This Venice, which was a haughty,
invincible, magnificent Republic for nearly fourteen
hundred years; whose armies compelled the world’s
applause whenever and wherever they battled; whose
navies well nigh held dominion of the seas, and whose
merchant fleets whitened the remotest oceans with
their sails and loaded these piers with the products
of every clime, is fallen a prey to poverty, neglect
and melancholy decay. Six hundred years ago,
Venice was the Autocrat of Commerce; her mart was the
great commercial centre, the distributing-house from
whence the enormous trade of the Orient was spread
abroad over the Western world. To-day her piers
are deserted, her warehouses are empty, her merchant
fleets are vanished, her armies and her navies are
but memories. Her glory is departed, and with
her crumbling grandeur of wharves and palaces about
her she sits among her stagnant lagoons, forlorn and
beggared, forgotten of the world. She that in
her palmy days commanded the commerce of a hemisphere
and made the weal or woe of nations with a beck of
her puissant finger, is become the humblest among
the peoples of the earth, a peddler of
glass beads for women, and trifling toys and trinkets
for school-girls and children.
The venerable Mother of the Republics
is scarce a fit subject for flippant speech or the
idle gossipping of tourists. It seems a sort
of sacrilege to disturb the glamour of old romance
that pictures her to us softly from afar off as through
a tinted mist, and curtains her ruin and her desolation
from our view. One ought, indeed, to turn away
from her rags, her poverty and her humiliation, and
think of her only as she was when she sunk the fleets
of Charlemagne; when she humbled Frederick Barbarossa
or waved her victorious banners above the battlements
of Constantinople.
We reached Venice at eight in the
evening, and entered a hearse belonging to the Grand
Hotel d’Europe. At any rate, it was more
like a hearse than any thing else, though to speak
by the card, it was a gondola. And this was
the storied gondola of Venice! the fairy
boat in which the princely cavaliers of the olden
time were wont to cleave the waters of the moonlit
canals and look the eloquence of love into the soft
eyes of patrician beauties, while the gay gondolier
in silken doublet touched his guitar and sang as only
gondoliers can sing! This the famed gondola and
this the gorgeous gondolier! the one an
inky, rusty old canoe with a sable hearse-body clapped
on to the middle of it, and the other a mangy, barefooted
guttersnipe with a portion of his raiment on exhibition
which should have been sacred from public scrutiny.
Presently, as he turned a corner and shot his hearse
into a dismal ditch between two long rows of towering,
untenanted buildings, the gay gondolier began to sing,
true to the traditions of his race. I stood
it a little while. Then I said:
“Now, here, Roderigo Gonzales
Michael Angelo, I’m a pilgrim, and I’m
a stranger, but I am not going to have my feelings
lacerated by any such caterwauling as that.
If that goes on, one of us has got to take water.
It is enough that my cherished dreams of Venice have
been blighted forever as to the romantic gondola and
the gorgeous gondolier; this system of destruction
shall go no farther; I will accept the hearse, under
protest, and you may fly your flag of truce in peace,
but here I register a dark and bloody oath that you
shan’t sing. Another yelp, and overboard
you go.”
I began to feel that the old Venice
of song and story had departed forever. But
I was too hasty. In a few minutes we swept gracefully
out into the Grand Canal, and under the mellow moonlight
the Venice of poetry and romance stood revealed.
Right from the water’s edge rose long lines
of stately palaces of marble; gondolas were gliding
swiftly hither and thither and disappearing suddenly
through unsuspected gates and alleys; ponderous stone
bridges threw their shadows athwart the glittering
waves. There was life and motion everywhere,
and yet everywhere there was a hush, a stealthy sort
of stillness, that was suggestive of secret enterprises
of bravoes and of lovers; and clad half in moonbeams
and half in mysterious shadows, the grim old mansions
of the Republic seemed to have an expression about
them of having an eye out for just such enterprises
as these at that same moment. Music came floating
over the waters Venice was complete.
It was a beautiful picture very
soft and dreamy and beautiful. But what was
this Venice to compare with the Venice of midnight?
Nothing. There was a fête a grand
fête in honor of some saint who had been instrumental
in checking the cholera three hundred years ago, and
all Venice was abroad on the water. It was no
common affair, for the Venetians did not know how
soon they might need the saint’s services again,
now that the cholera was spreading every where.
So in one vast space say a third of a
mile wide and two miles long were collected
two thousand gondolas, and every one of them had from
two to ten, twenty and even thirty colored lanterns
suspended about it, and from four to a dozen occupants.
