登陆注册
4606300000008

第8章 CASANOVA AT DUX(8)

But, though the letters from women naturally interested me the most, they were only a certain proportion of the great mass of correspondence which I turned over. There were letters from Carlo Angiolini, who was afterwards to bring the manuscript of the Memoirs to Brockhaus; from Balbi, the monk with whom Casanova escaped from the Piombi; from the Marquis Albergati, playwright, actor, and eccentric, of whom there is some account in the Memoirs; from the Marquis Mosca, 'a distinguished man of letters whom I was anxious to see,' Casanova tells us in the same volume in which he describes his visit to the Moscas at Pesaro; from Zulian, brother of the Duchess of Fiano; from Richard Lorrain, 'bel homme, ayant de l'esprit, le ton et le gout de la bonne societe', who came to settle at Gorizia in 1773, while Casanova was there; from the Procurator Morosini, whom he speaks of in the Memoirs as his 'protector,' and as one of those through whom he obtained permission to return to Venice. His other 'protector,' the 'avogador' Zaguri, had, says Casanova, 'since the affair of the Marquis Albergati, carried on a most interesting correspondence with me'; and in fact I found a bundle of no less than a hundred and thirty-eight letters from him, dating from 1784 to 1798. Another bundle contains one hundred and seventy-two letters from Count Lamberg. In the Memoirs Casanova says, referring to his visit to Augsburg at the end of 1761:

I used to spend my evenings in a very agreeable manner at the house of Count Max de Lamberg, who resided at the court of the Prince-Bishop with the title of Grand Marshal. What particularly attached me to Count Lamberg was his literary talent. A first-rate scholar, learned to a degree, he has published several much esteemed works. I carried on an exchange of letters with him which ended only with his death four years ago in 1792.

Casanova tells us that, at his second visit to Augsburg in the early part of 1767, he 'supped with Count Lamberg two or three times a week,' during the four months he was there. It is with this year that the letters I have found begin: they end with the year of his death, 1792. In his 'Memorial d'un Mondain' Lamberg refers to Casanova as 'a man known in literature, a man of profound knowledge.'

In the first edition of 1774, he laments that 'a man such as M. de S.

Galt' should not yet have been taken back into favour by the Venetian government, and in the second edition, 1775, rejoices over Casanova's return to Venice. Then there are letters from Da Ponte, who tells the story of Casanova's curious relations with Mme. d'Urfe, in his 'Memorie scritte da esso', 1829; from Pittoni, Bono, and others mentioned in different parts of the Memoirs, and from some dozen others who are not mentioned in them. The only letters in the whole collection that have been published are those from the Prince de Ligne and from Count Koenig.

IV

Casanova tells us in his Memoirs that, during his later years at Dux, he had only been able to 'hinder black melancholy from devouring his poor existence, or sending him out of his mind,' by writing ten or twelve hours a day. The copious manuscripts at Dux show us how persistently he was at work on a singular variety of subjects, in addition to the Memoirs, and to the various books which he published during those years. We see him jotting down everything that comes into his head, for his own amusement, and certainly without any thought of publication; engaging in learned controversies, writing treatises on abstruse mathematical problems, composing comedies to be acted before Count Waldstein's neighbours, practising verse-writing in two languages, indeed with more patience than success, writing philosophical dialogues in which God and himself are the speakers, and keeping up an extensive correspondence, both with distinguished men and with delightful women. His mental activity, up to the age of seventy-three, is as prodigious as the activity which he had expended in living a multiform and incalculable life. As in life everything living had interested him so in his retirement from life every idea makes its separate appeal to him; and he welcomes ideas with the same impartiality with which he had welcomed adventures. Passion has intellectualised itself, and remains not less passionate. He wishes to do everything, to compete with every one; and it is only after having spent seven years in heaping up miscellaneous learning, and exercising his faculties in many directions, that he turns to look back over his own past life, and to live it over again in memory, as he writes down the narrative of what had interested him most in it.

'I write in the hope that my history will never see the broad day light of publication,' he tells us, scarcely meaning it, we may be sure, even in the moment of hesitancy which may naturally come to him. But if ever a book was written for the pleasure of writing it, it was this one; and an autobiography written for oneself is not likely to be anything but frank.

