of the whole revenues of Rome. You see," continued Montreal, turning to Adrian, in whose youth he expected a more warm ally than in his hoary kinsman, " you see, at a glance, how THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 193 feasible is this project, and what a mighty field it opens to your House." " Sir Walter de Montreal," said Adrian, rising from his seat, and o;ivino; vent to the indii^nation he had with difficulty suppressed, " I grieve much tliat, beneath the roof of the first citizen of Rome, a sti'anger should excite, thus calmly, and without interruption, an ambition to emulate the guilty and execrated celebrity of a Visconti or a Pepoli. Speak, my Lord ! (turning to Stephen,) — speak, noble kinsman ! and tell this Knight of Provence that, if by a Colonna the ancient grandeur of Rome cannot be restored, it shall not be, at least, by a Colonna that her last wrecks of hberty shall be swept away." " How now, Adrian ! — how now, sweet kins- man !" said Stephen, thus suddenly appealed to, — " calm thyself, I pr'ythee. Noble Sir Walter, he is young — young, and hasty, — he means not to offend thee." " Of that I am persuaded," returned Montreal, coldly, but with great and courteous command of temper. '' He speaks from the impulse of the moment, — a praiseworthy fault in youth. It was VOL. I. K 194 RIENZI, mine at his age, and many a time have I nearly lost my life for the rashness. Nay, Signor, nay ! — touch not your sword so meaningly, as if you fancied I intimated a threat; far from me such presumption. I have learned sufficient caution, believe me, in the wars, not wantonly to draw me against a blade which I have seen wielded against such odds." Touched, despite himself, by the courtesy of the Knight, and the allusion to a scene in which, per- haps, his life had been preserved by Montreal, Adrian extended his hand to the latter. " I was to blame for my haste," said he, frankly ; " but know, by my very heat," he added, more gravely, " that your project will find no friends among the Colonna. Nay, in the presence of my noble kinsman, I dare to tell you, that could even his high sanction lend itself to such a scheme, the best hearts of his house would desert him, — and I myself, his kinsman, would man yonder castle against so unnatural an ambition ! " A slight, and scarce perceptible, cloud passed over Montreal's countenance at these words ; and he bit his lip ere he replied — THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 195 " Yet, if the Orsini be less scrupulous, their first exertion of power would be heard in the crashing house of the Colonna." " Know you," returned Adrian, " that one of our mottoes is this haughty address to the Romans, — ' If we flill, ye flill also' ? And better that flite than a rise upon the w recks of our native city. " "Well, well, well!" said Montreal, re-seating himself, — " I see that I must leave Rome to her- self, — the League must thrive without her aid. I did but jest, touching the Orsini, for they have not the powder that would make their efforts safe. Let us sweep, then, our past conference from our re- collection. It is the nineteenth, I think, Lord Colonna, on which you propose to repair to Cor- neto, with your friends and retainers, and on which you have invited my attendance?" "It is on that day. Sir Knight," replied the Baron, evidently much relieved by the turn the conversation had assumed. " The fact is, that we have been so charged with indifference to the interests of the good people, that I strain a point in this expedition to contradict the assertion ; and we propose, therefore, to escort and protect, against k2 196 RIENZI, the robbers of the road, a convey of corn to Corneto. In truth, I may add another reason, besides fear of the robbers, that makes me desire as numerous a train as possible. I wish to shew my enemies, and the people generally, the solid and growing power of my house ; the display of such an armed band as I hope to levy, will be a magnificent occasion to strike awe into the riotous and refrac- tory. Adrian, you will collect your servitors, I trust, on that day ; we would not be without you." " And as we ride along, fair Signor," said Mon- treal, inclining to Adrian, " you and I will entirely heal the wound I inadvertently occasioned you. Fortunately, there is one point on which we can agree — our gallantry to the sex. You must make me acquainted with the names of the fairest dames of Rome; and we will discuss old adventures in that line, and hope for new. By the way, I suppose, Lord Adrian, you, with the rest of your countrymen, are Petrarch-stricken ? " " Do you not share our enthusiasm? — slur not so your gallantry, I pray you." " Come, we must not again disagree ; but, by my halidame, I think one troubadour roundel worth all THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 197 tliat Petrarch ever \M'ote. He has but borrowed from our Knightly Poesy, to disguise it, Hke a cai-pet coxcomb." " Well," said Adrian, gaily, " for every line of the troubadours that you quote, I will cite you another. I will forgive you for injustice to Pe- ti'arch, if you are just to the troubadours." " Just ! " cried Montreal, with real enthusiasm, " I am of the land, nay the very blood, of the Trou- badour ! But we grow too light for your noble kinsman ; and it is time for me to bid you, for the present, farewell. My Lord Colonna — peace be with you ; farewell. Sir Adrian, — brother mine in knighthood, — remember your challenge." And with an easy and careless grace the Knight of St. John took his leave. The old Baron, making a dumb sign of excuse to Adrian, followed Mon- treal into the adjoining room. « Sir Knight!" said he, " Sir Knight !" as he closed the door upon Adrian, and then drew Montreal to the recess of the casement, — " a word in your ear. Think not I slight your offer, — but these young men must be managed; the plot is i98 RIENZI, great — noble, — grateful to my heart; but it re- quires time and caution. I have many of my house, scrupulous as yon hot-skull, to win over ; the M^ay is pleasant, but must be sounded well and carefully ; you understand ?" From under his bent brows, Montreal darted one keen glance at Stephen, and then answered — " My friendship for you dictated my offer. The league may stand without the Colonna, — beware a time when the Colonna cannot stand without the league. My Lord, look well around you ; there are more freemen — ay, bold and stirring ones, too — in Rome, than you imagine. Beware Rienzi ! Adieu, we meet soon again." Thus saying, Montreal departed, soliloquizing as he passed with his careless step through the crowded ante-room — " I shall fail here ! — these caitiff nobles have neither the courage to be great, nor the wisdom to be honest. Let them fall ! — I may find an adven- turer from the people, — an adventurer like myself, worth them all." No sooner had Stephen returned to Adrian than THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 199 he flung his arms affectionately round his ward, who was preparing his pride for some sharp rebuke for his petulance. " Nobly feigned, — admirable, admirable !" cried the Baron, — " you have learned the true art of a statesman at the Emperor's court. I always thought you would — always said it. You saw the di- lemma I was in, thus taken by surprise by that barbarian's mad scheme ; afraid to refuse, — more afraid to accept. You extricated me with consum- mate address ; that passion — so natural to your age, — was a famous feint, — drew off* the attack, — gave me time to breathe, — allowed me to play with the savage. But we must not offend him, you know : all my retainers would