“My Lords of the Senate, the Collegio and most Illustrious Ten!” he responded, with a courtly movement of deference which included them all, “I thank you! In that it graciously pleaseth you to bestow upon me your favor for a trifle of designing which was the pastime of an hour, and made for the pleasure of the giving in homage to the noble Lady Laura Giustiniani. But the praise of it should not be mine; it is rather to the stabilimento which hath shown perfection in its workmanship. But first to him, the master, who hath given it its crowning grace. I pray you, let me share the unmerited honor of this commendation with Paolo Cagliari, detto Veronese, without whom my little had been nothing!”
The chivalry and grace of the young noble elicited a murmur of approbation, as he courteously indicated his friend.
The Veronese, to whom this denouement was unexpected, and who had long since been crowned with highest honors by the Republic, did not move forward, but, acknowledging the tribute of his pupil with a genial smile, he stood with folded arms, unembarrassed and commanding, scanning the faces of the assembly, well pleased with the effect produced by the words of Marcantonio, whom, at all hazards, he intended to befriend. He realized that the atmosphere might never be so favorable.
“The crowning grace of that goblet, my Lords of Venice,” he said boldly, “is lent it by the face of the most beautiful maiden it hath ever been my fortune to paint—than whom Venice hath none more charming.”
There was a murmur of surprise from the younger nobles, who were standing in groups about the hall of the Gran’ Consiglio; they had supposed the face to be merely a dainty conceit of the artist’s fancy, and those nearest gathered about the case with sudden interest.
But the face of Marcantonio betrayed him, while he stood unabashed in the circle of the senators, though with mounting color, his hand, under shelter of his cloak, resting upon the jeweled hilt of the sword upon which he had sworn his first knightly vow.
Giustinian Giustiniani rose to his feet. “Her name, Messer Paolo Cagliari!” he thundered.
But it was the young Giustinian who answered to the challenge—“Marina Magagnati!” with an unconscious reverence, as he confessed his lady’s name.
“Is no face found fair enough among all the palaces on the Canal Grande to charm thy fastidious fancy?” cried the angry father, losing all self-control. “It were fitter that the name of thine inamorata were first declared elsewhere than in this presence!”
“Not so, my father,” Marcantonio replied, undaunted. “For I first would ask a grace of our most illustrious Signoria,—the which may it indeed please them to grant,—or never shall I bring a bride to the Ca’ Giustiniani. As I have sworn a noble’s oath of allegiance to Venice, so faithfully have I vowed to wed none other than Marina Magagnati! And it is my father who hath taught me to hold sacred the faith of a Venetian and a Giustinian. But my lady is not called of noble blood.”