<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
<p>The signor count formed the resolution to make use of
the father provincial to cut the knot of these perplexities;
whether he would have thought of this, had it not been
suggested by Attilio, it is impossible to determine, inasmuch
as he would never have acknowledged this to be the
case. It was important that one of his family, his nephew,
should not be obliged to yield in an open controversy; it
was a point essential to the reputation of his power, which
he had so much at heart. The satisfaction which his
nephew might himself take of his adversary would be a
remedy worse than the disease. Should he order him to
leave his castle, when obedience would seem like flying
from the field of battle? Legal force could have no power
over the capuchin; the clergy were entirely exempt from
secular jurisdiction. All that he could attempt against
such an adversary was to endeavour to have him removed
and the power to do this rested with the father provincial.</p>
<p>Now the count and the father provincial were old acquaintances;
they saw each other rarely, but always with
great demonstrations of friendship, and reiterated offers of
service.</p>
<p>When all was matured in his mind, the count invited
the father provincial to a dinner, where he found a company
of choice guests; noblemen, who, by their deportment,
their native boldness, and lordly disdain, impressed those
around them with the idea of their superiority and power.
There were also present some clients, who, attached to the
house by hereditary devotion, and the service of a life, sat
at their lord's table, in a spirit of implicit submission,
“devouring his discourse” and his dinner with unqualified
and equal approbation.</p>
<p>At table, the count led the conversation to Madrid; he
spoke of the court, the count-duke, the ministers, the
family of the governor; of the bull-fights, which he could
well describe, having seen them from a distinguished place;
of the escurial, of which he could speak in its most minute
details, because a page of the count-duke had conducted
him into every nook of it. For some time all the company
were attentive to him alone; then they divided into
separate parties. He continued for a while to relate a
number of anecdotes, as in confidence, to the father provincial,
who was seated near him. But suddenly he gave
a turn to the conversation, and spoke of Cardinal Barberini,
who was a capuchin, and brother to the reigning pope,
Urban VIII. As they left the table, the count invited the
father provincial to go with him into another apartment.</p>
<p>The noble lord gave a seat to the reverend father, and
taking one himself, said, “Considering the friendship that
exists between us, I thought I was authorised to speak to
your reverence of an affair equally interesting to us both,
and which had best be concluded between us without
going farther, which might—and I will tell you frankly
what it is, as I am certain we shall have the same opinion
on the subject. Tell me, in your convent of Pescarenico,
is there not a Father Christopher of ***?”</p>
<p>The father provincial bowed assent.</p>
<p>“I pray your reverence to tell me, frankly, as a friend,—this
man—this father—I have no personal acquaintance
with him, 'tis true; I know many fervent,
prudent, humble capuchins, who are worth their weight in
gold; I have been the friend of the order from infancy;
but in a numerous family there is always some individual——
And I have reason to think that Friar Christopher is
a man—a little fond of quarrelling—who has not all
the prudence he might have: I imagine he has caused
your reverence much anxiety.”</p>
<p>“I perceive there is some intrigue,” thought the father
provincial; “it is my fault; I knew that this holy man
should have been sent from pulpit to pulpit, and not have
been suffered to remain six months in a convent in the
country.—Oh,” said he, aloud, “I am truly sorry that
your excellency has conceived such an opinion of Father
Christopher; for I know that his conduct in the convent
is exemplary, and that he is esteemed by every body.”</p>
<p>“I understand very well; your reverence ought——
However, I would as a friend inform you of a matter
which it is necessary you should know. This Father
Christopher has taken under his protection a young man
of that country, one of whom your reverence must have
heard; him who recently escaped from the hands of justice,
on the terrible day of San Martin—Lorenzo Tramaglino!”</p>
<p>“I had not heard of this,” said the father provincial;
“but your excellency knows that it is the duty of our
order to seek those who have gone astray, for the purpose
of leading them back.”</p>
<p>“That is true; but I thought it best to give you this
information, because, if ever his holiness—the intelligence
of it may have been sent to Rome.”</p>
<p>“I am much obliged to your excellency for the information.
