[Rienzi by Edward Bulwer Lytton]@TWC D-Link bookRienzi CHAPTER 1 4/18
Never before had authority been borne with so austere an integrity, so uncorrupt a zeal.
He had sought to impregnate his colleagues with the same loftiness of principle--he had failed.
Now secure in his footing, he had begun openly to appeal to the people; and already a new spirit seemed to animate the populace of Rome. While these were the fortunes of Rienzi, Adrian had been long separated from him, and absent from Rome. The Colonna were staunch supporters of the imperial party, and Adrian di Castello had received and obeyed an invitation to the Emperor's court. Under that monarch he had initiated himself in arms, and, among the knights of Germany, he had learned to temper the natural Italian shrewdness with the chivalry of northern valour. In leaving Bavaria, he had sojourned a short time in the solitude of one of his estates by the fairest lake of northern Italy; and thence, with a mind improved alike by action and study, had visited many of the free Italian states, imbibed sentiments less prejudiced than those of his order, and acquired an early reputation for himself while inly marking the characters and deeds of others.
In him, the best qualities of the Italian noble were united.
Passionately addicted to the cultivation of letters, subtle and profound in policy, gentle and bland of manner, dignifying a love of pleasure with a certain elevation of taste, he yet possessed a gallantry of conduct, and purity of honour, and an aversion from cruelty, which were then very rarely found in the Italian temperament, and which even the Chivalry of the North, while maintaining among themselves, usually abandoned the moment they came into contact with the systematic craft and disdain of honesty, which made the character of the ferocious, yet wily, South.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|