desert me, or sell me to the Orsini, or cut my throat, if he but held up his finger. Oh, it was admirably managed, Adrian, — admirably !" " Thank Heaven" — said Adrian, with some dif- ficulty recovering the breath which his astonish- ment had taken away — " you do not think of em- bracing that black proposition !" " Think of it! no, indeed!" said Stephen, throw- ing himself back on his chair. «' Why, do you not 200 RIENZI, know my age, boy ? Hard on my ninetieth year, I should be a fool indeed to throw myself into such a whirl of turbulence and agitation. I want to keep what I have, — not risk it by grasping more. Am I not the beloved of the pope ? shall I hazard his ex- communication ? Am I not the most powerful of the nobles ? should I be more if I were king ? At my age, to talk to me of such stuff! — the man's an idiot. Besides," added the old man, sinking his voice, and looking fearfully round, " if I were a king, my sons might poison me for the succession. They are good lads, Adrian, very ! — but such a temptation ! — I would not throw it in their way ; these grey hairs have experience ! Tyrants don't die a natural death; no, no! — Plague on the Knight, say I ; he has already cast me into a cold sweat." Adrian gazed on the working features of the old man, whose selfishness thus preserved him from crime. He listened to his concluding words — full of the dark truth of the times, — and as the pure and high ambition of Rienzi flashed upon him in contrast, he felt that he could not blame its fervour, or marvel at its excess. " And then, too," resumed the Baron, speaking THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 201 more deliberately as he recovered his self-posses- sion, " this man, by way of a warning, shews me, at a glance, his whole ignorance of the state. What think you? he has mingled with the mob, and taken their rank breath for power ; yes, he thinks words are soldiers, and bade me — me, Stephen Co- lonna, — beware — of whom, think you ? No, you will never guess ! — of that speech-maker, Rienzi ! — my own old jesting guest! Ha! ha! ha! — the igno- rance of these barbarians ! — ha ! ha ! ha !" and the old man laughed till the tears ran down his cheeks. " Yet, many of the nobles fear that Rienzi," said Adrian, gravely. " Ah ! let them, let them ! — they have not our experience — our knowledge of the world, Adrian. Tut, man, — when did declamation ever overthrow castles, and conquer soldiery ? I like Rienzi to harangue the mob, about old Rome, and such stuff; it gives them something to think of and prate about, and so all their fierceness evaporates in words ; they might burn a house if they did not hear a speech. But, now I am on that score, I must own the pedant has grown impudent in his new office ; here, here, — I received this paper ere I rose to-day. T hear a k3 202 RIENZI, similar insolence has been shewn to all the nobles. Read it, will you ;" and the Colonna put a scroll into his kinsman's hand. " I have received the like," said Adrian, glanc- ing at it. " It is a request of Rienzi's to attend at the Church of St. John of Lateran, to hear ex- plained the inscription on a Table just discovered. It bears, he saith, the most intimate connection with the welfare and state of Rome." " Very entertaining, I dare say, to professors and bookmen. Pardon me, kinsman ; I forgot yovu- taste for these things; and my son, Gianni, too, shares your phantasy. Well, well ! it is innocent enough ! Go — the man talks well." " Will you not attend, too ? " " I — my dear boy — I !" said the old Colonna, opening his eyes in such astonishment that Adrian could not help laughing at the simplicity of his own question. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 203 CHAP. II. THE INTERVIEW, AND THE DOUBT. As Adrian turned from the palace of his guardian, and bent his way in the direction of the Forum, he came somewhat unexpectedly upon Raimond, Bishop of Orvietto, who, mounted upon a low palfrey, and accompanied by some three or four of his waiting-men, halted abruptly when he recog- nised the young noble. " Ah, my son ! it is seldom that I see thee ; how fares it with thee ? — well ? So, so ! I re- joice to hear it. Alas ! what a state of society is ours, when compared to the tranquil pleasures of Avignon ! There, all men who, like us, are fond of the same pursuits, the same studies, 204 RIENZI, delicice musarum^ — hum ! hum ! (for the Bishop was proud of an occasional quotation, right or wrong,) are brought easily and naturally together. But here we scarcely dare stir out of our houses, save upon gi'eat occasions. But, talking of great occasions and the Muses reminds me of our good Rienzi's invitation to the Lateran : of course you will attend ; 'tis a mighty knotty piece of Latin he proposes to solve — so I heai', at least, — very inter- esting to us, my son, — very ! " It is to-morrow," answered Adrian. " Yes, as- suredly ; I will be there." " And harkye, my dear son," said the Bishop, resting his hand affectionately on Adrian's shoul- der, " I have reason to hope that he will re- mind our poor citizens of the Jubilee for the year Fifty, and stir them towards clearing the road of the brigands : a necessary injunction, and one to be heeded timeously ; for who will come here for absolution when he stands a chance of rushing un- annealed upon purgatory by the way ? You have heard Rienzi, — ay ? quite a Cicero — quite ! Well, Heaven bless you, my son ! — you will not fail ?" « Nay, not I." THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 205 " Yet, Stay — a word with you : just mention to all you meet the advisability of a full meeting ; it looks well for the city to shew respect to letters." " To say notliing of the Jubilee," added Adrian, smiling. " Ah, to say nothing of the Jubilee — very good ! Adieu for the present !" And the Bishop, resettling himself on his saddle, ambled solemnly on to visit his various friends, and press them to the meeting. Meanwhile, Adrian continued his course till he had passed the Capitol, the Arch of Severus, the crumbling columns of the fane of Jupiter, and found himself amidst the long grass, the whisper- ing reeds, and the neglected vines, that wave over the now-vanished pomp of the Golden House of Nero. Seating himself on a fallen pillar — by that spot where now the traveller descends to the (so- called) Baths of Livia — he looked impatiently to the sun, as to blame it for the slowness of its march. Not long, however, had he to wait before a light step was heard crushing the fragrant gi-ass; and presently thi'ough the arching vines gleamed a 206 RIENZI, face that might well have seemed the nymph — the goddess of the scene. " My beautiful ! my Irene ! how shall I thank thee !" It was long before the delighted lover suffered himself to observe upon Irene's face a sadness that did not usually cloud it in his presence. Her voice, too, trembled — her words seemed constrained and cold. " Have I offended thee ?" he asked, " or what less misfortune hath occurred ?" Irene raised her eyes to her lover's, and said, looking at him earnestly, " Tell me, my Lord, in sober and simple truth, tell me, would it grieve thee much were this to be our last meeting ?" Paler than the marble at his feet grew the dark cheek of Adrian. It was some moments ere he could reply, and he did so then with a forced smile and a quivering lip. " Jest not so, Irene ! Last ! — that is not a word for us !" " But hear me, my Lord — " " Why so cold ? — call me Adrian ! — friend ! — lover ! — or be dumb !" THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 20? " Well, then, my soul's soul ! — my all of hope ! — my life's