As he entered, all but the son sprang up and surrounded him with excited exclamations.
“Well, have you heard the news? Thank God, it’s all ended! The hand of God is in it! What do you think of it all? Tell us, let us hear your opinion!”
“But what news?” asked the priest, looking from one to the other with astonished eyes.
In wild haste, and all speaking at once, they poured out the story of the festival, the forgiveness, the reconciliation.
The priest stared at them, with the look of a man who finds himself unexpectedly surrounded by lunatics; then, with a withering glance at the boy, and a smile of malignant triumph—
“Luckily,” he said, “there is not a word of truth in it!”
“Not a word of truth in it?” they clamored, turning upon their informant.
The boy, unmoved by their agitation, returned the priest’s look half-scornfully, half-sadly.
“Your reverence, don’t say fortunately. Since you are an Italian, say rather, ‘Alas, that it is not so!’”
For a moment the others stood aghast; then, angered, as people will be, rather against those who undeceive them than against those who delude them, they turned towards the priest, involuntarily echoing the boy’s words: “He’s right, your reverence! Say rather, ’Alas, that it is not so!’”
The priest pointed to his own breast with a long knotty finger.
“I?” he exclaimed bitterly, “never!”
At these words, the boy’s father, rudely roused from his mood of tender exaltation, and bursting, after his wont, into sudden fury, stretched his arm towards the priest, with a cry that rang through the room like a pistol-shot: “Out of my house this instant!”
The priest stalked out, slamming the door. The lad’s arms were about his father’s neck; and the old man, laying his hands on his son’s head, said gently: “I forgive you.”
PEREAT ROCHUS
BY
ANTONIO FOGAZZARO
The Translation by A. L. Frothingham, Jr.
I.
“It is a fine case, Don Rocco,” said Professor Marin, gathering up the cards and smiling beatifically, while his neighbor on the right raved furiously against poor Don Rocco. The professor continued to look at him with a little laugh on his closed mouth, and with a glance sparkling with benevolent hilarity; then he turned to the lady of the house, who was napping in a corner of the sofa.
“It is a fine case, Countess Carlotta!”
“I understand that well enough,” said she, “and it seems to me time to end it; isn’t that so, Don Rocco?”
“No, Don Rocco,” said the professor seriously, “on reflection it certainly is a case for the ecclesiastical court.”
“I should say it was at least that,” said his neighbor on the right.