The Waters of Edera eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 259 pages of information about The Waters of Edera.
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The Waters of Edera eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 259 pages of information about The Waters of Edera.

“The river rushes were more merciful than man, they kept the little new-born lordling safe until his faithful vassal, under cover of the night, when the assailants were drunk and stupid with licence gratified, could take him to a poor woman to be suckled in a cottage farther down the river.  How he grew up I know not, but certain it is that thirty years later one Federigo Tor’alba was living where you live, and your house and land have never changed hands or title since; only your name has been truncated, as often happens in the speech of the people.  How this land called the Terra Vergine was first obtained I cannot say; the vassal may have saved some gold or jewels which belonged to his masters, and have purchased these acres, or the land may have been taken up and put gradually into cultivation without any legal right to it; of this there is no explanation, no record.  But from that time the mighty lordship of Tor’alba has been extinct, and scarcely exists now even in local tradition; although their effigies are on their tombs, and the story of their reign can be deciphered by any one who can read a sixteenth-century manuscript, as you might do for yourself, my son, had you been diligent.”

Adone was silent.  He had listened with attention, as he did to everything which was said or read to him by Don Silverio.  But he was not astonished, because he had often heard, though vaguely, the legend of his descent.

“Of what use is it?” he said, as he sat moving the bright water with his bare slim feet.  “Nothing will bring it all back.”

“It should serve some great end,” said Don Silverio, not knowing very well what he meant or to what he desired to move the young man’s mind.  “Nobility of blood should make the hands cleaner, the heart higher, the aims finer.”

Adone had shrugged his shoulders.

“We are all equal!” he answered.

“We are not all equal,” the priest said curtly.  “There is not equality in nature.  Are there even two pebbles alike in the bed of the river?”

Don Silverio, for the first time in his life, could have willingly let escape him some unholy word.  It incensed him that he could not arouse in the boy any of that interest and excitement which had moved his own feelings so strongly as he had spent his spare evenings poring over the crabbed characters and the dust-weighted vellum of the charred and mutilated archives discovered by him in a secret closet in the bell-tower of his church.  With infinite toil, patience, and ability he had deciphered the Latin of rolls, registers, letters, chronicles, so damaged by water, fire, and the teeth of rats and mice, that it required all an archæologist’s ingenuity and devotion to make out any sense from them.  Summer days and winter nights had found him poring over the enigma of these documents, and now, when he had conquered and revealed their secret, he who was most concerned in it was no more stirred by curiosity or pride than if he had been one of the big tawny owls dwelling in the dusk of the belfry.

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The Waters of Edera from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.