However, I am certain, that if the affair is enquired
into, it will be found that Father Christopher has had no
connection with this man but for the purpose of doing him
good. I know the father well.”</p>
<p>“Your reverence knows, then, better than I, what he
was in the world, and the pranks of his youth.”</p>
<p>“It is the glory of our habit, signor count, that whatever
a man may have been in the world, once clothed with
that, he is quite another person; and since the Father
Christopher has belonged to our order——”</p>
<p>“I believe it from the bottom of my heart, I believe it;
but sometimes—as the proverb says—The habit does not
make the monk.”</p>
<p>The proverb was not much to the purpose, but the count
had cited it, in place of another which occurred to him,—“The
wolf may change his skin, but he does not become
a dog.”</p>
<p>“I have certain information,” pursued he.</p>
<p>“If your excellency knows positively that the father
has committed a fault (we are all liable to err), I wish you
would inform me of it. I am his superior—unworthily, 'tis
true; but it is my duty to watch over, and, if necessary,
correct——”</p>
<p>“Besides the circumstance of his granting protection to
the man I have mentioned, this same Father Christopher
has undertaken to contend—but we can settle it together
with my nephew, Don Roderick.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I am sorry for that, I am sorry for that, truly.”</p>
<p>“My nephew is young, rash, and not accustomed to
provocation.”</p>
<p>“It becomes my duty to obtain the best information on
the subject. Your excellency, with your experience of the
world, knows better than I, that we are all frail, liable to
error—some one way, some another; and if our Father
Christopher has failed——”</p>
<p>“But these are things which had better be settled
between ourselves; to spread them abroad would only
increase the evil. These trifles are often the cause of
numerous embarrassments and difficulties, which might
have been prevented by some decisive act in the commencement.
That is now our business; my nephew is young;
the monk, from what I hear, has still the spirit, the inclinations
of a young man; but we, who are advanced in years,
(too true, is it not, reverend father?) must have prudence
to act for the young, and apply a remedy to their follies.
Happily there is yet time; we must remove the fire from
the straw. An individual who does not do well in one
place may in another; your reverence might see to his
being removed, might find a suitable station for the friar at
a sufficient distance—all may be easily arranged—or
rather, there's no harm done.”</p>
<p>The father provincial had expected this conclusion from
the commencement of the conversation. “I perceive,”
thought he, “where you would lead me; when a poor
friar gives one of you the least umbrage, the superior must
make him march, right or wrong.”</p>
<p>When the count had finished, the provincial said aloud,
“I understand what the signor count would say; but
before taking a step——”</p>
<p>“It is a step, and it is not a step, very reverend father:
it is only a natural event, such as might happen in the
ordinary course of affairs; and if we do not do it quickly, I
foresee a deluge of disorders, a mountain of grievances.
If we do not put a stop to the affair between ourselves, it
is not possible it should remain a secret. And then it
is not only my nephew—you raise a wasp's nest, very
reverend father. We are a powerful house—we have
adherents.”</p>
<p>The father bowed in assent. The count proceeded.
“You understand me; they are all people who have blood
in their veins, and who in the world—count as something.
They are proud of their honour; the affair will
become theirs, and then—— Even those who are the
friends of peace—— It would be a grief of heart to me
to be obliged—— I, who have always had such a friendship
for the capuchins! The fathers, for their ministry
to be efficient, should be in harmony with all men—no
misunderstandings: besides, they have relations abroad—and
these affairs of punctilio extend, ramify—— I, too,
have a certain dignity to maintain—— His excellency——
my noble colleagues—— It becomes a party matter——”</p>
<p>“It is true,” said the provincial, “that Father Christopher
is a preacher; I had already the intention—I have
even been solicited to do it—but under these circumstances,
and just at this time, it might be considered as
a punishment; and to punish without being well acquainted——”</p>
<p>“But it is not a punishment; it is a prudent precaution,
an honest means of preventing evils that might——
I have explained myself.”</p>
<p>“The signor count and myself understand each other
very well; but the facts being those which your excellency
has adduced, it is impossible but that they should in part be
known through the country: there are every where firebrands,
or idle spirits, who find pleasure in the contests of
the monks and the nobility, and love to make malignant
observations. Each one has his own dignity to preserve;
and I, in the character of a superior, have an express duty—the
honour of the habit—it is not my own affair—it is
a deposit which—and since the signor your nephew is so
irritated, as your excellency has said, he might take it as a
satisfaction offered to him, and—I do not say boast of it,
but——”</p>
<p>“You jest, reverend father, surely; my nephew is a
cavalier of consideration in the world, as he should be;
but in his relations with me, he is but a child, and will do
neither more nor less than I prescribe to him. And, moreover,
he shall never know it. The thing is done between
ourselves; there is no necessity for rendering an account
to him. Let not that give you any uneasiness; I am accustomed
to keep silence on important subjects. As to
the idle talk of others, what can be said? It is a very
common thing to see a friar leave one place to go and
preach at another.”</p>
<p>“However, in order to prevent malicious observations,
it would be necessary, on this occasion, that the nephew of
your excellency should give some demonstration of friendship,
of deference,—not for us, but for the order.”</p>
<p>“Certainly, certainly, that is but right; it is not necessary,
however; I know that the capuchins are highly
esteemed by my nephew, as well as by our whole family.
