The Project Gutenberg EBook of Facino Cane, by Honore de Balzac

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Title: Facino Cane

Author: Honore de Balzac

Translator: Clara Bell and Others

Release Date: March 1, 2010 [EBook #1737]
Last Updated: April 3, 2013

Language: English

Character set encoding: ASCII

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FACINO CANE ***




Produced by John Bickers, and Dagny, and David Widger






 




FACINO CANE  




By Honore De Balzac  





Translated by Clara Bell and others  










FACINO CANE 

ADDENDUM 









FACINO CANE  





I once used to live in a little street which probably is not known to youthe  Rue de Lesdiguieres. It is a turning out of the Rue Saint-Antoine,  beginning just opposite a fountain near the Place de la Bastille, and  ending in the Rue de la Cerisaie. Love of knowledge stranded me in a  garret; my nights I spent in work, my days in reading at the Bibliotheque  d'Orleans, close by. I lived frugally; I had accepted the conditions of  the monastic life, necessary conditions for every worker, scarcely  permitting myself a walk along the Boulevard Bourdon when the weather was  fine. One passion only had power to draw me from my studies; and yet, what  was that passion but a study of another kind? I used to watch the manners  and customs of the Faubourg, its inhabitants, and their characteristics.  As I dressed no better than a working man, and cared nothing for  appearances, I did not put them on their guard; I could join a group and  look on while they drove bargains or wrangled among themselves on their  way home from work. Even then observation had come to be an instinct with  me; a faculty of penetrating to the soul without neglecting the body; or  rather, a power of grasping external details so thoroughly that they never  detained me for a moment, and at once I passed beyond and through them. I  could enter into the life of the human creatures whom I watched, just as  the dervish in the Arabian Nights could pass into any soul or body  after pronouncing a certain formula.  

If I met a working man and his wife in the streets between eleven o'clock  and midnight on their way home from the Ambigu Comique, I used to amuse  myself by following them from the Boulevard du Pont aux Choux to the  Boulevard Beaumarchais. The good folk would begin by talking about the  play; then from one thing to another they would come to their own affairs,  and the mother would walk on and on, heedless of complaints or question  from the little one that dragged at her hand, while she and her husband  reckoned up the wages to be paid on the morrow, and spent the money in a  score of different ways. Then came domestic details, lamentations over the  excessive dearness of potatoes, or the length of the winter and the high  price of block fuel, together with forcible representations of amounts  owing to the baker, ending in an acrimonious dispute, in the course of  which such couples reveal their characters in picturesque language. As I  listened, I could make their lives mine, I felt their rags on my back, I  walked with their gaping shoes on my feet; their cravings, their needs,  had all passed into my soul, or my soul had passed into theirs. It was the  dream of a waking man. I waxed hot with them over the foreman's tyranny,  or the bad customers that made them call again and again for payment.  

To come out of my own ways of life, to be another than myself through a  kind of intoxication of the intellectual faculties, and to play this game  at will, such was my recreation. Whence comes the gift? Is it a kind of  second sight? Is it one of those powers which when abused end in madness?  I have never tried to discover its source; I possess it, I use it, that is  all. But this it behooves you to know, that in those days I began to  resolve the heterogeneous mass known as the People into its elements, and  to evaluate its good and bad qualities. Even then I realized the  possibilities of my suburb, that hotbed of revolution in which heroes,  inventors, and practical men of science, rogues and scoundrels, virtues  and vices, were all packed together by poverty, stifled by necessity,  drowned in drink, and consumed by ardent spirits.  

You would not imagine how many adventures, how many tragedies, lie buried  away out of sight in that Dolorous City; how much horror and beauty lurks  there. No imagination can reach the Truth, no one can go down into that  city to make discoveries; for one must needs descend too low into its  depths to see the wonderful scenes of tragedy or comedy enacted there, the  masterpieces brought forth by chance.  

I do not know how it is that I have kept the following story so long  untold. It is one of the curious things that stop in the bag from which  Memory draws out stories at haphazard, like numbers in a lottery. There  are plenty of tales just as strange and just as well hidden still left;  but some day, you may be sure, their turn will come.  