life !" exclaimed Irene, passionately, — " hear me ! I dread that we stand at this moment upon some gulph whose depth I see not, but which may divide us for ever ! Thou knowest the real nature of my brother, and dost not misread him as many do. Long has he planned, and schemed, and communed with himself, and, feeling his way amidst the people, prepared the path to some great design. But now (thou wilt not betray — thoii wilt not injure him ? — he is thy friend !" ) *' And thy brother ! I would give my life for his ! Say on !" '^ But now, then," resumed Irene, " the time for that enterprise, whatever it be, is coming fast. I know not of its exact nature, but I know that it is against the nobles — against thy order — against thy house itself ! If it succeed — Oh, Adrian ! thou thyself mayst not be free from danger, — and my name, at least, will be coupled with the name of thy foes. If it fail, — my brother, my bold brother, is swept away ! He will fall a victim to revenge or justice, call it as you will. Your kinsman may be his judge — his executioner ; and I, even if I should 208 RIENZl, yet live to mourn over the boast and glory of my humble line, could I permit myself to love — to see one in whose veins flowed the blood of his de- stroyer ? Oh ! I am wretched — wretched ! these thoughts make me well nigh mad !" and, %\Tinging her hands bitterly, Irene sobbed aloud. Adrian himself was struck forcibly by the pic- ture thus presented to him, although the alterna- tives it embraced had often before forced themselves dimly on his mind. It was true, however, that, not seeing the schemes of Rienzi backed by any phy- sical power, and never yet having witnessed the mighty force of a moral revolution, he did not conceive that any rise to which he might instigate the people could be permanently successful : and, as for his punishment, in that city, where all justice was the slave of interest, Adrian knew himself powerful enough to gain forgiveness even for the greatest of aU crimes — armed insurrection against the nobles. As these thoughts recurred to him, he gained the courage to console and cheer Irene. But his efforts were only partially successful. Awakened by her fears to that consideration of the future which hitherto she had forgotten, Irene, THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 209 for the first time, seemed deaf to the charmer's voice. " Alas !" said she, sadly, " even at the best, what can this love, that we have so blindly encouraged — what can it end in ? Thou must not wed with one like me ; and I ! how foolish I have been !" " Recall thy senses then, Irene," said Adrian, proudly, partly perhaps in anger, partly in his ex- perience of the sex. " Love another, and more wisely if thou wilt ; cancel thy vows with me, and continue to think it a crime to love, and a folly to be true ! " " Cruel ! " said Irene, falteringly, and in her turn alarmed. " Dost thou speak in earnest ? " " Tell me, ere I answer you, tell me this : come death, come anguish, come a whole life of sorrow, as the end of this love, wouldst thou yet repent that thou hast loved ? If so, thou knowest not the love that I feel for thee." " Never ! never can I repent !" said Irene, falling upon Adi'ian's neck ; " forgive me!" " But is there, in truth," said Adrian, a little while after this lover-like quarrel and reconciliation, "is there, in truth, so marked a difference between 210 RIENZI, thy brother's past and present bearnig? How knowest thou that the time for action is so near ? " " Because now he sits closeted whole nights with all ranks of men ; he shuts up his books, — he reads no more, — but, when alone, walks to and fro his chamber, muttering to himself. Sometimes he pauses before the calendar, which of late he has fixed with his own hand against the wall, and passes his finger over the letters, till he comes to some chosen date, and then he plays with his sword and smiles. But two nights since, arms, too, in great number, were brought to the house ; and I heard the chief of the men who brought them, a grim giant, known well amongst the people, say, as he wiped his brow, — ' These will see work soon ! '" " Arms ! Are you sure of that?" said Adrian, anxiously. " Nay, then, there is more in these schemes than I imagined ! But (observing Irene's gaze bent fearfully on him as his voice changed, he added, more gaily,) but, come what may, believe me, — my beautiful ! my adored ! — that while I live, thy brother shall not suffer from the wrath he may provoke, — nor I, though he forget our ancient friendship, cease to love thee less." THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 211 " Siojnora ! Sio'iiora, child ! it is time ! we must go!" said the shrill voice of Benedetta, now peering tlirough the foliage. " The working men pass home this way ; I see them approaching." The lovers parted; for the first time the ser- pent had penetrated into their Eden, — they had conversed, they had thought, of other things than Love. 212 RIENZI, CHAP. III. A LIBERAL PATRICIAN's SITUATION AMIDST POPULAR DISCONTENTS. THE SCENE OF THE LATERAN. The situation of a Patrician who honestly loves the people, is, in those evil times — when power op- presses and freedom struggles, — when the two divisions of men are wrestling against each other, — the most irksome and perplexing that destiny can possibly contrive. Shall he take part with the no- bles ? he betrays his conscience ! with the people? he deserts his friends ! But that consequence of the last alternative is not the sole — nor, perhaps, to a strong mind, the most severe. All men are swayed and chained by public opinion ; it is the public judge : but public opinion is not the same for all ranks. The public opinion that excites or THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 213 deters the plebeian, is the opinion of the plebeians, — of those whom he sees, and meets, and knows ; of tliose with whom he is brought in contact, — those with whom he has mixed from childhood, — those whose praises are daily heard, — whose censure fi'owns upon him with every hour.^ So, also, the public opinion of the great is the opinion of their equals, — of those whom birth and accident cast for ever in their way. Wlien we read, at this day, in the shallow pages of some dogmatizing journalist, that this or that noble will not dare to commit this or that action — terrify a tenant, or bribe a voter — because public opinion awes him ! is it the public opinion of those around him that will condemn ? the public opinion of his parasites. ♦ It is the same in still smaller divisions. The public opinion for lawyers is that of lawyers ; of soldiers, that of the army; of scholars, it is that of men of literature and science. And to the susceptible amongst the latter, the hostile criticism of learning has been more stinging than the severest moral censuresof the vulgar. Many a man has done a great act, or composed a great work, solely to please the two or three persons constantly present to him. Their voice was his public opinion. The public opinion that ope- rated on Bishop, the murderer, was the opinion of the burkers, his comrades. Did that condemn him? No! He knew no other public opinion till he came to be hanged, and caught the loathing eyes, and heard the hissing execrations, of the crowd below his gibbet. 