Just as far as the eye could reach, these painted
lights were massed together like a vast
garden of many-colored flowers, except that these blossoms
were never still; they were ceaselessly gliding in
and out, and mingling together, and seducing you into
bewildering attempts to follow their mazy evolutions.
Here and there a strong red, green, or blue glare
from a rocket that was struggling to get away, splendidly
illuminated all the boats around it. Every gondola
that swam by us, with its crescents and pyramids and
circles of colored lamps hung aloft, and lighting up
the faces of the young and the sweet-scented and lovely
below, was a picture; and the reflections of those
lights, so long, so slender, so numberless, so many-colored
and so distorted and wrinkled by the waves, was a picture
likewise, and one that was enchantingly beautiful.
Many and many a party of young ladies and gentlemen
had their state gondolas handsomely decorated, and
ate supper on board, bringing their swallow-tailed,
white-cravatted varlets to wait upon them, and
having their tables tricked out as if for a bridal
supper. They had brought along the costly globe
lamps from their drawing-rooms, and the lace and silken
curtains from the same places, I suppose. And
they had also brought pianos and guitars, and they
played and sang operas, while the plebeian paper-lanterned
gondolas from the suburbs and the back alleys crowded
around to stare and listen.
There was music every where choruses,
string bands, brass bands, flutes, every thing.
I was so surrounded, walled in, with music, magnificence
and loveliness, that I became inspired with the spirit
of the scene, and sang one tune myself. However,
when I observed that the other gondolas had sailed
away, and my gondolier was preparing to go overboard,
I stopped.
The fête was magnificent. They
kept it up the whole night long, and I never enjoyed
myself better than I did while it lasted.
What a funny old city this Queen of
the Adriatic is! Narrow streets, vast, gloomy
marble palaces, black with the corroding damps of centuries,
and all partly submerged; no dry land visible any where,
and no sidewalks worth mentioning; if you want to
go to church, to the theatre, or to the restaurant,
you must call a gondola. It must be a paradise
for cripples, for verily a man has no use for legs
here.
For a day or two the place looked
so like an overflowed Arkansas town, because of its
currentless waters laving the very doorsteps of all
the houses, and the cluster of boats made fast under
the windows, or skimming in and out of the alleys
and by-ways, that I could not get rid of the impression
that there was nothing the matter here but a spring
freshet, and that the river would fall in a few weeks
and leave a dirty high-water mark on the houses, and
the streets full of mud and rubbish.
In the glare of day, there is little
poetry about Venice, but under the charitable moon
her stained palaces are white again, their battered
sculptures are hidden in shadows, and the old city
seems crowned once more with the grandeur that was
hers five hundred years ago. It is easy, then,
in fancy, to people these silent canals with plumed
gallants and fair ladies with Shylocks
in gaberdine and sandals, venturing loans upon the
rich argosies of Venetian commerce with
Othellos and Desdemonas, with Iagos and Roderigos with
noble fleets and victorious legions returning from
the wars. In the treacherous sunlight we see
Venice decayed, forlorn, poverty-stricken, and commerceless forgotten
and utterly insignificant. But in the moonlight,
her fourteen centuries of greatness fling their glories
about her, and once more is she the princeliest among
the nations of the earth.
“There
is a glorious city in the sea;
The
sea is in the broad, the narrow streets,
Ebbing
and flowing; and the salt-sea weed
Clings
to the marble of her palaces.
No
track of men, no footsteps to and fro,
Lead
to her gates! The path lies o’er the sea,
Invisible:
and from the land we went,
As
to a floating city steering in,
And
gliding up her streets, as in a dream,
So
smoothly, silently by many a dome,
Mosque-like,
and many a stately portico,
The
statues ranged along an azure sky;
By
many a pile, in more than Eastern pride,
Of
old the residence of merchant kings;
The
fronts of some, tho’ time had shatter’d
them,
Still
glowing with the richest hues of art,
As
tho’ the wealth within them had run o’er.”
What would one naturally wish to see
first in Venice? The Bridge of Sighs, of course and
next the Church and the Great Square of St. Mark,
the Bronze Horses, and the famous Lion of St. Mark.
We intended to go to the Bridge of
Sighs, but happened into the Ducal Palace first a
building which necessarily figures largely in Venetian
poetry and tradition. In the Senate Chamber of
the ancient Republic we wearied our eyes with staring
at acres of historical paintings by Tintoretto and
Paul Veronese, but nothing struck us forcibly except
the one thing that strikes all strangers forcibly a
black square in the midst of a gallery of portraits.