One day my charwoman, a working man's wife, came to beg me to honor her  sister's wedding with my presence. If you are to realize what this wedding  was like you must know that I paid my charwoman, poor creature, four  francs a month; for which sum she came every morning to make my bed, clean  my shoes, brush my clothes, sweep the room, and make ready my breakfast,  before going to her day's work of turning the handle of a machine, at  which hard drudgery she earned five-pence. Her husband, a cabinetmaker,  made four francs a day at his trade; but as they had three children, it  was all that they could do to gain an honest living. Yet I have never met  with more sterling honesty than in this man and wife. For five years after  I left the quarter, Mere Vaillant used to come on my birthday with a bunch  of flowers and some oranges for meshe that had never a sixpence to  put by! Want had drawn us together. I never could give her more than a  ten-franc piece, and often I had to borrow the money for the occasion.  This will perhaps explain my promise to go to the wedding; I hoped to  efface myself in these poor people's merry-making.  

The banquet and the ball were given on a first floor above a wineshop in  the Rue de Charenton. It was a large room, lighted by oil lamps with tin  reflectors. A row of wooden benches ran round the walls, which were black  with grime to the height of the tables. Here some eighty persons, all in  their Sunday best, tricked out with ribbons and bunches of flowers, all of  them on pleasure bent, were dancing away with heated visages as if the  world were about to come to an end. Bride and bridegroom exchanged salutes  to the general satisfaction, amid a chorus of facetious "Oh, ohs!" and  "Ah, ahs!" less really indecent than the furtive glances of young girls  that have been well brought up. There was something indescribably  infectious about the rough, homely enjoyment in all countenances.  

But neither the faces, nor the wedding, nor the wedding-guests have  anything to do with my story. Simply bear them in mind as the odd setting  to it. Try to realize the scene, the shabby red-painted wineshop, the  smell of wine, the yells of merriment; try to feel that you are really in  the faubourg, among old people, working men and poor women giving  themselves up to a night's enjoyment.  

The band consisted of a fiddle, a clarionet, and a flageolet from the  Blind Asylum. The three were paid seven francs in a lump sum for the  night. For the money, they gave us, not Beethoven certainly, nor yet  Rossini; they played as they had the will and the skill; and every one in  the room (with charming delicacy of feeling) refrained from finding fault.  The music made such a brutal assault on the drum of my ear, that after a  first glance round the room my eyes fell at once upon the blind trio, and  the sight of their uniform inclined me from the first to indulgence. As  the artists stood in a window recess, it was difficult to distinguish  their faces except at close quarters, and I kept away at first; but when I  came nearer (I hardly know why) I thought of nothing else; the wedding  party and the music ceased to exist, my curiosity was roused to the  highest pitch, for my soul passed into the body of the clarionet player.  

The fiddle and the flageolet were neither of them interesting; their faces  were of the ordinary type among the blindearnest, attentive, and  grave. Not so the clarionet player; any artist or philosopher must have  come to a stop at the sight of him.  

Picture to yourself a plaster mask of Dante in the red lamplight, with a  forest of silver-white hair above the brows. Blindness intensified the  expression of bitterness and sorrow in that grand face of his; the dead  eyes were lighted up, as it were, by a thought within that broke forth  like a burning flame, lit by one sole insatiable desire, written large in  vigorous characters upon an arching brow scored across with as many lines  as an old stone wall.  

The old man was playing at random, without the slightest regard for time  or tune. His fingers traveled mechanically over the worn keys of his  instrument; he did not trouble himself over a false note now and again (acanard, in the language of the orchestra), neither did the dancers,  nor, for that matter, did my old Italian's acolytes; for I had made up my  mind that he must be Italian, and an Italian he was. There was something  great, something too of the despot about this old Homer bearing within him  an Odyssey doomed to oblivion. The greatness was so real that it  triumphed over his abject position; the despotism so much a part of him,  that it rose above his poverty.  

There are violent passions which drive a man to good or evil, making of  him a hero or a convict; of these there was not one that had failed to  leave its traces on the grandly-hewn, lividly Italian face. You trembled  lest a flash of thought should suddenly light up the deep sightless  hollows under the grizzled brows, as you might fear to see brigands with  torches and poniards in the mouth of a cavern. You felt that there was a  lion in that cage of flesh, a lion spent with useless raging against iron  bars. The fires of despair had burned themselves out into ashes, the lava  had cooled; but the tracks of the flames, the wreckage, and a little smoke  remained to bear witness to the violence of the eruption, the ravages of  the fire. These images crowded up at the sight of the clarionet player,  till the thoughts now grown cold in his face burned hot within my soul.  