214 RIENZI, his clients, his equals, his co-mates, in policy and in sentiment ? Will that condemn him ? — No ! It is the public opinion of another class, — a class whom his orbit does not approach, — a class, whose praise or blame sounds seldom on his ear, — a class whom the public opinion of his own rank may deem it courage to brave, or dignity to disregard. This distinction is full of important practical deductions; it is one w^hich, more than most maxims, should never be forgotten by a politician who desires to be profound. It is, then, an ordeal terrible to pass — which few plebeians ever pass, which it is there- fore unjust to expect patricians to cross unfalter- ingly — the ordeal of opposing the public opinion which exists for them. They cannot help doubting then' own judgment, — they cannot help thinking the voice of wisdom or of virtue speaks in those sounds which have been deemed oracles from their cradle. In the tribunal of sectarian prejudice they imagine they recognise the court of the Universal Conscience. Another powerful detergent to the acting of a patrician so placed, is in the certainty that to the last the motives of such activity will be alike misconstrued by the aristocracy he deserts and the people he joins. It seems so unnatural THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 215 in a man to fly in the face of his own order, that the world is willing to suppose any clue to the mys- tery save that of honest conviction or lofty patri- otism. ' Ambition! ' says one. * Disappointment ! ' cries another. ' Some private grudge ! * hints a tliird. ' Mob-courting vanity !' sneers a fourth. The people admire at first, but suspect afterwards. The moment he thwarts a popular wish, there is no redemption for him : he is accused of having acted the hypocrite, — of having worn the sheep's fleece : and now say they, — ' See ! the wolf's teeth peep out ! ' Is he familiar with the people — ^it is cajolery ! Is he distant — it is pride ! What, then, sustains a man in such a situation, following his own conscience, with his eyes opened to all the perils of the path ? Away with the cant of public opinion, — away with the poor delusion of posthu- mous justice ; he will offend the first, he will never obtain the last. What sustains him ? His own SOUL ! A man thoroughly great has a certain con- tempt for his kind while he aids them : their weal or woe are all ; their applause — their blame — are nothing to him. He walks forth from the circle of bkth and habit; he is dumb to the little motives 216 RIENZI, of little men. High, through the widest space liis orbit may describe, he holds on his sphered course to guide or to enlighten; but the noises below reach him not ! Until the wheel is broken, — until the dark void swallow up the star, — it makes melody, night and day, to its own ear : thirsting for no sound from the earth it illumines, anxious for no companionship in the path through which it rolls, conscious of its own glory, and contented, therefore, to be alone! But minds of this order are rare. All ages can- not produce them. They are exceptions to the ordinary and human virtue, which, if not corrupted, is at least influenced and regulated, by external cir- cumstance. At a time when even to be merely susceptible to the voice of fame was a great pre- eminence in moral energies over the rest of man- kind, it would be impossible that any one should ever have formed the conception of that more re- fined and metaphysical sentiment, that purer ex- citement to high deeds — that glory in one's own heart, which is so immeasurably above the desire of renown from others. In fact, before we can dispense with the world, we must, by a long and THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 217 severe noviciate — by the probation of much thought, and much sorrow — by deep and sad conviction of the vanity of all that the world can give us, have raised ourselves — not in the fervour of an hour, but habitually — above the world : an abstraction — an idealism — which, in our wiser age, how few, even of the wisest, can attain ! Yet, till we are thus fortunate, we know not the true divinity of con- templation, nor the all-sufficing mightiness of con- science ; nor can we retreat with solemn footsteps into that Holy of Holies in our own souls, wherein we know, and feel, how much our nature is capable of the self-existence of a God ! But to return to the things and thoughts of earth. Those considerations, and those links of circumstance, which, in a similar situation, have chained so many honest and courageous minds, chained also the mind of Adrian. He feh in a false position. His reason and conscience shared in the schemes of Rienzi, and his natural hardihood and love of enterprise would have led him actively to share the danger of their execution. But this, all his associations, his friendships, his private and household ties, loudly forbade. Against his order, VOL. I. L 218 RIENZI, against his house, against the companions of his youth, how could he plot secretly, or act sternly ? If, on one side he was impelled by patriotism, on the other side stood hypocrisy and ingratitude. Who, too, would believe him the honest champion of his country who was a traitor to his friends? Thus, indeed, " The native hue of resolution Was sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought ! " And he who should have been by nature a leader of the time became only its spectator. Yet Adrian endeavoured to console himself for his present pas- siveness in a conviction of the policy of his conduct. He who takes no share in the commencement of civil revolutions, can often become, with the most effect, a mediator between the passions and the parties subsequently formed. Perhaps, under Adrian's circumstances, delay was really the part of a prudent statesman ; the very position which cripples at the first, often gives authority before the end. Clear from the excesses, and saved from the jealousies, of rival factions, all men are willing to look with complaisance and respect to a new actor in a turbulent drama; his moderation may THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES, 219 make him trusted by the people ; his rank enable him to be a fitting mediator with the nobles ; and thus the qualities that would have rendered him a martyr at one period of the Revolution, raise him perhaps into a saviour at another. Silent, therefore, and passive, Adrian waited the progress of events. If the projects of Rienzi failed, he might, by that inactivity, the better preserve the people from new chains, and their champion from death. If those projects succeeded, he might equally save his house from the popular wrath — and, advo- cating liberty, check disorder. Such, at least, were his hopes; and thus did the Italian sagacity and caution of his character control and pacify the enthusiasm of youth and courage. The sun shone calm and cloudless upon the vast concourse gathered before the broad space that sur- rounds the Church of St. John of Lateran. Partly by curiosity — partly by the desire of the Bishop of Orvietto — partly because it was an occasion in which they could display the pomp of their retinues — many of the principal Barons of Rome had gathered to this spot. On one of the steps ascending to the church, l2 220 RIENZI, with his mantle folded round him, stood Walter de Montreal, gazing on the various parties that, one after another, swept through the lane which the soldiers of the Church preserved unimpeded, in the middle of the crowd, for the access of the principal nobles. He watched with interest, though with his usual carelessness of air and roving glance, the different marks and looks of welcome given by the populace to the different personages of note. Banners and pennons preceded each Signor, and, as they waved aloft, the witticisms or nicknames — the brief words of praise or censure, that imply so much — which passed to and fro among that lively crowd, were treasured