decking the room and the couch on which the dead man lay. At a
sign from Don Juan all his people stopped, dumfounded and
trembling.
"Leave me alone here," he said, and his voice was changed, "and
do not return until I leave the room."
When the footsteps of the old servitor, who was the last to go,
echoed but
faintly along the paved
gallery, Don Juan hastily
locked the door, and sure that he was quite alone, "Let us try,"
he said to himself.
Bartolommeo's body was stretched on a long table. The embalmers
had laid a sheet over it, to hide from all eyes the dreadful
spectacle of a
corpse so wasted and shrunken that it seemed like
a
skeleton, and only the face was uncovered. This mummy-like
figure lay in the middle of the room. The limp clinging linen
lent itself to the outlines it shrouded--so sharp, bony, and
thin. Large
violet patches had already begun to spread over the
face; the embalmers' work had not been finished too soon.
Don Juan, strong as he was in his scepticism, felt a tremor as he
opened the magic
crystal flask. When he stood over that face, he
was trembling so
violently, that he was
actually obliged to wait
for a moment. But Don Juan had acquired an early
familiarity with
evil; his morals had been corrupted by a licentious court, a
reflection
worthy of the Duke of Urbino crossed his mind, and it
was a keen sense of
curiosity that goaded him into
boldness. The
devil himself might have whispered the words that were echoing
through his brain, Moisten one of the eyes with the liquid! He
took up a linen cloth,
moistened it sparingly with the precious
fluid, and passed it
lightly over the right
eyelid of the
corpse.
The eye unclosed. . . .
"Aha!" said Don Juan. He gripped the flask
tightly, as we clutch
in dreams the branch from which we hang suspended over a
precipice.
For the eye was full of life. It was a young child's eye set in a
death's head; the light
quivered in the depths of its youthful
liquid
brightness. Shaded by the long dark lashes, it sparkled
like the strange lights that travelers see in
lonely places in
winter nights. The eye seemed as if it would fain dart fire at
Don Juan; he saw it thinking, upbraiding, condemning, uttering
accusations, threatening doom; it cried aloud, and gnashed upon
him. All
anguish that shakes human souls was gathered there;
supplications the most tender, the wrath of kings, the love in a
girl's heart pleading with the headsman; then, and after all
these, the deeply searching glance a man turns on his fellows as
he mounts the last step of the scaffold. Life so dilated in this
fragment of life that Don Juan
shrank back; he walked up and down
the room, he dared not meet that gaze, but he saw nothing else.
The ceiling and the hangings, the whole room was sown with living
points of fire and
intelligence. Everywhere those gleaming eyes
haunted him.
"He might very likely have lived another hundred years!" he cried
involuntarily. Some diabolical influence had drawn him to his
father, and again he gazed at that
luminous spark. The
eyelidclosed and opened again
abruptly; it was like a woman's sign of
assent. It was an
intelligentmovement. If a voice had cried
"Yes!" Don Juan could not have been more startled.
"What is to be done?" he thought.
He nerved himself to try to close the white
eyelid. In vain.
"Kill it? That would perhaps be parricide," he debated with
himself.
"Yes," the eye said, with a strange sardonic
quiver of the lid.
"Aha!" said Don Juan to himself, "here is
witchcraft at work!"
And he went closer to crush the thing. A great tear trickled over
the hollow cheeks, and fell on Don Juan's hand.
"It is scalding!" he cried. He sat down. The struggle exhausted
him; it was as if, like Jacob of old, he was wrestling with an
angel.
At last he rose. "So long as there is no blood----" he muttered.
Then, summoning all the courage needed for a coward's crime, he
extinguished the eye, pressing it with the linen cloth, turning
his head away. A terrible groan startled him. It was the poor
poodle, who died with a long-drawn howl.
"Could the brute have been in the secret?" thought Don Juan,
looking down at the
faithful creature.
Don Juan Belvidero was looked upon as a dutiful son. He reared a
white
marblemonument on his father's tomb, and employed the
greatest sculptors of the time upon it. He did not recover
perfect ease of mind till the day when his father knelt in
marblebefore Religion, and the heavy weight of the stone had sealed the
mouth of the grave in which he had laid the one feeling of
remorse that sometimes flitted through his soul in moments of
physical weariness.
He had drawn up a list of the
wealth heaped up by the old
merchant in the East, and he became a miser: had he not to
provide for a second
lifetime? His views of life were the more
profound and penetrating; he grasped its
significance, as a
whole, the better, because he saw it across a grave. All men, all
things, he analyzed once and for all; he summed up the Past,
represented by its records; the Present in the law, its
crystallized form; the Future, revealed by religion. He took
spirit and matter, and flung them into his crucible, and found--
Nothing. Thenceforward he became DON JUAN.
At the outset of his life, in the prime of youth and the beauty
of youth, he knew the illusions of life for what they were; he
despised the world, and made the
utmost of the world. His
felicity could not have been of the bourgeois kind,
rejoicing in
periodically recurrent bouilli, in the comforts of a warming-pan,
a lamp of a night, and a new pair of slippers once a quarter.
Nay, rather he seized upon
existence as a
monkey snatches a nut,
and after no long toying with it, proceeds
deftly to strip off
the mere husks to reach the savory
kernel within.
Poetry and the
sublime transports of
passion scarcely reached
ankle-depth with him now. He in nowise fell into the error of
strong natures who
flatter themselves now and again that little
souls will believe in a great soul, and are
willing to barter
their own lofty thoughts of the future for the small change of
our life-annuity ideas. He, even as they, had he chosen, might
well have walked with his feet on the earth and his head in the
skies; but he liked better to sit on earth, to
wither the soft,
fresh,
fragrant lips of a woman with kisses, for like Death, he
devoured everything without
scruple as he passed; he would have
full fruition; he was an Oriental lover, seeking prolonged
pleasures easily obtained. He sought nothing but a woman in
women, and
cultivated cynicism, until it became with him a habit
of mind. When his
mistress, from the couch on which she lay,
soared and was lost in regions of ecstatic bliss, Don Juan
followed suit,
earnest, expansive, serious as any German student.
But he said I, while she, in the transports of intoxication, said
We. He understood to
admiration the art of abandoning himself to
the influence of a woman; he was always clever enough to make her
believe that he trembled like some boy fresh from college before
his first
partner at a dance, when he asks her, "Do you like
dancing?" But, no less, he could be terrible at need, could
unsheathe a
formidable sword and make short work of Commandants.
Banter lurked beneath his
simplicity, mocking
laughter behind his
tears--for he had tears at need, like any woman nowadays who says
to her husband, "Give me a
carriage, or I shall go into a
consumption."
For the merchant the world is a bale of goods or a mass of
circulating bills; for most young men it is a woman, and for a
woman here and there it is a man; for a certain order of mind it
is a salon, a coterie, a quarter of the town, or some single