In one long row, around the great hall, were painted
the portraits of the Doges of Venice (venerable
fellows, with flowing white beards, for of the three
hundred Senators eligible to the office, the oldest
was usually chosen Doge,) and each had its complimentary
inscription attached till you came to the
place that should have had Marino Faliero’s
picture in it, and that was blank and black blank,
except that it bore a terse inscription, saying that
the conspirator had died for his crime. It seemed
cruel to keep that pitiless inscription still staring
from the walls after the unhappy wretch had been in
his grave five hundred years.
At the head of the Giant’s Staircase,
where Marino Faliero was beheaded, and where the Doges
were crowned in ancient times, two small slits in the
stone wall were pointed out two harmless,
insignificant orifices that would never attract a
stranger’s attention yet these were
the terrible Lions’ Mouths! The heads
were gone (knocked off by the French during their
occupation of Venice,) but these were the throats,
down which went the anonymous accusation, thrust in
secretly at dead of night by an enemy, that doomed
many an innocent man to walk the Bridge of Sighs and
descend into the dungeon which none entered and hoped
to see the sun again. This was in the old days
when the Patricians alone governed Venice the
common herd had no vote and no voice. There were
one thousand five hundred Patricians; from these,
three hundred Senators were chosen; from the Senators
a Doge and a Council of Ten were selected, and by
secret ballot the Ten chose from their own number a
Council of Three. All these were Government spies,
then, and every spy was under surveillance himself men
spoke in whispers in Venice, and no man trusted his
neighbor not always his own brother.
No man knew who the Council of Three were not
even the Senate, not even the Doge; the members of
that dread tribunal met at night in a chamber to themselves,
masked, and robed from head to foot in scarlet cloaks,
and did not even know each other, unless by voice.
It was their duty to judge heinous political crimes,
and from their sentence there was no appeal.
A nod to the executioner was sufficient. The
doomed man was marched down a hall and out at a door-way
into the covered Bridge of Sighs, through it and into
the dungeon and unto his death. At no time in
his transit was he visible to any save his conductor.
If a man had an enemy in those old days, the cleverest
thing he could do was to slip a note for the Council
of Three into the Lion’s mouth, saying “This
man is plotting against the Government.”
If the awful Three found no proof, ten to one they
would drown him anyhow, because he was a deep rascal,
since his plots were unsolvable. Masked judges
and masked executioners, with unlimited power, and
no appeal from their judgements, in that hard, cruel
age, were not likely to be lenient with men they suspected
yet could not convict.
We walked through the hall of the
Council of Ten, and presently entered the infernal
den of the Council of Three.
The table around which they had sat
was there still, and likewise the stations where the
masked inquisitors and executioners formerly stood,
frozen, upright and silent, till they received a bloody
order, and then, without a word, moved off like the
inexorable machines they were, to carry it out.
The frescoes on the walls were startlingly suited
to the place. In all the other saloons, the
halls, the great state chambers of the palace, the
walls and ceilings were bright with gilding, rich with
elaborate carving, and resplendent with gallant pictures
of Venetian victories in war, and Venetian display
in foreign courts, and hallowed with portraits of
the Virgin, the Saviour of men, and the holy saints
that preached the Gospel of Peace upon earth but
here, in dismal contrast, were none but pictures of
death and dreadful suffering! not a living
figure but was writhing in torture, not a dead one
but was smeared with blood, gashed with wounds, and
distorted with the agonies that had taken away its
life!
From the palace to the gloomy prison
is but a step one might almost jump across
the narrow canal that intervenes. The ponderous
stone Bridge of Sighs crosses it at the second story a
bridge that is a covered tunnel you can
not be seen when you walk in it. It is partitioned
lengthwise, and through one compartment walked such
as bore light sentences in ancient times, and through
the other marched sadly the wretches whom the Three
had doomed to lingering misery and utter oblivion in
the dungeons, or to sudden and mysterious death.