carefully in his recol- lection. " Make way, there ! — way for my Lord Martino Orsini — Baron di Porto !" " Peace, minion ! — draw back ! — way for the Signor Adrian Colonna, Baron di Castello, and Knight of the Empii-e !" And at those two rival shouts, you saw waving on high the golden bear of the Orsini, with the motto — "Beware my embrace!" and the solitary THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 221 column on an azure ground, of the Colonna, with Adrian's especial device — " Sad, but strong." The train of Martino Orsini was much more numerous than that of Adrian, which last consisted but of ten servitors. But Adrian's men attracted far greater admiration amongst the crowd, and pleased more the experienced eye of the warlike Knight of St. John. Their arms were polished like mirrors ; their height was to an inch the same ; their march was regular and sedate ; their mien erect ; they looked neither to the right or left ; they betrayed that ineffable discipline — that harmony of order — which Adrian had learnt to impart to his men during his own apprenticeship of arms. But the disorderly train of the Lord of Porto was composed of men of all heights. Ill-polished, ill-fashioned, were their arms ; they prest confusedly on each other ; they laughed, and spake aloud ; and in their mien and bearing expressed all the insolence of men who despised alike the master they served and the people they awed. The two bands coming unexpectedly on each other through this narrow defile, the jea- lousy of the two houses presently declared itself. Each pressed forward for the precedence ; and, as 222 RIENZI, the quiet regularity of Adrian's train, and even its compact paucity of numbers, enabled it to pass before the servitors of his rival, the populace set up a loud shout — " A Colonna for ever !" — " Let the Bear dance after the Column !" " On, ye knaves !" said Orsini aloud to his men. " How have ye suffered this affront ?" And passing himself to the head of his men, he would have ad- vanced through the midst of his rival's train, had not a tall guard, in the Pope's livery, placed his baton in the way. " Pardon, my Lord ! we have the Vicar's express commands to suffer no struggling of the different trains one with another." "Knave! dost thou bandy words with me?" said the fierce Orsini, and with his sword he clove the baton in two. " In the Vicar's name, I command you to fall back !" said the sturdy guard, now placing his huge bulk in the very front of the noble's path. " Tt is Cecco del Vecchio !" cried those of the populace who were near enough to perceive the interruption and its cause. " Ay," said one, '« the good Vicar has put many THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. •223 of the Stoutest fellows in the Pope's livery in order the better to keep peace. He could have chosen none better than Cecco." " But he must not fall !" cried another, as Orsini, glaring on the smith, drew back his sword as if to plunge it through his bosom. " Shame — shame ! shall the Pope be thus in- sulted in his own city?" cried several voices. "Down with the sacrilegious — down !" And, as if by a preconcerted plan, a whole body of the mob broke at once through the lane, and swept like a torrent over Orsini and his jostled and ill-assorted train. Orsini himself was thrown on the grovmd with violence, and trampled upon by a hundred foot- steps; his men, huddled and struggling as much against themselves as against the mob, were scat- tered and overset ; and when, by a great effort of the guards, headed by the smith himself, order was again restored, and the line re-formed, Orsini, well nigh choked with his rage and humiliation, and greatly bruised by the rude assaults he had received, could scarcely stir from the ground. The officers of the Pope raised him, and, when he was on his legs, he looked wildly around for 224 RiEXZi, his sword, which, faUing from his hand, had been kicked amongst the crowd, and seeing it not, he said, between his ground teeth, to Cecco del Vecchio — '^ Fellow, thy neck shall answer this outrage, or may God desert me !" and passed along through the space ; while a half-suppressed and exultant hoot from the bye-standers followed his path. " Way there !" cried the smith, " for the Lord Martino di Porto, and may all the people know that he has threatened to take my life for the dis- charge of my duty in obedience to the Pope's Vicar r " He dare not !" shouted out a thousand voices; " the people can protect their own ! " This scene had not been lost on the Provencal, who well knew how to construe the wind by the direction of straws, and saw at once, by the bold- ness of the populace, that they themselves were conscious of a coming tempest. " P«r dieic" said he, as he saluted Adrian, who, gravely, and with- out looking behind, had now won the steps of the church, " yon tall fellow has a brave heart, and many friends, too. What think you," he added, THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 225 in a low whisper, " is not this scene a proof that the nobles are less safe than they wot of?" " Tlie beast begins to kick against the spur, Sir Knight," answered Adrian ; " a wise horseman sliould, in such a case, take care how he pull the rein too tight, lest the beast should rear, and he be overthrown — yet that is the policy thou wouldst recommend." " You mistake," returned Montreal, " dropping the metaphor, my wish was to give Rome one so- vereign instead of many tyrants, — but hark ! what means that bell?" " The ceremony is about to begin," answered Adrian. " Shall we enter the church together ?" Seldom had a temple consecrated to God wit- nessed so singular a spectacle as that which now animated the solemn space of the Lateran. In the centre of the church, seats were raised in an amphitheatre, at the far end of which was a scaffolding, a little higher than the rest ; below this spot, but high enough to be in sight of all the con- course, was placed a vast table of iron, on which was graven an ancient inscription, and bearing in l3 ^•26 RIENZI, its centre a clear and prominent device, presently to be explained. The seats were covered with cloth and rich tapestry. In the rear of the church was drawn a purple curtain. Around the amphitheatre were the officers of the Church, in the parti-coloured liveries of the Pope. To the right of the scaffold sate Rai- mond, Bishop of Orvietto, in his robes of state. On the benches round him you saw all the marked personages of Rome — the judges, the men of let- ters, the nobles, from the lofty rank of the Savelli to the inferior grade of a Raselli. The space beyond the amphitheatre was filled with the people, who now poured fast in, stream after stream : all the while rang, clear and loud, the great bell of the church. At length, as Adrian and Montreal seated them- selves at a little distance from Raimond, the bell suddenly ceased — the murmurs of the people were stilled — the purple curtain was withdrawn, and Rienzi came forth with slow and majestic steps. He came — but not in his usual sombre and plain attire. Over his broad breast he wore a vest of THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 227 dazzling whiteness — a long robe, in the ample fashion of the toga, descended to his feet, and swept the floor. On his head he wore a fold of white cloth, in the centre of which shone a golden crown. But the crown was divided, or cloven, as it were, by the mystic ornament of a silver sword, which, attracting the universal attention, testified at once, that this strange garb was worn, not from the vanity of display, but for the sake of presenting to the concourse — in the person