Stradella | Page 7

F. Marion Crawford
meeting. For acquaintance grows and ripens precociously
when two people are busy together so that they depend on each other at
every instant, as teacher and pupil, or as the chief actor and actress in a
play, or as a man and a woman who are suddenly thrown together in
adventure or danger.
When Stradella put his lute back into the purple bag at last, telling
Ortensia that she had sung enough for one morning and that she must
not tire her voice, she felt as if this could not possibly have been her
first meeting with him. His face, his tone, his gestures, the way he held
his lute, were all as familiar to her already as if he had given her
half-a-dozen lessons; and when he was gone and she sat once more in
her chair looking at the top of the cypress tree against the noonday sky,
she saw and heard all again, and then again; but she neither saw nor
heard her nurse, who had laid aside the lace-pillow and was standing at
her elbow telling her that it was time for the mid-day meal and that her
uncle did not like to be kept waiting. The nurse spoke three times
before Ortensia heard her and looked up.
'They say well that music is a thief,' observed the middle-aged woman
in grey, enigmatically, as she stood with her hands folded under her
black apron, gazing intently at Ortensia's face.
The young girl laughed as she rose.
'Poor old Pina!' she answered, tapping her forehead with one finger as

if to say that the nurse was weak-minded.
But Pina smiled, and made three gestures, without saying a word: first
she pointed to herself, then she shook her forefinger, and lastly she
jerked her thumb back in the direction of the door that led to the
Senator's apartments. The weak-minded body was not Pina, but her
master, since he had brought that handsome singer to teach Ortensia,
who had never before exchanged two words with any young man,
handsome or plain, except under the nose of the Senator himself; and
that had always been at those great festivals to which the Venetian
nobles took their wives and daughters, even when the latter were very
young, to show off their fine clothes and jewels, though it meant
comparing them publicly with quite another class of beauties.
For the Venetian maxim was that women and girls were safe in public
or under lock and key, but that there was no salvation for them between
those two extremes.
But, in the eyes of Pignaver, a musician was not a man, any more than
a servant or a gondolier could be. Where a Venetian lady was
concerned, nothing was a man that had not a seat in the Grand Council;
that was the limit, below which the male population consisted of
sexless creatures like domestics, shopkeepers, and workmen.
Furthermore, the vanity of Pignaver raised him above all other
competitors as high as the Campanile stood above Saint Mark's and the
Ducal Palace, not to mention the rest of Venice, and the idea that
Ortensia, who had been informed that she was to be the wife of his
transcendently gifted and desirable self, could stoop to look at a
Sicilian music-master, would have struck him as superlatively comic,
though his sense of humour was imperfect, to say the least of it.
Even if the great man could have set aside all these considerations for a
moment, so as to look upon Stradella as a possible rival, he would still
have believed that the presence of Pina during the lessons was a
trustworthy safeguard against any 'accident to Ortensia's affections,' as
he would have expressed the danger. He had unbounded faith in Pina's
devotion to him and in her severity as a chaperon. On the rare

occasions when the young girl was allowed to leave the palace without
her uncle, Pina accompanied her in the gondola, and sometimes on foot
as far as the church of the Frari, where she went to confession once a
month; but, as a rule, she had her daily airing with the Senator himself,
meekly sitting on his left, and pretending to keep her eyes fixed on an
imaginary point directly ahead, as he insisted that she must, lest she
should look at any of the handsome young nobles who were only too
anxious to pass as near as possible on her side of the gondola.
For, though she was not eighteen years old, the reputation of her beauty
was already abroad; and as it was said that she was to inherit her uncle's
vast wealth, there were at least three hundred young gentlemen of high
degree who desired her now, since no one knew that the Senator had
determined to
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