'Truth is the only God I have ever adored,' he tells us: and we now know how truthful he was in saying so. I have only summarised in this article the most important confirmations of his exact accuracy in facts and dates; the number could be extended indefinitely. In the manuscripts we find innumerable further confirmations; and their chief value as testimony is that they tell us nothing which we should not have already known, if we had merely taken Casanova at his word.

But it is not always easy to take people at their own word, when they are writing about themselves; and the world has been very loth to believe in Casanova as he represents himself. It has been specially loth to believe that he is telling the truth when he tells us about his adventures with women. But the letters contained among these manuscripts shows us the women of Casanova writing to him with all the fervour and all the fidelity which he attributes to them; and they show him to us in the character of as fervid and faithful a lover. In every fact, every detail, and in the whole mental impression which they convey, these manuscripts bring before us the Casanova of the Memoirs. As I seemed to come upon Casanova at home, it was as if I came upon old friend, already perfectly known to me, before I had made my pilgrimage to Dux.

1902

同类推荐
  • Bird Neighbors

    Bird Neighbors

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 五代名画补遗

    五代名画补遗

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 无量寿经会译

    无量寿经会译

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 广州记

    广州记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 辨正论

    辨正论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 天才阴阳师驾到:妖孽王爷请淡定

    天才阴阳师驾到:妖孽王爷请淡定

    这是个与21世纪完全挂不上钩的修玄大陆。她是21世纪有名的天才阴阳师,虽无父无母但起码有个老头照着。而她却是这星夜大陆中有名的废材小姐兼丑八怪,虽然受尽冷眼但她还有爹疼有哥爱。只因某个契机下两人既一朝结合,其影响可谓惊天动地~【大概】话说,修玄大陆什么的不应该是强者为尊才对的吗?为嘛那妖孽随便卖个萌就把本天才给拿下了呢?为嘛人家的宠兽什么的都是一副威风凛凛、气势十足的样子,而我的宠兽却一个比一个可爱呢?虽然是上古魔兽和千年难得一遇的神兽,但你们这么萌看上去是木有杀伤力的呀!!难道是我穿过来的方式不对?!某妖孽:娘子夜深了,过来为夫陪你就寝吧~本天才:卖你妹的萌啊!!看来这脱节时代强者还是次要、卖萌才是王道!!
  • Sidekicks

    Sidekicks

    Batman has Robin, Wonder Woman has Wonder Girl, and Phantom Justice has Bright Boy, a.k.a. Scott Hutchinson, an ordinary schoolkid by day and a superfast, superstrong sidekick by night, fighting loyally next to his hero. But after an embarrassing incident involving his too-tight spandex costume, plus some signs that Phantom Justice may not be the good guy he pretends to be, Scott begins to question his role. With the help of a fellow sidekick, once his nemesis, Scott must decide if growing up means being loyal or stepping boldly to the center of things. Great for boys, comics fans, and anyone looking for a superhero tale that's also an insightful look at adolescence.
  • 快穿之男神怎么又黑化了

    快穿之男神怎么又黑化了

    (推新书:快穿攻略:我的宿主伪白莲)【绝世宠文1v1,男主始终如一,男女主身心干净。全程撒糖。主男女主感情。标签:一见钟情】身为资深颜控的情无药,听说有一个名为男神拯救的系统,于是她就申请加入了。打算救男神于水火之中。可是为什么系统没有告诉她,黑化是什么鬼?为什么男神们都有个那么可怕的共同爱好?一言不合就绑人?系统!系统!我觉得我好像比较需要被拯救!
  • 宠妻如命:污力老公缠上瘾

    宠妻如命:污力老公缠上瘾

    五年前,她被最亲近的哥哥背叛,莫名其妙有了身孕。五年后,她唯一的儿子得了白血病,急需匹配的骨髓救命。这时,却有三个男人主动找上门,声称是孩子的父亲。苏小绵看着三个性格迥异的大帅哥,彻底懵逼了。神啊,谁来告诉她,五年前的那天晚上,她到底经历了什么!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 长城边的中国