The fiddle and the flageolet took a deep interest in bottles and glasses;  at the end of a country-dance, they hung their instruments from a button  on their reddish-colored coats, and stretched out their hands to a little  table set in the window recess to hold their liquor supply. Each time they  did so they held out a full glass to the Italian, who could not reach it  for himself because he sat in front of the table, and each time the  Italian thanked them with a friendly nod. All their movements were made  with the precision which always amazes you so much at the Blind Asylum.  You could almost think that they can see. I came nearer to listen; but  when I stood beside them, they evidently guessed I was not a working man,  and kept themselves to themselves.  

"What part of the world do you come from, you that are playing the  clarionet?"  

"From Venice," he said, with a trace of Italian accent.  

"Have you always been blind, or did it come on afterwards"  

"Afterwards," he answered quickly. "A cursed gutta serena."  

"Venice is a fine city; I have always had a fancy to go there."  

The old man's face lighted up, the wrinkles began to work, he was  violently excited.  

"If I went with you, you would not lose your time," he said.  

"Don't talk about Venice to our Doge," put in the fiddle, "or you will  start him off, and he has stowed away a couple of bottles as it ishas  the prince!"  

"Come, strike up, Daddy Canard!" added the flageolet, and the three began  to play. But while they executed the four figures of a square dance, the  Venetian was scenting my thoughts; he guessed the great interest I felt in  him. The dreary, dispirited look died out of his face, some mysterious  hope brightened his features and slid like a blue flame over his wrinkles.  He smiled and wiped his brow, that fearless, terrible brow of his, and at  length grew gay like a man mounted on his hobby.  

"How old are you?" I asked.  

"Eighty-two."  

"How long have you been blind?"  

"For very nearly fifty years," he said, and there was that in his tone  which told me that his regret was for something more than his lost sight,  for great power of which he had been robbed.  

"Then why do they call you 'the Doge'?" I asked.  

"Oh, it is a joke. I am a Venetian noble, and I might have been a doge  like any one else."  

"What is your name?"  

"Here, in Paris, I am Pere Canet," he said. "It was the only way of  spelling my name on the register. But in Italy I am Marco Facino Cane,  Prince of Varese."  

"What, are you descended from the great condottiere Facino Cane,  whose lands won by the sword were taken by the Dukes of Milan?"  

"E vero," returned he.His son's life was not safe under the  Visconti; he fled to Venice, and his name was inscribed on the Golden  Book. And now neither Cane or Golden Book are in existence.His gesture  startled me; it told of patriotism extinguished and weariness of life.  

"But if you were once a Venetian senator, you must have been a wealthy  man. How did you lose your fortune?"  

"In evil days."  

He waved away the glass of wine handed to him by the flageolet, and bowed  his head. He had no heart to drink. These details were not calculated to  extinguish my curiosity.  

As the three ground out the music of the square dance, I gazed at the old  Venetian noble, thinking thoughts that set a young man's mind afire at the  age of twenty. I saw Venice and the Adriatic; I saw her ruin in the ruin  of the face before me. I walked to and fro in that city, so beloved of her  citizens; I went from the Rialto Bridge, along the Grand Canal, and from  the Riva degli Schiavoni to the Lido, returning to St. Mark's, that  cathedral so unlike all others in its sublimity. I looked up at the  windows of the Casa Doro, each with its different sculptured ornaments; I  saw old palaces rich in marbles, saw all the wonders which a student  beholds with the more sympathetic eyes because visible things take their  color of his fancy, and the sight of realities cannot rob him of the glory  of his dreams. Then I traced back a course of life for this latest scion  of a race of condottieri, tracking down his misfortunes, looking for the  reasons of the deep moral and physical degradation out of which the lately  revived sparks of greatness and nobility shone so much the more brightly.  My ideas, no doubt, were passing through his mind, for all processes of  thought-communications are far more swift, I think, in blind people,  because their blindness compels them to concentrate their attention. I had  not long to wait for proof that we were in sympathy in this way. Facino  Cane left off playing, and came up to me. "Let us go out!" he said; his  tones thrilled through me like an electric shock. I gave him my arm, and  we went.  

Outside in the street he said, "Will you take me back to Venice? Will you  be my guide? Will you put faith in me? You shall be richer than ten of the  richest houses in Amsterdam or London, richer than Rothschild; in short,  you shall have the fabulous wealth of the Arabian Nights."  

