登陆注册
19641800000011

第11章

Returning after tea, Salemina was observed to radiate a kind of subdued triumph, which proved on investigation to be due to the fact that she had met the comandante of the offending ship and that he had gallantly promised to remove it without delay. I cannot help feeling that the proper time for departure had come; but this destroys the story and robs the comandante of his reputation for chivalry.

As Miss Palett's gondola neared the grain-ship, Salemina, it seems, spied the commanding officer pacing the deck.

"See," she said to her companion, "there is a gang-plank from the side of the ship to that small flat-boat. We could perfectly well step from our gondola to the flat-boat and then go up and ask politely if we may be allowed to examine the interesting grain-ship. While you are interviewing the first officer about the foreign countries he has seen, I will ask the comandante if he will kindly tie his boat a little farther down on the island. No, that won't do, for he may not speak English; we should have an awkward scene, and I should defeat my own purposes. You are so fluent in Italian, suppose you call upon him with my card and let me stay in the gondola."

"What shall I say to the man?" objected Miss Palett.

"Oh, there's plenty to say," returned Salemina. "Tell him that Penelope and I came over from the hotel on the Grand Canal only that we might have perfect quiet. Tell him that if I had not unpacked my largest trunk, I should not stay an instant longer.

Tell him that his great, bulky ship ruins the view; that it hides the most beautiful church and part of the Doge's Palace. Tell him that I might as well have stayed at home and built a cottage on the dock in Boston Harbour. Tell him that his steam-whistles, his anchor-droppings, and his constant loadings or unloadings give us headache. Tell him that seven or eight of his sailormen brought clean garments and scrubbing brushes and took their bath at our front entrance. Tell him that one of them, almost absolutely nude, instead of running away to put on more clothing, offered me his arm to assist me into the gondola."

Miss Palett demurred at the subject-matter of some of these remarks, and affirmed that she could not translate others into proper Italian. She therefore proposed that Salemina should write a few dignified protests on her visiting-card, and her own part would be to instruct the man in the flat-boat to deliver it at once to his superior officer. The comandante spoke no English,--of that fact the sailorman in the flat-boat was certain,--but as the gondola moved away, the ladies could see the great man pondering over the little piece of pasteboard, and it was plain that he was impressed. Herein lies perhaps a seed of truth. The really great thing triumphs over all obstacles, and reaches the common mind and heart in some way, delivering its message we know not how.

Salemina's card teemed with interesting information, at least to the initiated. Her surname was in itself a passport into the best society. To be an X- was enough of itself, but her Christian name was one peculiar to the most aristocratic and influential branch of the X-s. Her mother's maiden name, engraved at full length in the middle, established the fact that Mr. X- had not married beneath him, but that she was the child of unblemished lineage on both sides. Her place of residence was the only one possible to the possessor of three such names, and as if these advantages were not enough, the street and number proved that Salemina's family undoubtedly possessed wealth; for the small numbers, and especially the odd numbers, on that particular street, could be flaunted only by people of fortune.

You have now all the facts in your possession, and I can only add that the ship weighed anchor at twilight, so Salemina again gazed upon the Doge's Palace and slept tranquilly.

V

CASA ROSA, May 22

I am like the schoolgirl who wrote home from Venice: "I am sitting on the edge of the Grand Canal drinking it all in, and life never seemed half so full before." Was ever the city so beautiful as last night on the arrival of foreign royalty? It was a memorable display and unique in its peculiar beauty. The palaces that line the canal were bright with flags; windows and water-steps were thronged, the broad centre of the stream was left empty.

Presently, round the bend below the Rialto, swept into view a double line of gondolas--long, low, gleaming with every hue of brilliant colour, most of them with ten, some with twelve, gondoliers in resplendent liveries, red, blue, green, white, orange, all bending over their oars with the precision of machinery and the grace of absolute mastery of their craft. In the middle, between two lines, came one small and beautifully modelled gondola, rowed by four men in red and black, while on the white silk cushions in the stern sat the Prince and Princess. There was no splash of oar or rattle of rowlock; swiftly, silently, with an air of stately power and pride, the lovely pageant came, passed, and disappeared under the shining evening sky and the gathering shadows of "the dim, rich city." I never saw, or expect to see, anything of its kind so beautiful.

I stay for hours in the gondola, writing my letters or watching the thousand and one sights of the streets, for I often allow Salemina and the Little Genius to tread their way through the highways and byways of Venice while I stay behind and observe life from beneath the grateful shade of the black felze.

