passed off in that position, and I cannot express what
have been my sufferings, for you, of course, urged
me to come, and I was always under the painful necessity
of disappointing you. I even feared to find myself
alone with you, for I felt certain that I could not
have refrained from telling you the cause of the change
in my conduct. To crown my misery, add that I
found myself compelled, at least once a week, to receive
the vile Cordiani outside of my room, and to speak
to him, in order to check his impatience with a few
words. At last, unable to bear up any longer
under such misery, threatened likewise by you, I determined
to end my agony. I wished to disclose to you
all this intrigue, leaving to you the care of bringing
a change for the better, and for that purpose I proposed
that you should accompany me to the ball disguised
as a girl, although I knew it would enrage Cordiani;
but my mind was made up. You know how my scheme
fell to the ground. The unexpected departure of
my brother with my father suggested to both of you
the same idea, and it was before receiving Cordiani’s
letter that I promised to come to you. Cordiani
did not ask for an appointment; he only stated that
he would be waiting for me in my closet, and I had
no opportunity of telling him that I could not allow
him to come, any more than I could find time to let
you know that I would be with you only after midnight,
as I intended to do, for I reckoned that after an
hour’s talk I would dismiss the wretch to his
room. But my reckoning was wrong; Cordiani had
conceived a scheme, and I could not help listening
to all he had to say about it. His whining and
exaggerated complaints had no end. He upbraided
me for refusing to further the plan he had concocted,
and which he thought I would accept with rapture if
I loved him. The scheme was for me to elope with
him during holy week, and to run away to Ferrara,
where he had an uncle who would have given us a kind
welcome, and would soon have brought his father to
forgive him and to insure our happiness for life.
The objections I made, his answers, the details to
be entered into, the explanations and the ways and
means to be examined to obviate the difficulties of
the project, took up the whole night. My heart
was bleeding as I thought of you; but my conscience
is at rest, and I did nothing that could render me
unworthy of your esteem. You cannot refuse it
to me, unless you believe that the confession I have
just made is untrue; but you would be both mistaken
and unjust. Had I made up my mind to sacrifice
myself and to grant favours which love alone ought
to obtain, I might have got rid of the treacherous
wretch within one hour, but death seemed preferable
to such a dreadful expedient. Could I in any
way suppose that you were outside of my door, exposed
to the wind and to the snow? Both of us were
deserving of pity, but my misery was still greater
than yours. All these fearful circumstances were
written in the book of fate, to make me lose my reason,