The man was mad, I thought; but in his voice there was a potent something  which I obeyed. I allowed him to lead, and he went in the direction of the  Fosses de la Bastille, as if he could see; walking till he reached a  lonely spot down by the river, just where the bridge has since been built  at the junction of the Canal Saint-Martin and the Seine. Here he sat down  on a stone, and I, sitting opposite to him, saw the old man's hair  gleaming like threads of silver in the moonlight. The stillness was  scarcely troubled by the sound of the far-off thunder of traffic along the  boulevards; the clear night air and everything about us combined to make a  strangely unreal scene.  

"You talk of millions to a young man," I began, "and do you think that he  will shrink from enduring any number of hardships to gain them? Are you  not laughing at me?"  

"May I die unshriven," he cried vehemently, "if all that I am about to  tell you is not true. I was one-and-twenty years old, like you at this  moment. I was rich, I was handsome, and a noble by birth. I began with the  first madness of allwith Love. I loved as no one can love nowadays.  I have hidden myself in a chest, at the risk of a dagger thrust, for  nothing more than the promise of a kiss. To die for Herit seemed to  me to be a whole life in itself. In 1760 I fell in love with a lady of the  Vendramin family; she was eighteen years old, and married to a Sagredo,  one of the richest senators, a man of thirty, madly in love with his wife.  My mistress and I were guiltless as cherubs when the sposo caught  us together talking of love. He was armed, I was not, but he missed me; I  sprang upon him and killed him with my two hands, wringing his neck as if  he had been a chicken. I wanted Bianca to fly with me; but she would not.  That is the way with women! So I went alone. I was condemned to death, and  my property was confiscated and made over to my next-of-kin; but I had  carried off my diamonds, five of Titian's pictures taken down from their  frames and rolled up, and all my gold.  

I went to Milan, no one molested me, my affair in nowise interested the  State.One small observation before I go further,he continued,  after a pause, "whether it is true or no that the mother's fancies at the  time of conception or in the months before birth can influence her child,  this much is certain, my mother during her pregnancy had a passion for  gold, and I am the victim of a monomania, of a craving for gold which must  be gratified. Gold is so much of a necessity of life for me, that I have  never been without it; I must have gold to toy with and finger. As a young  man I always wore jewelry, and I carried two or three hundred ducats about  me wherever I went."  

He drew a couple of gold coins from his pocket and showed them to me as he  spoke.  

"I can tell by instinct when gold is near. Blind as I am, I stop before a  jeweler's shop windows. That passion was the ruin of me; I took to  gambling to play with gold. I was not a cheat, I was cheated, I ruined  myself. I lost all my fortune. Then the longing to see Bianca once more  possessed me like a frenzy. I stole back to Venice and found her again.  For six months I was happy; she hid me in her house and fed me. I thought  thus deliciously to finish my days. But the Provveditore courted her, and  guessed that he had a rival; we in Italy can feel that. He played the spy  upon us, and surprised us together in bed, base wretch. You may judge what  a fight for life it was; I did not kill him outright, but I wounded him  dangerously.  

"That adventure broke my luck. I have never found another Bianca; I have  known great pleasures; but among the most celebrated women at the court of  Louis XV. I never found my beloved Venetian's charm, her love, her great  qualities.  

"The Provveditore called his servants, the palace was surrounded and  entered; I fought for my life that I might die beneath Bianca's eyes;  Bianca helped me to kill the Provveditore. Once before she had refused  flight with me; but after six months of happiness she wished only to die  with me, and received several thrusts. I was entangled in a great cloak  that they flung over me, carried down to a gondola, and hurried to the  Pozzi dungeons. I was twenty-two years old. I gripped the hilt of my  broken sword so hard, that they could only have taken it from me by  cutting off my hand at the wrist. A curious chance, or rather the instinct  of self-preservation, led me to hide the fragment of the blade in a corner  of my cell, as if it might still be of use. They tended me; none of my  wounds were serious. At two-and-twenty one can recover from anything. I  was to lose my head on the scaffold. I shammed illness to gain time. It  seemed to me that the canal lay just outside my cell. I thought to make my  escape by boring a hole through the wall and swimming for my life. I based  my hopes on the following reasons.  

