Produced by Dave Ceponis, Sue Asscher and David Widger
ZANONI
BY
EDWARD BULWER LYTTON
(PLATE: "Thou art good and fair," said Viola. Drawn by P. Kauffmann, etched by Deblois.)
DEDICATORY EPISTLE First prefixed to the Edition of 1845
TO
JOHN GIBSON, R.A., SCULPTOR.
In looking round the wide and luminous circle of our great living Englishmen, to select one to whom I might fitly dedicate this work,--one who, in his life as in his genius, might illustrate the principle I have sought to convey; elevated by the ideal which he exalts, and serenely dwelling in a glorious existence with the images born of his imagination,--in looking round for some such man, my thoughts rested upon you. Afar from our turbulent cabals; from the ignoble jealousy and the sordid strife which degrade and acerbate the ambition of Genius,--in your Roman Home, you have lived amidst all that is loveliest and least perishable in the past, and contributed with the noblest aims, and in the purest spirit, to the mighty heirlooms of the future. Your youth has been devoted to toil, that your manhood may be consecrated to fame: a fame unsullied by one desire of gold. You have escaped the two worst perils that beset the artist in our time and land,--the debasing tendencies of commerce, and the angry rivalries of competition. You have not wrought your marble for the market,--you have not been tempted, by the praises which our vicious criticism has showered upon exaggeration and distortion, to lower your taste to the level of the hour; you have lived, and you have laboured, as if you had no rivals but in the dead,--no purchasers, save in judges of what is best. In the divine priesthood of the beautiful, you have sought only to increase her worshippers and enrich her temples. The pupil of Canova, you have inherited his excellences, while you have shunned his errors,--yours his delicacy, not his affectation. Your heart resembles him even more than your genius: you have the same noble enthusiasm for your sublime profession; the same lofty freedom from envy, and the spirit that depreciates; the same generous desire not to war with but to serve artists in your art; aiding, strengthening, advising, elevating the timidity of inexperience, and the vague aspirations of youth. By the intuition of a kindred mind, you have equalled the learning of Winckelman, and the plastic poetry of Goethe, in the intimate comprehension of the antique. Each work of yours, rightly studied, is in itself a CRITICISM, illustrating the sublime secrets of the Grecian Art, which, without the servility of plagiarism, you have contributed to revive amongst us; in you we behold its three great and long-undetected principles,--simplicity, calm, and concentration.
But your admiration of the Greeks has not led you to the bigotry of the mere antiquarian, nor made you less sensible of the unappreciated excellence of the mighty modern, worthy to be your countryman,--though till his statue is in the streets of our capital, we show ourselves not worthy of the glory he has shed upon our land. You have not suffered even your gratitude to Canova to blind you to the superiority of Flaxman. When we become sensible of our title-deeds to renown in that single name, we may look for an English public capable of real patronage to English Art,--and not till then.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Zanoni by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
- 2: And that deal with mysterious and occult agencies
- 3: That in Zanoni the author depicts to us humanity
- 4: Zanoni was originally published by Saunders and Otley
- 5: In this catalogue which relates to the Rosicrucians
- 6: I was riding leisurely towards Highgate
- 7: Of the tenets of the Rosicrucians
- 8: Through the telestic or mystic
- 9: Or the sudden assumption of a new cipher
- 10: Vergina era D' alta belta
- 11: The Orfeo of Angelo Politiano was produced in 1475
- 12: Certainly barbiton sounds better than fiddle
- 13: Dame Gionetta was every inch Italian and Neapolitan
- 14: But not to the pure enthusiasm that comes from art
- 15: And therefore it seemed not strange that Viola herself
- 16: But he took up the faithful barbiton
- 17: The audience simultaneously recognised the hand of Pisani
- 18: From that time Viola forgot the crowd
- 19: As he rouses the barbiton from its case
- 20: Whether to compose or to practice
- 21: Involuntarily her eyes followed him
- 22: What fresh news of the ducats of Signor Zanoni
- 23: Cetoxa was a redoubted swordsman
- 24: Has been but as Nature to the sage
- 25: We supped with one of our confreres of the Academy
- 26: Condorcet on this head was eloquent
- 27: Of Martines de Pasqualis little is known
- 28: But not by the hand of the executioner
- 29: The stranger looked at the basin
- 30: Especially the Encyclopedistes
- 31: Couldst thou not spare me a few months or days
- 32: And selected the painter David
- 33: If ever you want the heart's blood of Rene Dumas
- 34: Thou must sicken to see thy Elfrida and thy Pirro laid aside
- 35: One evening Pisani was taken ill
- 36: The anodyne seemed already to have taken benign effect
- 37: His robe brushed the laurel wreath