of the citizen — a type and emblem of that state of the city on which he was about to descant. " 'Faith," whispered one of the old nobles to his neighbour, " the plebeian assumes it bravely." " What showman's tricks are these ?" said a second. " It will be rare sport," said a third. " I trust the good man will put some jests in his discourse." " He is certainly crazed !" said a fourth. " How handsome he is !" said the women, mixed with the populace. " This is a man who has learnt the people by heart," observed Montreal to Adrian. '« He knows 228 RIENZI, he must speak to the eye, in order to win the mind : a knave, — a wise knave !" And now Rienzi had ascended the scaffold ; and as he looked long and steadfastly around the meeting, the high and thoughtful repose of his majestic countenance, its deep and solemn gravity, hushed all the murmurs, and made its effect equally felt by the sneering nobles as the impatient populace. " Signors of Rome," said he, at length, " and ye, friends and citizens, you have heard why we are met together this day ; and you, my Lord Bishop of Orvietto, — and ye, fellow labourers with me in the field of letters, — ye, too, are aware that it is upon some matter relative to that ancient Rome, the rise and the decline of whose past power and glories we have spent our youth in en- deavouring to comprehend. But this, believe me, is no vain enigma of erudition, useful but to the studious, — referring but to the dead. Let the Past perish ! — let darkness shroud it! — let it sleep for ever over the crumbling temples and desolate tombs of its forgotten sons, — if it cannot afford us, THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 229 from its disgraved secrets, a guide for the Present and the Future. What, my Lords, ye have thought that it was for tlie sake of antiquity alone that we have wasted our nights and days in studying what antiquity can teacli us ! You are mistaken ; it is nothing to know what we have been, unless it is with tlie desire of knowing that which we ought to be. Our ancestors are mere dust and ashes, save when they speak to our posterity ; and then their voices resound, not from the earth below, but the heaven above. There is an eloquence in Memory, because it is the nurse of Hope. There is a sanctity in the Past, but only because of the chronicles it retains, — chronicles of the progress of mankind, — stepping-stones in civilization, in liberty, and in knowledge. Our fathers forbid us to recede, — they teach us what is our rightful heritage, — they bid us reclaim, they bid us augment that heritage, — pre- serve their virtues, and avoid their errors. These are the true uses of the past. Like the sacred edifice in which we are, — it is a tomb upon which to rear a temple. I see that you marvel at this long beginning; ye iook to each other — ye ask to what it tends. Behold this broad plate of iron ; 230 RIENZI, upon it is graven an inscription but lately disin- terred from the heaps of stone and ruin, which — O shame to Rome ! — were once the palaces of empire, and the arches of triumphant power. The device in the centre of the table, which you behold, conveys the act of the Roman Senators, — who are conferring upon Vespasian the imperial authority. It is this inscription which I have invited you to hear read ! It specifies the very terms and limits of the authority thus conferred. To the Emperor was confided the power of making laws and alli- ances with whatsoever nation, — of increasing, or of diminishing the limits of towns and districts, — of — mark this my Lords ! — exalting men to the rank of dukes and kings, — ay, and of deposing and degrad- ing them ; — of making cities, and of unmaking , in short, of all the attributes of imperial power. Yes, to that Emperor was confided this vast autho- rity ; but, by whom ? Heed — listen, I pray you — let not a word be lost ; — by whom, I say ? By the Roman Senate ! What was the Roman Senate ? The Representative of the Roman People ! " " I knew he would come to that!" said the smith, who stood at the door with his fellows, but to THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 231 whose ear, clear and distinct, rolled the silver voice of Rienzi. " Brave fellow ! and this, too, in the hearing of the Lords." " Ay, you see what the people were ! and we should never have known this but for him." " Peace, fellows !" said the officer to those of the crowd, from whom came these whispered sentences. Rienzi continued. — " Yes, it is the people who entrusted this power — to the people, therefore, it belongs ! Did the haughty Emperor arrogate the crown ? Could he assume the authority of himself ? Was it born with him? Did he derive it, my Lord Barons, from the possession of towered castles — of lofty lineage ? No ! all-powerful as he was, he had no right to one atom of that power, save from the voice and trust of the Roman people. Such, O my countrymen ! such was, even at that day, when Liberty was but the shadow of her former self, — such was the acknowledged prerogative of your fathers ! All power was the gift of the people. What have ye to give now ? Who, who, I say, — what single person, what petty chief, asks you for 232 RIENZI, the autliority he assumes ? His senate is his sword ; his chart of licence is written, not with ink, but blood. The people ! — there is no people ! Oh ! would to God that we might disentomb the spirit of the Past as easily as her records !" " If I were your kinsman," whispered Montreal to Adrian, " I would give this man short breath- ing-time between his peroration and confession." " What is your Emperor ?" continued Rienzi ; " a stranger ! What the great Head of your Church ? — an exile ! Ye are without your lawful chiefs ; and why ? Because ye are not without your law-defying tyrants ! The licence of your nobles, their discords, their dissensions, have driven our Holy Father from the heritage of St. Peter ; — they have bathed your streets in your own blood ; they have wasted the w^ealth of your labours on private quarrels and the maintenance of hireling ruffians ! Your forces are exhausted against yourselves. You have made a mockery of your country, once the mistress of the world. You have steeped her lips in gall — ye have set a crown of thorns upon her head ! What, my Lords !" cried he, turning sharply round towards the Savelli THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 233 and Orsini, who, endeavouring to shake off the tlirill which the fiery eloquence of Rienzi had stricken to their hearts, now, by contemptuous gestures and scornful smiles, testified the displea- sure they did not dai'e loudly to utter in the pre- sence of the Vicar and the people. — " What ! even while I speak — not the sanctity of this place re- sti'ains you ! I am a humble man — a citizen of Rome ; — but I have this distinction : I have raised against myself many foes and scoffers for that which I have done for Rome. I am hated, because I love my country ; I am despised, because I would exalt her. I retaliate — I shall be avenged. Three traitors in your own palaces shall betray you : their names are — Luxury, Envy, and Dissension !" " There he had them on the hip !" " Ha, ha ! by the Holy Cross, that was good !" " I would go to the hangman for such another keen stroke as that !" " This is the man we have always wanted !" " It is a shame if ice are cowards, when one man is thus brave," said the smith. " Silence ! " proclaimed the officer. " O Romans ! " resumed Rienzi, passionately — 234 RIENZI, " awake ! I conjure you ! Let this memorial of your former power — your ancient liberties — sink deep into your souls. In a propitious hour, if