The Bravo eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 512 pages of information about The Bravo.

The Bravo eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 512 pages of information about The Bravo.

“Thou should’st have come of Padua, friend, by thy knowledge of the laws!  Dost thou trust in him thou servest for the victory?”

There was a movement among the senators at the answer of Gino; and the half-terrified varlet thought he perceived frowns gathering on more than one brow.  He looked around in quest of him whose greatness he had vaunted, as if he sought succor.

“Wilt thou name thy support in this great trial of force?” resumed the herald.

“My master,” uttered the terrified Gino, “St. Januarius, and St. Mark.”

“Thou art well defended.  Should the two latter fail thee, thou mayest surely count on the first!”

“Signor Monforte has an illustrious name, and he is welcome to our Venetian sports,” observed the Doge, slightly bending his head towards the young Calabrian noble, who stood at no great distance in a gondola of state, regarding the scene with a deeply-interested countenance.  This cautious interruption of the pleasantries of the official was acknowledged by a low reverence, and the matter proceeded.

“Take thy station, Gino of Calabria, and a happy fortune be thine,” said the latter; then turning to another, he asked in surprise—­“Why art thou here?”

“I come to try my gondola’s swiftness.”

“Thou art old, and unequal to this struggle; husband thy strength for daily toil.  An ill-advised ambition hath put thee on this useless trial.”

The new aspirant had forced a common fisherman’s gondola, of no bad shape, and of sufficient lightness, but which bore about it all the vulgar signs of its daily uses, beneath the gallery of the Bucentaur.  He received the reproof meekly, and was about to turn his boat aside, though with a sorrowing and mortified eye, when a sign from the Doge arrested his arm.

“Question him, as of wont,” said the prince.

“How art thou named?” continued the reluctant official, who, like all of subordinate condition, had far more jealousy of the dignity of the sports he directed, than his superior.

“I am known as Antonio, a fisherman of the Lagunes.”

“Thou art old!”

“Signore, none know it better than I. It is sixty summers since I first threw net or line into the water.”

“Nor art thou clad as befitteth one who cometh before the state of Venice in a regatta.”

“I am here in the best that I have.  Let them who would do the nobles greater honor, come in better.”

“Thy limbs are uncovered—­thy bosom bare—­thy sinews feeble—­go to; thou art ill advised to interrupt the pleasures of the nobles by this levity.”

Again Antonio would have shrunk from the ten thousand eyes that shone upon him, when the calm voice of the Doge once more came to his aid.

“The struggle is open to all,” said the sovereign; “still I would advise the poor and aged man to take counsel; give him silver, for want urges him to this hopeless trial.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Bravo from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.