- 38: Viola was too inexperienced to perceive
- 39: And looked steadfastly at Glyndon
- 40: The Englishman who had first addressed Glyndon
- 41: When I suddenly perceived Zanoni
- 42: With Ughelli that was the Sicilian's name facing me
- 43: Clarence Glyndon was a young man of fortune
- 44: The world was too much with Clarence Glyndon
- 45: He showed Glyndon a small herb with a pale blue flower
- 46: The actress drew Gionetta nearer to the stage
- 47: Mascari shrugged his shoulders
- 48: But Gionetta was no ordinary ally
- 49: Zanoni followed the young Neapolitan into her house
- 50: This Englishman Viola drew herself away
- 51: The Signor Glyndon woos your mistress
- 52: Zanoni himself absent from home
- 53: Where in a few moments Zanoni joined him
- 54: And Constantine the vices of a Pagan
- 55: Zanoni looked gravely at the young man
- 56: Zanoni observed him in thoughtful silence
- 57: Zanoni threatened him with rivalry
- 58: Zan was unquestionably the Chaldean appellation for the sun
- 59: And before Glyndon had met Zanoni
- 60: Nicot suppressed an exclamation
- 61: Disparities of the PHYSICAL life
- 62: Fixing his eyes earnestly on Zanoni
- 63: Glyndon coloured as he answered
- 64: Clarence Glyndon returns to England
- 65: But idealised the porter to the hero
- 66: Never had Viola looked so lovely
- 67: For the polenta will be spoiled
- 68: A step that she did not hear approached the actress
- 69: Glyndon listened with visible emotion and perturbation
- 70: The child was exceedingly fond of Viola
- 71: That Viola herself began to despair
- 72: At noon Zanoni escaped from the blessings of the aged pair
- 73: That bade it commune with itself
- 74: In his earlier visits he did not speak of Glyndon
- 75: Glyndon turned his eyes from the picture before him to Nicot
- 76: With that Nicot nodded significantly
- 77: Mervale drew his chair nearer to Glyndon's
- 78: Mervale burst into a violent fit of laughter
- 79: Glyndon was yet too indignant to answer
- 80: Purer and loftier than your own
- 81: The day after his attempt on Viola
- 82: Attracted thyself unconsciously
- 83: Fear of the Nicots and the Mervales
- 84: I behold but a likeness to thine eyes
- 85: And the nightingale flew into yonder thicket
- 86: Too high and too bright to be loved thyself
- 87: Thy kiss claimed and hallowed it to thyself
- 88: The gentleman of the chamber announced the Signor Zanoni
- 89: Mascari took up the three dice
- 90: Zanoni then turned the conversation
- 91: By that shadowy scaffold it stands and gibbers at me
- 92: And the grey smoke of Vesuvius
- 93: And Gionetta had told him his friend was within
- 94: Tirsi He who fears and flies
- 95: Mervale was more than usually gay
- 96: Were their Excellencies going to Vesuvius
- 97: Mervale uttered an exclamation of terror
- 98: He heard the voice of Mervale calling on him
- 99: Mervale recognised the form of his friend
- 100: Glyndon rejoined his impatient and wondering friend
- 101: Glyndon started from his reverie
- 102: While Gionetta busied herself with the long tresses which
- 103: And was Zanoni indeed about to quit Naples
- 104: Thou canst not dream of what thou wouldst demand
- 105: Suddenly Zanoni tore himself from her
- 106: Her first thought was for Zanoni
- 107: Worthy of the fellowship of Mejnour
- 108: Had he but listened to Mejnour
- 109: Come poss' io Altri trovar
- 110: And repaired to the palace of Zanoni
- 111: Replied he who had owned the name of Mejnour
- 112: The apparition of Mejnour served
- 113: Seemed deep in conversation with the fawning Mascari
- 114: Whom he despatched with a message to Zanoni
- 115: Zanoni grew yet more animated and brilliant
- 116: He seemed as if Zanoni had infected him
- 117: Glyndon followed Zanoni into the banquet room
- 118: Mascari muttered some inaudible words
- 119: And uttered the name of Zanoni
- 120: Zanoni hath performed his task
- 121: Who stood up as Zanoni gained the boat
- 122: This Mejnour is an imposter more dangerous
- 123: By the corner of the Toledo he was arrested by Nicot
- 124: Glyndon hastily threw them some small coins
- 125: And I give him the sacred watchword
- 126: He bound me over to an honest notary at Naples
- 127: With this sum I obtained the consent of the silk mercer
- 128: To get taken on board a vessel bound to Leghorn
- 129: And as the strange signor doubled the sum I myself proposed
- 130: The landscape now seemed studded with castles
- 131: With these words Mejnour turned to lighter topics
- 132: Zanoni will pause to admire its beauties
- 133: And if you desire to reform the faulty
- 134: The good forever on the defensive
- 135: And he saw Mejnour by his side
- 136: Whispered the voice of Mejnour
- 137: Zanoni was mute for some moments
- 138: Hermes and Albert and Paracelsus
- 139: Like the animalculae unseen by the naked eye
- 140: Mejnour exhibited to his pupil
- 141: Mejnour then set before his pupil certain tasks
- 142: Mejnour placed the key in his hands
- 143: How lightly Fillide bounds along
- 144: And saw the eyes dropping rheum
- 145: Glyndon hastily reclosed and replaced the vial
- 146: He recognised the dark eyed Fillide