ye seize it, — in an evil one, if ye suffer the golden op- portunity to escape, — has this record of the past been unfolded to your eyes. Recollect that the Jubilee approaches." The Bishop of Orvietto smiled, and bowed ap- provingly : the people, the citizens, the inferior nobles, noted well those signs of encouragement; and, to their minds, the Pope himself, in the person of his Vicar, looked benignly on the daring of Rienzi. " The Jubilee approaches, — the eyes of all Qiristendom will be directed hither. Here, where, from all quarters of the globe, men come for peace, shall they find discord ? — seeking absolu- tion, shall they perceive but crime ? In the centre of God's dominion, shall they weep at your weak- ness? — in the seat of the martyred saints, shall they shudder at your vices ? — in the fountain and source of Christ's law, shall they find all law un- known ? You were the glory of the world — will you be its byeword ? You were its example — will you be its warning ? R.ise, while it is yet time ! — clear THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 235 your roads from the bandits that infest them ! — your walls from the hirelings that they harbour ! Banish these civil discords, or the men — how proud, how great, soever — who maintain them ! Pluck the scales from the hand of Fraud ! — the sword from the hand of Violence ! — the balance and the sword are the ancient attributes of Justice ! — restore them to her again ! This be your high task, — these be your great ends ! Deem any man who opposes them a traitor to his country. Gain a victory greater than those of the Caesars — a victory over yourselves ! Let the pilgrims of the world behold the resurrection of Rome ! make one epoch of the Jubilee of Religion and the Restoration of Law ! Lay the sacrifice of your vanquished passions — the first-fruits of your renovated liberties — upon the very altar that these walls contain ! and never ! oh, never ! since the world began, shall men have made a more grate- ful offering to their God !" So intense was the sensation these words created in the audience — so breathless and over- powered did they leave the souls which they took by storm — that Rienzi had descended the scaffold, 236 RiEXzi, and already disappeai-ed behind the curtain from which he had emerged, ere the crowd were fully aware that he had ceased. The singularity of this sudden apparition — robed in mysterious splendour, and vanishing the moment its eiTand was fulfilled — gave additional effect to the words it had uttered. The whole character of that bold address became invested with a some- thing preternatural and inspired ; to the minds of the vulgar, the mortal was converted into the oracle; and, marvelling at the unhesitating courage with which their idol had rebuked and conjured the haughty barons, — each of whom they regarded in the light of sanctioned executioners, whose anger could be manifest at once by the gibbet or the axe, — the people could not but superstitiously imagine that nothing less than authority from above could have gifted their leader with such hardihood, and preserved him from the danger it incurred. In fact, it was this very courage of Rienzi in which his safety consisted; he was placed in those cir- cmnstances wherein audacity is prudence. Had he been less bold, the nobles would have been more severe ; but so great a licence of speech in an THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 237 officer of the Holy See, they naturally imagined, was not unauthorized by the assent of the Pope, as well as by the approbation of the people. Those who did not (like Stephen Colonna) despise words as wind, shrank back from the task of punishing one whose voice might be the mere echo of the wishes of the pontiff. The dissensions of the nobles among each other, were no less favourable to Rienzi. He attacked a body the members of which had no union. " It is not my duty to slay him ! " said one. " I am not the representative of the barons ! " said another. " If Stephen Colonna heeds him not, it would be absurd, as well as dangerous, in a meaner man to make himself the champion of the order ! " said a third. The Colonna smiled approval, when Rienzi de- nounced an Orsini — an Orsini laughed aloud, when the eloquence burst over a Colonna. The lesser nobles were well pleased to hear attacks upon both: while, on the other hand, the Bishop, by the long impunity of Rienzi, had taken courage to sanction the conduct of his fellow offi<:er. He affected, indeed. 238 RIENZI, at times, to blame the excess of his fervour, but it was always accompanied by the praises of his honesty ; and the approbation of the Pope's Vicar confirmed the impression of the nobles as to the approbation of the Pope. Thus, from the very rashness of his enthusiasm had grown his security and success. Still, however, when the barons had a little re- covered from the stupor into which Rienzi had cast them, they looked round to each other ; and their looks confessed their sense of the insolence of the orator, and the affront offered to themselves. " Perfede /" quoth Reginaldo di Orsini, "this is past bearing, — the plebeian has gone too far ! " " Look at the populace below ! how they mur- mur and gape, — and how their eyes sparkle — and what looks they bend at us ! " said Luca di Sa- velli to his mortal enemy, Castruccio Malatesta : the sense of a common danger united in one moment, but only for a moment, the enmity of years. "Diavolo!" muttered Raselli, (Nina's father,) to a baron, equally poor, "but the clerk has truth in his lips. 'Tis a pity he is not noble." " What a clever brain marred ! " said a Floren- THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 239 tine merchant. " That man might be something, if he were sufficiently rich." Adrian and Montreal were silent: the first seemed lost in thought, — the last was watching the various effects produced upon the audience. " Silence ! " proclaimed the officers. " Silence, for my Lord Vicar." At this announcement, every eye turned to Rai- mond, who, rising with much clerical importance, thus addressed the assembly : — "Although, Barons and Citizens of Rome, my well-beloved flock, and children, — I, no more than yourselves, anticipated the exact nature of the ad- dress ye have just heard, — and, albeit, I cannot feel unalloyed contentment at the manner, nor, I may say, at the whole matter of that fervent exhorta- tion, — yet (laying great emphasis on the last word,) I cannot suffer you to depart without adding to the prayers of our Holy Father's servant, those, also, of his Holiness's spiritual representative. It is true ! the Jubilee approaches ! The Jubilee approaches — and yet our roads, even to the gates of Rome, are infested with murderous and godless ruffians ! What pilgrim can venture across the Apennines 240 RIENZI, to worship at the altars of St. Peter ? The Jubilee approaches : what scandal shall it be to Rome if these shrines be without pilgrims — if the timid recoil from, if the bold fall victims to, the dangers of the way ! Wherefore, I pray you all, citizens and chiefs alike, — I pray you all to lay aside those unhappy dissensions which have so long consumed the strength of our sacred city ; and, uniting with each other in the ties of amity and brotherhood, to form a blessed leao^ue against the marauders of the road. I see amongst you, my Lords, many of the boasts and pillars of the state ; but, alas ! I think with grief and dismay on the causeless and idle hatred that has grown up between you ! — a scandal to our city, and reflecting, let me add, my Lords, no honour on your faith as Christians, nor on your dignity