But, in this case, something more signal is very proper.
Leave it to me, very reverend father: I will give such
orders to my nephew—that is to say, it shall be prudently
suggested to him, that he may not suspect what has passed
between us, because we need not apply a plaster where
there is no wound. As to that which we have agreed on,
the sooner it is done the better; and if you had a place
at some distance—to remove every occasion——”</p>
<p>“They want a preacher at Rimini; and perhaps without
this motive I should have thought——”</p>
<p>“That is very opportune, very opportune. And when?”</p>
<p>“Since the thing is to be done, it shall be quickly.”</p>
<p>“Certainly, certainly; better to-day than to-morrow.
And,” continued he, rising, “if I or my adherents can
render any service to the good father capuchins——”</p>
<p>“We have often experienced the kindness of the house,”
said the father provincial, also rising, and following his
vanquisher to the door of the apartment.</p>
<p>“We have extinguished a spark,” said the count,—“a
spark, very reverend father, which might have excited a
great conflagration. Between good friends, things are
easily arranged.”</p>
<p>They then entered the next apartment, and mixed with
the rest of the company.</p>
<p>The count obtained his end: Friar Christopher was
made to travel on foot from Pescarenico to Rimini, as we
shall see.</p>
<p>One evening a capuchin from Milan arrived at Pescarenico,
with a packet for the superior: it was an order for
Father Christopher to repair to Rimini for the purpose of
preaching the Lent sermons. The letter contained instructions
to the superior, to insinuate to the friar, that he
should give up every attention to any business he might
have on hand in the country he must leave, and that he
should not maintain any correspondence there. The friar,
who was the bearer of the order, was to be the companion
of his journey. The superior said nothing that night, but
in the morning he sent for Father Christopher, showed
him the order, and told him to take his basket, staff, and
girdle, and with the friar, whom he presented to him,
commence his journey.</p>
<p>Imagine what a blow this was for our good father.
Renzo, Lucy, Agnes, passed rapidly over his mind, and he
thought, “Great God! what will these unfortunate people
do, when I am no longer here?” but raising his eyes to
heaven, he placed his hope and confidence there. He
crossed his hands on his breast, and bowed his head in
token of obedience; he then went to his cell, took his
basket, his staff, and his breviary, and after having bid
farewell to his brethren, and obtained the benediction of
his superior, took, with his companion, the route prescribed.</p>
<p>We have said that Don Roderick, more than ever determined
on the accomplishment of his infamous enterprise,
had resolved to seek the assistance of a powerful man.
We cannot give his name, nor even hazard a conjecture
with regard to it; this is the more astonishing, inasmuch
as we find notices of this personage in several histories of
the time. The identity of the facts does not leave a doubt
of the identity of the man; but there is evidently an extreme
care to avoid the mention of his name. Francesco
Rivola, in his life of the Cardinal Federigo Borromeo,
speaking of him, says, “He was a lord as powerful from
his wealth as illustrious from his birth,” and nothing further.
