The Bravo of Venice - A Romance - Page 48/84

Scarcely had she reached her chamber ere Rosabella repented her

having acted so courageously. It was cruel in her, she thought, to

have given him so harsh an answer. She recollected with what

hopeless and melancholy looks the poor thunderstruck youth had

followed her steps as she turned to leave him. She fancied that she

saw him stretched despairing on the earth, his hair dishevelled, his

eyes filled with tears. She heard him term her the murderess of his

repose, pray for death as his only refuge; and she saw him with

every moment approach towards the attainment of his prayer through

the tears which he shed on her account. Already she heard those

dreadful words--"Flodoardo is no more." Already she saw the

sympathising multitude weep round the tomb of him whom all the

virtuous loved, and whom the wicked dreaded; whom all his friends

adored, and whom even his enemies admired.

"Alas! alas!" cried she, "this was but a wretched attempt to play

the heroine. Already does my resolution fail me. Ah, Flodoardo! I

meant not what I said. I love you--love you now, and must love you

always, though Camilla may chide, and though my good uncle may hate

me."

In a few days after this interview she understood that an

extraordinary alteration had taken place in Flodoardo's manner and

appearance; that he had withdrawn himself from all general society;

and that when the solicitations of his intimate friends compelled

him to appear in their circle, his spirits seemed evidently

depressed by the weight of an unconquerable melancholy.

This intelligence was like the stroke of a poniard to the feeling

heart of Rosabella. She fled for shelter to the solitude of her

chamber, there indulged her feelings without restraint, and

lamented, with showers of repentant tears, her harsh treatment of

Flodoardo.

The grief which preyed in secret on her soul soon undermined her

health. No one could relieve her sufferings, for no one knew the

cause of her melancholy, or the origin of her illness. No wonder,

then, that Rosabella's situation at length excited the most bitter

anxiety in the bosom of her venerable uncle. No wonder, too, that

Flodoardo entirely withdrew himself from a world which was become

odious to him, since Rosabella was to be seen in it no longer; and

that he devoted himself in solitude to the indulgence of a passion

which he had vainly endeavoured to subdue, and which, in the

impetuosity of its course, had already swallowed up every other

wish, and every other sentiment.

But let us for the moment turn from the sick chamber of Rosabella,

and visit the dwellings of the conspirators, who were now advancing

with rapid strides towards the execution of their plans; and who,

with every hour that passed over their heads, became more numerous,

more powerful, and more dangerous to Andreas and his beloved

Republic.