Modern Italian Poets
valet appears, and throwing open the shutters asks whether he will have coffee or chocolate in bed, and when he has broken his fast and
tering
the thresho
then contracting
ttle, at the
in, and, with t
hat, lightly t
while to ask how the lady he serves has passed the night, and attending her response he may read Voltaire in a sumptuous Dutch or French binding, or he may amuse himself with a French romance; or it may happen that the artist whom he has engaged to paint the miniat
labor of the
nd the elegant
shaken hand a
their time thy
ake h
som of that w
sly. O brave!
ancestor throug
n his country'
ed, and shatter
ht. But he, his
e, and smirched wi
tossed wild, cam
ision, even
rescued; mild
o behold, in
resently to b
ountry, which
ther and thy
content and
ed for the visit to his lady,
ters, clasp th
ther, that n
t; down from th
nic fair, th
ely-fitting sleev
or of azure
color tinge. Th
h a soft and
atch
haste to go.
of tiny char
ous tinkling f
t there of fa
eds so marvel
every charger
ed with visitors when he calls to revere her, as he would have said, and he can therefore make the more effective a
and be pressed
aistcoat, and
owy linen r
rt; let the bre
roaden both, an
k; then at the
ttle, pointed
from thy month
dible. Meanwh
given, and no
m ivory a
n, and with one
s, while every t
ding slightly
isper secret n
mpany with m
ances that be
r tender pass
sat for it. The scene was sometimes heightened by the different humor in which the lady and the cavalier received each other, as for instance when th
a b
et, signor, an
, whom, tende
h thy strength,
le the guests
ll the husban
rat
he husb
of a generou
uent another
sit, whose
else beside
s likewise abs
the chain imm
ng, binds the w
ady seated a
her hand, and w
ir that not to
ar that her s
nst the table,
gather round
volume of her
down; for th
tted to fors
es, except the
occasion warr
great
o longer springs or hops in the service of beauty, or even dreams of doing it. But a passage which will touch the sympath
now th
polished at thy
th, and like t
the eyes of
hy finger-tips
ndle to her.
elicate playin
hand upon its
hat around t
in new forms, an
lying, flutt
cious rosy kn
the hollows
de her knuckle
cavalier watches over the wife with tender care, prepares her food, offers what agrees with her, and forbids what harms. He is virtually
ssages of the poem, the light irony of which it is hard to reproduce in a version. One of t
ourses; and
he speaks, into
calls
l day!-what ti
ap-dog, darling
youthful gay
rk of her iv
of a menial;
ious toe, fl
thrice she rol
lken coat, and
stril the thic
ring cries, and "
ll, while from t
e Echo answe
cloistral bas
shed, and from
dens trembling
ce was with r
she awakened
convulsed her
ance upon the
languid voice sh
er embrace and
her shrill te
r poodle, darli
nial trembled
ed his doom. Na
rs' desert; na
secret servi
ayer and promis
ivery that till
h the vulgar
her lord; the
ruck at his at
author. The fals
ualid brood, an
wife in tatt
nted to the
to such topics as may best serve to exploit his own accomplishments. As a man of the first fashion, he must be in the habit of seeming to have read Horace a little, and it will be a pretty ef
rtal is his f
dear to Natu
es thy carriag
thy field, tha
ignal to the cavalier that it
to th
ll, and drawin
air and offer
the other rooms,
reek of viand
nse. Thee with
odor of the
pon a small
Indian webs. T
le burn swee
osphere, and
traces of the
misery or who
the noonday
aked, and uns
d limbs and s
nd on crutch
ves, and with e
nectar of the
ble zephyrs
besiege these
y offering h
oathsome spec
'tis your off
that then s
ts liquor to t
nk thee wheth
verage much or
if perchance
arous spouse, th
of Persia, wit
isage of her
has already thought with which of the husband's horses they shall drive out; he has suggested which dress his lady shall wear and which fan she shall carry; he has witness
ent friends to
and pressing
brace, and with
und; then, claspi
down upon t
ed thus, one f
inted, at the
tain things th
urn the othe
ovely face of
s anger, and
lips a litt
nstant wax
agitation
e of Turpin,
well cased in
y, each cav
valor of the
eetings court
r lances and thei
together; th
fragments of th
generous fury,
ds and rushed u
stance throug
of a messen
l gallop to r
les, and th' o
Agramante. Da
cible youth, to
et, so exqui
rning, to th
iate fans; t
, and thus the
riculous en
interpretation of the scene is delightful; and those embattled f
walks and drives. The place is full of their common acquaintance, and the carriages are at rest for the exchange of greetings and gossip, in which the hero must take his part. All this is
the s
descent; and
creases from th
thy breast; a
owy stockings
ct thyself a
ce the prome
t please thee wal
arriages of
up, and thrust
houlders, half
or. There let t
from afar t
ear, and inte
roes who ha
sk to keep
t absent. O ye
ght, and let t
hero shine u
y! Nay, night m
iolable law
ades over one
moving on h
he varied co
order of her m
ing; the sist
aspect indist
es, to flowers, t
eat and to th
th the painted
of want, and go
he blind air
es depart, an
the shades; bu
aught, my he
enebrous and
same ironical reverence depicts them alighting from their carriage, arriving in the presence of the hostess, sharing in the gossip of the guests, supping, and sitting down at those games of chance with which every fashionable house was provided and at which the lady loses or doubles her pin-money. In Milan long trains were then the mode, and any woman might wear them, but only patricians were allowed to have them carried by servants; the rich plebeian must drag her costly skirts in the dust; and the nobi