- 147: Certainly Fillide had not the seraphic loveliness of Viola
- 148: There is more magic in Fillide than in Mejnour
- 149: As they moved in majestic order
- 150: To the mysterious knowledge of Zanoni
- 151: And Zanoni entered calm as usual
- 152: Began to haunt her night and day when Zanoni was absent
- 153: When last thy soul hearkened to me
- 154: Extracts from the letters of zanoni to mejnour
- 155: Were ourselves the neophytes and aspirants
- 156: The malevolence would disarm the power
- 157: Has thy pupil disappointed thee
- 158: When thy initiation is beside the cradle of thy child
- 159: Zanoni did not seem to hear her
- 160: But fear still was in the heart of Viola
- 161: Because the Padrone bade me await your waking
- 162: Thou hast not only inhaled the elixir
- 163: His indignation began to kindle against Mejnour
- 164: To have left the refining effects Mejnour had ascribed to it
- 165: To deprive the corpse of the rites of sepulture
- 166: Mephist Wohin es Dir gefallt
- 167: Mervale was dressed for the day
- 168: Glyndon was greatly altered since Mervale had seen him last
- 169: Thomas Mervale positively sang
- 170: He startled Mervale by his energy
- 171: And was impatient till Adela arrived
- 172: The poetical temperament of Adela
- 173: Then Glyndon commenced his story
- 174: Showed the features of Mejnour
- 175: For several days deprived Glyndon of consciousness
- 176: Was a commonplace practitioner
- 177: But Jean Nicot bears no malice
- 178: Never to the pale trembler bow the things of glory the soul
- 179: And Zanoni heard distinctly in his heart
- 180: Tristis Erinnys Praetulit infaustas sanguinolenta faces
- 181: Seest thou not that to love is but to fear
- 182: Zanoni and Viola were separated
- 183: To introduce the real Cottalto and the true Dandolo
- 184: How gladly Viola would see him
- 185: Alarmed Viola even more than his words
- 186: When Glyndon and Viola met again
- 187: Still clinging to the image of Zanoni
- 188: Des Erdenlebens Schweres Traumbild sinkt
- 189: And zones of nebulosity were successively thrown off
- 190: Suddenly the phantom Zanoni turned
- 191: For those who would unite the lofty with the lowly
- 192: And the fruit is gore and ashes
- 193: When on the fatal 9th of Thermidor
- 194: Drawn up most probably by Payan Thermidor 9
- 195: Apropos of the spaniel of Couthon
- 196: Who recoiled before the determined spirit of Payan
- 197: And he grasped the list of Payan in his hand
- 198: Even of profounder politicians than Jean Nicot
- 199: That they the Hebertists have all the canaille with them
- 200: That Nicot at once was silenced
- 201: This Fillide would that I had never seen her
- 202: He passed slowly into the chamber where Fillide yet sat
- 203: Nicot felt he had gone too far
- 204: That individualises the One amidst the Multitude
- 205: Forswear the Divine one these demons would depose
- 206: Robespierre passed me with his furtive step
- 207: And so for she would not accept alms from Glyndon so
- 208: Glyndon paused for a few moments
- 209: Fillide uttered an exclamation
- 210: Fillide turned upon him her eyes
- 211: Glyndon did not see the Italian
- 212: Talent unhonoured is talent at war with men
- 213: Nobler paupers than Jean Nicot would despair
- 214: Nicot received these apologies in sullen silence
- 215: That the divine Catherine Theot
- 216: He to whom Catherine Theot assured immortal life
- 217: I will pluck Tallien from his benches in the Convention
- 218: And Payan reappeared and whispered Robespierre
- 219: That farce ended with Anarcharsis Clootz
- 220: And as the ready Jacobin attended the summons
- 221: The next moment Glyndon plunged into a winding lane
- 222: In the recognition of a holy and spiritual Theurgia
- 223: It dwelt amidst the wonders of the loftier creation
- 224: The sublimest luxury of their knowledge was but this
- 225: The Phantom hath stalked suddenly to thy side
- 226: I have tracked the cause to Glyndon
- 227: After an animating harangue from Lecointre
- 228: Before Tallien could recover his surprise
- 229: Robespierre has gone to the Convention
- 230: For Lecointre was one of the fiercest foes of the tyrant
- 231: Payan and his brother following him
- 232: Erde mag zuruck in Erde stauben
- 233: Didst thou think that my boon would be other than thy curse
- 234: Thou CANST save her from the headsman
- 235: With its Cabala and its number
- 236: Dumas was but little altered in appearance since
- 237: Black Henriot is no 'Indulgent
- 238: Henriot scrawled the words dictated to him
- 239: Fouquier rarely stirred out at night
- 240: Dumas looked up and shrunk from the eye of the stranger
- 241: Und den Mordstahl seh' ich blinken
- 242: That grim and loathsome NOTHINGNESS which
- 243: Canst Thou not make the love that will not die
- 244: And she only answered him by sobs
- 245: I never doubted thee in our lovely isle
- 246: The wagons groan and reel to the mart
- 247: She felt the amulet on her bosom
- 248: Robespierre would destroy himself
- 249: Never a word again on earth spoke Maximilien Robespierre
- 250: Were we not so divinely charmed with Faust
- 251: ZANONI Contemplation of the Ideal
- 252: But is deterred by Conventionalism
