The Bravo of Venice - A Romance - Page 43/84

I informed my readers, in the beginning of the last chapter, that

Flodoardo was become melancholy, and that Rosabella was indisposed,

but I did not tell them what had occasioned this sudden change.

Flodoardo, who on his first arrival at Venice was all gaiety, and

the life of every society in which he mingled, lost his spirits on

one particular day; and it so happened that it was on the very same

day that Rosabella betrayed the first symptoms of indisposition.

For on this unlucky day did the caprice of accident, or perhaps the

Goddess of Love (who has her caprices too every now and then),

conduct Rosabella into her uncle's garden, which none but the Doge's

intimate friends were permitted to enter; and where the Doge himself

frequently reposed in solitude and silence during the evening hours

of a sultry day.

Rosabella, lost in thought, wandered listless and unconscious along

the broad and shady alleys of the garden. Sometimes, in a moment of

vexation, she plucked the unoffending leaves from the hedges and

strewed them upon the ground; sometimes she stopped suddenly, then

rushed forward with impetuosity, then again stood still, and gazed

upon the clear blue heaven. Sometimes her beautiful bosom was

heaved with quick and irregular motion, and sometimes a half-

suppressed sigh escaped from her lips of coral.

"He is very handsome!" she murmured, and gazed with such eagerness

on vacancy, as though she had there seen something which was hidden

from the sight of common observers.

"Yet Camilla is in the right," she resumed, after a pause, and she

frowned as had she said that Camilla was in the wrong.

This Camilla was her governess, her friend, her confidante, I may

almost say her mother. Rosabella had lost her parents early. Her

mother died when her child could scarcely lisp her name; and her

father, Guiscardo of Corfu, the commander of a Venetian vessel,

eight years before had perished in an engagement with the Turks,

while he was still in the prime of life. Camilla, one of the

worthiest creatures that ever dignified the name of woman, supplied

to Rosabella the place of mother, had brought her up from infancy,

and was now her best friend, and the person to whose ear she

confided all her little secrets.

While Rosabella was still buried in her own reflections, the

excellent Camilla advanced from a side path, and hastened to join

her pupil. Rosabella started.

Rosabella.--Ah! dear Camilla, is it you? What brings you hither?

Camilla.--You often call me your guardian angel, and guardian angels

should always be near the object of their care.