"Every time that the jailer came with my food, there was light enough to  read directions written on the walls'Side of the Palace,' 'Side of  the Canal,' 'Side of the Vaults.' At last I saw a design in this, but I  did not trouble myself much about the meaning of it; the actual incomplete  condition of the Ducal Palace accounted for it. The longing to regain my  freedom gave me something like genius. Groping about with my fingers, I  spelled out an Arabic inscription on the wall. The author of the work  informed those to come after him that he had loosed two stones in the  lowest course of masonry and hollowed out eleven feet beyond underground.  As he went on with his excavations, it became necessary to spread the  fragments of stone and mortar over the floor of his cell. But even if  jailers and inquisitors had not felt sure that the structure of the  building was such that no watch was needed below, the level of the Pozzi  dungeons being several steps below the threshold, it was possible  gradually to raise the earthen floor without exciting the warder's  suspicions.  

"The tremendous labor had profited nothingnothing at least to him  that began it. The very fact that it was left unfinished told of the  unknown worker's death. Unless his devoted toil was to be wasted for ever,  his successor must have some knowledge of Arabic, but I had studied  Oriental languages at the Armenian Convent. A few words written on the  back of the stone recorded the unhappy man's fate; he had fallen a victim  to his great possessions; Venice had coveted his wealth and seized upon  it. A whole month went by before I obtained any result; but whenever I  felt my strength failing as I worked, I heard the chink of gold, I saw  gold spread before me, I was dazzled by diamonds.Ah! wait.  

"One night my blunted steel struck on wood. I whetted the fragment of my  blade and cut a hole; I crept on my belly like a serpent; I worked naked  and mole-fashion, my hands in front of me, using the stone itself to gain  a purchase. I was to appear before my judges in two days' time, I made a  final effort, and that night I bored through the wood and felt that there  was space beyond.  

"Judge of my surprise when I applied my eye to the hole. I was in the  ceiling of a vault, heaps of gold were dimly visible in the faint light.  The Doge himself and one of the Ten stood below; I could hear their voices  and sufficient of their talk to know that this was the Secret Treasury of  the Republic, full of the gifts of Doges and reserves of booty called the  Tithe of Venice from the spoils of military expeditions. I was saved!  

"When the jailer came I proposed that he should help me to escape and fly  with me, and that we should take with us as much as we could carry. There  was no reason for hesitation; he agreed. Vessels were about to sail for  the Levant. All possible precautions were taken. Bianca furthered the  schemes which I suggested to my accomplice. It was arranged that Bianca  should only rejoin us in Smyrna for fear of exciting suspicion. In a  single night the hole was enlarged, and we dropped down into the Secret  Treasury of Venice.  

"What a night that was! Four great casks full of gold stood there. In the  outer room silver pieces were piled in heaps, leaving a gangway between by  which to cross the chamber. Banks of silver coins surrounded the walls to  the height of five feet.  

"I thought the jailer would go mad. He sang and laughed and danced and  capered among the gold, till I threatened to strangle him if he made a  sound or wasted time. In his joy he did not notice at first the table  where the diamonds lay. I flung myself upon these, and deftly filled the  pockets of my sailor jacket and trousers with the stones. Ah! Heaven, I  did not take the third of them. Gold ingots lay underneath the table. I  persuaded my companion to fill as many bags as we could carry with the  gold, and made him understand that this was our only chance of escaping  detection abroad.  

"'Pearls, rubies, and diamonds might be recognized,' I told him.  

"Covetous though we were, we could not possibly take more than two  thousand livres weight of gold, which meant six journeys across the prison  to the gondola. The sentinel at the water gate was bribed with a bag  containing ten livres weight of gold; and as far as the two gondoliers,  they believed they were serving the Republic. At daybreak we set out.  

"Once upon the open sea, when I thought of that night, when I recollected  all that I had felt, when the vision of that great hoard rose before my  eyes, and I computed that I had left behind thirty millions in silver,  twenty in gold, and many more in diamonds, pearls, and rubiesthen a  sort of madness began to work in me. I had the gold fever.  

"We landed at Smyrna and took ship at once for France. As we went on board  the French vessel, Heaven favored me by ridding me of my accomplice. I did  not think at the time of all the possible consequences of this mishap, and  rejoiced not a little. We were so completely unnerved by all that had  happened, that we were stupid, we said not a word to each other, we waited  till it should be safe to enjoy ourselves at our ease. It was not  wonderful that the rogue's head was dizzy. You shall see how heavily God  has punished me.  