Giuseppe Ripamonti makes farther mention of him, as a
<i>man</i>, this <i>man</i>, a <i>person</i>, this <i>person</i>. “I will relate,”
says he, “the case of a man, who, belonging to the most
powerful family in the city, chose the country for his residence;
and there, assuring himself of impunity by the
force of crime, he set at nought the law and the magistrates,
the king and the nobles. Placed on the extreme
confines of the state, he led an independent life; he offered
an asylum to the outlaw; he was outlawed himself, and
then absolved from the sentence which had led——” We
will hereafter quote from this author other passages, which
will confirm the history we are about to relate.</p>
<p>To do that which was forbidden by the laws; to be the
arbiter, the supreme judge in the affairs of others, without
other interest than a thirst for power; to be feared by all,
even by those who were the objects of fear to all men;
these had ever been the controlling principles which actuated
the conduct of this man. From his youth he had
been filled with impatient envy at the power and authority
of others; superior to the greater number in riches and
retinue, and to all perhaps in birth and audacity, he constrained
them to renounce all competition with him; he
took some into his friendship, but was far from admitting
any equality between himself and them; his proud and
disdainful spirit could only be content with those who were
willing to acknowledge their inferiority, and to yield to
him on all occasions. When, however, they found themselves
in any difficulty, they did not fail to solicit the aid
of so powerful an auxiliary; and a refusal from him would
have been the destruction of his reputation, and of the high
station which he had assumed. So that, for himself and
others, he had performed such deeds that not all his own
power and that of his family could prevent his banishment
and outlawry; and he was obliged to leave the state. I
believe that it is to this circumstance Ripamonti alludes:—</p>
<p>“He was obliged to leave the country: but his audacity
was unsubdued; he went through the city on horseback,
followed by a pack of hounds, and with the sound of the
trumpet; passing by the court of the palace, he sent an
abusive message to the governor by one of the guards.”</p>
<p>In his absence he did not desist from his evil practices;
he maintained a correspondence with his friends, “who
were united to him,” says Ripamonti, “in a secret league
of atrocious deeds.”</p>
<p>It appears that he even contracted new habits, of which
the same historian speaks with mysterious brevity. “Foreign
princes had recourse to him for important murders,
and they even sent him reinforcements of soldiers to act
under his orders.”</p>
<p>At last, whether the proclamation of his outlawry was
withdrawn from some powerful intercession, or that the
audacity of the man outweighed all authority, he resolved
to return home; not exactly to Milan, but to a castle on
the frontier of the Bergamascan territory, which then
belonged to the Venetian state. “This house,” says Ripamonti,
“was a focus of sanguinary mandates. The
household was composed of such as had been guilty of
great crimes; the cooks, and the scullions even, were not
free from the stain of murder.” Besides this notable household,
he had men resembling them, stationed in different
places of the two states, on the confines of which he lived.</p>
<p>All, however tyrannical themselves, had been obliged to
choose between the friendship or enmity of this tyrannical
man, and it fared ill with those who dared resist him. It
was in vain to hope to preserve neutrality or independence;
his orders to do such or such a thing, or to refrain,
were arbitrary, and resistance was useless. Recourse was
had to him on all occasions, and by all sorts of people,
good as well as bad, for the arrangements of their difficulties;
so that he occasionally became the protector of
the oppressed, who could not have obtained redress in any
other way, public or private. He was almost always the
minister of wickedness, revenge, and caprice; but the
various ways in which he had employed his power impressed
upon all minds a great idea of his capability to
devise and perform his acts in defiance of every obstruction,
whether lawful or unlawful. The fame of ordinary tyrants
was confined to their own districts, and every district had
its tyrant; but the fame of this extraordinary man was
spread throughout the Milanese; his life was the subject of
popular tales, and his name carried with it something powerful
and mysterious. Every tyrant was suspected of alliance
with him, every assassin of acting under his orders; at
every extraordinary crime, of the author of which they
were ignorant, the name of this man was uttered, whom,
thanks to the circumspection of our historians, we are
obliged to call the Unknown.</p>
<p>The distance between his castle and that of Don Roderick
was not more than six miles. The latter had long
felt the necessity of keeping on good terms with such a
neighbour, and had proffered his services, and entitled
himself to the same sort of friendship, as the rest; he was
however, careful to conceal the nature and strictness of the
union <SPAN name="tn250" id="tn250"></SPAN>between them. Don Roderick liked to play the
tyrant, but not openly; tyranny was with him a means,
not an end; he wished to live at ease in the city, and
enjoy the advantages, pleasures, and honours of civilised
life. To insure this, he was obliged to exhibit management,
to testify a great esteem for his relations, to cultivate
the friendship of persons in place, in order to sway the
balance of justice for his own peculiar purposes. Now, an
intimacy with such a man would not have advanced his
interests in such points, and especially with his uncle; but
a slight acquaintance with him might be considered unavoidable
under the circumstances, and therefore in some
degree excusable. One morning Don Roderick, equipped
for the chase, with an escort of retainers, among whom
was Griso, took the road to the castle of the Unknown.</p>
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