    长城边的中国

    《长城边的中国》以长城边的中国社会为观察主体,这是一个很现实的话题,因为它关乎新时代的社会发展进程,关乎社会的和谐与进步,关乎社会的公平与正义。在这个远离现代工业、商业和现代物流业的地域,在这个曾经战火纷飞、而又曾经被过度开垦的地域,人们依然以俭朴的农耕或牧业作为群体和家庭生活延续的重要手段。这个长城边的社会、这个在大城市里生活的人们不会想到的人群,是现实中国的另一个样本。
  • 林肯传(传记译林)

    林肯传(传记译林)

    《林肯传》林肯是美国第十六任总统,著名的演说家、律师。这位“伟大的解放者”领导了针对南方奴隶制度的南北战争,颁布了《解放黑人奴隶宣言》,维护了联邦的统一,为美国在十九世纪末跃居世界头号工业强国开辟了道路。《林肯传》是成功学大师戴尔·卡耐基的扛鼎之作,也是他一生中撰写的仅有的一部传记。作者以其感人至深的笔触,生动再现了一个内心忧郁、富于理想、愈挫愈勇、满怀仁慈之心的林肯形象。林肯的从政之路充满坎坷和失败,但追求平等的政治理想却一直支撑着他屡败屡战,直至最终入主白宫。这位平民总统富于传奇色彩的一生,相信会让每一位读者唏嘘不已。
  • 宝石转经筒

    宝石转经筒

    灰白色的毡包外,僵立着一个状如蒙古包似的钢丝牢笼。笼子里的小白狐突然蹦了起来。它后肢着地,两只前爪死死地抓着冰冷的钢丝网,胸口在剧烈地起伏,似乎被胸膛里的心火灼烧得痛苦不堪。它那宝石般的、黄红相间的眼睛,疾速地扫视着被寒风捆绑的四周,目光中迸溅着惊喜和惊慌,如电光石火,恨不能将四周剪成碎片,立刻显露出隐藏的妈妈。虽然是在深夜,可四周围并不黑暗,那几乎触手可及的星空中,银灰色的寒光闪烁着、流溢着、穿梭着,将牢笼的周边辉映得如同月夜里的雪地——寂静的清晰中,缭绕着淡蓝色的、薄薄的朦胧。
  • 锦绣阖欢

    锦绣阖欢

    【推荐笛子年代新文《在八零呗大佬宠成小祖宗》】,苏爽甜文。 一场穿越,连锦不单名字多了个字,身边也多了一些人。偏疼她的公婆,顺从她的夫君,还有一个萌哒哒的小包子。连锦绣表示,挺好!就是地方差了点儿,穷山恶水一贫如洗,不过没关系,她可是二十一世纪的全能农家女,会种地,能持家,更擅圈钱和养娃,外带虐得极品叫呱呱!本文主打温馨接地气,穿越女不是万能的,谢谢!
  • 重生之侯府嫡女

    重生之侯府嫡女

    前世,幸福美满的姻缘不过是镜中花,水中月。她,身份高贵的侯府嫡女,为心爱之人倾尽所有,全心付出。功成名就时,心爱之人竟与她亲妹联手设计,毁她清誉、夺她亲儿,害她受尽苦楚…葬身火海之时,慕容雨咬牙切齿,对天狂吼:“若有来世,无论上天入地,为人为鬼,慕容雨绝不会放过你们!”再次醒来,她重生到了六年前,是母亲与哥哥过世的三年后,更是她命运的重大转折年…这一世,且看浴火重生的她如何翻手为云,覆手为雨,掌握住自己的命运,将前世背叛过她的那些人一一斩尽杀绝…
  • 诸界末日在线

    诸界末日在线

    诸界末日降临,魔王的秩序收割着众生性命,在这绝望的黑暗之中,有一人挣脱时空,回到世界崩毁之前,决心改变曾经的命运。但随着时间的推移,他渐渐发现末日并不是那么简单……(书友群:662816185;V群878261509,欢迎读友们加入~)