The women crossing the many little bridges look like the characters in light opera; the young girls, with their hair bobbed in a round coil, are sometimes bareheaded and sometimes have a lace scarf over their dark, curly locks. A little fan is often in their hands, and one remarks the graceful way in which the crepe shawl rests upon the women's shoulders, remembering that it is supposed to take generations to learn to wear a shawl or wield a fan.

同类推荐
  • 六十种曲三元记

    六十种曲三元记

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

    沙弥罗经

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

    奉和圣制答张说扈从

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

    Orthodoxy

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 四书韵对

    四书韵对

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

    紫羽风暴

    紫气东来,蓝羽飘凌.一名来自东方的少年,因缘际会,获得了大天使沙利叶哥哥蓝魔所传承之力.从而踏上不平凡的磨练之路。而与此同时的另一面,天外空间正有另一股邪恶的力量在..........
  • 究极天使

    究极天使

    世界格局被打破,本是凡人的林寒觉醒成为天使一族,但是却在进化途中发生意外,成为一个打破天使等级的存在。普通天使只是被神创造出来用于战斗的工具,但是林寒天生独翼,所以他打破了神的禁咒,拥有了无限进化的潜力……在一场魔物入侵的战场中,林寒要做的就是活下去,并且变得更强……
  • 皇后悠闲生活

    皇后悠闲生活

    穿越啦,遇到皇子啦,什么?一落魄皇子……
  • 不准不发财

    不准不发财

    草根青年李恒迁无资金无背景,却并未因此而气馁,而是敏锐地观察着四周,在身边发现着创业的机会,最终把握机会,掘得人生的前几桶金,成为酒店老板、地产老板等。《不准不发财:我那超好看的猎财秘史》具有自传色彩,故事真实生动,情节跌宕起伏,在情节推进中又紧密结合创业营销案例,极具借鉴价值和吸引力。作为小成本创业的典范案例,本书的创业经验可以复制,既是广大创业者、个体私营企业主、社会待业人员的实用指导手册,也适于在校大学生、白领阶层阅读。总抱怨没有背景没有资金?总抱怨没有机遇没有商机?看完《不准不发财:我那超好看的猎财秘史》,不准不发财!
  • 极品送子专家

    极品送子专家

    以前他认为,让女人生孩子不算本事,让医院都没办法的女人生孩子才算本事。现在他认为,让女人生孩子太小儿科了,打破医学定律,让男人生孩子才算真本事。笨蛋、普通、天才只在他的一念之间——边送孩子边升级,钱权美女全都有,踏破阴阳路,逍遥天地间。
  • 一剑乱天机

    一剑乱天机

    她本是笑容明媚,慧黠灵动的无忧少女,奈何造化弄人,一朝穿越,等待她的竟是这样沉重的使命。族姐暗害,母亲疯癫,她筋脉寸断,跌落无回之谷。因祸得福,习得三煞鬼剑,看她如何回归,一了恩仇。先师遗命,回归之愿,她一路前行,天魔宫前,雪山之巅,她墨发飞扬,三煞鬼剑,剑指天阑……天机乱,生灵将覆,天宫出,鬼剑纵横。是谁的手,掌这天下棋局?是谁翻手为云覆手为雨,以天下人血祭天魔?天宫魔典,引血雨腥风。天下江湖,谁主浮沉?
  • 属于自己的生活

    属于自己的生活

    我想了很多小说的题材,却发现都是那些模模糊糊的内容。为了满足我对小说的追求,所以我决定我要按照自己的生活去写一本写实的小说,可能写的不好,不喜勿喷,谢谢。
  • 作家们的威尼斯

    作家们的威尼斯

    本书运用许多趣闻轶事与文章史料,为读者翔实丰富地点出威尼斯迷人的文学图像,并穿针引线地勾勒出文艺复兴以来环绕着威尼斯的人文、艺术、建筑、生活与逸事风流的华丽世界。几个世纪以来,无数的文学作品不断发现这座城市的新视角,形塑出各自精彩的威尼斯神话,至今影响深远。二十九篇栩栩如生的传奇素描,引领读者进入这座荡漾着拜伦、歌德、蒙田、卢梭、乔治·桑、普鲁斯特等来自世界各地的文人墨客的悠悠水都,是所有文学迷与威尼斯迷不可不读的城市文艺史。
  • 昔日里的我和你

    昔日里的我和你

    她-----花痴女一个,他-----校草一枚!!!女追男变为男追女。。。校园里的甜蜜爱情故事立即上演,在不看,你就out了!!!
  • 九重天外天

    九重天外天

    天降吾辈入世间,山登绝顶我为仙。男儿当遂凌云志,笑傲九重天外天。