as defenders of the Church." AmonfTst the inferior nobles — along the seats of the judges and the men of letters — through the vast concourse of the people — ran a loud murmur of approbation at these words. The greater barons looked proudly, but not contemptuously, at the countenance of the prelate, and preserved a strict and unrevealing silence. THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 241 " In this holy spot," continued the Bishop, " let me beseech you to bury those fruitless animosities which have already cost enough of blood and trea- sure ; and let us quit these walls with one com- mon determination to evince our courage and display our chivalry only against our universal foes ; — those ruffians who lay waste our fields, and infest our public waj^s, — the foes alike of the peo- ple we should protect, and the God whom we should serve !" The Bishop resumed his seat ; the nobles looked at each other without reply ; the people began to whisper loudly amongst themselves ; when, after a short pause, Adrian di Castello rose. " Pardon me, my Lords, and you, reverend Father, if I, unexperienced in years and of little mark or dignity amongst you, presume to be the first to embrace the proposal we have just heard. Wil- lingly do I renounce all ancient cause of enmity with any of my compeers. Fortunately for me, my long- absence from Rome has swept from my remem- brance the feuds and rivalries familiar to my earlier youth ; and in this noble conclave I see but one man (glancing to Martino di Porto, who sat VOL. I. M •242 RIENZI, sullenly looking down,) against whom I have, at any time, deemed it a duty to draw my sword ; the gage that I once cast to that noble is yet, I rejoice to think, unredeemed. I withdraw it. Henceforth my only foes shall be the foes of Rome !" " Nobly spoken," said the Bishop, aloud. " And," continued Adrian, casting down his glove amongst the nobles, — " I throw, my Lords, the gage, thus resumed, amongst you all, in chal- lenge to a wider rivalry, and a more noble field. I invite any man to vie with me in the zeal that he shall shew to restore tranquillity to our roads, and order to our state. It is a contest in which, if I be vanquished with reluctance, I will yield the prize without envy. In ten days from this time, reverend Father, I will raise forty horse- men-at-arms, ready to obey whatever orders shall be agreed upon for the security of the Roman state. And for you, O Romans, dismiss, I pray you, from your minds, those eloquent invectives against your fellow-citizens which ye have lately heard. All of us, of what rank soever, may have shared in the excesses of these unhappy times ; let us en- deavour, not to avenge nor to imitate, — but to THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 243 reform and to unite. And may the people hereafter find, that the true boast of a patrician is, that his power the better enables him to serve his country." ••« Brave words !" quoth the smith, sneering. "If they were all like him!" said the smith's neighbour. " He has helped the nobles out of a dilemma," said Pandulfo. " He has shewn grey wit under young hairs," said an aged Malatesta. '' You have turned the tide, but not stemmed it, noble Adrian," whispered the ever-boding Mon- treal, as, amidst the murmurs of the general ap- probation, the young Colonna resumed his seat. *' How mean you ?" said Adrian. " That your soft words, like all patrician con- ciliations, have come too late." Not another noble stirred, though they felt, per- haps, disposed to join in the general feeling of amnesty, and appeared, by signs and whispers, to applaud the speech of Adrian. They were too habituated to the ungracefulness of an unlettered pride, to bow themselves to address conciliating language, either to the people or their foes. And M 2 244 RIENZI, Raimond, glancing round, and not willing that their unseemly silence should be long remarked, rose at once, to give it the best construction in his power. " My son, thou hast spoken as a patriot and a Christian ; by the approving silence of your peers we all feel that they share your sentiments. Break we up the meeting, — its end is obtained. The manner of our proceeding against the leagued rob- bers of the road requires maturer consideration elsewhere. This day shall be an epoch in our history." " It shall," quoth Cecco del Vecchio, gruffly, be- tween his teeth. " Children, my blessing upon you all !" con- cluded the Vicar, spreading his arms. And in a fev»' minutes more the crowd poured from the Church. The different servitors and flag- bearers ranged themselves on the steps without, each train anxious for their master's precedence; and the nobles, gravely collecting in small knots, in the which was no mixture of rival blood, fol- lowed the crowd down the aisles. Soon rose again the din, and the noise, and the wranorlino^, and the THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. '245 oaths, of the hostile bands, as, with pain and labour, the Vicar's officers marshalled them in " order most disorderly." But so true were Montreal's words to Adrian, that the populace already half forgot the young noble's generous appeal, and were only bitterly comment- ing on the ungracious silence of his brother Lords. What, too, to them was this crusade against the rob- bers of the road ? They blamed the good Bishop for not saying boldly to tlie nobles, — " Ye are the first robbers we must march against !" The popular discontents had gone far beyond palliatives ; they had arrived at that point when the people longed less for reform than change. There are times when a revolution cannot be warded off; it must come — come alike by resistance or by concession. Woe to that race in which a revolution produces no fruits — in which the thunderbolt smites the high place, but does not purify the air. To suffer in vain is often the lot of the noblest individuals ; but when a People suffer in vain, let them curse them- selves ! 246 KIENZI, CHAP. IV. THE AMBITIOUS CITIZEN, AND THE AMBITIOUS SOLDIER. The Bishop of Orvietto lingered last, to confer with Rienzi, who awaited him in the recesses of the Late- ran. Raimond had the penetration not to be seduced into believing that the late scene could effect any reformation amongst the nobles, heal their divi- sions, or lead them actively against the infestors of the Campagna. But, as he detailed to Rienzi all that had occurred subsequent to the departure of that hero of the scene, he concluded with saying — " You will perceive from this, one good result w^ill occur : the first armed dissension — the first fray among the nobles — will seem like a breach of promise; and, to the people and to the Pope, a reasonable excuse for despairing of all amendment THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES. 247 amongst the Barons — an excuse which will sanction the efforts of the first, and the approval of the last." " For such a fray we shall not long wait," an- swered Rienzi. *' I believe the prophecy," answered Raimond, smiling; " at present, all runs well. Go you with us homeward ?" " Nay, I think it better to tarry here till the crowd is entirely dispersed ; for if they were to see me, in then* present excitement, they might insist on some rash and hasty enterprise. Besides, my Lord," added Rienzi, " with an ignorant people, however honest and enthusiastic, this rule must be rigidly observed — stale not your presence by cus- tom. Never may men like me, who have no ex- ternal rank, appear amongst the crowd, save on those occasions when the mind is itself a rank." " That is true, as you have no train," answered Raimond, thinking of his own well-liveri