Down below the level of the water, by the light of
smoking torches, we were shown the damp, thick-walled
cells where many a proud patrician’s life was
eaten away by the long-drawn miseries of solitary
imprisonment without light, air, books;
naked, unshaven, uncombed, covered with vermin; his
useless tongue forgetting its office, with none to
speak to; the days and nights of his life no longer
marked, but merged into one eternal eventless night;
far away from all cheerful sounds, buried in the silence
of a tomb; forgotten by his helpless friends, and
his fate a dark mystery to them forever; losing his
own memory at last, and knowing no more who he was
or how he came there; devouring the loaf of bread
and drinking the water that were thrust into the cell
by unseen hands, and troubling his worn spirit no more
with hopes and fears and doubts and longings to be
free; ceasing to scratch vain prayers and complainings
on walls where none, not even himself, could see them,
and resigning himself to hopeless apathy, driveling
childishness, lunacy! Many and many a sorrowful
story like this these stony walls could tell if they
could but speak.
In a little narrow corridor, near
by, they showed us where many a prisoner, after lying
in the dungeons until he was forgotten by all save
his persecutors, was brought by masked executioners
and garroted, or sewed up in a sack, passed through
a little window to a boat, at dead of night, and taken
to some remote spot and drowned.
They used to show to visitors the
implements of torture wherewith the Three were wont
to worm secrets out of the accused villainous
machines for crushing thumbs; the stocks where a prisoner
sat immovable while water fell drop by drop upon his
head till the torture was more than humanity could
bear; and a devilish contrivance of steel, which inclosed
a prisoner’s head like a shell, and crushed it
slowly by means of a screw. It bore the stains
of blood that had trickled through its joints long
ago, and on one side it had a projection whereon the
torturer rested his elbow comfortably and bent down
his ear to catch the moanings of the sufferer perishing
within.
Of course we went to see the venerable
relic of the ancient glory of Venice, with its pavements
worn and broken by the passing feet of a thousand
years of plebeians and patricians The Cathedral
of St. Mark. It is built entirely of precious
marbles, brought from the Orient nothing
in its composition is domestic. Its hoary traditions
make it an object of absorbing interest to even the
most careless stranger, and thus far it had interest
for me; but no further. I could not go into
ecstasies over its coarse mosaics, its unlovely Byzantine
architecture, or its five hundred curious interior
columns from as many distant quarries. Every
thing was worn out every block of stone
was smooth and almost shapeless with the polishing
hands and shoulders of loungers who devoutly idled
here in by-gone centuries and have died and gone to
the dev no, simply died, I mean.
Under the altar repose the ashes of
St. Mark and Matthew, Luke and John, too,
for all I know. Venice reveres those relics above
all things earthly. For fourteen hundred years
St. Mark has been her patron saint. Every thing
about the city seems to be named after him or so named
as to refer to him in some way so named,
or some purchase rigged in some way to scrape a sort
of hurrahing acquaintance with him. That seems
to be the idea. To be on good terms with St.
Mark, seems to be the very summit of Venetian ambition.
They say St. Mark had a tame lion, and used to travel
with him and every where that St. Mark went,
the lion was sure to go. It was his protector,
his friend, his librarian. And so the Winged
Lion of St. Mark, with the open Bible under his paw,
is a favorite emblem in the grand old city.
It casts its shadow from the most ancient pillar in
Venice, in the Grand Square of St. Mark, upon the throngs
of free citizens below, and has so done for many a
long century. The winged lion is found every
where and doubtless here, where the winged
lion is, no harm can come.
St. Mark died at Alexandria, in Egypt.
He was martyred, I think. However, that has
nothing to do with my legend. About the founding
of the city of Venice say four hundred
and fifty years after Christ (for Venice
is much younger than any other Italian city,) a priest
dreamed that an angel told him that until the remains
of St. Mark were brought to Venice, the city could
never rise to high distinction among the nations;
that the body must be captured, brought to the city,
and a magnificent church built over it; and that if
ever the Venetians allowed the Saint to be removed
from his new resting-place, in that day Venice would
perish from off the face of the earth. The priest
proclaimed his dream, and forthwith Venice set about
procuring the corpse of St. Mark. One expedition
after another tried and failed, but the project was
never abandoned during four hundred years. At
last it was secured by stratagem, in the year eight
hundred and something. The commander of a Venetian
expedition disguised himself, stole the bones, separated
them, and packed them in vessels filled with lard.
The religion of Mahomet causes its devotees to abhor
anything that is in the nature of pork, and so when
the Christian was stopped by the officers at the gates
of the city, they only glanced once into his precious
baskets, then turned up their noses at the unholy
lard, and let him go. The bones were buried in
the vaults of the grand cathedral, which had been waiting
long years to receive them, and thus the safety and
the greatness of Venice were secured. And to
this day there be those in Venice who believe that
if those holy ashes were stolen away, the ancient
city would vanish like a dream, and its foundations
be buried forever in the unremembering sea.