"I never knew a quiet moment until I had sold two-thirds of my diamonds in  London or Amsterdam, and held the value of my gold dust in a negotiable  shape. For five years I hid myself in Madrid, then in 1770 I came to Paris  with a Spanish name, and led as brilliant a life as may be. Then in the  midst of my pleasures, as I enjoyed a fortune of six millions, I was  smitten with blindness. I do not doubt but that my infirmity was brought  on by my sojourn in the cell and my work in the stone, if, indeed, my  peculiar faculty for 'seeing' gold was not an abuse of the power of sight  which predestined me to lose it. Bianca was dead.  

"At this time I had fallen in love with a woman to whom I thought to link  my fate. I had told her the secret of my name; she belonged to a powerful  family; she was a friend of Mme. du Barry; I hoped everything from the  favor shown me by Louis XV.; I trusted in her. Acting on her advice, I  went to London to consult a famous oculist, and after a stay of several  months in London she deserted me in Hyde Park. She had stripped me of all  that I had, and left me without resource. Nor could I make complaint, for  to disclose my name was to lay myself open to the vengeance of my native  city; I could appeal to no one for aid, I feared Venice. The woman put  spies about me to exploit my infirmity. I spare you a tale of adventures  worthy of Gil Blas.Your Revolution followed. For two whole years  that creature kept me at the Bicetre as a lunatic, then she gained  admittance for me at the Blind Asylum; there was no help for it, I went. I  could not kill her; I could not see; and I was so poor that I could not  pay another arm.  

"If only I had taken counsel with my jailer, Benedetto Carpi, before I  lost him, I might have known the exact position of my cell, I might have  found my way back to the Treasury and returned to Venice when Napoleon  crushed the Republic  

"Still, blind as I am, let us go back to Venice! I shall find the door of  my prison, I shall see the gold through the prison walls, I shall hear it  where it lies under the water; for the events which brought about the fall  of Venice befell in such a way that the secret of the hoard must have  perished with Bianca's brother, Vendramin, a doge to whom I looked to make  my peace with the Ten. I sent memorials to the First Consul; I proposed an  agreement with the Emperor of Austria; every one sent me about my business  for a lunatic. Come! we will go to Venice; let us set out as beggars, we  shall come back millionaires. We will buy back some of my estates, and you  shall be my heir! You shall be Prince of Varese!"  

My head was swimming. For me his confidences reached the proportions of  tragedy; at the sight of that white head of his and beyond it the black  water in the trenches of the Bastille lying still as a canal in Venice, I  had no words to answer him. Facino Cane thought, no doubt, that I judged  him, as the rest had done, with a disdainful pity; his gesture expressed  the whole philosophy of despair.  

Perhaps his story had taken him back to happy days and to Venice. He  caught up his clarionet and made plaintive music, playing a Venetian  boat-song with something of his lost skill, the skill of the young  patrician lover. It was a sort of Super flumina Babylonis. Tears  filled my eyes. Any belated persons walking along the Boulevard Bourdon  must have stood still to listen to an exile's last prayer, a last cry of  regret for a lost name, mingled with memories of Bianca. But gold soon  gained the upper hand, the fatal passion quenched the light of youth.  

"I see it always," he said;dreaming or waking, I see it; and as I pace  to and fro, I pace in the Treasury, and the diamonds sparkle. I am not as  blind as you think; gold and diamonds light up my night, the night of the  last Facino Cane, for my title passes to the Memmi. My God! the murderer's  punishment was not long delayed! Ave Maria,and he repeated  several prayers that I did not heed.  

"We will go to Venice!" I said, when he rose.  

"Then I have found a man!" he cried, with his face on fire.  

I gave him my arm and went home with him. We reached the gates of the  Blind Asylum just as some of the wedding guests were returning along the  street, shouting at the top of their voices. He squeezed my hand.  

"Shall we start to-morrow?" he asked.  

"As soon as we can get some money."  

"But we can go on foot. I will beg. I am strong, and you feel young when  you see gold before you."  

Facino Cane died before the winter was out after a two months' illness.  The poor man had taken a chill.  

PARIS, March 1836.  








ADDENDUM  

The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy.  

     Cane, Marco-Facino
       Massimilla Doni

     Vendramini, Marco
       Massimilla Doni














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